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Richard Hauptmann

Bruno Richard Hauptmann (November 26, 1899 – April 3, 1936) was a German-born carpenter who was convicted of the abduction and murder of Charles Augustus Lindbergh, Jr., the 20-month-old son of aviator Charles Lindbergh and his wife Anne Morrow Lindbergh. The Lindbergh kidnapping became known as "The Crime of the Century".[1] Both Hauptmann and his wife, Anna Hauptmann, proclaimed his innocence to his death, when he was executed in 1936 by electric chair at the Trenton State Prison.[2] Anna later sued the State of New Jersey, various former police officers, the Hearst newspapers that had published pre-trial articles insisting on Hauptmann's guilt, and former prosecutor David T. Wilentz.

Richard Hauptmann
Born
Bruno Richard Hauptmann

(1899-11-26)November 26, 1899
DiedApril 3, 1936(1936-04-03) (aged 36)
Cause of deathExecution by electrocution
OccupationCarpenter
Known forBeing convicted for the murder-kidnapping of Charles Lindbergh Jr.
Criminal statusExecuted
Spouse
Anna Hauptmann
(m. 1925)
Conviction(s)
Criminal penaltyDeath by electric chair

Background edit

Bruno Richard Hauptmann was born in Kamenz, a town near Dresden in the Kingdom of Saxony, which was a state of the German Empire. He was the youngest of five children. Neither he nor his family or friends used the name Bruno, although prosecutors in the Lindbergh kidnapping trial insisted on referring to him by that name. At the age of eleven, he joined the Boy Scouts (Pfadfinderbund).[3] Hauptmann attended public school during the day while attending trade school (Gewerbeschule) at night, studying carpentry for the first year, then switching to machine building (Maschinenschlosser) for the next two years.[4]

Hauptmann's father died in 1917. During that same year, Hauptmann learned that his brother, Herman, had been killed fighting in France in World War I. Not long after that, he was informed that another brother, Max, had also been killed while fighting in Russia. Shortly thereafter, Hauptmann was conscripted into the German Army and assigned to an artillery battery.

Upon receiving his orders, he was sent to Bautzen but was transferred to the 103rd Infantry Replacement Regiment upon his arrival. In 1918, Hauptmann was assigned to the 12th Machine Gun Company at Königsbrück.[3] Hauptmann later claimed he was deployed to western France with the 177th Regiment of Machine Gunners in either August or September 1918, then fought in the Battle of Saint-Mihiel;[5] that he was gassed in September or October 1918; and that he was struck in the helmet by shrapnel from shelling, knocking him out so that he was left for dead. When he came to, he crawled back to safety and was back on duty that evening.[6]

After the war, Hauptmann and a friend robbed two women wheeling baby carriages they were using to transport food on the road between Wiesa and Nebelschütz. The friend wielded Hauptmann's army pistol during the commission of this crime.[7] Hauptmann's other charges include burgling a mayor's house with the use of a ladder. Released after three years in prison, he was arrested three months later on suspicion of additional burglaries.[8]

Hauptmann illegally entered the United States by stowing away on an ocean liner. Landing in New York City in November 1923, the 24-year-old Hauptmann was protected by a member of the established German community and worked as a carpenter. He married a German waitress, Anna Schoeffler (1898–1994), in 1925 and became a father eight years later.[8][9]

Lindbergh kidnapping edit

Crime and investigation edit

On the evening of March 1, 1932, Charles Lindbergh Jr., son of aviator Charles Lindbergh, was kidnapped from Highfields, New Jersey; a homemade ladder was found under the window of the child's room. The $50,000 demanded in a ransom note had been delivered by John F. Condon, but the infant's body was found on May 12 in woods 4 miles (6.4 km) from the family's home. The death was ascribed to a blow to the head, which some have theorized occurred accidentally during the abduction.[10][11]

On September 15, 1934, a bank teller realized that the serial number on a $10 gold certificate deposited by a gas station was on the list of Lindbergh ransom bills.[12][13] On the bill's margin, the attendant, who found the certificate suspicious, had written the license plate number of the customer's car, which turned out to be Hauptmann's. Hauptmann was placed under surveillance by the New York City Police Department, New Jersey State Police, and the FBI.

On September 19, Hauptmann realized he was being watched and attempted to escape, speeding and running through red lights. He was captured after finding himself blocked by a truck on Park Avenue just north of Tremont Avenue in the Bronx.[14]

Trial edit

His trial was dubbed the "Trial of the Century",[15] while Hauptmann was named "The Most Hated Man in the World".

Evidence against Hauptmann included: $14,600 of the ransom money found in his garage; testimony alleging handwriting and spelling similarities to that found on the ransom notes;[14][16] testimony that lumber used in constructing the ladder probably originated in Hauptmann's house;[17] Condon's address and telephone number found written on the inside of one of Hauptmann's closets; and what appeared to be a hand-drawn sketch of a ladder found in one of Hauptmann's notebooks.[18] Experts retained by the defense were never called to testify.[19]

During the trial, Hauptmann was identified as the man who received the ransom money, the man who had spent some of the ransom gold certificates, and as a man seen near the Lindbergh home on the day of the kidnapping. He had been absent from work on the day of the ransom payment and had quit his job two days later.[citation needed]

Hauptmann's attorney, Edward J. Reilly, argued that the evidence against Hauptmann was entirely circumstantial, as no reliable witness had placed Hauptmann at the scene of the crime, nor were his fingerprints found on the ladder, the ransom notes, or anywhere in the nursery.[20]

Hauptmann was convicted, however, and immediately sentenced to death. His appeals failed, though his execution stayed twice while New Jersey Governor Harold G. Hoffman reviewed the case.

