In
the Court of
Historical Criticism:
Alger Hiss's Narrative |
By David Levin
Reprinted
from the Virginia Quarterly Review, 1976
"I
had rather judge a Witch to be an honest woman, than judge
an honest woman as a Witch."
Increase Mather
The fall of Richard Nixon accelerated a process that had begun
for me four years earlier. I had taught an undergraduate seminar
on American autobiographies in 1970, and in order to consider
at least one book that makes a central issue of its own veracity
I had assigned Whittaker Chambers's "Witness". That assignment
had drawn me back into the world of the Hiss case the
Case, Chambers calls itan irresistible accumulation
of baffling personalities, mysterious evidence both sworn
and circumstantial, questions of civil liberty, major issues
of congressional power and ethics, and (for my generation)
major problems of symbolic allegiance. To teach "Witness",
one could not simply read Chambers. One had also to read Hiss's
"In the Court of Public Opinion", Nixon's "Six Crises" and
transcripts from the Case.
I have begun autobiographically because a statement of past
prejudices and current preferences will clarify my argument
about Hiss's book. I was a Harvard graduate student, a Democrat
and a civil libertarian when the accusations against Hiss
were made public in 1948, and I was disgusted by the tactics
of the House Committee on Un-American Activities (hereafter
HUAC or the Committee), especially by its attacks upon private
citizens through quasi-judicial proceedings and lurid publicity.
Because of those tactics and general sneers against his Harvard
background and his liberal sponsors (among them Felix Frankfurter
and Oliver Wendell Holmes), Alger Hiss became for me what
his most vehement detractors wanted to make of him: a representative
of liberal education and liberal politics. His detractors
wanted to show that that image masked at first a smug dupe
and then a traitor; I wanted him to be a hero of reasonable
humanity. I wanted his vindication to be a triumph of decency.
Following the Case as well as one can ever follow a trial
in the daily press, I felt sure that Hiss's conviction after
a second trial (the first jury having failed to agree on a
verdict) was unjust.
The
jury decided that Hiss had twice perjured himself before a
grand jury: when he had denied giving State Department documents
to Whittaker Chambers and when he had declared that he had
not seen Chambers after Jan. 1, 1937. The indictment on these
charges in December 1948 had followed nearly five months of
secret and public testimony in which Chambers, under subpoena
from HUAC, had first accused Hiss and others of membership
in a Communist underground group whose goal was not to spy
but to "mess up policy." Hiss had appeared voluntarily
under oath to deny the charges, and in the first weeks of
sensational publicity during August 1948 one major controversy
had turned on whether Hiss had ever known Chambers at all,
and whether Chambers had been an intimate friend of the Hisses
before he had broken with the Communist Party at the end of
1937. Once Chambers was actually presented to Hiss without
the aliases that he had admittedly used during his years in
the underground, Hiss admitted having known him for a time
as George Crosley, an impecunious journalist to whom Hiss
had lent some money, lent or given an old Ford and sublet
an apartment for two or three months, but whose failure to
repay any of the loans had led to a complete break in 1936.
Hiss had dared Chambers to repeat his 1948 charges outside
Congress so that a libel suit might test their validity, and
Chambers had done so at the end of August, whereupon Hiss
had sued for libel. In November, with attorneys for both sides
requesting evidence, Chambers had suddenly produced typewritten
copies of some State Department documents and had accused
Hiss of espionage after all. A few weeks later Chambers had
revealed the so-called pumpkin papers, microfilm of some other
State Department documents. Chambers had then confessed that
his earlier testimony had been perjured, and for a time the
public debate had focused on the prospective indictment not
only of Hiss but also of Chambers. Since the statute of limitations
prohibited indictments for espionage, the question was one
of perjury. Richard Nixon and HUAC worked openly to persuade
the grand jury to indict Hiss but not Chambers, and the grand
jury (by a majority of one) did indict Hiss on Dec. 15, 1948.
The indictment and eventual conviction of this former State
Department official, one of the chief men responsible for
American policy in the United Nations, had an immeasurable
effect on the movement that came to be known as McCarthyism
By
the time Hiss published "In the Court of Public Opinion" in
1957, I was too busy to read his book. I read the reviews,
of course, regretted that they were not more conclusively
favorable and wavered slightly in my confidence that Hiss
had been falsely accused. I had seen no new evidence. I had
merely grown accustomed (more easily, no doubt, than Hiss)
to the jail term that Hiss had served and to the lack of any
major national effort to continue insisting on his innocence.
Then an essay by Herbert Packer made me suspect that I had
ignored genuine evidence against Hiss, and I gradually came
to accept a cliche if Hiss hadn't been guilty of the specific
charges, he nonetheless had had a deeper intimacy with Chambers
and with Communism than he had acknowledged; and although
he may have been protecting someone else throughout his ordeal,
there had been just too much circumstantial evidence that
he had never succeeded in explaining away. Until 1970, then,
the Case was filed uncomfortably in my memory as closed.
Reading
"Witness" and "In the Court of Public Opinion" shocked me.
When I read for the first time what the two antagonists themselves
had to say about the evidence, I saw that I had been credulous
and inaccurate in my recollection of the trial even while
advocating Hiss's exoneration. Although a partisan defender,
I had come to believe, for example, that Hiss had begun by
denying he had ever known Chambers, and I had even failed
to see how completely and how early the burden of proof had
been shifted from prosecution to defense.
"Six
Crises" deepened my perplexity and introduced new questions
of veracity, which provoke new interest in 1976. A familiar
kind of evasion or prevarication occurs, for example, in the
first chapter. To explain why he suddenly called an extraordinary
executive session of the HUAC subcommittee to meet in a New-York
hotel on Aug. 17, 1948, so that Hiss might be confronted by
Chambers for the first time, Nixon declares that he decided
late on the night of the 16th to avoid giving Hiss time to
"make his story fit the facts" in the eight days
before the next scheduled hearing; Hiss and Chambers must
be brought together on the 17th, because "only the man
who was not telling the truth would gain by having additional
time to build his case." Before Nixon wrote his narrative,
however, both Chambers (1952) and Hiss (1957) had suggested
in their respective books a relationship between the sudden
decision to hold this surprise hearing and the death of Harry
Dexter White, a former Treasury Department official, on August
16th. Nixon says that the subcommittee read the news of White's
death during their train ride from Washington to New York
on the afternoon of the 17th. Then he denies the "plausible"
but "completely untrue" allegation that the subcommittee
had arranged the Hiss-Chambers meeting for that afternoon
"in order to divert attention from White's death."
Chambers's
own strange account of that day must arouse the suspicion
of any reader who sets it beside Nixon's, because the two
reports differ on the telling detail of the newspaper story.
En route from his Maryland farm to his office in NewYork,
Chambers has suddenly felt "a curious need to go [to
Washington] to see the Committee, as if its members were the
only people left in the world with whom I could communicate."
He buys a ticket to New York but goes to Washington instead,
only to learn that the subcommittee has been "frantically
trying to reach me." They will not tell him why they
want him, but instead, "As we rolled to Union Station,
Appell [an investigator on the staff] wrestled a newspaper
out of his pocket and pointed to a headline: Harry Dexter
White had died of a heart attack."
