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Murder of Bobby Greenlease

Robert Cosgrove Greenlease Jr. (February 3, 1947 – September 28, 1953) was a six-year-old from Kansas City, Missouri, United States, who was the victim of a kidnapping and homicide on September 28, 1953. His father, Robert Cosgrove Greenlease Sr., was a multi-millionaire auto dealer, and the demanded ransom payment was the largest in American history at the time.

Murder of Bobby Greenlease
Bobby Greenlease and his father, 1953
LocationLenexa, Kansas, U.S.
DateSeptember 28, 1953
Attack type
Child murder by shooting, child abduction
Weapon.38 caliber snubnosed Smith & Wesson revolver
VictimRobert Cosgrove "Bobby" Greenlease Jr., aged 6
Perpetrators
  • Carl Austin Hall
  • Bonnie Emily Brown
MotiveRansom
VerdictPleaded guilty
ConvictionsKidnapping (18 U.S.C. § 1201)
BurialForest Hill Calvary Cemetery
SentenceDeath

Greenlease Jr.'s kidnappers, Carl Hall and Bonnie Heady, had no intention of returning him to his family, the child having been murdered before the ransom demand was even issued.[1] Both perpetrators were sentenced to death and executed in Missouri's gas chamber in December 1953. Heady was the third woman ever to be executed by U.S. federal authorities.[2]

Background edit

Robert "Bobby" Cosgrove Greenlease Jr. was born to Robert Greenlease Sr. (1882–1969) and Virginia Greenlease (nee Pollock; 1909–2001), his second wife, on February 3, 1947. (They were married in 1939. Greenlease's first wife was Betty "Bessie" Rush (1890–1950), whom he married on March 3, 1913.) The elder Greenlease was a multi-millionaire car dealer and entrepreneur, having made his fortune by introducing General Motors vehicles to the Great Plains in the early 20th century, owning dealerships from Texas to South Dakota. He was 65 years old when Bobby was born in 1947. The Greenleases were said to have been devoted to Bobby.

According to author John Heidenry, Bobby was said to be a trusting boy; Bonnie Heady later stated that from the moment she appeared at his school posing as his aunt to take him to his mother, he just took her hand and did anything he was told to do.[3]

Abduction and murder edit

Carl Hall
Bonnie Heady
 
Carl Hall (left) and Bonnie Heady (right)
BornCarl Austin Hall
(1919-07-01)July 1, 1919
Bonnie Emily Brown
(1912-07-15)July 15, 1912
DiedHall
December 18, 1953(1953-12-18) (aged 34)
Missouri State Penitentiary, Jefferson City, Missouri, U.S.
Brown
December 18, 1953(1953-12-18) (aged 41)
Missouri State Penitentiary, Jefferson City, Missouri, U.S.
Cause of deathExecution by gas chamber
Criminal statusExecuted
Conviction(s)Kidnapping (18 U.S.C. § 1201)
Criminal penaltyDeath
Details
DateSeptember 28, 1953
CountryUnited States
State(s)Missouri
Location(s)Johnson County, Kansas, U.S.

In September 1953, Carl Hall (34) and Bonnie Heady (41), kidnapped Bobby from Notre Dame de Sion, a Catholic pre-school located in Kansas City, Missouri.[4] The kidnappers were drug-addicted alcoholics then living together in nearby St. Joseph. In the early 1930s, Hall had attended Kemper Military School in Boonville with Paul Robert Greenlease, Bobby's adopted older brother. Hall had planned for years to victimize his former classmate's wealthy family.

Heady visited Bobby's school and persuaded a nun, Sister Morand, that she was his aunt, telling her that his mother had suffered a heart attack and was in St. Mary's Hospital. She then took Bobby away in a taxi driven by John Oliver Hager, of the Ace Cab Company, who would testify in court. When another nun from the school rang to inquire about Virginia Greenlease's condition, she discovered the truth and her husband contacted the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Hall and Heady took the child across the state line to Johnson County, Kansas, where Hall shot him dead with a snubnosed .38 caliber revolver. They then took the child's body to St. Joseph and buried him in the backyard of Heady's house, at 1201 South 38th Street.

