Carl T. Blakeney, cashier of the Bank of Midland when it was burned several weeks ago, was arrested yesterday on a warrant issued by W.A. Scott, State deputy insurance commissioner. The warrant charges are arson.
Mr. Blakeney was arrested at his home at 527 Sunnyside Avenue, Charlotte, by detectives who were sent there by Deputy Sheriff Honeycutt of Cabarrus County, and Commissioner Scott, who went to Charlotte during the afternoon and turned the warrant over to the Charlotte officers for service.
Later in the afternoon the officers returned to concord with Mr. Blakeney, who was taken before ‘Squire G.M. Lore, who set his bond at $10,000. The bond was immediately raised by W.S. and P.P. Blakeney, uncle and father, respectively, of the defendant. The bondsmen reside in Monroe, it is said, the former being president of the Bank of Union.
Mr. Blakeney, it was stated, did not discuss the case at all, except to say that he had worked hard for the bank and did not deserve to have a crime laid against him. Before leaving Charlotte he communicated with relatives and his uncle and father arrived from Monroe shortly after he arrived from Charlotte.
Mr. Blakeney told the officers, they said, that he had not been working in Charlotte, where he has been living since the latter part of May. He expected to get lined up shortly, he said, and start to work there.
After the bond was signed, ‘Squire Lore set June 22 as the date for the preliminary hearing, to be held in Concord. Mr. Blakeney has retained Frank Armfield of the local bar and the State will be assisted by H.S. Williams and Harsell & Hartsell, also of the local bar.
The Bank of Midland was burned early on the morning of April 8th while Mr. Blakeney was at work in it. The building was completely destroyed along with some of the records and books on which the defendant has been quoted as saying he was working. Bank examiners took the cash and books from the safe several hours after the fire had been extinguished and later the American Trust Company of Charlotte was named receiver for the bank at the request of bank examiners.
Mr. Blakeney has been quoted as saying that he was struck on the head by some unknown party or parties who set fire to the bank, after robbing or trying to rob it. He was found near the front corner of the bank by persons who first reached the fire and was under the care of a physician for several days.
Mr. Blakeney went to the bank about 4:30 o’clock on the morning of the fire, it was said, following a custom he established soon after becoming cashier of the bank. Often when business was heavy, he is said to have stated, he went to the bank at an early hour to get in a full day. He had been in the bank for half an hour or more when the fire was discovered.
Bank examiners, so far as is known, have never made a public report of the check-up they made of the money taken from the safe. Whether robbers took any on the morning of the fire has not been stated, since the examiners have not made a report.
It is said that a number of prominent men of the county have been summoned as witnesses by the State.
From the front page of The Concord Daily Tribune, Thursday, June 17, 1926
newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn92073201/1926-06-17/ed-1/seq-1/