Former Ku Klux Klan official, Clifton E. Snelson, at a trial in which the court was attempting to preemptively disrupt the reformation of the Klan and ultimately outlawed it in California. Snelson testified, along with other former officials, that he had had no involvement with the Klan since the war.
Former Ku Klux Klan official, Theodore S. Moody, at a trial in which the court was attempting to preemptively disrupt the reformation of the Klan and ultimately outlawed it in California. Moody testified, along with other former officials, that he had had no involvement with the Klan since the war.
Former Ku Klux Klan Kleagle, Ray J. Schneider (left), and Attorney General Robert W. Kenny holding Klan robes which were found in the Walker Auditorium Building at a trial in which the court was attempting to preemptively disrupt the reformation of the Klan and ultimately outlawed it in California. Schneider testified, along with other former officials, that he had had no involvement with the Klan since the war.
Former Ku Klux Klan Kleagle, Ray J. Schneider, in Klan robes at a trial in which the court was attempting to preemptively disrupt the reformation of the Klan and ultimately outlawed it in California. Schneider testified, along with other former officials, that he had had no involvement with the Klan since the war.
Photographed left to right are Walter Sullivan, District Attorney investigator; Herbert J. Mulvey, in costume; and State Attorney General Robert Walker Kenny.
Ray J. Schneider, former Kleagle of the Los Angeles Ku Klux Klan, at a trial in which the court was attempting to preemptively disrupt the reformation of the Klan and ultimately outlawed it in California. Schneider testified, along with other former officials, that he had had no involvement with the Klan since the war.