Nixon
claims that the subcommittee learned of White's death during
the train ride to New York, but Chambers, with the same rhetorical
skill that was so deadly to Hiss, gives us the memorable picture
of Appell graphically answering Chambers's question on the
way to Union Station, before Chambers even learns that their
destination is New York. In the rest of the paragraph Chambers
supplies adequate reason for the subcommittee's dramatic response
to White's death: White had made a "gallant" and
celebrated defense in his public hearing before the Committee.
But neither Chambers nor Nixon lists a third relevant fact
about the relationship between White's fate and the sudden
confrontation of Hiss and Chambers. Of our three autobiographical
narrators, only Hiss points out that White's heart condition
had become an issue during the hearing itself, and that Congressman
Thomas had jeered at White's request (as a medical precaution)
for a brief recess every hour. White had testified on Friday
the 13th, had been stricken almost immediately after his return
to New Hampshire that night, and had died at 5:45 p.m. on
the 16th. I suspect (as Chambers implies) that before Richard
Nixon ordered the surprise hearing he had learned of White's
death.
Neither
Nixon nor Chambers mentions here the way that Hiss was actually
called to that hearing. Hiss was "not summoned,"
as Nixon's narrative suggests. Instead he was told that Congressman
McDowell was coming to New York that afternoon and would like
to speak to him for a few minutes. Then, just before the appointed
time, Hiss was telephoned again and invited to stroll over
to the Commodore Hotel for his brief chat with McDowell and
it was now revealed two or three others. When
he arrived, the subcommittee was declared to be in session
and he was questioned under oath. Both Nixon and Chambers,
moreover, neglect to mention Hiss's request at the very first
hearing on August 5th to be allowed to confront Chambers as
soon as possible, and both ignore the Committee's concurrence
in Hiss's persistent request on the 16th that the confrontation
scheduled for the 25th be held in public session. Both therefore
leave the reader without any preparation (besides a consciousness
of guilt and danger) for the anger and wariness that all three
narratives agree Hiss displayed through most of this climactic
hearing. Commentators as disparate as Nixon, Hiss and Leslie
Fiedler agree that (in the public mind, at least) this hearing
broke the Case remember Hiss's demand to examine Chambers's
teeth and a recent article by a Cornell University
Law professor who believes Hiss was guilty quotes more extensively
from this transcript than from any other evidence before the
testimony at the actual trials.
What
I hope to demonstrate here and throughout the essay is the
value of historical criticism in both the understanding of
factual books and the evaluation of a baffling case. Close
comparative reading of the texts and some of the transcripts
should help us to understand the books among which
Hiss's has been the most widely misunderstood and perhaps
the issue that unites them. The evidence that we have already
considered requires us to remember that all three books are
to some extent self-serving, apologetic. Before we agree with
Nixon that only the false "Witness" would have been aided
by having a week to "make his story fit the facts,"
we ought to reflect that, as Hiss's narrative plainly demonstrates,
a truthful "Witness" might have benefited from having the
time to look up the records concerning the sale of his 1929
Ford twelve years earlier if the Committee had not
removed those documents from the Department of Motor Vehicles.
Nor is Hiss the only person with whom Chambers disagrees about
the facts. Chambers sometimes remembers quite differently
from Nixon, even when Nixon's prudently selective memory has
the opportunity to check "Witness" before committing itself
to print. Both Chambers and Nixon, moreover, set up the meeting
of August 17 in their narratives as a way of forestalling
the charge of collusion between them. Others seem to agree
with Hiss that Chambers and the Committee needed one another.
Chambers's "curious need" visit the Committee seems
as strange to the reader as it does to Chambers. Why would
Chambers feel so early in the case, before the Committee had
accepted his story, "as if its members were the only
people left in the world with whom I could communicate"?
Remember that Chambers has set out for New York from his Maryland
farm but has suddenly decided to go to Washington instead.
So remarkable is his encounter with the subcommittee members
as they leave the House Office Building by "an entrance
that I had never used before" that he himself highlights
the coincidence. Robert Stripling, he says, "fixed me
with a somewhat birdlike stare and said darkly, ŒI believe
he must be psychic.' I sensed that he felt that among so many
complicating factors that was one too many."
The
world of this case abounds in complicating factors, selective
remembering and special pleading, even in books written long
after the trials. The issue is not between a truth-teller
and a liar, but between two sides trying equally hard to persuade
us. Nixon's repeated and flagrant lies during the Watergate
investigation, Chambers's admitted espionage and his admitted
perjury during the early part of the Hiss investigation and
Hiss's conviction on two counts of perjury mean that any reviewer
of the Case in 1976 must find his way among the testimony
of three writers, all of whom now stand impeached of falsehoods.
The behavior on both sides includes some actions or circumstances
so strange that the advantage in any argument will often lie
with the adversary who can ask his antagonist to answer the
rhetorical question: Why would anybody have done that? Chambers,
Nixon and the Committee can ask tellingly, Why would Chambers
want to risk his own career for petty revenge, and why would
he want to ruin Hiss? The burden of answering such questions
was put on Hiss throughout the ordeal, and even after he had
served his term in prison. It is that burden that I mean to
question in my discussion of "In the Court of Public Opinion",
but here we must notice that Hiss and the defense had a number
of telling questions which they could ask: Why would a guilty
man seek out and turn over to the court an incriminating typewriter?
Why would a traitor in the State Department, working with
a Communist Party member whose last name he didn't even know,
meet that agent regularly in his own home, give him official
notes in his own handwriting, photograph confidential documents
bearing his own initials, and have his wife transcribe others
on her own typewriter? Since the transfer of documents from
Julian Wadleigh, the one government employee who actually
admitted giving documents to Chambers, had been accomplished
with all the precautions of the most secretive espionage
seemingly casual exchanges on street corners, etc.
Hiss and his attorneys argued in their appeal that Chambers's
story of weekly deliveries and typing sessions in Hiss's own
home was preposterous. To believe Chambers, one must believe
that these spies took better precautions to disguise their
transfer of a rug and a Model A Ford than to disguise the
espionage itself.
Another
of Hiss's unanswered rhetorical questions leads us to consider
recent revelations about the FBI: why, when Hiss was already
in prison, did FBI agents follow his attorney and other investigators
who sought factual evidence about the incriminating typewriter,
and why did FBI agents forewarn prospective witnesses concerning
affidavits about the manufacture and sale of that typewriter,
forewarn them against cooperating with the Hiss attorneys'
inquiries? Imputations of FBI skullduggery have followed the
Case ever since Chambers met regularly with FBI agents and
interrogated prospective defense witnesses during the weeks
before the trial. The defense claimed that the FBI was coaching
Chambers about Hiss's earlier life, and Hiss recounts in his
book some dubious conduct by FBI agents who interviewed one
of his former servants and another witness. Richard Nixon,
while of course praising the FBI, gives especial credit to
Justice Department employees in "the lower echelons"
for keeping the Committee informed of confidential Justice
Department plans concerning the Case. He even declares
along with a surprisingly large number of other writers on
the Case that it was FBI agents, rather than Hiss's
investigators, who found the missing typewriter in 1948. Today,
however, we don't need the accusations of antagonists or the
praise of former allies on the Committee. The FBI itself has
now admitted not only entrapment but forgery most notoriously
in an effort to set the Mafia and the Communist Party against
one another in its aggressive program to confound the
Left.
