Pinkerton’s Great Detective: The
Amazing Life and Times of James McParland. By Beau Riffenburgh. Viking.
$32.95.
Honor and Betrayal: The Untold
Story of the Navy SEALs Who Captured the “Butcher of Fallujah”—and the Shameful
Ordeal They Later Endured. By Patrick Robinson. Da Capo. $26.99.
Not all wars are declared as
such; not all wars are between nations. In the 19th and early 20th
centuries, the United States, after the Civil War, was often at war with itself
in nonmilitary ways, as the Industrial Revolution fully took hold, the nation
became less agricultural in focus, cities expanded dramatically, immigrant
issues proliferated, and robber barons ruled the manufacturing sector with a
ruthlessness matched only by that of those determined – for reasons of their
own – to oppose them. This is a period largely forgotten and little understood
today: who remembers William Jennings Bryan’s once-famous “cross of gold”
speech and the reasons behind it, or the Panic of 1893 (one of those reasons) and
the near-destruction of the silver industry? Beau Riffenburgh brings that time
to vivid life – and skillfully limns some of the major figures within it – in Pinkerton’s Great Detective, nominally
the story of James McParland (1843 or 1844-1919) but also a story of a
rough-and-tumble, deadly time. It was an era that comes across as far more
exciting in Riffenburgh’s book than it likely was to the people who had to live
through and endure it. McParland was a colorful and highly controversial figure,
often thought to be in league with mine owners as they fought back against
unionization attempts that, in the 19th century, were fraught with
vicious coercion up to and including murder. McParland is perhaps best known
today for his successful infiltration of the Molly Maguires, a miners’ group
whose violent tactics were fed in part by the fact that they were Irish
Catholics at a time when there was substantial prejudice against them. There is
little doubt that the Molly Maguires committed murder and other violent acts,
but there is, to this day, doubt about whether McParland and the Pinkerton
agency caught the culprits, or caught all
the culprits, or caught a mixture of criminals and innocents. And so it was to
be through much of McParland’s career – a career that Riffenburgh traces
largely through recently released Pinkerton archives that, not surprisingly,
cast both the agency and its famed detective in a highly favorable light.
Riffenburgh does make some attempts at balance, but he mostly uses his research
to re-create in meticulous detail a series of investigations and court cases
that many readers will find tiresome and difficult to follow, so filled are
they with names, places, dates and acronyms. One random example: “During
cross-examination by Kaercher, Butler suddenly admitted that leaders of the AOH
had proposed many crimes, including when Dennis ‘Bucky’ Donnelly had ordered
him and a man named Pat Shaw to murder Sanger. He also told of Hurley’s plans
to murder Gomer James, Hurley’s subsequent claims, and Kehoe’s decision for him
and McParlan to investigate.”
Notice that “McParlan”
spelling. That is the name with which McParland was born, and the two spellings
coexist uneasily during this book. Riffenburgh eventually explains that the
detective’s relatives in Ireland added the final “d” in the mid-1870s and “by
1879, the Pinkerton’s operative had added a final ‘d’ to his name as well.”
This is straightforward, but the coexistence of the names within the narrative
makes things unnecessarily confusing – not only in the text but also in the
captions of the photos, where one photo caption features “McParlan testifying”
and another, two pages later, refers to someone involved in “one of McParland’s
most high-profile cases.” The photos themselves are most welcome, lending a
sense of the real world to stories that could easily spin out of control:
McParland was a legend in his own time, partly a legend of his own making, and
separating fact from fiction in his life and cases is by no means easy. It is
hard to know how successfully Riffenburgh has done this. His reliance on the
Pinkerton documents skews his interpretations in a particular direction, but
there is no reason to think there is anything wrong with that. Still,
McParland’s detractors, and there were many of them, get somewhat short shrift
here. So do some famous disagreements associated with him: he was included in
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes tale, The Valley of Fear, as the character Birdy Edwards, but the
positive portrayal of McParland did not sit at all well with Pinkerton and
caused a rift between him and Doyle – for complex reasons that are barely
touched upon in Riffenburgh’s book. Still, despite its flaws, Pinkerton’s Great Detective brings to
life a fascinating man, a fascinating time, and a series of genuinely
interesting cases: McParland worked for, among others, railroad tycoon Jay
Gould; he helped catch the man who committed the largest theft of gold bullion
in U.S. history; he probed the assassination of an Idaho governor who was
killed by an explosive device attached to the gate of his picket fence; and on
and on. Unfortunately, what is wholly missing from Riffenburgh’s book – a lack
he himself admits – is any significant authorial detective work about the
detective’s private life; there is “no proof of what McParland was like as a
husband, a father, a brother, or a son,” and no solid information about his
emotional life or his reaction to tragedies such as the deaths of two young daughters.
