The Press: Stop the Presses

The Press: Stop the Presses
As a sportswriter who never covered anything more exciting than
home-town boxing bouts for Texas' San Antonio News, young Dan Cook
nursed a Technicolored dream: to stop the presses for a Page One beat.
One night last week—as he later told the story—an anonymous phone call
promised the big chance. The caller tipped him to “the biggest
robbery pulled since the Brink's job”—the theft of $200,000 from a
safe in Houston, some 200 miles to the east. The voice even gave Cook
the address and automobile license number of the robber.Cook picked up a friend, Jimmy Parks, 33, a fight promoter, and one of
the county's numerous “special,” i.e., honorary, deputy
sheriffs with the privilege of flashing a badge and toting a pistol.
Then the pair took off for Houston, stopping occasionally on the way to
fortify themselves with beer. “I got to thinking,” Cook later
recalled, “if I could go over to Houston and clean up the case and
bring the man and the money back to San Antonio and dump it all in the
lap of the police chief, I would be famous.” Finally, in a
beer-blurred haze of headlines and bylines, Cook rapped on the door at
the Houston address.”Who is it?” asked Edwin Roy Hamlett, 34, an auto salesman.
“We're police officers,” shouted Deputy Parks, and the door
opened. “All right,” rasped Parks, “where's it
hidden?” Hamlett protested that he did not know what they were
talking about. Reporter Cook, a high-school halfback who packs 210 lbs.
into his 6 ft. 1 in. frame, took turns with Parks trying to cuff a confession about the
robbery out of Hamlett.The Loot. All the money Hamlett could produce was $885. They took it and
demanded to be led to his boss. After another cuffing, Hamlett supplied
the address of his employer, Used-Car Dealer Jimmy Hicks. Cook and
Parks put Hamlett into his own Cadillac and drove to Hicks's home. On
the way they pocketed another $1,000 they found in the glove
compartment.They burst in on Hicks, beat him until he surrendered $1,200. Then they
taped up their victims' hands and mouths and announced they would take
them into the country and “make you tell us” where the bulk
of the loot was hidden. As they were leaving the house, the captors
decided to untape the men lest they seem conspicuous. At that, Hicks
and Hamlett dashed in opposite directions yelling for the police. The
two sleuths fled in alarm in Hamlett's car, quickly ditched it after a
narrow brush with a police car.Headlines. Next morning Newsman Cook decided that he had better let the
police in on his big story. Recalling that he had gone to high school
with a brother of Houston Police Chief Jack Heard, he telephoned the
chief and got an appointment. Cook found the police harder to persuade
than a city editor. Though he told his story once—and backed it up
with a brown envelope containing the money he had seized—they made
him tell it over and over again. Then they booked him and Parks for
armed robbery and jailed them.

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