Cleveland Torso Murderer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cleveland Torso Murderer | |
---|---|
Map of Cleveland, Ohio |
|
Background information | |
Alias(es): | Cleveland Torso Murderer, Mad Butcher of Kingsbury Run |
Killings | |
Number of victims: | 12-15 |
Country: | USA |
State(s): | Cleveland, Ohio |
Date apprehended: | never caught |
The Cleveland Torso Murderer (also known as the Mad Butcher of Kingsbury Run) was an unidentified serial killer active in the Cleveland, Ohio, area in the early 20th century.
Contents |
[edit] Murders
The official toll of the murderer was 12 (latest researchers include the "Lady of the Lake," listed below, for a total of 13 victims), killed between 1935 and 1938, but some (including lead Cleveland Detective Peter Merylo) believe that there may have been as many as 40+ victims in the Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and Youngstown, Ohio, area between the 1920s and the 1950s. Two strong candidates for addition to the list of those killed are the unknown victim nicknamed the Lady of the Lake, found on September 5, 1934, and Robert Robertson, found on July 22, 1950. Serial killers had not yet entered the American public consciousness in 1935[citation needed], and the "Mad Butcher" is considered to be one of the first such criminals to be well-known (along with others such as Albert Fish and H. H. Holmes).
The victims were usually drifters whose identities were never determined, although there are several exceptions to this (victims number 2, 3, and 8 were identified as Edward Andrassy, Flo Polillo, and possibly Rose Wallace, respectively). Invariably, all the victims, male and female, appeared to be from the lower classes of society — easy prey in Depression-era Cleveland. Many were known as "working poor" that had nowhere else to live but the ramshackle shanty towns in the Cleveland Flats.
The Torso Murderer always beheaded and often dismembered his victims, sometimes also cutting the torso in half; in many cases the cause of death was the act of decapitation itself. Most of the male victims were castrated, and some victims showed evidence of chemical treatment of their bodies. Many of the victims were found a considerable period after their deaths, sometimes a year or more, which made identification nearly impossible, especially since the heads were often not found.
Eliot Ness was the Public Safety Director of Cleveland during the period of the "official" murders. Ness failed to apprehend the killer, but new evidence suggests that he was actually successful in chasing the killer from Cleveland.[citation needed]
[edit] Victims
Most researchers consider there to be 12 definite victims; new evidence includes "The Lady of the Lake." Only two were ever identified, the other 10 were divided by six John Does and four Jane Does.
John Doe, victim 1 was an unidentified male found in the Jackass Hill area of Kingsbury Run (near East 49th and Praha Avenue) on September 23, 1935. Early estimates were that the first victims had been dead seven to ten days when found. Later estimates were that the man had been dead from three to four weeks when found.
Edward W. Andrassy, victim 2 was found in the Jackass Hill area of Kingsbury Run on September 23, 1935, about 30 feet from victim number one. It was estimated that Andrassy had been dead two to three days when found.
Florence Genevieve Polillo, victim 3, also known by numerous aliases, was found behind a business at 2315 E. 20th Street in downtown Cleveland on January 26, 1936. It was estimated that she had been dead two to four days when found.
John Doe II, victim 4 was an unidentified male, also famously known as the "tattooed man", found in Kingsbury Run on June 5, 1936. It was estimated that he had been dead two days when found. The victim possessed six unusual tattoos, one including the names "Helen and Paul" and another displaying the initials "W.C.G."; his undershorts bore a laundry mark indicating the owner's initials were J.D. Despite morgue and death mask inspections by thousands of Cleveland citizens in the summer of 1936 at the Great Lakes Exposition, the "tattooed man" was never identified.
Sketch of victim 4 created by Wesley Neville. Case file can be viewed here |
John Doe III, victim 5 was an unidentified male, found in the sparsely populated Big Creek area of Brooklyn, west of Cleveland on July 22, 1936. It was estimated that he had been dead two months when found. This was the only known West Side victim.
John Doe IV, victim 6 was an unidentified male, found in Kingsbury Run on September 10, 1936. It was estimated that he had been dead two days when found.
Jane Doe I, victim 7 was an unidentified female, found near Euclid Beach on the Lake Erie shore on February 23, 1937. It was estimated that she had been dead three to four days when found. Her body was found at the same spot as the 1934 noncanonical victim, nicknamed "The Lady of the Lake" (see below).
Jane Doe II, victim 8, possibly Rose Wallace, was found beneath the Lorain-Carnegie bridge on June 6, 1937. It was estimated that she had been dead one year when found, which casts some doubt that the victim was Wallace, who was known to have disappeared only 10 months earlier. Dental work was considered a close match both by police experts and by her son, who felt certain that the victim was his mother. A definitive identification was not possible, since the dentist who performed the work had died years before.
John Doe V, victim 9 was an unidentified male, found in Cuyahoga River in the Cleveland Flats on July 6, 1937. It was estimated that he had been dead two to three days when found.
