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  1. James J. McNamara (April 9, 1927 – November 27, 2022) was an American politician. He served as a Democratic member for the Chittenden 7-5 district of the Vermont House of Representatives. Life and career. McNamara was born in Colchester, Vermont. He attended Holy Cross College and Cornell Law School.

  2. James B. McNamara (AKA J.B. McNamara or JB) (1882 – March 8, 1941) was a 20th-century American labor unionist, best known for his involvement in the McNamara Case as the bomber of the Los Angeles Times building.

    • Background
    • Leading Up to The Explosion
    • Bombing
    • Tracking Down The Bombers
    • Organized Labor Unites in Defense of The Mcnamaras
    • Clarence Darrow For The Defense
    • Big Trial in Indianapolis
    • Final Cases: Caplan and Schmidt
    • Aftermath
    • See Also

    The International Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers (IW) was formed in 1896. As the work was seasonal and most iron workers were unskilled, the union remained weak and much of the industry remained unorganized until 1902. That year, the IW won a strike against the American Bridge Company, a subsidiary of the newly formed U.S. Steel ...

    On June 3, 1910, two days after the start of the strike, Eugene Clancy, the top IW official on the West Coast, wrote to J.J.: "Now, Joe, what I want here is Hockin," referring to Herbert Hockin, the union official in charge of the dynamite bombings. However, Hockin had been caught taking money earmarked for bombing jobs, and McNamara no longer trus...

    On the evening of 30 September 1910, J.B. left a suitcase full of dynamite in the narrow alley between the Los Angeles Times Building and the Times annex, known as "Ink Alley", which contained the paper's printing press. The suitcase was left near barrels of flammable printer's ink. The dynamite had a detonator connected to a mechanical windup cloc...

    The Times and law enforcement authorities announced that the perpetrators would be caught immediately, but weeks passed and no arrests were made. The City of Los Angeles posted a $25,000 rewardfor the capture of the bombers, and the M&M raised another $50,000. On October 2, 1910, Mayor George Alexander hired private detective William J. Burns to ca...

    The national labor movement was outraged by the way the McNamaras had been treated, and labor leaders were quick to defend the brothers' innocence. They contended that Burns had engaged in kidnapping, misrepresentation of his status as a law enforcement officer, and unlawful imprisonment in his handling of McManigal and J. B. McNamara. The local ci...

    Iron Workers president Frank Ryan asked Clarence Darrow to defend the McNamaras. Darrow had become a hero in labor circles for his successful defense of labor leader Bill Haywood in 1906. However, Darrow was in ill health, and although organized labor was convinced of the McNamaras' innocence, Darrow realized that the evidence against them was over...

    As part of the McNamara brothers' plea bargain, Los Angeles prosecutors had agreed not to pursue other labor union officials for the L.A. bombings. But the federal government was not a party to the agreement, and in 1912 brought charges against 54 union men, mostly national and local officials of the Iron Workers Union, for involvement in a five-ye...

    After the Indianapolis trials, the only cases remaining were of David Caplan and Matthew Schmidt, two anarchists who had helped Jim McNamara buy the dynamite used in the Los Angeles bombings. Both were indicted in 1911, but they became fugitives and evaded the police. On July 4, 1914, a dynamite bomb exploded in a New York tenement apartment occupi...

    The labor movement in Los Angeles collapsed, and union membership in the city remained minuscule almost a century later.Employers refused to honor additional terms of the plea agreement, which required the convening of a meeting of labor union and employers and an end to the open shop campaign. Instead, employers redoubled their efforts to break th...

  3. James and John McNamara were Irish-American trade unionists who performed the Los Angeles Times bombing on October 1, 1910. Their bomb started a fire which killed 21 newspaper employees and injured a hundred more, Biography. When the case came to trial in 1911, the unions hired Clarence Darrow to defend the brothers.

  4. Director/Board Member at Waterman Logistics, Inc., Discover James J. McNamara's known position history, network and 28 relationships. Find out about his known public assets.

  5. JP McNamara, D Chandler, M Seyfried, S Achet. Hydrological Processes 19 (20), 4023-4038. , 2005. 354. 2005. An approach to understanding hydrologic connectivity on the hillslope and the implications for nutrient transport. M Stieglitz, J Shaman, J McNamara, V Engel, J Shanley, GW Kling.

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  7. James J. McNamara. Mr. McNamara entered on duty with the FBI on August 31, 1987. While assigned to the FBI’s Honolulu Field Division as a Special Agent his investigative areas included violent crime, white collar crime, counter intelligence and public corruption.