The Huey Long Murder Case by Hermann B. Deutsch

(7 User reviews)   497
By Caleb Mazur Posted on Mar 22, 2026
In Category - Ocean Studies
Deutsch, Hermann B. (Hermann Bacher), 1889-1970 Deutsch, Hermann B. (Hermann Bacher), 1889-1970
English
Hey, have you ever heard about the wildest political murder in American history? I just finished 'The Huey Long Murder Case' and it reads like a true crime thriller that just happens to be real. Forget what you think you know about Louisiana's 'Kingfish.' This book isn't about his life – it's about his death and the absolute circus that followed. On September 8, 1935, a young doctor named Carl Weiss walked into the Louisiana State Capitol and shot Senator Huey Long. Long's bodyguards fired back, killing Weiss instantly. Case closed, right? That's what the official story said. But Hermann Deutsch, a reporter who was there, starts asking questions. Why did a quiet family man suddenly turn assassin? Was he really acting alone, or was he a patsy in a bigger plot? The official investigation was rushed, evidence was ignored, and key witnesses gave shaky testimony. Deutsch digs through the mess and presents a chilling alternative: maybe Weiss didn't fire first. Maybe the whole thing was a tragic accident triggered by overzealous guards. It's a book that takes a single, violent moment and unpacks it into a gripping story about power, paranoia, and how the truth can get buried by a convenient story. If you like mysteries where the puzzle pieces never quite fit, you need to read this.
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Let's set the scene: It's 1935, and Huey Long, the fiery, populist senator and former governor of Louisiana, is one of the most powerful and controversial men in America. He's building a national movement and has enemies everywhere. On a Sunday night in Baton Rouge, he's in a hallway of the ornate state capitol he built. A young doctor, Carl Austin Weiss, approaches him. There's a brief scuffle, shots ring out, and both men are dead. The official story, told immediately and upheld for decades, is simple: Weiss, driven by a political grudge, assassinated Long.

The Story

Hermann Deutsch doesn't just retell the shooting. He reconstructs the frantic minutes before and after. He puts you in that marble corridor. He introduces you to Weiss—not as a fanatic, but as a respected surgeon and devoted family man with no history of violence. Then, Deutsch walks you through the aftermath: the chaotic investigation, the quick dismissal of Weiss as a lone madman, and the many odd details that didn't add up. Why was Weiss's gun found with only one bullet fired, when Long was hit multiple times from behind? Why did the autopsy findings seem to contradict the guards' story? Deutsch meticulously lays out the evidence for his central, shocking theory: that Weiss may have only intended to confront Long, and that the fatal shots came from Long's own panicked security detail.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me wasn't just the 'whodunit' angle. It's how Deutsch, writing with the urgency of a front-page reporter, shows how a narrative solidifies before the facts are cold. The need for a simple story—a martyr and a villain—was stronger than the messy truth. You see the machinery of power spin up to control the message. Reading it today, it feels incredibly relevant. It's a masterclass in skepticism. You learn to look at the official version of any big event and ask, 'What are we missing? Who benefits from this story?' Long himself becomes a ghostly presence, a man whose reign created so much fear and loyalty that it distorted reality even after his death.

Final Verdict

This book is perfect for true crime fans who want substance with their suspense, and for history buffs tired of dry textbooks. It's for anyone who loves a good mystery where the puzzle is human nature itself—our capacity for confusion, cover-up, and the desperate need for a neat ending. Don't expect a biography of Huey Long; this is the gripping, unsettling autopsy of his death and the birth of a legend. It's a short, powerful read that will make you look twice at any story that seems too clean to be true.



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Deborah Wright
1 year ago

Good quality content.

James Clark
10 months ago

Five stars!

5
5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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