District Attorney Buron Fitts with wife, Mrs. Marion Fitts, and great-niece (whom they later adopted as a daughter), Mary Lou Spear, at a polling station. Mr. & Mrs. Fitts drop their ballots into the "General Tickets" ballot box. One woman sits with records book, while another woman and man stand watching.
Almost identical image 21198/zz0002pjxt has typed note on negative which states "I PLEADE NOT GUILTY." ..."Left to right; District Attorney Buron Fitts; front row standing: Dep. Dist. Atty. Clifford Thoms; Norbert Savay, chief defense counsel; Northcott, and A.H. DeTremaudan, defense attorney."
From left to right, Roland Swaffield, Buron Fitts, Joseph Scott, Mrs. Berthal Gregory (sometimes spelled "Berthel" in the Los Angeles Times), Jerry Giesler, and unknown, stand in crowded courtroom during Fitts Grand Jury trial for perjury.
Tanner sits in a chair between Fitts and Bodkin. The attorneys lean in towards Tanner, who seems to be in mid-conversation sitting with his hands folded in his lap.
District Attorney Buron Fitts and his great-niece, whom he later adopted as his daughter, Mary Lou Spear, at a polling station. Fitts is filling out his ballot.
Buron Fitts, Joe Houtenbrink, and Charles Hope, all in casual clothing, standing in office, Houtenbrink with finger raised, Hope with cigarette, with desk and law books in background
Los Angeles County Supervisor Jack H. Bean and Deputy District attorney Buron Fitts shake hands at the dedication of Patriotic Hall in Los Angeles, with John T. Curtin between them. Photo (cropped) appears with the article, "Dedicate New Patriotic Hall: County's Memorial Building Officially Opened Veterans of Many Wars at Stirring Exercises Pictures of Two Officers On Committee Unveiled Dedicate New Patriotic Hall," Los Angeles Times, 22 Feb. 1926: A1.
From left: William H. Carter, Judge Arthur Keetch, and Buron Fitts in the office of judge Keetch. Judge Keetch swore in Carter as foreman of the 1926 Los Angeles County Grand Jury on March 9. Reported in "Court Swears in Inquisitors: INQUISITORS ARE SWORN IN," Los Angeles Times, 10 Mar. 1926: A1.