Smoking gun

Smoking gun

The term "smoking gun" was originally, and is still primarily, a reference to an object or fact that serves as conclusive evidence of a crime or similar act. In addition to this, its meaning has evolved to uses completely unrelated criminal activity: for example, scientific evidence that is highly suggestive in favour of a particular hypothesis is sometimes called smoking gun evidence. Its name originally came from the idea of finding a smoking (i.e., very recently fired) gun on the person of a suspect wanted for shooting someone, which in that situation would be nearly unshakable proof of having committed the crime.

Origin of phrase

The phrase originated in the Sherlock Holmes story, "The Gloria Scott" (1893). The origin and development of "smoking gun" was described by William Safire [Safire, William. "On Language: The Way We Live Now." "The New York Times", 26 January 2003] in his column, "On Language," as follows:

When did that phrase first become the favorite figure of speech meaning "incontrovertible incrimination"? The answer is elementary, Watson. In an 1893 Sherlock Holmes story, "The Gloria Scott," Arthur Conan Doyle wrote of a grisly murder by a sham chaplain aboard a prison ship: "We rushed into the captain's cabin . . . there he lay with his brains smeared over the chart of the Atlantic . . . while the chaplain stood with a smoking pistol in his hand at his elbow." A good copy editor would have fixed Doyle's awkward "in his hand at his elbow," and Sir Arthur chose pistol rather than gun, but that Holmes citation seems to be the start of the cliché that grips us today.

It was made famous during the Golden Age of Political Coinage. The Watergate era coined or popularized Saturday night massacre, stonewalling, cover-up, dirty tricks, straight arrow, expletive deleted, third-rate burglary, plumbers, Deep Throat, Big Enchilada, enemies list and my personal favorite, twisting slowly in the wind. That was when Doyle's smoking pistol, which had changed in occasional usage over 80 years to smoking gun, blazed its way into dictionaries.

It first appeared in The New York Times on July 14, 1974, in an article by Roger Wilkins: "The big question asked over the last few weeks in and around the House Judiciary Committee's hearing room by committee members who were uncertain about how they felt about impeachment was 'Where's the smoking gun?"' The question was rooted in a Nixon defense strategy, to narrow the grounds for impeachment to a provable crime. On July 31, Representative Jack Brooks of Texas told the impeachment panel that he thought Nixon was guilty of income-tax evasion: "Millions of Americans will view this evidence as a so-called smoking gun." With insufficient proof, that charge did not stick.

On Aug. 5, the committee released a transcript of a recording of the meeting held two years earlier, on June 23, 1972, in which the White House chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman, asked President Nixon, "You think the thing to do is to get them, the F.B.I., to stop?" and Nixon replied, "Right, fine." Representative Barber Conable of New York promptly said that "looked like a smoking gun," and the recording became known as "the smoking-gun tape."

ee also

*The Smoking Gun (Web site)
*Burden of proof
*Watergate scandal

References


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Look at other dictionaries:

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  • smoking gun — A smoking gun is definitive proof of someone s guilt …   The small dictionary of idiomes

  • smoking gun — Slang for evidence that decisively proves a cause. Category: Criminal Law Category: Small Claims Court & Lawsuits Nolo’s Plain English Law Dictionary. Gerald N. Hill, Kathleen Thompson Hill. 2009 …   Law dictionary

  • smoking gun — n something that shows who is responsible for something bad or how something really happened …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • smoking gun — noun count INFORMAL clear proof that someone has done something wrong or illegal …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • smoking gun — ► NOUN ▪ a piece of undeniable incriminating evidence …   English terms dictionary

  • smoking gun — ☆ smoking gun n. Informal any conclusive evidence that proves guilt or fault …   English World dictionary

  • smoking gun — noun indisputable evidence (especially of a crime) • Hypernyms: ↑evidence * * * noun, pl ⋯ guns [singular] : a piece of evidence that clearly proves who did something or shows how something happened This document is the smoking gun that proves… …   Useful english dictionary

  • smoking gun —    A smoking gun is definitive proof of someone s guilt.   (Dorking School Dictionary)    ***    A smoking gun is a piece of evidence or the indisputable sign of someone s guilt.     The fingerprints left on the door handle was the smoking gun… …   English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

  • smoking gun — UK / US noun [countable] Word forms smoking gun : singular smoking gun plural smoking guns informal clear proof that someone has done something wrong or illegal …   English dictionary

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