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Showing posts with label murder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label murder. Show all posts

Sunday, May 15, 2016

L'affaire De Chevaline: the Annecy quadruple murder

Brett Martin is a retired RAF pilot with a love of bicycling and a holiday home in Lathuile. On a clear autumn Wednesday in 2012, he was biking up a hill in the village of Chevaline, France.  At the top of a steep, remote street, he pedaled upon the unthinkable: a 7-year-old girl, shot, beaten, and bloodied, laying in the parking lot at the top of the mountain path.
Nearby lay another local cyclist - Sylvain Mollier, aged 45, shot five times - two in the head and thrice in the chest. In a burgundy BMW SUV with British plates was the rest of the young girl's family - her mother (Iqbal al-Hilli), father (Saad al-Hilli), and grandmother (Suhaila al-Allaf, Iqbal's mother) -- all shot dead. Bullet casings littered the ground.
Brett rushed to the girl to provide first aid and called for help.
French gendarmes swarmed the scene. This was a rural area that saw maybe one or two easily-solved homicides per year. This case was handled with kid gloves. So much so, in fact, that it wasn't until 8 hours later that specialists discovered the lone unhurt survivor - 4-year-old Zeena, who had escaped harm by hiding underneath her mother's skirts. She had remained hidden the entire time.
The scene they found was strange, but told a clear tale: The SUV had made its way up a desolate and dangerous mountain road, though the family inside were not dressed in hiking attire, and rested in the parking lot at the top of the mountain, which the road dead-ended into. A sort of scenic overlook, if you will. The SUV had been reversed sharply into an embankment beside the car park, leaving gouge marks that were still visible two days later. When Martin arrived, the car was still in reverse with the wheels spinning and the doors locked. Clearly, Saad had seen danger and tried to get away.
Investigators surrounding the al-Hilli's vehicle.
WARNING: The next two images will show a (pixellated and poorly visible) dead body.

The SUV with Sylvain Mollier's body beside it.  You can see the tire marks where the SUV reversed.

Another shot of the SUV and body.

As the investigation got under way, it turned out that both the family and the cyclist had tantalizing troubling backgrounds. Iraqi-born Saad was a freelance mechanical engineer currently working for a satellite company. Sylvain Mollier was on a three-year leave of absence from his job at Cezus, which primarily crafted fuel rod housings for nuclear reactors. Tabloids went nuts with potential theories - including that the two were actually forming a plot in cahoots with each other.
Was al-Hilli a terrorist with possible connections to Iraq? Tabloids at one point burst with headlines declaring that al-Hilli's father had smuggled money out of Iraq for Saddam and hidden it in a Swiss bank account. While the senior al-Hilli, Kadim, did have money in a Swiss account, it was not Saddam's; in fact, it emerged that Kadim's brother had been kidnapped and tortured by the secret police and sustained brain damage. Shortly thereafter, he took his family and fled to England, where Saad and the rest had stayed. Nor did Saad have access to any classified secrets or anything satellite-related that would be of interest for a terrorist cell.
Mollier was a divorced father of three: two children with his ex-wife and an infant daughter with his live-in girlfriend of two years, Claire Schutz. Like al-Hilli, his tantalizing connections fell apart under scrutiny: he was a welder at the nuclear plant, and did not have access to anything that would be of interest to atomic-minded criminals. Nor had he ever had contact with al-Hilli before: there was no trace of any connection between the two men (or anyone else in the al-Hilli family), apart from the ending of their lives.
The al-Hillis had driven to France on a vacation. Saad, the father, had visited there several times before, and may have been looking for a job as he liked the location and brought with him his computers and thumb drives from work. They towed a white Bürstner camper behind their BMW and stayed at Le Solitaire du Lac, a campground on the shores of Lake Annecy. On Wednesday, September 5, 2012, he asked his daughter Zainab what she would like to do that afternoon: did she want to go shopping, or go for a walk in the woods? Zainab wanted to take a walk in the woods.
Saad didn't know the area that well, and asked the campground owner for directions. He won't say where he sent them, but it may have been up that dirt road, or he may have taken a wrong turn; once you turn onto the uphill road, there is no turnaround for 3 kilometers - not until it dead-ends into the parking lot at the top.

A photo of the al-Hilli family taken just minutes before the attack.