II
My
interpretation of Hiss's book asks the reader to assume for
the sake of argument that Hiss was not guilty. We must seem
to beg the question in order to be prepared to consider the
narrator's experience. Many reviewers, some of them sympathetic
to Hiss, criticized his restrained tone, and some even used
that dispassionate quality as evidence of his guilt: surely
a man who had been so unjustly treated would have written
a more volatile prose. Surely, moreover, he had erred in writing
his book as if it were a lawyer's brief, for now that he was
appealing to the court of public opinion it wasn't enough
to show that he had not been proved guilty. To convince the
public (and the reviewers in question), he was obliged to
prove his innocence. If I am correct, the mistake of those
readers was to beg the question in the opposite way from the
one that I temporarily propose. Knowing of his conviction
and his prison term, and knowing much of the evidence, they
seem to be looking for revelations that will positively exonerate
Hiss. Wherever the burden of proof ought to have rested during
the trial, they understandably believe that it now belongs
to Hiss. And so, I believe, they misread his book.
"In
the Court of Public Opinion" is both the record of an experience
and a demonstration of principle. It teaches in a way that
neither "Witness" nor "Six Crises", both heavily and explicitly
didactic, can approach. Chambers begins "Witness" with an
impassioned letter to his children about the importance of
the Case to their generation and to history, and he draws
attention throughout the book to his feelings of anger, misery,
loneliness, fright, remorse, compassion as he played his part
in a "tragedy of history." Nixon later borrows in
his first chapter a version of Chambers's device, narrating
the Hiss case in response to a question about it from his
daughter and then considering the historical significance
of the Case and its political and personal meaning to himself.
His Introduction announces several hypotheses about successful
behavior in crises, and his account of the Case emphasizes
the narrator's responses and resources during critical moments
of stress and triumph.
"In
the Court of Public Opinion", however, begins flatly with
no preface at all:
In
August 1948 I was living in New York City. For the preceding
year and a half I had been president of the Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace. To accept that position I had resigned
from the State Department, where I was director of the office
responsible for proposing and carrying out our policies
in the United Nations.
This
is a reserved book. Here we find no autobiographical emphasis
beyond the Case, none on the narrator's family, none on the
lessons of the Case for American democracy, none on how to
endure disgrace and misery. The narrator takes us methodically
through his intellectual experience of the Case. He does,
of course, arrange the record to support his case, but he
concentrates for his effect upon the record, including "Witness",
counting on the contrast between Chambers's past and his own
public service to return the burden of proof to the accusers.
This narrator has served nearly four years in prison. He has
seen his once respected name become a byword. He will show
us how he fell from the position described in his first paragraph,
and how he fought to defend himself. Only at the very end
of his book will he write three brief, restrained paragraphs
of what he calls "personal comments."
Whatever
its deeper psychological significance, I call this quality
a demonstration of principle because the style, the form,
the tone of the book reinforce the central declaration of
a defendant's rights in criminal cases, that he must be presumed
innocent until he has been proven guilty. If I am correct,
the very form of this book rebukes the reviewers who have
declared that Hiss must now "prove his innocence."
Even some of the most sympathetic commentators on Hiss's book
warn the reader to distinguish between concluding that Hiss
had not been proven guilty and concluding that he has been
vindicated. Hiss, I believe, was perfectly aware of that distinction
when he wrote his book, and we must explicitly recognize it
here. But I believe the form and the extent of his argument
are limited by more than the difficulty of proving a negative,
more than the reserved habits of a legal and diplomatic career.
Our
legal principle has an ethical basis which demands more than
the negative act of refusing to jail those who have not been
proved guilty. Hiss, I believe, calls us by his very restraint
to honor principles of charity and trust, to see that in the
republic an official ought to be judged according to his public
record. Hiss challenges our magnanimity by assuming that if
we see how his ruin came about we will understand his premise.
If he was not guilty, then he chose the most appropriate form
and tone for his book. Discrediting the case against him would
mean restoring to him the assumption to which not only our
legal traditions but his known public and private life had
entitled him before the nightmare began. Cruelly presumptuous
are the well-meaning and the skeptical observers who would
tell the innocent victim of such horrors not only that he
must disclose more of his personal feelings portray
himself as more "human" but also that he
must explain both the motives of his accusers and their partially
discredited evidence. If he was innocent, he owes us nothing.
If he was innocent, we owe him an unlimited debt.
Middle-aged
readers, of course, cannot erase their memory of the incriminating
evidence or their human interest in the general mystery rather
than the narrower question of whether Hiss ought to have been
convicted or later granted a new trial. Yet before judging
his book we ought to respect the premises, the order and the
shape of his narrative and argument as he develops them. Although
aware that the narrator may be a guilty man trying to hoodwink
me, I shall proceed on the assumption implicit in his opening
paragraph: the President of the Carnegie Endowment, who has
distinguished himself in public service, returns to New York
from his summer vacation and learns that he has been named
as a Communist Party member who worked in an underground "cell"
while serving in the federal government eleven to 14 years
earlier. How did he reply to the charges? What happened to
him?
Hiss's
title, as Mark Howe perceived, does more than appeal to the
court of public opinion. It suggests that he was tried there.
Procedural and chronological questions have great significance
throughout his account and especially in the beginning. He
first learns of the 1948 charges not from the Committee but
from a newspaperman, who telephones him at home the night
before Chambers's testimony. Hiss immediately volunteers to
appear before the Committee so that he may deny the allegations.
The name of Whittaker Chambers, he explains to us, was unknown
to him except as that of a person about whom two FBI agents
had asked him in 1947. J. Parnell Thomas, the Committee's
chairman, later said that the Republican presidential campaign
leaders had asked him to "set up the spy hearings, .
. . to stay in Washington in August in order to put the heat
on Harry Truman." Yet Hiss represents himself as "convinced,"
despite his mistrust of the Committee, that he could exonerate
himself. "I had nothing to hide and, I thought, nothing
to fear. A simple statement of facts would surely clear up
the whole business."
Vestiges
of that faith reappear throughout the book. At the end of
the first trial Hiss is astonished to learn that eight of
the twelve jurors voted for conviction. Even after his conviction
in 1950, he is "confident of obtaining a new trial."
When the judge invites him to make a statement before being
sentenced, Hiss remains "confident that in the future
the full facts of how Whittaker Chambers was able to carry
out forgery by typewriter will be disclosed." And in
his personal statement at the end of the book, Hiss reaffirms
"the democratic ideals which motivated me in government
service.
But
in the narrative of "In the Court of Public Opinion" the protagonist
never has a chance to make "a simple statement of facts."
Hiss becomes involved at once in an adversary proceeding which
screens his adversary from him. The main conflict sets a believer
in traditional procedures against a congressional committee
and a mysterious accuser who seem determined to ruin him.