Riffenburgh’s bland concluding statement that McParland will “forever remain an
enigma” is disappointing: a thorough biography needs to get behind the public
face of its subject, especially one whose career is as filled with controversy
and mythmaking as McParland’s was. In this respect, Riffenburgh falls short;
but in many others, he provides considerable information and a thorough
recounting of the events in the professional life of a genuinely intriguing
historical figure.
The history is far more
recent, the undeclared war far fresher, and the men at the center of the
narrative far different in Patrick Robinson’s Honor and Betrayal, one in a lengthy series of books about the
worldwide fight against terrorism and the excesses that accompany the
successes. This is the story of Matthew McCabe, Jonathan Keefe and Sam
Gonzales, three Navy SEALs who were part of a team that stormed an al Qaeda
desert stronghold and captured the terrorist known as the “Butcher of Fallujah”
for arranging the 2004 murder and mutilation of four American contractors. Told
largely from the viewpoint of McCabe and Keefe, who have left the service and
can therefore speak freely, the book details the SEALs’ own difficulties to a
greater extent than it discusses the battle against terrorist murderers and the
SEALs’ place within it. Acting in accordance with terrorist battle plans, Ahmad
Hashim Abd al-Isawi claimed shortly after his capture that he had been beaten
by the three SEALs, who were summarily placed under house arrest and pressured
to sign confessions. They refused, demanding courts-martial, and thus setting
the stage for a legal drama in which – according to Robinson – high military
commanders were determined to get convictions and the SEALs were equally
determined to prove their innocence. Robinson likes to write, or rather
overwrite, in a slam-bang action-movie style, perhaps with an eye toward an
eventual film: “Matt and his men may have been well under the radar, but they
sure as hell were not above suspicion, not to some desert nomad being scared
half to death by six turbo-shaft engines screaming above his head in the middle
of the night, shattering the quiet of these biblical lands.” And there is no
doubt at all about Robinson’s viewpoint on the situation: the book starts with
“open letters” from McCabe and Keefe to Admiral Sean Pybus, commander of the
U.S. Navy Special Warfare Command, with comments about, among other things, “a
proud US Navy SEAL, branded a bully, idler and a liar, on the word of a mass
murderer and terrorist.” In case the letters do not make it clear enough that
Robinson’s purpose is to exonerate the SEALs fully and completely, the author
offers such chapter titles as “We Want This Maniac Alive,” “A Presumption of
Guilt,” and “Scapegoats of Empire.” By the book’s epilogue, Robinson is writing
of McCabe and Keefe after their trials, “a flame deep within them had
flickered. It had not died; after all, they were both supremely well trained
and dedicated special operators. But it would never burn so brightly again.” As
an apologia for McCabe and Keefe, and by extension for Gonzales, Honor and Betrayal is effective: it
reads like a skilled defense attorney’s brief (a very extended one) to a higher
court. But as a book, it is less so, precisely because it is so one-sided.
There is really little doubt that McCabe and Keefe were the good guys and
al-Isawi a vicious murderer. But the factors leading military higher-ups to
prosecute (Robinson would say persecute) the SEALs, even in light of massive
public condemnation of the courts-martial and despite a congressional uproar,
are much less clear. Robinson’s eventual comment that “once the commanders had
crossed that line, had determined to establish ‘prisoner abuse,’ there was no
way back,” is at best facile and incomplete. McCabe and Keefe get a rousing,
self-guided defense in Honor and
Betrayal, but they would have been better served with a more-nuanced book,
even if it turned into one that showed them in a less-favorable light than
Robinson’s does.
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