Murderers' Row: An International Murderers' Who's Who

Criminoloogist Robin Odell has compiled this gruesome gallery of cases from all over the world, revealing the growth in serial slayings, contract killings and middle-class murders and investigating what motivates people to commit the ultimate crime. As well as gangsters and ordinary felons, the book includes doctors, millionaries, housewives, children, lawyers, accountants, officers and gentlemen who have succumbed to the killing instinct. Behind the sensational names concocted by the tabloid press - 'Boston Strangler', 'Dracula Killer', 'Night Stalker', 'Granny Killer' - lurk real murderers committing acts of violence in circumstances often more bizarre than fiction.

Arranged in an easy-to-use A-Z format, the book contains over 500 cases from serial killers such as Dennis Nilsen and Ted Bundy, to those such as Jeremy Bamber and Steven Benson who dispatched their parents for money; from murderous New Zealand teenagers whose story made a successful film, to the many doctors and nurses who took life instead of saving it; from unsolved murders such as the murder of Little Gregory in France to the paid assignments of John Waynes Hearn, a Vietnam veteran who killed to order. The result is a classic of true crime, a definitive work on murder as a worldwide phenomenon.

"1111869305"
Murderers' Row: An International Murderers' Who's Who

Criminoloogist Robin Odell has compiled this gruesome gallery of cases from all over the world, revealing the growth in serial slayings, contract killings and middle-class murders and investigating what motivates people to commit the ultimate crime. As well as gangsters and ordinary felons, the book includes doctors, millionaries, housewives, children, lawyers, accountants, officers and gentlemen who have succumbed to the killing instinct. Behind the sensational names concocted by the tabloid press - 'Boston Strangler', 'Dracula Killer', 'Night Stalker', 'Granny Killer' - lurk real murderers committing acts of violence in circumstances often more bizarre than fiction.

Arranged in an easy-to-use A-Z format, the book contains over 500 cases from serial killers such as Dennis Nilsen and Ted Bundy, to those such as Jeremy Bamber and Steven Benson who dispatched their parents for money; from murderous New Zealand teenagers whose story made a successful film, to the many doctors and nurses who took life instead of saving it; from unsolved murders such as the murder of Little Gregory in France to the paid assignments of John Waynes Hearn, a Vietnam veteran who killed to order. The result is a classic of true crime, a definitive work on murder as a worldwide phenomenon.

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Murderers' Row: An International Murderers' Who's Who

Murderers' Row: An International Murderers' Who's Who

Murderers' Row: An International Murderers' Who's Who

Murderers' Row: An International Murderers' Who's Who

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Overview

Criminoloogist Robin Odell has compiled this gruesome gallery of cases from all over the world, revealing the growth in serial slayings, contract killings and middle-class murders and investigating what motivates people to commit the ultimate crime. As well as gangsters and ordinary felons, the book includes doctors, millionaries, housewives, children, lawyers, accountants, officers and gentlemen who have succumbed to the killing instinct. Behind the sensational names concocted by the tabloid press - 'Boston Strangler', 'Dracula Killer', 'Night Stalker', 'Granny Killer' - lurk real murderers committing acts of violence in circumstances often more bizarre than fiction.

Arranged in an easy-to-use A-Z format, the book contains over 500 cases from serial killers such as Dennis Nilsen and Ted Bundy, to those such as Jeremy Bamber and Steven Benson who dispatched their parents for money; from murderous New Zealand teenagers whose story made a successful film, to the many doctors and nurses who took life instead of saving it; from unsolved murders such as the murder of Little Gregory in France to the paid assignments of John Waynes Hearn, a Vietnam veteran who killed to order. The result is a classic of true crime, a definitive work on murder as a worldwide phenomenon.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780752471280
Publisher: The History Press
Publication date: 10/30/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 528
Sales rank: 890,338
File size: 661 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

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Murderers' Row

An International Murderers' Who's Who


By Robin Odell, Wilfred Gregg

The History Press

Copyright © 2011 Robin Odell and Wilfred Gregg
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-7524-7128-0



CHAPTER 1

A


ABBOTT, BURTON W

Student at the University of California in Berkeley who was executed in 1957 for kidnapping and murdering a fourteen-year-old schoolgirl.

Stephanie Bryan failed to return to her home after school on 28 April 1955. After several days, searchers found her school books in a field out of town but there was no trace of the girl. On 15 July, Mrs Georgia Abbott telephoned the police from nearby Almeda to report that she had found some of Stephanie's effects in the basement. She had been looking for articles suitable for a theatrical production when she found a purse and identification card belonging to the missing girl.