Hiss expects to be confronted with Chambers at his first,
voluntary appearance before the Committee, but instead he
is shown a picture taken from an odd angle, he says
twelve years after his last admitted meeting with the
man he later comes to identify as Chambers. A subcommittee
interviews Chambers secretly two days after Hiss's first testimony,
and the congressmen, who confide some of Chambers's accusations
to the press, do not tell Hiss or the reporters that Chambers
himself has positively denied Hiss ever knew him by his real
name. Nor do they seem to notice that Hiss has immediately
asked to see Chambers in order to determine whether he once
knew him. They question Hiss about details of Chambers's secret
testimony, but without letting him see the transcripts before
replying under oath. Thus Hiss not only risks damaging errors
in testifying about events more than a decade in the past,
but he is also denied access to the demonstrably false portions
of Chambers's testimony. Committee members tell Hiss in his
second hearing (August 16) that Chambers has testified in
"dazzling" detail about Hiss's personal life in
the 1930's, but Hiss has access to those details only through
their questions. When they ask him about bird-watching, therefore,
and he replies in response to a further question that he once
saw a prothonotary warbler, the seeming corroboration of Chambers's
testimony has much more impact, both on the congressmen and
on newspaper readers, than if Hiss were able to corroborate
that accurate detail in the context of all the misinformation
that Chambers also supplied. Hiss uses the early part of his
book to establish that context.
The
most damaging evidence against Chambers in this part of Hiss's
book is Hiss's refutation of gratuitous details which Chambers
must have volunteered either maliciously or self-deceptively.
We see Chambers, for example, swear that Hiss regularly paid
him dues for the Communist Party, and that Hiss transferred
his stepson to a less expensive private school so that the
tuition money sent by the boy's father could be used for both
the new school and the Party dues. Hiss is able, belatedly,
to show that the father himself had paid the tuition directly
to the schools, and that the new school was not less but more
expensive than the preceding one (so that Hiss himself had
to add to the father's payments). Chambers says that Hiss
walks with a slight mince "if you watch him from behind";
Hiss not only denies that quirk but shows that Chambers used
a virtually identical description in a novel he translated
before he had met Hiss a novel about forgery and perjury
used by one man to convict his innocent friend of a crime.
Chambers testifies that Hiss "is deaf in one ear
probably," Hiss suggests, because a newspaper photograph
depicted Hiss cupping one ear during interrogation. Hiss later
has his hearing checked at Columbia Medical Center, where
it is certified as normal.
Almost
equally telling at this point is Hiss's list of facts that
Chambers did not know, facts that Hiss says any intimate friend
in 1937 must have known. In a decade a casual acquaintance
might forget but would an intimate friend forget?
a tall man's stature. Chambers testified that Hiss was five
feet, eight or nine inches tall, whereas Hiss, in 1937 and
1948, was six feet tall. Timothy, Hiss's stepson, was nearly
killed by an automobile in 1937, and then "was bed-ridden
and cast-bound for months in the small house to which we had
moved in July 1936," but Chambers does not remember that
dominant fact of the household during his own professed intimacy
there. Chambers says that Hiss's sister and mother lived at
their home in Baltimore during the alleged friendship. Although
listed in the telephone directory, which Chambers might easily
have consulted twelve years later, Hiss's mother did not live
at her Baltimore home during the alleged friendship, and the
sister, a professor of Physical Education, had already been
living in Austin, Texas for some years. (When the Committee
asked Chambers if he knew the occupation of Hiss's sister,
he twice replied, "I don't think she did anything."
Even after a congressman asked whether Hiss had ever mentioned
that the sister "was interested in athletics," Chambers
could not come up with the right answer.) Chambers can remember
nothing about Hiss's library except that it was "very
nondescript," but he claims to have spent as much as
a week at a time in the household and to have done much reading
there. He does not know that the reason the Hisses suddenly
moved in the spring of 1936 was that the heating system in
their house had collapsed while Hiss was recovering from pneumonia.
Intimate friends, Hiss insists, would have remembered that
because of the illness the Hisses had moved to a hotel for
two weeks while the new house was being renovated.
From
Chambers's errors and ignorance Hiss moves to the Committee's
decided lack of interest in investigating them. Committee
investigators never asked the landlady of the apartment that
Chambers had sublet from Hiss whether she remembered any tenant
whose name had been unknown to her and to her other tenants.
(Chambers contended that Hiss had known him only as "Carl,"
with no last name.) Nor, in considering whether Hiss had paid
one-tenth of his salary as Communist dues, did the Committee
look into Hiss's withdrawals from his bank account (into which
his salary was deposited by the State Department) or the tuition
fees of the two schools about which Chambers was so insistent.
The Committee did not even challenge Chambers's self- contradictory
testimony about the Party dues; he had denied on August 3
that he had collected individual dues from Party members,
but on August 7 he swore that Hiss had "piously"
given the monthly tithe to Chambers himself and that Chambers
himself had collected all the individual members' dues.
By
far the strongest example of the Committee's attitude toward
Chambers's errors is the Ford roadster that came to dominate
the public hearing of August 25, and Hiss saves that troubling
subject for his final illustration. In the first months of
the Case the car was probably the most damaging evidence against
Hiss. Even now it remains the most mysterious of the early
obstacles to Hiss's vindication. At the hearing of August
16, Hiss volunteered the surprising information that in 1935
he had given or sold George Crosley a 1929 Ford roadster,
then worth about $25, as part of a sublet transaction. Chambers
denied that Hiss had given or lent him the Ford. He testified
that in 1936 Hiss had insisted on giving the car "to
some poor [Communist] organizer in the West or somewhere,"
and that a small service station or used car lot owned by
a Communist had served as intermediary. When the official
records revealed that Hiss's apparent signature on the certificate
of transfer had been notarized by a Justice Department attorney
in 1936 and had transferred title to the largest Ford agency
in Washington, the Committee ignored the large inaccuracies
in Chambers's account and concentrated instead on Hiss's errors.
The
records indicated that Hiss's purchase of a new Plymouth (which
would have made the Ford expendable) did not coincide with
the sublease of the apartment, and the transfer of title,
dated a year later than Hiss's unaided memory had acknowledged,
included a resale of the Ford on the same day to a former
Communist named William Rosen. The mystery of that transaction
remains so inconclusive that the Committee eventually abandoned
the issue, but only after great damage had been done to Hiss.
A separate article would be necessary to describe the unresolved
mystery. Rosen, for example, insisted on invoking the Fifth
Amendment when asked about the Ford, even though he was later
able to prove that the signature on the document was not his
and although there was no other evidence that he had ever
owned a Ford. Neither of the notaries involved in the two
sales, moreover, had any recollection or record of the transaction;
and the Justice Department attorney, who never did get to
see the original document but saw only the photocopy that
the Committee showed him, would not positively swear that
he had notarized Hiss's signature or that he would have refused
to notarize it in Hiss's absence. What matters here, however,
for both Hiss's narrative and our analysis, is the Committee's
failure to investigate Chambers's story with the rigor that
it applied to Hiss.
