Jack McNally, NYPD detective turned defense sleuth, dies at 89
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Jack McNally, NYPD detective turned defense sleuth, dies at 89
New York police detective Jack McNally, left, handcuffed to Allan Kuhn, a suspect in the theft of priceless jewels from the Museum of Natural History, at John F. Kennedy airport in 1964. McNally, who as a police detective in 1964 made the first arrest in the most audacious jewel theft in New York City history, and who then became a private investigator for famous defense lawyers like F. Lee Bailey and worked on behalf of clients like O.J. Simpson, died on May 28. He was 89. (Patrick Burns/The New York Times)

by Daniel E. Slotnik



NEW YORK, NY.- Jack McNally, who as a police detective in 1964 made the first arrest in the most audacious jewel theft in New York City history, and who then became a private investigator for famous defense lawyers such as F. Lee Bailey and worked on behalf of clients such as O.J. Simpson, died May 28. He was 89.

His death was announced on the website of the Bedell-Pizzo Funeral Home on New York’s Staten Island, which handled the funeral arrangements. The announcement did not specify the cause or say where he died.

As a detective, McNally had the boldness and street smarts of a Raymond Chandler protagonist, although his approach to witnesses and suspects was less confrontational than that of a typical hard-boiled gumshoe.

“You try to win them over and convince them that you are in the mode of fair play,” he told USA Today in 1994. “We’re just there seeking the truth.”

McNally’s first high-profile investigation followed the brazen theft of two dozen priceless jewels from the American Museum of Natural History in New York.

On the night of Oct. 19, 1964, burglars broke into the museum’s Hall of Gems and stole the Star of India, a 563-carat sapphire bigger than a golf ball, as well as the DeLong Star Ruby, the Eagle Diamond and about 20 more gemstones. The museum valued the jewels at $410,000, the equivalent of more than $4 million today.

McNally was on duty at the 20th Precinct on the Upper West Side when a call about the burglary came in at around 10 a.m. The tabloids called it the heist of the century, although it took McNally and his colleagues only about two days to solve.

A tip came in from a staffer at the nearby Cambridge House Hotel, who told police about three hard-partying men from Miami who had been living extravagantly in a penthouse suite for several weeks.

The three men were Jack Murphy, Allan Kuhn and Roger Clark, beach boys turned criminals who had been robbing bar patrons and hotel rooms in the city but envisioned a bigger caper.

After casing the museum, Murphy, a celebrated surfer known by the nickname Murph the Surf, and Kuhn scaled a spiked metal fence, ascended the museum wall and entered through an unlocked window. They used tape and glass cutters to get to the gems. Then they escaped.

“They were very, very athletic, these guys, and they were not rookies at this,” McNally told The New York Times in 2019. “They had done plenty of this already down in Florida.”

The museum’s lax security made the theft easy, Murphy said in 2019. Only one aging guard monitored the Hall of Gems on his rounds, and the alarm system on many display cases no longer functioned.

Early the next morning, Murphy and Kuhn boarded a flight for Miami, along with a young woman who carried the jewels.

Not long after they fled, McNally and a colleague obtained a search warrant. In the penthouse, they found sneakers embedded with glass, a museum floor plan and burglary tools. McNally decided to spend the night, and the next morning, Clark walked in with a friend.

“They came into the apartment, and they caught me in the bathroom washing up,” McNally told Vanity Fair in 2014.

McNally arrested Clark, and Kuhn and Murphy were soon detained in Florida. But the jewels were nowhere to be found, there were no witnesses and the suspects denied everything.




They were released on bail and went back to Miami. They returned to New York for court hearings and mocked authorities in the press, which in some cases portrayed them as folk heroes. (The heist had such a hold on the public imagination that it was dramatized in a 1975 film, “Murph the Surf,” starring Don Stroud as Murphy.)

Authorities eventually recovered about half of the jewels, including the Star of India and the DeLong Star Ruby. Murphy, Kuhn and Clark served roughly two years each on Rikers Island.

McNally was promoted to second-grade detective. He retired from the New York Police Department as a first-grade detective in 1971, with 22 commendations, according to a profile of him that ran in Sunshine, the Sunday magazine for The South Florida Sun-Sentinel, in 1995.

After retiring, McNally began sleuthing on behalf of defendants as a private investigator. In 1972, he started working with Bailey, the lawyer known for vigorously representing defendants in notorious criminal trials.

McNally was involved in marquee trials of the 1970s and ’80s, including those of Patty Hearst, who was imprisoned for crimes she committed after being kidnapped by a radical group called the Symbionese Liberation Army; Claus von Bülow, who was convicted and later acquitted of trying to murder his wife; and Bernhard Goetz, who shot four young Black men on the subway who he said had tried to rob him.

Prosecutors tried to link McNally to the Mafia several times, including during the trials of members of the Gambino crime family. He denied the accusations.

In the 1990s, McNally played a part in the blockbuster trial of Simpson for the murder of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman — a trial that captivated the nation and became a cultural touchstone.

As part of Simpson’s fractious legal team, Bailey brought in McNally to help find the true killers. The trial eventually claimed their relationship after another lawyer on Simpson’s team blamed McNally for unflattering leaks to the press, and he was fired.

Simpson was acquitted in the criminal trial in 1995 but was found responsible for the deaths of Brown Simpson and Goldman in a civil trial in 1997 and ordered to pay millions of dollars in damages to their families.

John Edward McNally was born in Brooklyn on Oct. 17, 1933, to John and Anna McNally.

He joined the Navy at 17 and served for four years in the Korean War. After returning from the service, he married Elaine Hansen, with whom he had four children. He joined the New York Police Department in 1955.

He is survived by three daughters, Deborah McNally, Lynn Cook and Eileen Pellettiere; six grandchildren; and two great-grandsons. His son, John, died in a car accident in 1981, and his wife died in the early 1990s.

Persuading someone to talk sometimes meant making sacrifices, McNally said in 1995: “You’ve got to give a little to get a little.”

A Manhattan prosecutor persuaded Kuhn to help authorities find the missing American Museum of Natural History jewels in 1965 by offering him a reduced sentence. But the prosecutor and McNally, who also came to Florida to retrieve the jewels, had to give a little more.

Kuhn, a flashy person who favored Cadillacs, was unhappy with the drab rental car that awaited them when they landed in Florida.

“I had to get him a red convertible” before he would search for the jewels, McNally said in 2014.

It paid off. Kuhn helped them recover many of the missing gems from a Miami bus station locker.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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