Sylvain, too, may have gotten lost. He had asked his girlfriend's father to recommend a route, but it likely hadn't included the uphill path. His girlfriend called him shortly before he reached the top, but he was panting and said he wanted to reach the end of the road first.
Once there, he disembarked his bike. He may have been talking with Saad, who was gregarious and outgoing. Saad liked bikes, and they may have been discussing Sylvain's racing bike, which was not particularly suited for a bumpy, pothole-filled road such as the one up the mountain.
Each of the victims was killed by two shots to the head - execution-style, making it look like a professional hit. 21 shots were fired. However, the weapon used was a 7.65-millimeter Luger - an antique. Also, it appears that Zainab was pistol-whipped because the killer ran out of bullets- perhaps after shooting her in the shoulder. The model of the gun is known because a piece broke off in her skull.
The most promising suspect appears to be Patrice Menegaldo, a periphery acquaintance of Claire Schutz, Sylvain's girlfriend (I haven't found information on how she knew him). Police called Menegaldo in as a witness for a routine hour-long interview. Two months later, Menegaldo, a former French Foreign Legion soldier, shot himself in the head. He left behind a seven-page suicide note, the majority of which has not been revealed - except for the fact that he said, "I could not handle being a suspect in a murder."
But he wasn't a suspect. He wasn't even a witness. He was being interviewed because there were no other leads.
On the other hand, it could be that neither Sylvain Mollier - shot more times than anyone else, and possibly the first person shot, though this hasn't been confirmed - nor Saad al-Hilli were the subject of the murders. Both seem to have gotten lost, and no one could've known that either one was going to be in the parking lot. It could have been a random act of violence.
Zainab al-Hilli survived the brutal attack and made a full recovery. She and her younger sister, Zeena, now live in England with their maternal aunt and uncle, as well as another cousin. They had initially been in foster care following the murders. Because Zainab may have seen the murderer's face, they were placed under armed guard in 2013.
The murder remains unsolved.

Sources:


Monday, April 11, 2016

The Trial of the Century 6: The NJ State Police Archives

read this post on Reddit /r/UnresolvedMysteries

As I said on Friday, I had the privilege of rooting through the NJSP Archives last week.  It was an enjoyable, though overwhelming, experience.  I wound up leaving with a sheaf of photocopies and a minor headache.  All in a day's work!


The archives are located in the room next to the reception desk at the NJ State Police Museum. The room is filled with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves and file cabinets, the vast majority of which are materials related to the Lindbergh case. The archivist handed me a manila folder to start, which contained the preliminary case report, two binders of statements (I photocopied those of the Lindbergh household and immediate reporting policemen), and when I asked, I got a binder of crime scene photographs, as well.
I’m going to start with the photographs, because, well, those are the easiest to share! Also, I haven’t really gone through the statements in detail yet... that's today's project.
So far I haven’t seen anything we didn’t already know, although since the statements were given years before the trial, they’re a bit more detailed, and give us a better idea of the household's immediate reactions to the crime.

So, on to the pictures.

Teasers:
Anne Lindbergh's signature - You'll notice this isn't even in a sheet protector or anything. The papers were as thin as tissue paper, I was having a very quiet mental freakout the entire time I was touching it.


I'm going to list out all the documents I have the full text of right now. If you have questions about something in particular, ask!:
  • Major Initial Report - first police report on the case, Cpl. Joseph A. Wolf, 3/1/1932
  • Case report, Trooper N. DeGaetano, 3/3/1932
  • Statement: Trooper DeGaetano, 3/9/1932
  • Statement: Trooper Harry V. Cain, 3/16/1932
  • Statement: Trooper Frank A. Kelly, 3/16/1932
  • Statement: Trooper Lewis Bornman, 3/9/1932
  • Statement: Cpl. Joseph Wolf, 3/15/1932
  • Statement: Asst. Chief of Police of Hopewell, Charles E. Williamson, 3/9/1932
  • Statement: Betty Gow, 3/10/1932 [nursemaid]
  • Statement: Charles A. Lindbergh, 3/20/1932
  • Statement: Charles A. Lindbergh, 3/11/1932
  • Statement: Olly Whateley, 3/3/1932 [butler]
  • Statement: Elsie Mary Whateley, 3/10/1932 [cook/maid]
  • Statement: Anne M. Lindbergh, 3/13/1932
  • Statement: Violet Sharpe, 3/10/1932
  • Transcript of interview of Violet Sharpe, 3/24/1932
  • Correspondence from Scotland Yard re: Violet Sharpe
My next post will probably be the Violet Sharpe stuff.

