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Special Agent Herman Edward Hollis | United States Department of Justice - Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Government
United States Department of Justice - Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Government

Special Agent

Herman Edward Hollis

United States Department of Justice - Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Government

End of Watch: Tuesday, November 27, 1934

Biographical Info

Age: 31
Tour of Duty: 7 years
Badge Number: Not available

Incident Details

Cause of Death: Gunfire
Date of Incident: November 27, 1934
Weapon Used: Rifle; Winchester
Suspect Info: The Dillinger Gang

Special Agent Herman Hollis and Special Agent Samuel Cowley were shot and killed by the infamous gangster Baby Face Nelson near Barrington, Illinois.

When two other agents had encountered Baby Face Nelson, his wife and a male companion driving down a road, a gunbattle ensued as both parties recognized each other. The agent's, with their windshields shattered, were forced off the road into a field but not before they had disabled the suspect's car.

As Agents Hollis and Cowley approached the scene and exited their car, they were met with gunfire by both male suspects. Agent Hollis, with massive head wounds, was pronounced dead upon arrival at a hospital and Agent Cowley died the following morning after surgery for his stomach wounds.

The suspects fled the scene in the agent's car and drove to a house in Wilmette. Baby Face Nelson, who had been shot nine times, died there later that evening. His body was discovered wrapped in a blanket in a ditch in front of a cemetery in Skokie. He had also been responsible for the murder of Special Agent W. Carter Baum seven months earlier.

His wife was later convicted of harboring a fugitive and served a year in prison. The male companion was the first person to be tried under a federal law allowing the death penalty for the murder of a federal agent. He was found guilty, but the jury recommended a life sentence which he served at USP Alcatraz Island until his parole in 1966.

Agent Hollis had served with the Federal Bureau of Investigation for seven years. He was survived by his wife and is buried in Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines, Iowa.