Jane Doe III, victim 10 was an unidentified female, found in Cuyahoga River in the Cleveland Flats on April 8, 1938. It was estimated that she had been dead three to five days when found.
Jane Doe IV, victim 11 was an unidentified female, found at the East 9th Street Lakeshore Dump on August 16, 1938. It was estimated that she had been dead four to six months when found.
John Doe VI, victim 12 was an unidentified male, found at the East 9th Street Lakeshore Dump on August 16, 1938. It was estimated that he had been dead seven to nine months when found.
[edit] Possible victims
Several noncanonical victims are commonly discussed in connection with the Torso Murderer. The first was nicknamed the Lady of the Lake and was found near Euclid Beach on the Lake Erie shore on September 5, 1934, at virtually the same spot as canonical victim number 7. Some researchers of the Torso Murderers' victims count the "Lady of the Lake" as victim number 1, as well as "Victim Zero".
A headless, unidentified male was found in a boxcar in New Castle, Pennsylvania, on July 1 1936. Three headless victims were found in boxcars near McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania, on May 3, 1940. All bore similar injuries to those inflicted by the Cleveland killer. Others note that headless bodies were occasionally found in the swamps in this area of Pennsylvania as early as the 1920s.
Robert Robertson was found at a business at 2138 Davenport Avenue in Cleveland on July 22, 1950. He had been dead six to eight weeks when found and appeared to have been intentionally decapitated.
[edit] Suspects
Three suspects are most commonly associated with the Torso murders, although there are numerous others occasionally mentioned.
On August 24, 1939, Frank Dolezal, arrested as a suspect in Florence Polillo's murder, died under suspicious circumstances in the Cuyahoga County Jail. He was discovered to have six broken ribs, injuries his friends say he did not have when arrested by County Sheriff Martin L. O'Donnell some six weeks prior. Most researchers believe that there exists no evidence that Dolezal was involved in the murders, although at one time he did admit killing Flo Polillo in self-defense. Before his death, he recanted that confession, and recanted two others as well, saying he had been beaten until he confessed. Recently unearthed evidence points away from suicide and toward complicity by the sheriff and his deputies in Dolezal's death; a book and documentary about the case, both titled The Fourteenth Victim, are slated for 2008 releases.[1]
Most investigators consider the last canonical murder to have been in 1938. One very strongly suspected individual was Dr. Francis E. Sweeney, who permanently entered institutionalized care shortly after the last official murders were discovered in 1938. Significantly, Sweeney worked during World War I in a medical unit that conducted amputations on the field of battle. Sweeney was later personally interviewed by Eliot Ness, who oversaw the official investigation into the killings in his capacity as Cleveland's Safety Director. During this interrogation, Sweeney, whom Ness code-named "Gaylord Sundheim," is said to have "failed to pass" a very early polygraph machine test administered by polygraph expert Leonard Keeler, who told Ness he had his man. Nevertheless, Ness apparently felt that there was very little chance of obtaining a successful prosecution of the doctor, especially as he was the first cousin of one of Ness' political opponents, Congressman Martin L. Sweeney, who ironically hounded Ness publicly about his failure to catch the Butcher, and who in turn was later related by marriage to political ally Sheriff O'Donnell. After Sweeney committed himself, there were no more leads or connections that police could make to him as a possible suspect. The killings apparently stopped after Sweeney committed himself. He died in a Dayton veteran's hospital in 1965, though he did continue to mock and harass Ness and his family with threatening postcards well into the 1950s.
[edit] References
- James Jessen Badal; In the Wake of the Butcher: Cleveland's Torso Murders; The Kent State University Press; ISBN 0-87338-689-2 (paperback, 2001)
- Mark Wade Stone; The Fourteenth Victim - Eliot Ness and the Torso Murders; Storytellers Media Group, LTD; ISBN 0-9749575-3-4 (DVD video, 2006)
- John Stark Bellamy II; The Maniac in the Bushes and More Tales of Cleveland Woe; Gray and Company, Publishers; ISBN 1-886228-19-1 (paperback, 1997)
- Steven Nickel; Torso: Eliot Ness and the Search for a Psychopathic Killer; John F Blair Publishers; ISBN 0-89587-246-3 (paperback, 2001)
- Rasmussen, William T.; CORROBORATING EVIDENCE II, published by Sunstone Press (2006, softcover) Connects the Cleveland Torso Murders to the murder of the Black Dahlia,ISBN 0-86534-536-8
- Bendis, Brian Michael & Andreyko, Marc; Torso: a true crime graphic novel; Image Comics, publishers; ISBN 1-58240-174-8 (Graphic novel format, 2003)
[edit] External links
- The Fourteenth Victim - Eliot Ness and the Torso Murders (documentary)
- Cleveland Police Historical Society and Museum
- The Kingsbury Run Murders
- Connections between the Cleveland Torso Murders and the murder of the Black Dahlia
- Torso Killer at the Open Directory Project