Documents Of FBI Agent Who Chased John Dillinger Found In Ohio

Captured desperado John Dillinger, wearing vest, strikes a jaunty pose with prosecutor Robert Estill in what would become an infamous image at the Crown Point, Ind., jailhouse, Feb. 1934. (AP Photo)

AKRON, Ohio (AP) — Record-keepers examining long-forgotten documents in a northeast Ohio courthouse have found some unremarkable depositions with a noteworthy signature: Melvin Purvis Jr., the FBI man famous for tracking down John Dillinger and other gangsters in the 1930s.

Workers found the documents in the Summit County courthouse attic, the Akron Beacon Journal (http://bit.ly/1qCxGPt) reports. The depositions signed in 1927 involved a lawsuit over potatoes between an Akron company and one in South Carolina, where Purvis practiced law before joining the FBI.

FBI historian John Fox said it’s an interesting discovery because the agency typically doesn’t have many records on agents from that era prior to their FBI work.

“He’s certainly one of those interesting characters in our past,” Fox said.

The signatures were found by two county records retention workers, and they might have gone unnoticed if not for some motherly advice.

Worker Karen Kearns said her mother taught her never to get rid of stuff without going through it, and that’s why she urged colleague Teresa Corall to check out what was in the old boxes.

Corall said she recognized Purvis’ name from the 1973 movie “Dillinger.”

“I’ve never found anybody famous like this,” she said.

Purvis died in 1960, and some documents with his signature have been put up for sale for thousands of dollars. The ones found in Summit County, however, seem likely to stay there.

Corall hopes to frame them among other interesting finds displayed at the records retention center in the basement of a county building in Cuyahoga Falls.

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Information from: Akron Beacon Journal, http://www.ohio.com

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