The
Committee never asked why, if Hiss had not given or sold the
car to Chambers, he would have volunteered the false story
on August 16 as soon as he was asked whether George Crosley
had owned a car and before he had any indication that Chambers
had mentioned the Ford. (A guilty, canny man who had conspired
to use a large agency as a cover would presumably have waited
to be asked about his own car, and would then have testified
that he had sold it to that agency, not that he had given
or sold it directly to a member of the Communist underground.)
Nor did the Committee cross-examine Chambers on his false
testimony about the car. (Chambers, after all, had sworn that
Hiss had delivered the car to a small service station or used
car lot owned by a Communist. Neither the Ford agency nor
Rosen could be used to corroborate that story, nor did the
Committee find any evidence that Hiss himself had delivered
the car. The interrogation of Chambers is consistently gentle,
even when he hedges. Sometimes the Committee allows him to
go "off the record," even when testifying secretly
under oath.
Hiss
succeeds in demonstrating, then, that in both the congressional
investigation and the trials "Chambers was not requested
to prove his assertions. I was expected to disprove them."
At the second trial, long after the Committee had ceased trying
to show a connection between Hiss and Rosen or to corroborate
Chambers's version, the prosecutor called Rosen to the stand.
When Rosen predictably invoked the Fifth Amendment again,
the prosecutor treated his silence as the Committee had treated
the absence of other evidence in the matter, as if it were
evidence against Hiss. Having made this point in his book,
Hiss has the satisfaction of reporting that Robert Stripling,
in his own narrative of the Case, abandoned the claim that
Chambers's story about the Ford had been corroborated by the
evidence.
The
lesson for us readers, if we have maintained our hypothetical
conjecture that Hiss was not guilty, must be to distinguish
between mysteries and positively incriminating evidence. Congressmen
reminded Hiss of the rule that courts ought to be skeptical
of further testimony by a witness who has testified inaccurately
about a material matter. Both "Witness" and "In the Court
of Public Opinion" quote Congressman Mundt's declaration about
evaluating the testimony of Chambers and Hiss:
We proceed on the conclusion that if either one
of you is telling the truth on the verifiable data, that
you are telling the truth on all of it. And if either one
of you is concealing the truth from the committee on verifiable
data, it points out that you are concealing from us the
truth on obviously the points that we cannot prove.
The
Committee did persistently act on a modified version of Mundt's
simple axiom. It applied his first sentence to Chambers and
his second to Hiss.
III
With
the evidence about the car we arrive at the chief horror in
Hiss's nightmare. Just as the absence of evidence concerning
the Ford was treated as incriminating evidence, so the logic
of conspiracy led Hiss's accuser and the Committee to treat
positively favorable evidence about Hiss as if that, too,
were irrelevant or incriminating. The Committee, Chambers
and the prosecutor applied conspiratorial logic to the entire
record of Hiss's 15 years in government service. At his first
interrogation, one or two Committee members did ask what position
Hiss had taken on issues affecting the USSR offering
her virtually three votes in the United Nations, for example
and Hiss's answers had led Congressman Mundt, no friend
to Hiss even in that first hearing, to congratulate him for
his opposition to Soviet interests. But as the logic of conspiracy
takes over, Hiss loses the support that his record ought to
give him. At the televised hearing on August 25, he is forbidden
to read a statement concerning his record until after a damaging
and protracted interrogation (chiefly about the Ford), and
when he does ask that his conduct under the supervision of
many statesmen and jurists be studied for evidence of disloyalty
and that those associates be asked about his conduct, he is
rebuked in two ways. Committee members accuse him of trying
to shield himself with eminent names and reputations. (In
"Witness" Chambers calls this tactic "drawing the toga
of his official career about him.") And when Hiss insists
that he means to appeal to his actual conduct, the basis for
the confidence those men have had in him, he is rebuffed with
pronouncements which close the logical circle. Congressman
Mundt concedes that the committee never believed it could
"prove definitely that you were a Communist because,
. . . we have found that those who are guilty, refused to
admit it." Congressman Hebert's argument a little later
was so effective at the time that Richard Nixon gives it a
prominent place in the first chapter of "Six Crises": If you,
Mr. Hiss, cannot tell whether the people about whom we have
asked you are Communist, how can all these eminent men who
trusted you know whether you were a Communist?
Hiss
does not fail to point out, when his narrative reaches these
exchanges, the close resemblance between the congressmen's
logic and that of the prosecutors in 17th-century witchcraft
trials. Irving Younger's article on the Case praises the prosecutor
for urging the jury at the second trial to ignore all character
witnesses because Benedict Arnold and Satan, respectively,
could have received excellent references from George Washington
and God. "There is no answer to this [argument],"
Younger declares. But there is an answer, and Hiss might have
found it, had he known the literature of the witchcraft trials,
in a statement published belatedly by the ministers of Boston
after 20 men and women had been executed in Salem in 1692.
The ministers condemned as "very dangerous and unjustifiable"
the argument that "a less clear evidence ought to pass
in" the obscure crime of witchcraft than in other cases.
God, they declared:
never intended that all persons guilty of Capital
Crimes should be discovered and punished by men in this
Life, though they be never so curious in searching after
Iniquity. It is therefore exceeding necessary that in such
a day as this, men may be informed what is Evidence and
what is not. It concerns men in point of Charity; for though
the most shining Professor [i.e., apparent believer] may
be secretly a most abominable Sinner, yet till he be detected,
our Charity is bound to judge according to what appears:
and notwithstanding that a clear evidence must determine
a case, yet presumptions must be weighed against presumptions,
and Charity is not to be foregone as long as it has the
most preponderating on its side.
The
irony of Hiss's futile appeal to his record reaches its sad
conclusion in his surprisingly gentle treatment of John Foster
Dulles's testimony for the prosecution during the second trial.
Dulles was presumably summoned to counteract the effect of
Supreme Court justices and other character witnesses. Richard
Challener has recently shown that, during the presidential
campaign of 1948 and consistently thereafter, Dulles understated
both his former commitment to Hiss and his own part in recruiting
Hiss as a person "ideally" qualified for the presidency
of the Carnegie Endowment. At the second trial, then, while
some men who had testified truthfully in the first trial about
Hiss's fine record were dissuaded from testifying again, Dulles
now testified falsely as a prosecution witness whose chief
function was to impeach Hiss's credibility! Using Dulles's
recently discovered correspondence in the Princeton University
library, Challener proves that Hiss testified truthfully about
his recruitment by Dulles. If Hiss had had the Dulles letters
as well as one of his own to corroborate his testimony when
he wrote his book, he might have expressed more indignation
toward Dulles.
Like
Hiss's narrative, my discussion has necessarily gone ahead
of the chronological account, following into the public hearing
of August 25 (and beyond) kinds of argument that had been
used by August 16. The extraordinary confrontation of Chambers
in the Commodore Hotel on August 17 can be considered more
briefly here, now that we have examined the character of Hiss's
narrative and the key issues in the first month of the Case.
