asked him what the trouble was. He said he wanted me to take him away from the crowd, to take him to the station-house."
"Was there any more?"
"Yes. When we were in Fifth avenue some person unknown asked me if I knew the prisoner or what he had done. I said I did not. I asked the defendant if he knew what he had done and he said 'Yes.' I asked him if he knew who it was he had killed. He said he would say nothing until he reached the station-house. He asked me for a light, offered me a cigar, and then wanted to take a cab to the station, but I would not agree."
"Were his actions rational or irrational?"
"Rational."
Four other policemen testified Thaw appeared rational after the murder.
Jerome here made an attempt to prove Evelyn Thaw a liar. He was defeated, however, for his star witness, Rudolph Eckmyer, a photographer, was not allowed to tell the date he made the famous Madison Square Garden photographs of Evelyn.
"If you will let me fix the date of these pictures," he said heatedly, "I will show that on the night following the day they were taken, when Mrs. Thaw's experience at White's studio took place, Stanford White was not in the Twenty-fourth street house at all."