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

The Trial of the Century: the kidnapping of Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr.

ᴛʜᴇ ғɪʀsᴛ ᴘᴏsᴛ ɪɴ ᴛʜᴇ ʟɪɴᴅʙᴇʀɢʜ ᴛʀɪᴀʟ sᴇʀɪᴇs. ᴄᴜʀʀᴇɴᴛʟʏ ʀᴇsᴇᴀʀᴄʜɪɴɢ: ɪᴛᴇᴍs ᴛʜᴀᴛ ᴀʀᴇ ᴄᴜʀʀᴇɴᴛʟʏ ʙᴇɪɴɢ ʀᴇsᴇᴀʀᴄʜᴇᴅ ᴍᴀʏ ʙᴇ ᴜᴘᴅᴀᴛᴇᴅ ᴘᴇʀɪᴏᴅɪᴄᴀʟʟʏ. 

Lucky Lindy
Charles A. Lindbergh, or “Lucky Lindy,” rose to fame as an aviator in the 1920s after he completed the first ever solo nonstop flight across the Atlantic. Lindbergh was an A-list celebrity in the early ‘30s, helping to popularize aviation for pleasure, commerce, and mail. He was married to Anne Morrow Lindbergh, American royalty whose father was, at different times, a partner in JP Morgan, US Ambassador to Mexico, and a US Senator from New Jersey. They wed in 1929, and shortly thereafter, in June of 1930, they had a son - Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr.
The famous young couple seemed to have an idyll life. Charles was a happy, healthy baby with a head of bright blonde curly hair. When you think of the media surrounding Prince William and Kate and their children - that’s how the Lindbergh family was worshiped. Everyone knew about them, and they seemed to live in this perfect dream world.

