




Through a combination of trickery and intimidation, McParland got Hogan to admit that his name was really Harry Orchard and that he had been hired by the Western Federation of Miners. Orchard implicated Bill Hayward, Charles Moyer, the president of the Western Federation of Miners, and others in the plot to kill Steunenberg. However, these men were in Colorado, where local authorities were friendly to the unions and would not extradite them based on the confession of a murderer.
Government officials in Idaho, including the current governor and chief justice, sanctioned a plan to kidnap Hayward, Moyer, and Pettibone so that they could be put on trial in Caldwell. Despite the blatant illegality of their operation, the union leaders lost their appeals in federal court and were forced to stay in Idaho to be charged with conspiracy to commit murder. However, the union had one more ace up its sleeve.

Hayward, who was almost certainly guilty, later fled the country to Russia. He was buried at the Kremlin in 1928.
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- American Revolution
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- Civil War
- Union troops sack Columbia, South Carolina, 1865
- Cold War
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- Crime
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- Disaster
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- General Interest
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- Hollywood
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- Old West
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- Presidential
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- Sports
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- Vietnam War
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- World War I
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- World War II
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