Having volunteered to answer the Committee's questions and
to confront Chambers publicly, and having been told that the
public confrontation would occur on August 25, Hiss is angry
to discover on the 17th that the meeting has been arranged
deceptively and that it will be held in secret at the Commodore
Hotel. Not until his arrival does he learn that the meeting
he has been requested to attend is a hearing. He is angered
too by newspaper accounts not only of Harry Dexter White's
death but also about Priscilla Hiss, for Congressman Nixon
has promised that she will be interviewed without any publicity.
Now, with Chambers at last present, and with committee members
insisting that Hiss has positively denied knowing him, the
confrontation is even more rancorous than one might expect
it to be. Nixon's account stresses Hiss's evasive and angry
testimony: "From the beginning, Hiss dropped all previous
pretensions of injured innocence. He was on the defensive
edgy, delaying, belligerent, fighting every inch of
the way."
The
reader of Hiss's book can see why Hiss had become more indignant
and more wary, and that his indignation and defensiveness
need not indicate guilt. Hiss's narrative focuses on the Committee's
prejudicial behavior before and during the hearing. In both
the Hiss and Nixon accounts, as in the commentaries that persuaded
me for a time of Hiss's evasiveness, Hiss insists on examining
Chambers's teeth a detail that prompts Congressman
Nixon to ask whether Hiss never saw Crosley with his mouth
shut. As Hiss insists, however, both in his testimony and
in his book, he has made Crosley's teeth a major point of
identification in his previous testimony, and both friendly
and. hostile reports concerning Chambers in the 1930's describe
his poor teeth, which have since been replaced. (As late as
1975, Lionel Trilling, who still believed Hiss was guilty,
remarked on Chambers's extraordinarily bad teeth.) At the
end of the August 17 hearing, Hiss cannot find out whether
the Committee plans to publicize the transcript or whether
he is obliged to maintain silence about the secret hearing.
Only at midnight, after Nixon has told a press conference
that Hiss has retracted his alleged denial of knowing Chambers,
does Hiss learn (from reporters) that he, too, is free to
speak to the press. Nixon, moreover, seems no longer interested
in interviewing Mrs. Hiss, who at the Committee's request
has already come all the way from northern Vermont to New
York on a local train. Nixon alone interviews her for ten
minutes the next day. (In "Six Crises", Nixon regrets his
cursory interrogation of Mrs. Hiss as a missed opportunity,
missed because of the "letdown" that occurs after
one has successfully met a crisis.)
Again
at the televised hearing on August 25, Hiss finds himself
caught in a wrangle over the Committee's insistence that he
has previously denied knowing Chambers and over his testimony
about the Ford. Still unable to see all of Chambers's testimony
or his own records for the Ford and various leases during
the period in question, Hiss finds himself at a great disadvantage,
and in the narrative he admits that his testimony was deliberately
much more guarded than at his first two hearings. Near the
end of this long session, at which Chambers repeats some of
his charges without any hostile questioning from the Committee,
three congressmen sum up the case against Hiss's veracity
and loyalty, with no evidence of any actions directly indicating
Communist allegiance. Only then does Hiss have a chance to
reply to what he has read in the newspapers of Chambers's
secret testimony and at last to read the statement with which
he had hoped to open his testimony. Curiously, although Chambers
printed virtually the entire statement in "Witness", Hiss
does not print here that eloquent version of the premise for
his entire book: the value of his public record in contrast
to Chambers's criminal past and Chambers's admitted and newly
discovered false statements; the implausibility of supposing
that the men with whom Hiss has worked during 15 years in
government service would have failed to notice at least some
sign of his alleged disloyalty.
But
in that statement Hiss also poses a number of questions that
he wants the Committee to ask Chambers, including one about
Chambers's mental health and medical history. Congressman
Nixon immediately puts Hiss on the defensive once again, demanding
that Hiss substantiate his "charge," and Hiss is
caught up in an argument over whether he has indeed made such
a charge.
One
of the most extraordinary qualities in all three of the autobiographical
books about the Case is the certainty with which each of the
authors considers himself to have been on the defensive. Chambers
writes in "Witness" that the hearing of August 25 ruined his
life by turning the power of liberals and Communists publicly
against him, and Nixon focuses on the "smears" against
both Chambers and himself. Although both Chambers and Nixon
provoked much hostile criticism, no reader of the three books
will deny that in this final hearing and thereafter Hiss was
made the defendant in a special way. The hearing ended, indeed,
as Hiss points out, with a declaration by Mundt that Hiss
might "just as well" be the 135th Communist in a
State Department that (Mundt claims) has already harbored
134. Throughout the rest of the narrative the Committee continues
to pursue Hiss both by the release of selected testimony and
through the grand jury system.
Whatever
Chambers's fantasies, he, too, is really on the defensive,
both in the actual world of 1948 and in all three of the books.
With help from the Committee and the FBI, all three books
agree, it is Chambers's self-defense that ruins Hiss. At the
August 25 hearing Hiss challenges him to repeat his allegations
outside congressional hearing rooms. A few days later Chambers
does repeat the central charges on a radio program, and within
a month Hiss sues him for libel. Hiss describes his relief
at having the issue at last in the courts, where the rules
of evidence apply and attorneys respect them. As the attorneys
take depositions, both sides quickly begin to press Chambers
for more evidence, for even Chambers's own counsel sees that
the case against Hiss is extremely weak. President Harry Truman
is reelected in November despite his remark that the Committee's
"spy hearings' are a red herring, and in the same election
two members of the Committee are defeated. The chairman of
the Committee is indicted for accepting "kickbacks."
Cross-examination persuades Chambers that he, too, may be
ruined by the $75,000 libel suit. His knowledge of Hiss looks
less impressive under the criticism of Hiss's attorneys than
it seemed when the question was whether Chambers had known
Hiss at all.
In
November, therefore, Chambers brings forth what he later called
"a life preserver," a set of documents which he
says he had given to a nephew upon breaking with the Communist
Party ten or eleven years earlier. Hiss's attorneys immediately
give these documents to the Justice Department, but Chambers,
like the Committee, suspects the Truman Justice Department
of partiality to Hiss, and so he retains some additional documents
for the revelation of early December: the notorious pumpkin
papers, microfilm which Chambers conceals in a hollowed pumpkin
on his farm and which Richard Nixon, summoned dramatically
from a Caribbean cruise early in December, comes home to receive,
sequester and manage during a campaign to get Hiss
and not Chambers indicted for perjury. That campaign
is astonishingly brief. Here again Hiss finds himself nearly
overwhelmed by unknown and extremely complex evidence before
he can plan a defense, and here again the Committee's methods
include brilliant publicity, threats against the Justice Department
and an extraordinarily protective attitude toward Chambers.
Only twelve days after the revelation of Chambers's pumpkin,
the federal grand jury votes to indict Hiss on two counts
of perjury. Hiss calls this chapter of his book "Indictment
by Committee," citing not only the prejudicial reports
of August and press releases thereafter, but also the aggressive
attempts of congressmen to intimidate the Justice Department
and influence the grand jury. Congressman Nixon goes beyond
insisting that the grand jury let him testify about the microfilm
that he has pointedly refused to turn over to the Justice
Department. He also demands publicly that Chambers not be
indicted. He concedes that Chambers may be guilty of "technical
violations of law, particularly technical perjury." Then
he declares that if the United States attorneys seek Chambers's
indictment they will both ruin the case against Hiss and give
"the greatest encouragement to the Communist conspiracy
in this country."
