Eva Coo
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Eva Coo (née Eva Currie) (1894 – June 27, 1935) was an American murderer who was executed by electric chair at Sing Sing Prison.
Born in Haliburton, Ontario, Canada, she moved to Toronto when she was a teenager. There, she met and married William Coo, and together they moved to upstate New York in 1921.
Eva Coo was entrusted with the care of one of her employees, a slow-witted handiman named Henry Wright, after the death of Wright's mother. Coo embezzled Wright's inheritance and burned down his house for insurance money. After purchasing several life insurance policies on Wright, Coo then conspired to murder him with another of her employees, a woman named Martha Clift. On June 14, 1934, the two women drove Wright to an isolated location outside Oneonta, New York. There, Eva allegedly hit him with a mallet and Martha ran over him with a car, a Willys-Knight. They then dumped his body beside a road to simulate a hit-and-run accident. Though little evidence has been provided to corroborate the bludgeoning with the mallet, it remains the symbol of the murder and the trial to this day.
Police suspected homicide and Clift confessed after an interrogation. She was convicted of second-degree murder and served thirteen years in prison, while Coo received a death sentence.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Crime Library
- The Daily Star
- Eva Coo: Murderess by Niles Eggleston at Amazon.com
- Little Eva: Mallet Murderer from The Malefactor's Register