The Kidnapping
Tragedy struck on March 1, 1932. The Lindberghs lived in Highfields, an estate in East Amwell, NJ. This part of Jersey is very rural, even today. It’s surrounded by twisty roads that lead in and out of thick deciduous woods and fields of corn and other crops.
Charles Jr.’s nurse, Betty Gow, put the baby in his crib at around 8pm. Charles’ room was on the second floor of the house, and Gow went back downstairs. If I recall correctly, both Anne and Charles were downstairs in the library, until Anne went to take her bath.
At around 9:30pm, Charles Lindbergh Sr heard a loud noise; he thought a slot had fallen out of a crate in the kitchen. Betty Gow returned to the baby’s room, only to discover that he was not in his crib. Thinking he might be with his mother, she went to inquire with Mrs. Lindbergh, who was just then getting out of her bath. She did not have her son.
Gow then ran downstairs to the library where Mr. Lindbergh was reading. Charles immediately went to examine his son’s room, finding the crib empty as well. Charles discovered a handwritten note placed on the windowsill above the radiator:
Dear Sir!
Have 50000$ redy 25000$ in 20$ bills 15000$ in 10$ bills and 10000$ in 5$ bills After 2-4 days we will inform you were to deliver the Mony.
We warn you for making anyding public or for notify the Police The child is in gut care. Indication for all letters are singnature and three holes.
Lindbergh rushed outside with a firearm to search for the intruders, and the police were summoned. They arrived in about twenty minutes - again, this is pretty rural. The Hopewell Police arrived and after the initial report, the case was turned over to the New Jersey State Police.
After searching the yard, police discovered a ladder in two pieces hidden in bushes and underbrush near the home. The two sections of the ladder fit together, however, the center slat was broken, as if it had snapped during ascent or descent.
Other forensic evidence was found at the scene of the crime:
  • Footprints were found beneath Charles Jr’s second-story window, though they were “impossible to measure.”
  • Traces of mud were found on the floor of the nursery
  • A tire print was discovered in the mud later on that night -No bloodstains or adult fingerprints were found in the nursery. Charles Jr.’s fingerprints were found on the lower half of the nursery.
The Notes
This case was a huge, huge deal. You think we have media circuses today? Everyone was informed about the Lindgergh case. President Herbert Hoover declared he would “move heaven and earth” to find the baby Lindbergh. Al Capone and other crime bosses offered help from prison (in exchange for favors or release, of course). Lindbergh took charge of the investigation, and Anne was swept up in the hubub, devastated.
New Jersey offered $25,000 for tips leading to the recovery of the baby. The Lindberghs offered $50,000 additional of their own money. The infamous WANTED poster
A second ransom note was received on March 6, 1932, postmarked from Brooklyn:
Dear Sir. We have warned you note to make anything public also notify the police now you have to take consequences- means we will have to hold the baby until everything is quite. We can note make any appointments just now. We know very well what it means to us. It is realy necessary to make a world affair out of this, or to get your baby back as soon as possible to settle those affair in a quick way will be better for both- don't be afraid about the baby- keeping care of us day and night. We also will feed him acording to the diet.
We are interested to send him back in gut health. And ransom was made aus for 50000$ but now we have to take another person to it and probably have to keep the baby for a longer time as we expected. So the amound will be 70000 20000 in 50$ bills 25000$ in 20$ bill 15000$ in 10$ bills and 10000 in 5$ bills Don't mark any bills or take them from one serial nomer. We will form you latter were to deliver the mony. But we will note do so until the Police is out of the cace and the pappers are quite. The kidnapping we prepared in years so we are prepared for everyding.
The Lindberghs set out to appoint a go-between to work with the kidnappers to deliver the ransom. The kidnappers sent a third ransom note to the Lindbergh’s attorney, asking for them to place an ad in the papers to communicate. A retired school principal, Dr. John F. Condon, in the Bronx in NYC published a piece in the “Bronx Home News” offering to act as a go-between and pay an additional $1,000 ransom. The next day a fourth note from the kidnapper was delivered, accepting Dr. Condon as a go-between. His code name was “JAFSIE,” based on his initials.
The note to the Lindberghs, notifiying them of Dr. Condon’s approval as the go-between:
Mr Colonel Lindbergh Hopewell
Dear Sir: Mr Condon may act as go-between. You may give him the 70,000$ make one packet the size will be about-- (drawing appeared)
We have notifyed you already in what kind of bills. We warn you not to set any trapp in any way. If you or someone els will notify the Police ther will be a further delay. Affter we have the mony in hand we will tell you where to find your boy. You may have a airplane redy it is about 150 miles awy. But before telling you the adr. a delay of 8 houers will be between.
A representative of the kidnappers who called himself “John” met with Dr. Condon in a local park. Condon asked for proof the baby was alive, and was promised that the baby’s pajamas would be returned. He did not get a good look at the kidnapper; not enough to identify him. He spoke with an accent, what Condon described as “foreign.” The pajamas were sent and confirmed to be Charles Jr’s.
Finally, a month after the kidnapping, the payment of the ransom was arranged. The payment was in a custom-made box and consisted of gold certificates that were going to be withdrawn from circulation in the near future, all with the intent to draw attention to the kidnapper and aid in identifying him. The serial number of each bill was recorded, though the bills themselves were not marked.
On April 2nd, Dr. Condon met with “John” again, presenting him with only $50,000. John accepted the money and gave Condon another note, claiming the child was on a boat in Martha’s Vineyard, in the care of two innocent women. The child was not found in Martha’s Vineyard, and the exchange of messages continued. At this point, Dr. Condon said he would be able to identify “John” if he saw him again.


The Corpse
On May 12, two months after the kidnapping, a delivery truck driver pulled to the side of the road in Hopewell Township, NJ, to take a leak. As he wandered off the road into a cove of trees, he discovered something gruesome: a decomposing corpse of an infant, 4.5 miles from the Lindbergh home. The child had quite obviously been killed via a blow to the head, and had been dead for about 2 months. The body was later cremated.


The Gold Certificate
On September 18, 1934, a hit came on one of the ransomed gold certificates, at a Manhattan bank. A New York license plate number was penciled in the margin, and as the gold certificate was traced back to the gas station at which it was spent, the clerk explained that he wrote down his customer’s license plate number as he thought they were acted suspicious and might be a confeiter. The plate was licensed to one Bruno Richard Hauptmann.
Hauptmann was a German immigrant, married to wife, Anna, and had one infant son, Manfried. He was 34 years old and come to America as a stowaway, settling in New York City. He had previously been convicted of crimes and served time in prison in Germany, and had served in the German military. He worked as a carpenter, though shortly after the kidnapping, he began to trade stocks and stopped working.