Ransom edit

After the murder, Hall and Heady sent Bobby's father messages in the mail and phone calls demanding a ransom of $600,000 ($6.8 million today). Greenlease, desperately trying to save his son, held off the authorities and paid the money. At that time, it was the largest ransom ever paid in American history, and remained so until the 1972 kidnapping of Virginia Piper.[5] Hall became convinced that police would trace him and Heady to St. Joseph, so he randomly decided to drive to St. Louis. The couple collected the ransom and fled.

Arrest edit

Once in St. Louis, Hall left Heady in the middle of the night in a rented room. He contacted criminal associates to enlist their help in diverting police attention. One of the associates, a former sex worker named Sandra O'Day, was supposed to fly to Los Angeles and mail a letter Hall had written. It was thought that this would divert police attention from St. Louis. However, O'Day caught a glimpse of the ransom money.[6] St. Louis police soon learned that Hall was flaunting a large sum of money, and they brought him in for questioning.

Hall eventually implicated Heady. The police found her at an apartment at 4504 Arsenal Street and discovered Bobby's body in a shallow grave in her back yard.[3] Bobby was later interred in the family mausoleum at Forest Hill Calvary Cemetery in Kansas City.[7]

Trial and execution edit

Bobby's kidnapping and murder scandalized the nation. Because he had been taken over state lines, the crime became a federal case under the Federal Kidnapping Act. Hall and Heady both pleaded guilty to kidnapping. The jury deliberated an hour and eight minutes before recommending a death sentence. The two were executed together in the Missouri gas chamber on December 18, 1953.[8] Only eleven weeks and four days passed between the time the crime was committed and the executions. Neither Hall nor Heady made any attempts to appeal.[9]

Heady is one of only four women to have ever been executed by federal authorities as of 2021: the others being Lincoln assassination conspirator Mary Surratt in 1865 and Ethel Rosenberg, who, along with her husband Julius, was convicted of being a Soviet spy and executed by electric chair on June 19, 1953, just months before Heady. The fourth woman, Lisa Montgomery of Kansas, was executed by lethal injection on January 13, 2021, for the 2004 murder of Bobbie Jo Stinnett.[10]

Since the federal government did not have any execution facilities, Missouri's state facilities, and thus the then-legal gas chamber, were used to carry out the executions. This was the case for all federal executions in the 20th century, before the first executions at the federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, in 2001. Heady is the only woman executed by the federal government by gassing. Heady is buried in Clearmont, Nodaway County, Missouri, where she grew up.[11]

Only $288,000 of the ransom money was recovered. The missing $312,000 remained a subject of wide speculation. Some of the theories accounting for this were:

  • A cab driver who took Hall to the Coral Court Motel had tipped off local mobster Joseph G. Costello.[12]
  • Hall tried unsuccessfully to bury the cash near the Meramec River, though the FBI later searched that area in vain.
  • Suitcases in Hall's possession upon his arrest were not brought to the 11th District Precinct Station by the arresting officers, Lieutenant Louis Ira Shoulders and Patrolman Elmer Dolan.[4] Shoulders and Dolan told a grand jury that the $288,000 they turned over was the full amount seized from Hall when they arrested him. This statement was determined to be false; in fact, it was alleged that Shoulders had taken the balance of the $600,000 ransom that Hall had on him at the time of arrest. Both officers were subsequently federally indicted for, and convicted of, perjury. Shoulders was convicted on April 15, 1954, and sentenced to three years in prison; he died on May 12, 1962. Dolan was convicted on March 31, 1954, and sentenced to two years in prison: in 1962, he informed the FBI that he had perjured because his fear of Shoulders exceeded his fear of prison. Dolan received a pardon from U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson on July 21, 1965.[4]

Popular culture edit

The case was the subject of an episode of Investigation Discovery's series A Crime to Remember, "Baby Come Home" (season 2, episode 8) as well as an episode of the Investigation Discovery series Deadly Women entitled "Under His Control."

