Lola Cannady (also spelled Cannidy), a 19-year-old white woman from a farming family, was missing on the evening of Thursday, October 18, 1934, after going to a water pump to water the family's hogs. Friends and neighbors helped the Cannady family in their search for Lola in the fields behind the family's land. At 6:30 A.M. the next day, they found her body poorly hidden in the woods, under the cover of two logs and a pine tree branch. Cannady had been bludgeoned to death with a hammer that had been taken from the Cannady field. She may have been raped. County Sheriff Flake Chambliss became focused on two suspects: Claude Neal, a 23-year-old black farmworker who lived about a quarter mile away, and Calvin Cross, who was white. Sheriff Chambliss had received reports that Neal had been in the field near the same water pump that Lola had gone to and that he was gone for about two hours before going home. Neal and Cannady had known each other since childhood; there were some suggestions that they were lovers. Neal was arrested about two hours after the discovery of Cannady's body. Because the evidence gathered against Neal was circumstantial at best, it was not enough to prove that he was guilty of the crime. The evidence included bloody clothes that were found at the home he shared with his mother, as well as a bloody piece of fabric which Sheriff Chambliss claimed fit a tear in Neal's shirt. Neal reportedly had cuts on his hands and was inconsistent in his descriptions as to where they had come from; he gave three different explanations for the cuts, with one being that he had gotten them while fixing a fence, one being that he had cut his hands in a fight, and one being that he had cut them jumping a fence. In addition, Neal was missing a ring on his pocket watch. A common, standard watch ring had been found near the spot where Cannady had been murdered. No tests were done on the murder weapon to determine if Neal's fingerprints were on it. The sheriff moved Neal's mother Mrs. Annie Smith and aunt Sallie Smith to an undisclosed jail to prevent them from being harmed by a lynch mob. The prosecution told the coroner's jury that the women said they had washed Neal's bloody clothes.
Howard Kester, a white preacher and activist, was investigating the case on behalf of the
NAACP. He learned other accounts of Cannady's murder from members of the black community. One was that she had been murdered by a white man, who later asked Neal's mother and aunt to wash his clothes and possibly offered them payment. Another was that a white man from
Malone, in Jackson County, had already confessed to killing Cannady, and that he had given Neal money in exchange for trading clothes with him afterward. Neither of these rumors was ever proven, nor was Kester able to discover more helpful evidence. Kester said that perhaps Neal and Cannady had had a secret, consensual love affair. He suggested that maybe Neal had killed her out of anger if their relationship ended. He had no evidence for this, and such an affair was denied by the Cannady family. == Jailing of Claude Neal ==