The Case Against Hauptmann
  • The most damning evidence, according to the jury and many modern observers, was that a floorboard in Hauptmann’s attic matched the woodgrain of the 16th rail of the ladder exactly. Additionally, the nail holes in Rail 16 corresponded exactly with four nail holes found in the joists of the Hauptmann’s attic. Other evidence suggesting that a piece of the joist was sawed off was found (the wood wouldn’t have been left exposed, there were saw marks, etc).
  • Hauptmann had a prior conviction in Germany for burglary, entering a second-story window using a ladder.
  • Hauptmann’s handwriting matched the ransom notes.
  • Dr. Condon’s address and phone number were found written inside a closet at Hauptmann’s home
  • Hauptmann called out of work on the day of the kidnapping and quit his job two days later.
  • Hauptmann was seen in East Amwell in the days before the kidnapping.
  • $14,590 of the ransom money was found in Hauptmann’s garage
  • Witnesses identified Hauptmann as spending some of the gold certificates
  • Hauptmann misspelled the same words that were misspelled in the notes


Evidence for Hauptmann’s Innocence
  • Though Dr. John Condon testified that Hauptmann was the same “John” he had met with previously, he was unable to pick out Hauptmann in a police lineup, and described him as having different features
  • Hauptmann testitifed that he had been instructed to misspell words in the handwriting samples he was made to provide (though some of these samples came from his work ledgers and other sources)
  • The police beat Hauptmann while he was in custody (not really evidence IMO)
  • Hauptmann’s prints were not found on the ladder, nor in any part of Lindbergh’s home, nor on the child’s body. No evidence was found on the body linking Hauptmann to the murder.
  • Allegations that police pressured witnesses and tampered with or planted evidence
  • A reporter later confessed to having written to writing Condon’s name and address in the Lindbergh home
  • Complaints that police allowed crime scenes to be contaminated

The Electric Chair
Hauptmann was convicted and sentenced to death in “Old Smokey” -- yes, that really was the name for our old electric chair. You can see Old Smokey today in the Newseum in DC. Hauptmann’s ladder and other evidence is on display in the NJ State Police Museum.
Hauptmann was executed on April 3, 1936. His last words were in his native tongue, "Ich bin absolut unschuldig an den Verbrechen, die man mir zur Last legt" -- "I am absolutely innocent of the crime with which I am burdened."
His widow campaigned for her husband’s innocence until her death.


Points I often hear brought up
  • Many think someone within the household was in on the crime, and the finger is usually pointed at Betty Gow. The kidnapper had to know which window was the baby’s bedroom, and there was one window where the shutters did not latch properly - this points to it being an inside job. (The flipside to this is Hauptmann was seen casing the house - then again, that’s if you believe the eyewitnesses.)
  • The Lindbergh’s dog often barked at strangers and never fussed on the night of the kidnapping, indicating the dog was familiar with whoever the kidnapper was
  • A big deal is often made of how convincing Hauptmann was in person. He had piercing blue eyes, and when he testified of his innocence, he could be quite convincing until you stepped back and took a look at the evidence. He convinced his lawyer that he was innocent, and the lawyer believed him even after his death
  • The Union Hotel, where many reporters stayed to cover the case, is haunted (across the street from the Courthouse)
  • The jail where Hauptmann was held is haunted (this was not where he was executed, he was just held there during the trial since it is directly behind the Courthouse)
  • The consensus seems to be that Hauptmann was guilty, but the housemaid was in on it.

What I Think Happened
This was intended to be a kidnapping, not a murder. Hauptmann plucked Charlie Jr. from his crib intended to hold him for ransom, but as he was climbing down the ladder, the rung broke, he dropped the child, and the baby died instantly. Hauptmann had no choice but to continue now - he stashed the ladder and dashed off, panicked.
I do not think Hauptmann was very bright. I think he underestimate the celebrity of the Lindberghs and how much attention the case would attract. I think the crime was poorly planned, being that the notes were handwritten and he met in person with Condon (I’m not sure what to make of Condon’s failure to identify, but we all know how faulty eyewitness evidence can be). Particularly since the crime didn’t go according to plan, Hauptmann did not seem to have a fall-back for this. This is evidenced when he jumps on the fact that they went to the police and made a fuss - he could not possibly have expected they wouldn’t, could he? - he seems almost over-eager to lord holding the baby for longer over their heads. Why? Because the baby is dead, and has been since the first night.
Hauptmann had no plan for disguising his use of the easily-traceable gold certificates - why accept the money, less than he had demanded and not in the form he had requested? Because he’s already panicked and glad that he’s getting anything, and the entire crime is poorly planned.
This doesn’t seem like it would have been a one-man job -- but, on the other hand, it also seems so poorly planned that it may have been. I question that Hauptmann’s wife, Anna, was considered innocent.


Sources