During an episode of Ghost Adventures (Season 9, Episode 4) Zak Bagans and team investigates the hauntings at the Missouri State Penitentiary. During this investigation, it was explained that one woman was executed in the gas chamber of the prison (Heady).

Max Allan Collins' novel, The Big Bundle (2023) features the Greenlease kidnapping.

The historian Shelby Foote wrote a historical novel called September September about three misfits from Arkansas that kidnap the grandson of a rich African American businessman. The scalawags take their inspiration for the caper upon reading about the Greenlease kidnapping.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Cole, Suzanne P.; Engle, Tim; Winkler, Eric (April 23, 2012). . The Kansas City Star. Archived from the original on April 21, 2012. Retrieved April 23, 2012.
  2. ^ . news.yahoo.com. Archived from the original on December 11, 2020. Retrieved December 11, 2020.
  3. ^ a b As described in an episode of Deadly Women entitled "Under His Control", originally aired in the United States on October 21, 2010 on Investigation Discovery cable channel.
  4. ^ a b c . Federal Bureau of Investigation. Archived from the original on January 22, 2016.
  5. ^ "The 18 Largest Ransoms Ever Paid". Business Insider. Retrieved September 21, 2017.
  6. ^ Heidenry, John (2009). Zero at the Bone: The Playboy, the Prostitute, and the Murder of Bobby Greenlease. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-37679-6.
  7. ^ "Greenlease Family Gets Condolences". Lansing State Journal. October 8, 1953. p. 22. Retrieved October 8, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. 
  8. ^ "18 Dec 1953, Page 1 - Jefferson City Post-Tribune". Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ "Missouri's most infamous child kidnapping and murder". FOX 2. March 19, 2022. Retrieved May 9, 2023.
  10. ^ "US carries out its 1st execution of female inmate since 1953". Associated Press. January 13, 2021. Retrieved January 16, 2021.
  11. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 19, 2020. Retrieved October 18, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. ^ John Heidenry (2009). Zero at the Bone: The Playboy, the Prostitute, and the Murder of Bobby Greenlease. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 9780312376796.

External links edit

  • Federal Bureau of Investigation's case on Greenlease kidnapping
  • Bobby Greenlease at Find a Grave
  • "Days of Shock and Sorrow" from KCHistory.org/Kansas City Public Library

