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Murder
On
the night of January 10, 1914 two men entered the
small grocery store of John Morrison near downtown
Salt Lake City shortly before 10:00p.m. Morrison
and his son, Arling, were sweeping up and preparing
to close the family-run store for the night. At
the back of the store was a door. On the other side
of the door Morrison's younger son, Merlin, waited
for the light's to be turned out so the family could
go home.
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Re-enactment
of the Morrison shooting
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The
two men swept into the store wearing hats and with
handkerchiefs pulled up to cover their faces. One
spotted John Morrison behind the counter, shouted
something, and began firing a handgun at the storeowner.
Almost immediately, Arling reached into a produce
bin, produced the family's revolver and fired at
the intruders. In response the masked gunman leveled
his weapon at Arling Morrison and fired at least
two shots. The invading gunmen then fled the store.
Young Merlin Morrison was the first on the scene.
His brother was already dead from multiple gunshot
wounds. His father groaned nearby. John Morrison
would cling to life for a few minutes, but would
die before medical attention could be arranged.
Police arriving at the scene were told by Merlin
that he had been able to glimpse portions of the
shootout from the back of the store. He provided
vague descriptions of the two men, reported that
Arling had shot back, and stated that the lead gunman
has clearly shouted "We've got you now!" before
firing at John Morrison. Police checked the cash
register and found the day's receipts in place in
the till.
The responding police knew John Morrison. He had
been a member of the police force for a brief period
before turning to the more bucolic life of grocery
store owner. Morrison had complained on several
occasions that his time on the force had made him
too many enemies that carried a grudge, and that
he feared he would be the victim of a payback when
criminals were released from jail. Additionally,
police knew that Morrison had already had at least
one shootout with armed bandits at his store, seriously
wounding one in the process. It was Morrision's
old service revolver that his son, Arling, had pulled
from the produce bin when the shooting started.
The police quickly reached some preliminary conclusions,
and passed them on to reporters who had gathered
at the scene from Salt Lake City's three major daily
newspapers. First, they announced that the attack
was, indeed, a payback by someone who knew and disliked
Morrison. They pointed to the full cash register
as proof that it was not a robbery attempt. They
also cited Merlin Morrison's version of the gunman's
words as proof that the gunmen knew Morrison before
the attack. The second conclusion reached by police
was that Arling Morrison's single gunshot had found
its mark. Although there was no bullet retrieved
or blood in the store, apart from the Morrison's,
police said eyewitnesses were convinced that one
of the gunmen leaving the store was acting injured.
Police also reported that drops of blood were found
in the snow approximately one block from the Morrison
store.
The next morning, Salt Lake City's newspapers announced
the search for two gunmen who had killed as father
and son in a wanton "act of revenge."
Read
on for more
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