Police made a thorough search of the Abbott home and found further articles belonging to Stephanie Bryan, including her spectacles and brassiere. Neither Mrs Abbott nor her husband Burton, a twenty-seven-year-old disabled veteran, was able to offer any explanation.

When the police learned that the Abbotts had a weekend cabin in the Trinity Mountains, some 300 miles from Berkeley, they decided to pay a visit. Aided by dogs, they found a shallow grave containing the decomposed body of Stephanie Bryan; she had been battered to death.

Burton Abbott was arrested and charged with kidnapping and murdering the girl. His trial began in Oakland in November 1955. The case against him was largely circumstantial although hairs and fibres in his car linked him with the victim and undermined his alibi. He simply maintained that he was out of town when the girl went missing. The prosecution described him as a constitutional psychopath and sexual deviant.

After considering its verdict for seven days, the jury found him guilty of first-degree murder and kidnapping for which he was sentenced to death. Abbott strongly protested his innocence and launched several appeals which resulted in numerous stays of execution. On 14 March 1957, he entered the gas chamber at San Quentin; at the very moment that the gas was released, a further stay of execution was telephoned to the prison, but it was too late to save him.

[278, 948]


ABBOTT, JACK HENRY

Convicted bank-robber and murderer whose letters to Norman Mailer, the celebrated writer, were published in 1981 in a book called In the Belly of the Beast.

Abbott spent over twenty years in prison, and much of his internment was in solitary confinement. In 1966, he began a fourteen-year sentence after stabbing a fellow prisoner to death. He devoted his time and energy to reading scholarly works and began writing to Norman Mailer. The author was impressed with Abbott's potential as a writer and helped him to gain parole. For a while after his release, Abbott worked as Mailer's researcher but he found adjustment to life outside prison difficult to manage.

In July 1981, Abbott was involved in an altercation with a restaurant waiter in New York and stabbed him to death. Ironically, his victim was a budding actor-playwright. Abbott went on the run for two months before being arrested in Louisiana. He was tried for murder and sentenced to fifteen years' imprisonment.

Abbott acquired celebrity status on account of his book In the Belly of the Beast, and the way in which he was lauded in literary circles as a major new talent. Others thought the praise was misplaced for someone who simply romanticised crime.

In 1983, the book was adapted as a stage play in Chicago by a director who said he wanted to explore the human capacity for violence. Fifty-eight year old Abbott was found dead in his prison cell in February 2002. He had apparently hanged himself.

[1, 2]


ADAMS CASE

John Bodkin Adams was the Eastbourne doctor who came under suspicion after several of his patients died in the 1950s leaving him valuable legacies.

In July 1956, Mrs Gertrude Hullett, widow of a stockbroker, was being treated by the doctor for a nervous breakdown. He prescribed barbiturate drugs to the extent that she became addicted to them. When she became seriously ill, Bodkin Adams spoke to the coroner to make arrangements for a private post-mortem. The coroner expressed shock at this outlandish request for a patient not yet dead.

Mrs Hullett died on 23 July and Dr Bodkin Adams certified death due to cerebral haemorrhage. The pathologist disagreed, suggesting she had died of barbiturate poisoning. Concern voiced by the dead woman's friends was heightened when they learned that she had bequeathed her Rolls-Royce to the doctor. The inquest on Mrs Hullett returned a suicide verdict and Bodkin Adams received a reprimand.

Throughout his career the doctor had been the fortunate beneficiary in over a hundred wills, receiving cars, antiques and jewellery from grateful former patients. It was common gossip in Eastbourne that the doctor always carried with him on his rounds a supply of blank will forms. This state of affairs was made known to Scotland Yard and a trail of suspicious deaths involving Bodkin Adams was traced back to 1946.

In 1950 he had treated Mrs Edith Alice Morrell, a wealthy widow who was partially paralysed and suffered from severe arthritis. He prescribed heroin and morphine to control her pain and she became increasingly dependent on his visits. The sick woman made several wills and, at one time, left her entire estate to the doctor. When she changed her will, Bodkin Adams asked her solicitor to draw up a codicil concerning her Rolls-Royce and a box of silver which he claimed she promised to leave him. When she died on 13 November 1950, the doctor acquired both the car and the silver.

On 1 October 1956, after intensive inquiries, the police confronted Bodkin Adams about the manner in which he had acquired Mrs Morrell's property. Of her death he said, 'Easing the passing of a dying person is not all that wicked. She wanted to die – that cannot be murder.' The doctor was charged with murder and in March 1957 was tried at the Old Bailey where he pleaded not guilty.

Weaknesses in the prosecution's case were brilliantly exploited by Geoffrey Lawrence QC who defended the doctor and won his acquittal. Bodkin Adams did not testify, thereby denying the prosecution the chance to present damaging evidence about other cases. For example, the nurse who told Bodkin Adams about one of his patients, 'You realise, Doctor, that you have killed her.'

