An estimated 15,000 people shuffled past the body of the dead bank robber before the corpse could be taken to the McCready Funeral Home. On Tuesday morning the body was carried to a hearse that had arrived the previous day from Mooresville bringing Dillinger's father and half brother. Chicago police gave the hearse an escort to the Indiana border. At the Harvey Funeral Home in Mooresville, Audrey Dillinger Hancock was not convinced the body was that of her infamous brother. After allegedly reviewing a scar on the back of the corpse's thigh, Audrey conceded, "It's all right. That's Johnnie." On Tuesday night the body was taken to the Hancock's home in Maywood, Indiana. The casket was carried into the living room. Crowds filled the neighborhood the following day and Audrey agreed to open her home and let the public view the body for about an hour. The local police convinced the Dillinger family to hold the funeral that day, Wednesday, July 25, instead of Thursday as planned, in order to alleviate the crowds that had gathered in the besieged neighborhood. John Dillinger was laid to rest in Crown Hill Cemetery just outside Indianapolis. The cemetery was also the final resting-place for President Benjamin Harrison. A severe thunderstorm poured down on the mourners that afternoon. Two ministers conducted a brief service before the coffin was lowered into the grave. When the mourners left, a police guard stayed behind to prevent ghouls from unearthing the body. Days later the grave was reopened and an elaborate protection of concrete mixed with scrap iron and chicken wire was placed at staggered levels above the coffin. What had happened to Sage and Hamilton after the shooting? One report said Anna and Polly headed north on Lincoln. At Altgeld Street, Hamilton caught the elevated train to Wilson Avenue and she proceeded to the restaurant she worked at. Once there, she told a friend she would be out sick the following day. Another version has agents leading them down the alley, where Dillinger lay dead. The alley ran behind Sage's apartment. Sage went home and changed out of the orange skirt that had turned scarlet under the bright lights of the theatre's marquee, thus providing her with the infamous nickname, the "Woman in Red," a name she would come to despise. Surprisingly Sage returned to the Biograph to witness the morbid chaos taking place there as spectators continued to stream into the area. Sage returned home again and, with the help of a girlfriend, removed Dillinger's arsenal, taking it in a taxicab to Lake Michigan and disposing of it. The police had already identified Polly Hamilton, but were unable to locate her. Sage had still not been identified. She was still the mysterious "woman in red." The FBI was withholding information about her because she was considered a government informant. Officers from the Sheffield Avenue station caught up with Sage on the night of July 24 and took her and her son Steve into custody for questioning. Sage's statements to the police were a complete pack of lies. She denied that Dillinger had roomed at her apartment; she denied that she knew Martin Zarkovich; she denied that she assisted in the capture for consideration in her deportation order; and she claimed that she did not know the man she was with was Dillinger until the moment he was shot. As for Hamilton, Sage told the police she had gone home to Fargo, North Dakota. When she hadn't turned up there the police speculated that she had committed suicide. Sage's interrogation was cut short when Sam Cowley rushed to the station with other agents and instructed her not to answer any more questions. Soon afterward, both Sage and Hamilton were taken to Detroit to maintain their safety and silence. From there Sage was put on a bus to California. While out there she was paid a visit by Sam Cowley who handed over her portion of the reward money, $5,000. Sage returned to Chicago after the deaths of Homer Van Meter on August 23 by St. Paul police, and "Baby Face" Nelson by the FBI on November 27. On September 29, 1935 Sage told reporters that Cowley and Purvis had promised to stop the deportation proceedings, but the government was not keeping its part of the bargain. Cowley by this time was dead, killed in the shoot out with Nelson, and Purvis had resigned from the FBI months earlier, some allege because of the government's refusal to help Sage. On October 1, Sage petitioned Indiana Governor Paul V. McNutt for a pardon. The governor had Captain Matt Leach question Sage about her role in bringing down Dillinger. Girardin reported the following conversation: "Has Mrs. Sage revealed any information that might be of value to the state of Indiana in the Dillinger matter?" McNutt inquired. "She has not." Leach replied. "Whenever I asked her any pertinent questions she merely squirmed around in her chair and refused to answer." Sage's case was heard in Chicago on October 16 where the court ruled against her. On January 22, 1936 the United States Court of Appeals agreed with the lower court decision. In late April 1936 Anna Sage was sent home to Rumania. When Sage died from a liver ailment on April 25, 1947 the Chicago Daily Tribune reported that she had led the life of a well-to-do citizen in Rumania. In discussing a Rumania newspaper report of her death the Tribune stated: "Mrs. Cumpanas maintained to the end of her life that United States federal authorities had 'cheated' her out of the $70,000 reward for which, she contended, she had agreed to 'put the finger' on Dillinger, whom she described as a former business associate." If the "former business associate" part is true it reveals that Sage and Dillinger knew each other well before the Biograph affair, which Jay Robert Nash maintains. However, everyone was at a loss as to the $70,000 that is mentioned.  Evelyn 'Billie' Frenchette (CORBIS)
Polly Hamilton returned to Chicago and worked as a waitress under several aliases. She married again, this time to a salesman, and lived on Chicago's near north side until her death from cancer on February 19, 1969. She outlived Dillinger's previous girlfriend by one month. Evelyn "Billie" Frechette completed her sentence and for a while traveled with a crime-does-not-pay carnival show. Frechette died on January 13, 1969. |