murder, bobby, greenlease, robert, cosgrove, greenlease, february, 1947, september, 1953, year, from, kansas, city, missouri, united, states, victim, kidnapping, homicide, september, 1953, father, robert, cosgrove, greenlease, multi, millionaire, auto, dealer,. Robert Cosgrove Greenlease Jr February 3 1947 September 28 1953 was a six year old from Kansas City Missouri United States who was the victim of a kidnapping and homicide on September 28 1953 His father Robert Cosgrove Greenlease Sr was a multi millionaire auto dealer and the demanded ransom payment was the largest in American history at the time Murder of Bobby GreenleaseBobby Greenlease and his father 1953LocationLenexa Kansas U S DateSeptember 28 1953Attack typeChild murder by shooting child abductionWeapon 38 caliber snubnosed Smith amp Wesson revolverVictimRobert Cosgrove Bobby Greenlease Jr aged 6PerpetratorsCarl Austin Hall Bonnie Emily BrownMotiveRansomVerdictPleaded guiltyConvictionsKidnapping 18 U S C 1201 BurialForest Hill Calvary CemeterySentenceDeath Greenlease Jr s kidnappers Carl Hall and Bonnie Heady had no intention of returning him to his family the child having been murdered before the ransom demand was even issued 1 Both perpetrators were sentenced to death and executed in Missouri s gas chamber in December 1953 Heady was the third woman ever to be executed by U S federal authorities 2 Contents 1 Background 2 Abduction and murder 3 Ransom 4 Arrest 5 Trial and execution 6 Popular culture 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksBackground editRobert Bobby Cosgrove Greenlease Jr was born to Robert Greenlease Sr 1882 1969 and Virginia Greenlease nee Pollock 1909 2001 his second wife on February 3 1947 They were married in 1939 Greenlease s first wife was Betty Bessie Rush 1890 1950 whom he married on March 3 1913 The elder Greenlease was a multi millionaire car dealer and entrepreneur having made his fortune by introducing General Motors vehicles to the Great Plains in the early 20th century owning dealerships from Texas to South Dakota He was 65 years old when Bobby was born in 1947 The Greenleases were said to have been devoted to Bobby According to author John Heidenry Bobby was said to be a trusting boy Bonnie Heady later stated that from the moment she appeared at his school posing as his aunt to take him to his mother he just took her hand and did anything he was told to do 3 Abduction and murder editCarl HallBonnie Heady nbsp Carl Hall left and Bonnie Heady right BornCarl Austin Hall 1919 07 01 July 1 1919Bonnie Emily Brown 1912 07 15 July 15 1912DiedHallDecember 18 1953 1953 12 18 aged 34 Missouri State Penitentiary Jefferson City Missouri U S BrownDecember 18 1953 1953 12 18 aged 41 Missouri State Penitentiary Jefferson City Missouri U S Cause of deathExecution by gas chamberCriminal statusExecutedConviction s Kidnapping 18 U S C 1201 Criminal penaltyDeathDetailsDateSeptember 28 1953CountryUnited StatesState s MissouriLocation s Johnson County Kansas U S In September 1953 Carl Hall 34 and Bonnie Heady 41 kidnapped Bobby from Notre Dame de Sion a Catholic pre school located in Kansas City Missouri 4 The kidnappers were drug addicted alcoholics then living together in nearby St Joseph In the early 1930s Hall had attended Kemper Military School in Boonville with Paul Robert Greenlease Bobby s adopted older brother Hall had planned for years to victimize his former classmate s wealthy family Heady visited Bobby s school and persuaded a nun Sister Morand that she was his aunt telling her that his mother had suffered a heart attack and was in St Mary s Hospital She then took Bobby away in a taxi driven by John Oliver Hager of the Ace Cab Company who would testify in court When another nun from the school rang to inquire about Virginia Greenlease s condition she discovered the truth and her husband contacted the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI Hall and Heady took the child across the state line to Johnson County Kansas where Hall shot him dead with a snubnosed 38 caliber revolver They then took the child s body to St Joseph and buried him in the backyard of Heady s house at 1201 South 38th Street Ransom editAfter the murder Hall and Heady sent Bobby s father messages in the mail and phone calls demanding a ransom of 600 000 6 8 million today Greenlease desperately trying to save his son held off the authorities and paid the money At that time it was the largest ransom ever paid in American history and remained so until the 1972 kidnapping of Virginia Piper 5 Hall became convinced that police would trace him and Heady to St Joseph so he randomly decided to drive to St Louis The couple collected the ransom and fled Arrest editOnce in St Louis Hall left Heady in the middle of the night in a rented room He contacted criminal associates to enlist their help in diverting police attention One of the associates a former sex worker named Sandra O Day was supposed to fly to Los Angeles and mail a letter Hall had written It was thought that this would divert police attention from St Louis However O Day caught a glimpse of the ransom money 6 St Louis police soon learned that Hall was flaunting a large sum of money and they brought him in for questioning Hall eventually implicated Heady The police found her at an apartment at 4504 Arsenal Street and discovered Bobby s body in a shallow grave in her back yard 3 Bobby was later interred in the family mausoleum at Forest Hill Calvary Cemetery in Kansas City 7 Trial and execution editBobby s kidnapping and murder scandalized the nation Because he had been taken over state lines the crime