After his acquittal, Bodkin Adams was convicted of forging prescriptions and was struck off the Medical Register. He remained in Eastbourne where he bore his disgrace quietly and continued to treat patients privately.

He was returned to the Medical Register in 1961 and resumed his practice. He died in Eastbourne at the age of eighty-four, leaving an estate valued at £400,000. A full account of the trial was published by Lord Devlin, the presiding judge, in 1985.

Dr Bodkin Adams was widely believed to have killed eight or nine of his patients during his thirty-five years as a medical practitioner. Some thought he murdered for greed, others believed he merely practised euthanasia.

[52, 237, 392, 438, 900]


ALLAWAY, THOMAS HENRY

The murder of a young woman in Bournemouth in 1921 was solved by a telegram and a set of car-tyre impressions.

Irene Wilkins, a young unmarried woman living in London, sought employment on the south coast. She inserted an advertisement in the Morning Post on 22 December 1921 stating her experience for a position as a school cook. She received a reply by telegram from Bournemouth on the same day. The sender asked her to 'come immediately' and offered to meet her by car, adding, 'expense no object'.

The next day, the young woman's body was found in a field outside Bournemouth. She had been bludgeoned to death and, although her clothing was in disarray, she had not been subjected to rape. Car-tyre impressions were noticed in the road close to the crime scene.

It transpired that two other telegrams similar to the one sent to Irene Wilkins, and in the same handwriting, had been sent from post offices in the area. The purpose of the telegrams appeared to be to lure women to Bournemouth.

The tyre impressions were identified as having been made by a Dunlop Magnum. A police round-up of the relatively small number of cars used at that time in the Bournemouth area resulted in an interview with Thomas Allaway. The thirty-six-year-old ex-soldier was working as chauffeur to a businessman whose car was a Mercedes fitted with three Dunlop Magnum tyres and one Michelin tyre.

To confirm their suspicions, detectives needed a specimen of Allaway's handwriting. Betting slips found on him when he was arrested in connection with forging cheques bore writing similar to that on the telegrams. Postcards and letters which he had written to his wife were also made available for comparison.

Allaway's defence when he was tried at Winchester in July 1922 was an unconvincing alibi. The jury convicted him of murder and he confessed his guilt to the Prison Governor on the eve of his execution. The lack of motive in this case has never been adequately explained. If it was sexual, why would Allaway bring a woman from 100 miles away when he could easily have picked up a girl in Bournemouth by driving his employer's Mercedes along the seafront?

[1009]


ALLEN AND EVANS

Two men both in their twenties, Peter Anthony Allen and Gwynne Owen Evans, were the last two persons to be hanged in Britain.

On 7 April 1964, John Alan West, a fifty-two-year-old laundry-van driver, was found dead in his house in Workington. He lived alone and was seen by a neighbour returning to his house in the evening after work. His next-door neighbour was awakened in the early hours by thudding noises in West's house. Looking out of the window, he saw a car driving away down the street.

When the police arrived to investigate, they found West dead from a stab wound and head injuries. Their search of the house produced a raincoat holding vital clues about the attackers. In the coat's pockets were a medallion inscribed to 'G.O. Evans, July 1961' and an Army Memorandum bearing the name, 'Norma O'Brien' and a Liverpool address. Miss O'Brien, a seventeen-year-old factory worker, told the police that in 1963 she had met a man known as 'Ginger' Owen Evans whom she remembered wearing a medallion similar to the one found in the raincoat.

Within forty-eight hours of finding West's body, the police had arrested and charged two men with his murder. Gwynne Owen Evans (his real name was John Robson Welby) had West's inscribed watch on him. His companion was Peter Allen with whom he lodged at Preston. Both men had been in trouble with the police before.

Evans maintained that he did not strike West and tried to shift the blame on to Allen. He admitted stealing the dead man's watch and it was fairly obvious that he had planned the crime. Allen explained that they had stolen a car in Preston in order to drive to Workington to borrow some money from West who was a former workmate. His wife and children had apparently gone along for the ride.

Allen and Evans were tried in June 1964 at Manchester Crown Court. The judge put to the jury the question of whether one or both of the accused men had committed the murder. The jury decided they were equally guilty and they were convicted of capital murder. Their appeal was refused and both were hanged on 13 August 1964, Allen at Liverpool and Evans at Manchester.

Their act of robbery and murder, remarkable only for its callousness, nevertheless earned them a place in criminal history.

[490]


ALLEN, ANTHONY JOHN ANGEL

Justice finally caught up with this bigamist and murderer twenty-seven years after he killed his wife and children.