The
"technical perjury" that Nixon concedes in the speech
reverses Chambers's testimony on a subject so important that
even the Committee cannot ignore the contradiction. Chambers
has insisted that Hiss and the others committed no espionage.
The Committee, nonetheless, has continued to tell witnesses
that their testimony is needed for the inquiry into "espionage
activities" during 1936. Hiss begins his chapter on "Indictment
by Committee" with a reminder of that language and of
Nixon's private exhortation of Chambers late in August. Hiss
reminds us that "Witness" says Chambers told Nixon he "could
not go through another public hearing," whereupon Nixon
insisted:
"It is for your own sake [Chambers, Hiss says,
'purports to quote' Nixon here] that the Committee is holding
a public hearing. The Department of Justice is all set to
move in on you in order to save Hiss. They are planning to
indict you at once. The only way to head them off is to let
the public judge for itself which one of you is telling the
truth.
"If there is anything else that you have
not told us about Hiss, now is the time to tell us. Think
hard about it. If there is anything else, for your own sake,
tell us now."
Hiss
thus establishes what he calls "the classic elements
of motivation for false witness" and he builds his narrative
in this chapter to the point at which Chambers at last feels
sufficiently endangered to "assume this further extension
of the role which the Committee so evidently pressed upon
him." Even during the radio broadcast on which the libel
suit was based, Hiss shows, Chambers denies that the alleged
group planned espionage; its purpose was merely to influence
"government policy by getting Communists in key places."
Under pressure from the reporters Chambers at last concedes
that he has no knowledge of any pro-Communist influence attempted
or achieved by Hiss in the State Department.
Although
we need not consider the new evidence in detail, we should
remember that the relevant material Chambers produced in November
and December consists of three kinds:(1) four small slips
of note paper in Hiss's own handwriting; (2) 65 typewritten
pages which Hiss says he has "consistently denounced
as ingenious forgeries"; and (3) microfilm copies of
eight State Department documents. Hiss reviews here the conflicting
stories that Chambers has told about those documents at various
times since 1939. Neither the journalist nor the State Department
officer to whom Chambers first told his story in 1939 had
been shown the documents then. The journalist had not been
told at all about the typewritten documents, and the State
Department official testified in 1948 that in 1939 Chambers
had explicitly denied knowledge of espionage and had pointedly
refrained from claiming that any member of the alleged "study
group" had belonged to the Communist Party. Hiss is also
able to report here the later testimony of Malcolm Cowley,
who swore during Hiss's trial that in 1940 Chambers had accused
not Hiss but Assistant Secretary of State Francis B. Sayre
of serving as "the head of a Communist apparatus in the
State Department." Cowley testifies, moreover, that Hiss
was not among the others named in Chambers's fantastic accusation,
an accusation so extraordinary that Cowley immediately wrote
an account of it 1940. Perhaps, Hiss suggests, Sayre was originally
the victim against whom Chambers planned to use the materials
he had secreted, for Sayre was Hiss's superior and all the
microfilmed State Department documents had some actual apparent
connection, with Mr. Sayre's office. It is hard (but necessary)
to remember in 1976 that Chambers did not single out Alger
Hiss for unique significance in his accusations until after
Hiss had publicly challenged his veracity.
Even
in "Witness", Hiss reports, Chambers contends that he had
completely forgotten about the typed documents and about everything
but "two or three scraps of Alger Hiss's handwriting
and perhaps something of Harry White's." Yet Isaac Don
Levine, the journalist to whom Chambers had first brought
his story in 1939, testified in 1948 that Chambers had emphatically
mentioned microfilm to him. Since Chambers insisted throughout
Hiss's trials that Hiss had brought him official documents
every week or ten days, Hiss finds it inonceivable that Chambers
would not have mentioned both the weekly schedule and those
documents to Levine in 1939unless the "forgotten"
typewritten documents or the story of their regular delivery
had not been "concocted" until the fall of 1948.
In
Chambers's own book, moreover, Hiss finds evidence of the
mental instability that Congressman Nixon scorned as an outrageous
imputation when Hiss proposed to ask questions about Chambers's
medical history. Before delivering the "forgotten"
documents to his attorneys in mid-November, Chambers considers
shooting himself, and later he buys some cyanide. Then, when
the microfilm appears temporarily to be of a kind that was
not manufactured until years after 1938, he is so distressed
by Nixon's anger that he feels "whipped to torment"
by an "organic revulsion," a "self-revulsion,"
and he does use cyanide. He survives, he says in "Witness",
only because he misread the directions on the container. (When
"Six Crises" reports this incident, Nixon does not consider
its relationship to mental stability but only the close call,
his own error in underestimating the effect of his rebuke
upon Chambers and of course the dramatic though momentary
threat to the Case and the Committee.)
Before reporting the indictment, Hiss quotes speeches made
by congressmen and by Isaac Don Levine at a public hearing
on December 8. It is here that Committee members most vociferously
oppose the prospective indictment of Chambers, and on December
14, the day before the grand jury's term expires, Congressman
Mundt declares that "the crime involved here is definitely
a capital crime. It is either treason in wartime or treason
in peacetime." The Committee then issues a long statement
calling for indictment of "all guilty parties" except
Chambers. Impaneled 18 months earlier to investigate espionage,
the grand jury has indicted nobody for that crime and has
been criticized for its weak record. Now, Hiss points out,
it is persuaded not to indict the one admitted spy who has
appeared before it. It only charges Hiss with two counts of
perjury: first when he denied giving Chambers any State Department
documents, and then when he denied having seen Chambers after
Jan. 1, 1937.
In
the trials themselves it is chiefly the typewriter and the
documents that account for Hiss's jeopardy and his eventual
conviction. As his narrative proceeds, Hiss does report a
surprising number of new moves by the Committee, new contradictions
in Chambers's testimony and that of Mrs. Chambers and new
witnesses to controvert Chambers. The Committee publishes
several State Department documents in a new espionage report,
and it declares explicitly before the first trial what it
has implied for some time: that the burden of proof has been
shifted from the prosecution to Hiss. It reports erroneously
that only Hiss and three other people could have had access
to the documents in question and (also erroneously) that those
documents enabled the Russians and perhaps the Nazis
to break the U.S. State Department's code. These allegations
gain force, Hiss notes, from the coincidental criminal trials
in the same building of Judith Coplon, convicted of espionage,
and several leaders of the Communist Party, convicted of advocating
violent revolution. To refute the Chambers story, Hiss's defense
finds Claudia Catlett, a former servant, who testifies that
when the FBI brought her together with Chambers for a private
conference she told him he had never slept overnight in the
Hiss house and that he had never come to dinner, either. Where
would you have slept, she asks Chambers, for the house had
only two bedrooms and two beds, one for the parents and one
for Timothy. Hiss's defense also proves (as Chambers himself
later conceded in "Witness") that on the date Chambers specified,
Chambers and the Hisses could not possibly have stayed in
the lodgings Chambers swore they had occupied during an alleged
trip to Peterborough, N.H. But that evidence and further refutations
of that kind need not concern us any longer, so long as we
notice that Richard Nixon's denunciation of the judge who
presided at the first trial preceded the assignment of a different
judge, who ruled more favorably for the prosecution, to try
the second. What remains to be discussed is the most powerful
evidence against Hiss.
