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Friday, May 19, 2023

"CHARGED WITH UNDUE FAMILIARITY WITH WIVES"

VIOLIN TEACHER INCURS DISPLEASURE OF KKK

Washington, D.C. (JFK+50) On May 19, 1923, Richard Paul Otello, a violin teacher in Hyattsville, Maryland arrived here in the Nation's Capital just ahead of a visit from members of the Ku Klux Klan*.

The Washington Times reports Mr. Otello came to Washington seeking the protection of Federal authorities.  He received a letter written on official KKK stationery May 10th indicating "he had incurred the displeasure of" the Invisible Empire.  Since the envelope bore a Washington, D.C. postmark, Mr. Otello hoped the Feds would investigate.

The letter charged Otello with "undue familiarity with the wives of residents of Hyattsville."

*Ku Klux Klan, a.k.a. KKK, Invisible Empire was founded in 1864 in Pulaski, TN, a white supremacist terrorist organization targeting African Americans.  The "1st Klan" ended in 1872 but a "2nd Klan" emerged in 1915 sporting as many as 6 million members.

SOURCE

"Teacher Is Warned By Klan," The Washington Times, May 19, 1923, Chronicling America, Library of Congress, www.loc.gov/

 
 
Ku Klux Number
Judge Magazine
August 16 1924