(WATCH THIS EPISODE ON YOUTUBE) On December 31, 1918, Colonel Luke Lea of the 114th Field Artillery Regiment handed his commanding officer a request for leave from his post in Allied-occupied Luxembourg. He would not say where he was going or what he intended to do, though he assured the general he had nothing to worry about. General Spaulding called it the "strangest request for leave he had ever read," but approved it anyway. After all, Luke Lea was not just an excellent officer, he was also a successful lawyer, newspaper publisher, and one-term senator from Tennessee. How much trouble could he possibly get into.....Grab a baseball and an ashtray (trust me). Reb is breaking down State v. Wallace B. Davis, Luke Lea, & Luke Lea, Jr. (1932), but more importantly, all of the unbelievable chaos that happened before it.Follow @RebuttalPod on Instagram and Twitter!Follow @Rebmasel on TikTok, Instagram, and Twitter!***0:00 - Intro w/ Executive Producer Simba2:59 - CASE STARTS / LET’S GO BACK TO WWI4:00 - Colonel Luke Lea needs a vacation to be a nuisance6:00 - Tennesseans only6:59 - We’re kidnapping whomst?7:46 - What’s the Kaiser been up to these days?11:40 - COLONEL LUKE LEA’S *MESSY* LORE12:41 - Bloody Tennessee political drama16:07 - Luke’s newspaper is now TMZ19:12 - A good ol’ fashioned duel in the street20:32 - Luke is messy and reaps the benefits 22:30 - REB’S SUMMARY OF ALL THAT CHAOTIC BEEF & LUKE LEA LORE24:20 - The U.S. declares war, Luke joins the Army24:50 - What was the plan here, babes?27:23 - It’s Armistice Time! No need to ~arm~ the stice!28:07 - Colonel Lea takes a vacation to….somewhere….29:05 - ONLY Tennesseans allowed on my poorly planned kidnapping mission30:00 - SUDDENLY I’M PATRIOTIC / LARRY MACPHAIL BASEBALL LEGEND34:32 - KIDNAPPING ROAD TRIP IN A CADILLAC42:05 - The border is crossed, shenanigans ensue56:32 - #AshtrayGate57:45 - PUNISHMENT….?1:06:57 - I think Luke is a weirdo / Luke dabbles in felonies back home in the States1:11:59 - What happened to Kaiser Wilhelm II, his cool ashtray, and the MLB guy who stole it?1:12:58 - REB’S REBUTTAL Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
(WATCH THIS EPISODE ON YOUTUBE) On December 31, 1918, Colonel Luke Lea of the 114th Field Artillery Regiment handed his commanding officer a request for leave from his post in Allied-occupied Luxembourg. He would not say where he was going or what he intended to do, though he assured the general he had nothing to worry about. General Spaulding called it the "strangest request for leave he had ever read," but approved it anyway. After all, Luke Lea was not just an excellent officer, he was also a...