Although
I have come to believe in Hiss's innocence, I cannot presume
to refute all the documentary evidence. I wish only to show
that Hiss's book consistently throws enough doubt on the strongest
evidence to overturn the case against him by returning the
burden of proof to his accusers. If Hiss had been able to
prove that the typewritten documents were forged, he would
have done so. He believes that it was chiefly the denial of
a new trial that prevented that achievement after his attorney
had found new evidence. Hiss does show that those documents
could have been forged and that Chambers and a confessed collaborator
could have had access without Hiss's aid to the handwritten
notes in Hiss's office and the microfilmed documents. Hiss
also shows that Chambers had to change his story in December
1948 in order to fit the new evidence he then revealed.
The
only evidence that comes close to establishing a positive
connection between Hiss and the delivery of the documents
is the 65 typewritten pages. These, an FBI expert testifies,
were typed on the same machine as the "Hiss standards,"
letters which Mrs. Hiss had typed on the Woodstock machine
that her father, Thomas Fansler, had given her after it had
been used for some years in his insurance office. The mystery
of that machine has never been solved. As I have already remarked,
Hiss's submission of the typewriter to the court argues in
his favor, for he would hardly have submitted it if he had
believed that it would incriminate him. Although Nixon and
others have said that the FBI found the typewriter, Hiss reports
that the defense was led to the typewriter by the son of Claudia
Catlett, the servant to whom the Hisses had apparently given
the machine. During both trials, Hiss points out, the defense
accepted the widely held but inaccurate belief that a typewriter
is as unique as a fingerprint, that it cannot be counterfeited.
Richard Nixon continued to assert that disproven belief as
fact in "Six Crises", five years after Hiss published "In
the Court of Public Opinion", but Hiss's attorneys found an
expert who succeeded in fabricating a typewriter that produced
documents indistinguishable from those under dispute. Had
the defense called independent experts during the trial instead
of relying on the FBI expert who said that the two sets of
documents had been typed on the same machine, some doubt might
have been established then.
Hiss's
appeal to the court of public opinion, like his attorney's
appeal for a new trial, casts doubt, too, on the machine that
was introduced at the trials. After Hiss was already in jail,
his attorney found strong reason to suspect that the Woodstock
typewriter rediscovered in April 1949 was not the one that
Mrs. Hiss's father had bought in 1929 and had later given
to Mrs. Hiss. Chester Lane, the attorney, was able to show
that the Hiss typewriter had been used in Fansler's Philadelphia
office on July 8, 1929, whereas the serial number on the Woodstock
introduced as evidence could not have been dated (in Woodstock,
Illinois) before July 3, 1929 and was probably not produced
until August. Chambers, moreover, had testified that Priscilla
Hiss had typed all the 65 pages, and neither the defense nor
the prosecution had offered expert testimony on the idiosyncrasies
of the typist or typists. Now Lane had expert testimony that
the 65 pages had been typed by at least two different people
and that Priscilla Hiss (whose letters were available for
comparison) had not typed any of them. Lane also had elicited
expert judgments that the typeface on Mr. Fansler's letters
written in 1929 belonged to a model of Woodstock that had
not been manufactured after the first few months of that year,
and that the typefaces on the Woodstock introduced at the
trial had been deliberately altered to produce certain peculiarities
(presumably those found in the 65 pages and the letters by
Mrs. Hiss).
Any
of these discoveries alone might raise some question about
the justice of Hiss's conviction. As Herbert Packer conceded
even while he rejected Hiss's defense, the combination of
these and other discoveries seems too strange to be explained
by coincidence. The climax of Hiss's long narrative and argument
comes in his lucid concluding chapter, "The New Evidence
of Fraud and Forgery." There emerges the brilliant arguments,
and much of the clear prose, of Chester Lane with some of
the strangest inconsistencies and coincidences in the prosecution's
behavior during and even after the trials.
Most
notorious of the inconsistencies is the conflict between the
dates on the State Department documents and the date that
Chambers had invariably used throughout a decade of narrating
his escape from the Communist underground. During the trials
the defense denounced the blatant convenience of his revising
the old date (1937) in order to be able to claim that he had
still been a spy when the documents had been written and allegedly
copied, from January through April 1, 1938. Hiss found evidence
during the trial to suggest strongly, though he could not
prove, that the Fansler typewriter had been given away before
January 1938 and before the end of March and that therefore
Mrs. Hiss could not have typed all the documents, as Chambers
swore she had done. (Hiss himself did not know how to type.)
Only after Hiss was in prison did the defense find a letter
and other proof that Chambers had begun translating a book
for Oxford University Press before April 1 and that he must
have been already hiding from Communist agents by April 4,
the first date on which he could possibly have received the
last typewritten documents. A Vice-President of Oxford University
Press then swore that "at the very end of 1937 or the
beginning of 1938" Chambers had come to New York to discuss
the translation and had "expressed violently anticommunist
views and explained to me that he was in fear of his life
as he was being hunted by the G.P.U. He gave me the impression
of being hysterical and suffering from persecution mania.
Hiss's
attorneys, moreover, had been repeatedly thwarted by questionable
FBI and Justice Department behavior during their search for
new evidence after the trial. The most sensational coincidences
obstructed Lane's effort to establish the date on which the
Fansler typewriter and (if there were indeed two machines)
Woodstock #N230099 had been manufactured and sold. Lane and
Hiss tell a true detective story. Officials of the Woodstock
company and its successor give helpful information to the
defense, but then refuse to sign affidavits. Even the midwestern
attorney who has interviewed them refuses to authenticate
in an affidavit of his own the draft affidavit that he has
prepared for those reluctant witnesses to signbecause
he says he fears retribution if he should sign an affidavit
related to the Hiss case. Other experts offer opinions but
retract them after a visit from FBI agents. A branch manager
of the Woodstock agency in Philadelphia says that when the
FBI interviewed him in 1948 he told them that the serial number
they were looking for would have been manufactured in 1927.
Now the same man tells the defense investigators that since
the FBI took away all his records for that period (promising
to return them) he cannot even approximate the date on which
#N230099 would have been sold. FBI agents now come to see
this manager again to ask what the defense agents were looking
for. Lane summarizes his difficulties in two fine paragraphs
which Hiss quotes in full. Only if a new trial were granted,
Lane concludes, could the defense acquire the subpoena power
necessary to give "the jury in evidentiary form much
of the information which has necessarily been reflected in
this affidavit as hearsay however reliable."
IV
Twenty-four
years after the court refused to grant a new trial or to compel
reluctant witnesses to testify "in the interest of justice,"
at least two efforts to open up government files on the Hiss
case are going on. In the summer of 1975 Hiss himself and
a writer named William Reuben won permission to look at the
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