Education
He studied law in night school.
He studied law in night school.
He was also a prosecutor for the city of Chicago. Piquett was a former bartender active in Chicago Democratic politics. By 1915 he was chief clerk to the city prosecutor of Chicago.
In the early 1920s he was appointed city prosecutor by Mayor William Hale Thompson.
He was indicted in 1923 on corruption charges, which were subsequently dropped. By the Summer of 1923 Piquett was in private practice in Chicago.
In August 1923, for instance, he represented James J. McGrath, who owned films showing a boxing match between Tommy Gibbons and Jack Dempsey. He successfully argued that Dillinger should be allowed to appear in court free of shackles and without armed guards present.
After Dillinger"s dramatic pre-trial escape, an investigation by the state of Indiana revealed Piquett"s complicity.
In January 1935, Piquett was charged with harboring the fugitive Dillinger and of conspiring with a number of others, including two doctors, to hide Dillinger while he underwent plastic surgery. He was acquitted after less than four hours of deliberation. During this trial he was called "the brains of the Dillinger mob."
Piquett appealed his sentence all the way up to the Supreme Court of the United States, which denied certiorari in 1936.
He was pardoned for this crime in 1951 by President Harry Truman.
He died in Chicago in 1951.
In 1931, Piquett defended Leo Vincent Brothers against charges of murdering Chicago Tribune reporter Jake Lingle. In 1934 Piquett defended Dillinger in Crown Point, Indiana.