55 years and still unsolved: Washington's Great Petition Robbery
In the lower level of the Legislative Building 55 years ago this week, a theft was discovered that made front-page newspaper headlines, resulted in no arrests, and shocked political leaders.
The Great Petition Robbery, a heist of thousands of signature sheets bearing petition signatures for an anti-gambling ballot initiative, didn't stop the initiative but did hasten the end of the long political career of Secretary of State Vic Meyers, a bandleader and former five-term lieutenant governor.
The story unfolded over a quiet Capitol weekend in June 1963.
Three months earlier, the Legislature had passed a bill to legalize various forms of games — bingo, card games, pinball, and others — under local licensing. Gov. Albert D. Rossellini vetoed part of it, then let the rest become law without his signature. In two separate veto messages (see page 354), Rossellini emphasized the measure "does not legalize gambling;" the Associated Press differed, labeling the measure "a new tolerance gambling law."
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