Patricia Allen and her two children aged five and seven disappeared from their home in Salcombe, Devon on 26/27 May 1975. Anthony Allen did not report them missing. He said that his wife had gone to live in the USA with another man. A huge police search was mounted to find the missing trio but to no avail. Although there were suspicions about Allen, there was insufficient evidence to mount a prosecution. Within two months he had moved in to live with Eunice Yabsley, a widow.

Allen was a bigamist who was already married with two children when he wedded Patricia. He lived with his first family in Surrey where he defrauded the building company he worked for. He deserted his responsibilities by staging a fake suicide at Beachy Head, re-appearing a few years later to marry Patricia. His deception was discovered and he was given a two-year suspended sentence for bigamy, theft and false pretences. Between 1974 and 1990, he spent six years in prison for various offences.

Enquiries into the missing mother and children were re-opened in 2001 following publication of a book by Eunice Yabsley. She related that at the time of the disappearances Allen had scratches on his arm from wrist to elbow. Witnesses also came forward attesting to rows between Patricia and Anthony Allen with their children pleading with him not to her hurt their mother.

With new evidence, a prosecution was brought against Allen and he was put on trial at Plymouth to answer murder charges. His reputation as a bigamist, philanderer and fraudster was unveiled together with his bogus suicide attempt. He told the jury that he had tried to reinvent himself.

The prosecution maintained that he had disposed of his wife and two children so that he would be free to pursue his philandering ways. He was convicted of their murders and sentenced to life imprisonment.

[173]


ALLITT, BEVERLEY

Twenty-three-year-old nurse found guilty in 1993 of murdering four babies in her care at the Grantham and Kesteven General Hospital. Her trial drew comparisons with that of Genene Jones in the USA.

Beverley Allitt had always loved children and wanted to be a nurse or a midwife. She qualified as a state enrolled nurse in 1990 and, because of a shortage of qualified staff, was taken on for six months to work in the children's ward at Grantham.

Soon after her arrival, in the early months of 1991, there were twenty-four incidents of children suffering cardiac arrests and respiratory failure. Three babies and an eleven-year-old boy died. It became evident to the staff that all the emergencies occurred when Allitt was on duty. On 29 April 1991, blood tests on one of the children who came close to death revealed he had been given a massive dose of insulin.

Allitt was arrested but protested her innocence. The circumstantial evidence against her was strong and she was sent for trial. She collapsed midway through her trial at Nottingham Crown Court and received treatment for anorexia nervosa. She had a bad record for absenteeism and during her nursing training had been treated many times for either spurious ailments or self-inflicted injuries.

Her behaviour pointed to a phenomenon known as Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy, a condition in which a person seeks attention by making others ill. Allitt was found guilty of four murders, two attempted murders and seven instances of causing grevous bodily harm. She was given thirteen sentences of life imprisonment.

[24, 223]


ANGELO, RICHARD

Twenty-five-year-old registered nurse nicknamed the 'Angel of Death' by colleagues when he came under suspicion following a spate of hospital deaths.

Angelo was night-shift supervisor in the intensive care unit (ICU) at the Good Samaritan Hospital, West Islip, New York State. His patients were elderly people with cardiac and respiratory problems. Blue Code emergencies were fairly common and seemed to occur mostly when he was on duty.

Doctors became alarmed when the numbers of deaths in the ICU began to rise. There were twenty-five deaths in a six-week period in 1987. Crisis point was reached in October when two deaths and one near-fatal emergency occurred during a single night. The shift involved was Angelo's, and the seventy-three-year-old patient who survived death reported that the nurse had injected something into his intravenous drip before he experienced severe breathing problems. Traces of Pavulon, a muscle relaxant of the same type as succinylcholine (see Genene Jones), were found in his blood and also in his intravenous tube.

Angelo was suspended from duty while doctors reviewed thirty-seven cases involving death or life-threatening crisis. A search of his hospital locker turned up a hypodermic syringe bearing traces of Pavulon. He was not at his apartment when detectives arrived to arrest him but ampoules of Pavulon were found among his effects. Angelo was at Albany attending a medical technicians' conference.

He readily admitted guilt when he was arrested and made a tape-recorded confession. He said he had given unprescribed drugs to dozens of patients. He was unmarried and led a quiet life, being well-respected by his neighbours who thought he was religiously and studiously inclined. He collected rocks and was an avid reader. 'I would never in a million years think this man could do anything to harm somebody,' said an acquaintance.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Murderers' Row by Robin Odell, Wilfred Gregg. Copyright © 2011 Robin Odell and Wilfred Gregg. Excerpted by permission of The History Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgements,
Notes,
Authors' Introduction,
International Murderers A to Z,
Bibliography,

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