Lynn A. Davis
Quick Facts
Biography
Lynn Arthur Davis (July 7, 1933—September 15, 2011) was an American attorney and politician from Little Rock, Arkansas. He lectured and penned nonfiction crime thrillers based on his past experiences in law enforcement. He was a former agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, short-term director of the Arkansas State Police, and U.S. marshal for the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas. The conservative columnist Christopher Ruddy once described Davis as "Arkansas' version of Eliot Ness," a reference to the Prohibition agent who fought organized crime in Chicago during the 1930s and was portrayed in an ABC television series The Untouchables by the late Robert Stack.
Early life and education
Lynn Davis was born on July 7, 1933, in Texarkana, Arkansas, to the late Clarence and Estelle (Ginnings) Davis.
After graduating from Arkansas High School, Texarkana, in 1951, he attended Henderson State Teachers College, graduating in 1955. He then went to the University of Arkansas at Little Rock School of Law, earning his degree in 1976.
Career
Davis served as a Second Lieutenant in the First Infantry Division "The Big Red One," and rose to the rank of Major in the Arkansas Army National Guard.
Arkansas state police
In 1961, Davis was selected to join the FBI and served as a Special Agent until selected by Governor Winthrop Rockefeller to serve as Arkansas State Police Director in 1967. Davis was assigned to destroy illegal casino gambling in Hot Springs, sometimes called the "City of Vapors" because of its public mineral baths and also the name of a popular nightclub. Davis' account of those events highlights his book They Said It Couldn't Be Done.
In earlier years, Hot Springs had fallen under the influence of such mobsters as Al Capone, Frank Costello, and Charles "Lucky" Luciano, who was arrested in New York City along with the Hot Springs chief of detectives on charges of ninety counts of prostitution brought by District Attorney and later Governor Thomas E. Dewey. The Hot Springs story was rated No. 1 by Associated Press for the year 1967. Davis' book describes the police raids that Davis conducted and the seizure of slot machines and other gambling paraphernalia. The raids were not conducted only in Hot Springs but in some eight other communities to show a random search pattern. The story is also depicted in the Gangster Museum, located on Central Avenue in Hot Springs.
Early in 1967, Davis was working in the FBI office in Los Angeles when he requested a transfer to Little Rock because of his mother's declining health. He had been with the bureau for nearly seven years at the time and was just shy of his 34th birthday. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover implied that he would reassign Davis to Arkansas. Meanwhile, Davis was approached by a spokesman for Winthrop Rockefeller about the state police position. He readily accepted but held the job for only 128 days and was never paid for his services.
At the end of his police tenure, Davis spent a few days in jail in Little Rock for refusing to divulge the identity of an informant. Davis' short tenure was a result of his having lived outside Arkansas prior to his appointment. The Arkansas Supreme Court declared him ineligible for the position because he did not meet the ten-year residency requirement. Arkansas' Democratic lawmakers refused to change the residency rule as a way of defying the Republican governor.
Political matters
In 1968, Davis, was the Republican nominee for Arkansas Secretary of State, but he was defeated by the incumbent Democrat Kelly Bryant of Hope, the seat of Hempstead County in southwestern Arkansas and the birthplace of U.S. President Bill Clinton. Davis polled 265,510 votes (45.3 percent) to Bryant's 320,203 (54.7 percent). Davis' tabulation was the best any Republican ever procured against the popular Bryant. Rockefeller received 322,782 votes (52.4 percent) against the Democrat Marion H. Crank (1915–1994) of Foreman in Little River County, a state representative and a long-time supporter of former Governor Orval Faubus. Rockefeller hence ran some 57,000 votes ahead of Davis, who led in thirteen of the state's seventy-five counties, mostly in the more Republican northwestern quadrant but also in usually Democratic Pulaski (Little Rock) and Jefferson (Pine Bluff) counties. Davis polled at least 40 percent in Garland County, which encompasses Hot Springs, where he had recently moved against illegal gambling.
In December 1969, U.S. President Richard Nixon named Davis U.S. Marshal for the Eastern District based in Little Rock. Davis held the position until December 1974, when President Gerald Ford, moved to replace him with Len E. Blaylock of Perry County, the unsuccessful Republican gubernatorial nominee in 1972. Ford replaced Davis in an attempt to please veteran Democratic U.S. Senator John Little McClellan, who regarded Davis as too partisan for the position. Davis technically resigned after McClellan announced that he would not support him for renomination as marshal.
In 1993, Davis represented Roger Perry and Larry Patterson, two of the former Arkansas state troopers who claimed that they and other officers had helped President Bill Clinton meet women, booked hotel rooms for liaisons, and brought a woman into the Arkansas Governor's Mansion after Clinton was elected president. Perry and Patterson said that they were interested in writing a book about their time with the Clintons and had retained lawyer Cliff Jackson, a long-time Clinton nemesis. Davis also represented the troopers. He was quoted by the Washington Post: "The issue was not his [Clinton] sexual proclivities. It was the abuse of power – the abuse of office that concerned them [troopers] and concerned me."
Davis also gave lectures on crime. He was the founding director of the Arkansas Crime Commission, since been renamed the Arkansas Crime Information Center. The organization provides information technology services to law enforcement and criminal justice agencies within Arkansas.
Personal life
Davis was married to Elsie Sue Davis (born 1931). They had three children: Anthony George "Tony" Davis, Kristy Davis, and Clayton Taylor Davis.
Death
Davis died on September 15, 2011, in Little Rock at the age of seventy-eight. A memorial service was held on September 19, 2011, at First Baptist Church Chapel, 62 Pleasant Valley Drive, Little Rock, Arkansas.