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Carl Weiss

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Carl Weiss
Dr. Carl Weiss
Born
Carl Austin Weiss

(1906-12-06)December 6, 1906
DiedSeptember 8, 1935(1935-09-08) (aged 28)
Resting placeExhumed from Roselawn Cemetery in Baton Rouge; remains never returned
Alma materCatholic High School

Interned at Bellevue Hospital in New York City

Louisiana State University
OccupationPhysician
SpouseYvonne Louise Pavy Weiss (married 1933-1935, his death)
ChildrenCarl Austin Weiss, Jr.
Parent(s)Carl Adam and Viola Maine Weiss
RelativesBenjamin Pavy (father-in-law)
Felix Octave Pavy (wife's uncle)

Carl Austin Weiss, Sr. (December 6, 1906 – September 8, 1935), was an American physician from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, who assassinated U.S. Senator Huey Pierce Long, Jr., at the Louisiana State Capitol on September 8, 1935.

Baton Rouge doctor

Weiss was born in Baton Rouge to Carl Adam Weiss, M.D., and the former Viola Maine. Weiss's father was a prominent eye specialist who had once treated Senator Long.[1] Weiss was educated in local schools and graduated as the valedictorian of St. Vincent's Academy.[citation needed] He then obtained his bachelor's degree in 1925 from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. He did postgraduate work in Vienna, Austria, and was thereafter awarded internships in Vienna and at Bellevue Hospital in New York City. In 1932, he returned to Baton Rouge to enter private practice with his father. He was president of the Louisiana Medical Society in 1933 and a member of the Kiwanis International (Conrad 1988, 2:831).[clarification needed]

The Pavy-Opelousas connection

In 1933, Weiss married Yvonne Louise Pavy of Opelousas, the seat of St. Landry Parish. The couple had one son, Carl Austin Weiss, Jr., who was born in 1934, shortly before the elder Weiss' death. Pavy was the daughter of Judge Benjamin Henry Pavy (1874–1943) and Ida Veazie (died 1941). The Pavy family was part of an anti-Long political faction. Judge Pavy's brother Felix Octave Pavy (1879-1962), a physician in Leonville and Opelousas, had run for lieutenant governor in 1928 on an intraparty ticket, and had been defeated[2] by Paul N. Cyr, a Jeanerette dentist who was endorsed by Long.

Similarly, Judge Pavy, Weiss' father-in-law, was the Sixteenth Judicial District Court state judge from St. Landry and Evangeline parishes. He did not seek reelection in 1936, after Long had the legislature gerrymander the seat to include a majority of pro-Long voters within a revised district.(Conrad 1988, 2:635).

Murder of Huey Long

On September 8, 1935, Weiss confronted and shot Huey Long in the Capitol building in Baton Rouge. Weiss was cornered and killed by Long's bodyguards, having been shot sixty-two times.

Weiss was interred at Roselawn Cemetery in Baton Rouge. As measured by the number of mourners, Weiss's funeral is believed to have been the largest ever held for an accused political assassin in the United States.[3]

Family denials

At the time, Weiss's wife and their families did not accept his guilt, especially since Weiss' parents indicated that Weiss had seemed quite happy earlier on the day that Long was killed.[4] In fact, most of the people close to the family, and politics of the time doubted the official version of the shooting.

Weiss's son, Carl Weiss, Jr., an infant at the time of his father's death, has since vigorously disputed the assertion. In a 1993 interview on the NBC program Unsolved Mysteries,[5] he proffered the assertion that Long was accidentally shot by one of his own bodyguards. Donald Pavy, a medical doctor, and relative of Judge Pavy, conducted a scientific study of the case, and wrote a book explaining the facts surrounding the evidence. In conclusion of the facts revealed during that investigation Donald Pavy wrote a book, titled Accident and Deception : The Huey Long Shooting, which concluded that Dr. Carl Weiss did not shoot Huey Long. A Louisiana State University Professor T. Harry Williams, in the Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of Long, Williams wrote:

no one had taken it very seriously, for unless all the witnesses to the event were lying or mistaken, only four shots had been fired while Huey was still in the corridor, the two from Weiss's pistol that struck Huey and Roden's wristwatch respectively and the two from the revolvers of Roden and Coleman that dropped Weiss. By the time the other guards had got their guns out and started to fire Huey had run from the scene.[6]

Portrayal in literature

The character of Adam Stanton in Robert Penn Warren's fictitious All the King's Men is partially based on Weiss.

References

  1. ^ http://ajlambert.com/history/hst_hc30.pdf
  2. ^ "Felix Octave Pavy". New Orleans Times-Picayune. May 14, 1962. Retrieved March 7, 2015. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=dDOW75aJMR8C&lpg=PP1&pg=PA35#v=onepage&q&f=false
  4. ^ T. Harry Williams, Huey Long (1969), p. 868
  5. ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0737614/plotsummary www.imdb.com
  6. ^ T. Harry Williams, Huey Long (1969), p. 870
  • Conrad, Glenn R. 1988. A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography. Lafayette: Louisiana Historical Association.
  • Richard D. White, Jr., Kingfish (New York: Random House), pp. 258–259.
  • Douglas H. Ubelaker, 1997. Taphonomic Applications in Forensic Anthropology. In: Haglund, W.D. & Sorg, M.H. (eds): Forensic Taphonomy: The Postmortem Fate of Human Remains. CRC Press, pp.: 77-90; Boca Raton.
  • Williams, T.H., 1969, Huey Long, New York: Alfred A. Knopf Inc.
  • Gremillion, E.A., 2011 Did Carl Weiss shoot Huey Long