became a federal case under the Federal Kidnapping Act Hall and Heady both pleaded guilty to kidnapping The jury deliberated an hour and eight minutes before recommending a death sentence The two were executed together in the Missouri gas chamber on December 18 1953 8 Only eleven weeks and four days passed between the time the crime was committed and the executions Neither Hall nor Heady made any attempts to appeal 9 Heady is one of only four women to have ever been executed by federal authorities as of 2021 the others being Lincoln assassination conspirator Mary Surratt in 1865 and Ethel Rosenberg who along with her husband Julius was convicted of being a Soviet spy and executed by electric chair on June 19 1953 just months before Heady The fourth woman Lisa Montgomery of Kansas was executed by lethal injection on January 13 2021 for the 2004 murder of Bobbie Jo Stinnett 10 Since the federal government did not have any execution facilities Missouri s state facilities and thus the then legal gas chamber were used to carry out the executions This was the case for all federal executions in the 20th century before the first executions at the federal prison in Terre Haute Indiana in 2001 Heady is the only woman executed by the federal government by gassing Heady is buried in Clearmont Nodaway County Missouri where she grew up 11 Only 288 000 of the ransom money was recovered The missing 312 000 remained a subject of wide speculation Some of the theories accounting for this were A cab driver who took Hall to the Coral Court Motel had tipped off local mobster Joseph G Costello 12 Hall tried unsuccessfully to bury the cash near the Meramec River though the FBI later searched that area in vain Suitcases in Hall s possession upon his arrest were not brought to the 11th District Precinct Station by the arresting officers Lieutenant Louis Ira Shoulders and Patrolman Elmer Dolan 4 Shoulders and Dolan told a grand jury that the 288 000 they turned over was the full amount seized from Hall when they arrested him This statement was determined to be false in fact it was alleged that Shoulders had taken the balance of the 600 000 ransom that Hall had on him at the time of arrest Both officers were subsequently federally indicted for and convicted of perjury Shoulders was convicted on April 15 1954 and sentenced to three years in prison he died on May 12 1962 Dolan was convicted on March 31 1954 and sentenced to two years in prison in 1962 he informed the FBI that he had perjured because his fear of Shoulders exceeded his fear of prison Dolan received a pardon from U S President Lyndon B Johnson on July 21 1965 4 Popular culture editThe case was the subject of an episode of Investigation Discovery s series A Crime to Remember Baby Come Home season 2 episode 8 as well as an episode of the Investigation Discovery series Deadly Women entitled Under His Control During an episode of Ghost Adventures Season 9 Episode 4 Zak Bagans and team investigates the hauntings at the Missouri State Penitentiary During this investigation it was explained that one woman was executed in the gas chamber of the prison Heady Max Allan Collins novel The Big Bundle 2023 features the Greenlease kidnapping The historian Shelby Foote wrote a historical novel called September September about three misfits from Arkansas that kidnap the grandson of a rich African American businessman The scalawags take their inspiration for the caper upon reading about the Greenlease kidnapping See also editList of kidnappings List of solved missing person cases Capital punishment by the United States federal government List of people executed by the United States federal governmentReferences edit Cole Suzanne P Engle Tim Winkler Eric April 23 2012 50 things every Kansas Citian should know The Kansas City Star Archived from the original on April 21 2012 Retrieved April 23 2012 US schedules first federal execution of woman since 1953 news yahoo com Archived from the original on December 11 2020 Retrieved December 11 2020 a b As described in an episode of Deadly Women entitled Under His Control originally aired in the United States on October 21 2010 on Investigation Discovery cable channel a b c The Greenlease Kidnapping Federal Bureau of Investigation Archived from the original on January 22 2016 The 18 Largest Ransoms Ever Paid Business Insider Retrieved September 21 2017 Heidenry John 2009 Zero at the Bone The Playboy the Prostitute and the Murder of Bobby Greenlease New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 37679 6 Greenlease Family Gets Condolences Lansing State Journal October 8 1953 p 22 Retrieved October 8 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp 18 Dec 1953 Page 1 Jefferson City Post Tribune Newspapers com Missouri s most infamous child kidnapping and murder FOX 2 March 19 2022 Retrieved May 9 2023 US carries out its 1st execution of female inmate since 1953 Associated Press January 13 2021 Retrieved January 16 2021 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 19 2020 Retrieved October 18 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link John Heidenry 2009 Zero at the Bone The Playboy the Prostitute and the Murder of Bobby Greenlease St Martin s Press ISBN 9780312376796 External links editFederal Bureau of Investigation s case on Greenlease kidnapping Bobby Greenlease at Find a Grave Days of Shock and Sorrow from KCHistory org Kansas City Public Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Murder of Bobby Greenlease amp oldid 1222848329, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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