Execution edit

On April 3, 1936, Hauptmann was executed in the electric chair at the New Jersey State Prison.[21] Reporters present said he made no statement.[22][23] His spiritual advisor said that Hauptmann told him, before being taken from his cell, "Ich bin absolut unschuldig an den Verbrechen, die man mir zur Last legt" ("I am absolutely innocent of the crimes I am accused of").[24]

Hauptmann's widow Anna had his body cremated. Two Lutheran pastors conducted a private memorial service in German. A crowd of some 2,000 gathered outside.

Guilt questioned edit

In the latter part of the 20th century, the case against Hauptmann came under serious scrutiny. For instance, one item of evidence at his trial was a scrawled phone number on a board in his closet, which was the number of the man who delivered the ransom, John F. Condon. A juror at the trial said this was the one item that convinced him the most; according to some accounts, a reporter later admitted he had written the number himself.[25] However, Hauptmann stated in court that he had written it but could not remember why.[26]

Additionally, neither Lindbergh nor the go-between who delivered the ransom initially identified Hauptmann as the recipient.[27] Condon, after seeing Hauptmann in a lineup at New York Police Department Greenwich Street Station, told FBI Special Agent Turrou that Hauptmann was not "John", the man whom Condon claimed he had passed the ransom money to in St. Raymond's Cemetery. He further stated that Hauptmann looked different (for instance that he had different eyes, was heavier, and had different hair), and that "John" was actually dead because he had been murdered by his confederates.[28]

While waiting in a car nearby, Lindbergh heard the voice of "John" calling to Condon during the ransom drop-off, but never saw him. Although he testified before the Bronx grand jury that he heard only the words "Hey, Doc!", and that it would be very difficult to say he could recognize a man by his voice, he identified Hauptmann as having the same voice during his trial in Flemington.[29] The police beat Hauptmann while in custody at the Greenwich Street Station.[30]

Other coverage has said that certain witnesses were intimidated, and some claim that the police planted or doctored evidence, such as the ladder; or that the police doctored Hauptmann's time cards and ignored fellow workers who stated that Hauptmann was working the day of the kidnapping.[31] These and other findings prompted J. Edgar Hoover, the first Director of the FBI, to question the manner in which the investigation and the trial were conducted. Hauptmann's widow campaigned until the end of her life to have her husband's conviction reversed.

Erastus Mead Hudson was a fingerprint expert who knew about the then-rare silver nitrate process of collecting fingerprints from wood and other surfaces on which the previous powder method would not work. He found that Hauptmann's fingerprints were not on the wood, even in places that the man who made the ladder must have touched. Upon reporting this to a police officer and stating that they must look further, the officer said, "Good God, don't tell us that, Doctor!" The ladder was then washed of all fingerprints, and Colonel Norman Schwarzkopf, Sr, the Superintendent of the New Jersey State Police, refused to disclose to the public that Hauptmann's prints were not on the ladder.[16]

Several books have been written proclaiming Hauptmann's innocence. These books variously criticize the police for allowing the crime scenes to become contaminated, Lindbergh and his associates for interfering with the investigation, Hauptmann's trial lawyers for ineffectively representing him, and the reliability of the witnesses and physical evidence presented at the trial. Scottish journalist Ludovic Kennedy in particular questioned much of the evidence, such as the origin of the ladder and the testimony of many of the witnesses.

In her book about another high-profile trial of the 1930s, the Winnie Ruth Judd case, investigative reporter Jana Bommersbach argued that Hauptmann could not have received a fair trial because the press created an atmosphere of prejudice against him. Bommersbach noted that in those days, newspapers acted as both "judge and jury", and covered crime in a way that would be considered sensationalistic today.[32]

In 1974, Anthony Scaduto wrote Scapegoat, which took the position that Hauptmann was framed and that the police both withheld and fabricated evidence. This led to further investigation, and in 1985, Ludovic Kennedy published The Airman and the Carpenter, in which he argued that Hauptmann had not kidnapped and murdered Lindbergh Jr. The book was made into a 1996 television film Crime of the Century, starring Stephen Rea and Isabella Rossellini.

Some authors suggest Lindbergh was involved in the kidnapping and/or death of his baby, including retired judge Lise Pearlman in her 2020 book The Lindbergh Kidnapping Suspect No. 1: The Man Who Got Away. She points out that instead of being investigated as a possible suspect (due to his fame), Lindbergh helped lead the investigation despite being home at the time of the abduction.[33]

Not all modern authors agree with these theories. Jim Fisher, a former FBI agent and professor at Edinboro University of Pennsylvania,[34] has written two books on the subject, The Lindbergh Case (1987)[14] and The Ghosts of Hopewell (1999)[35] to address, at least in part, what he calls a "revision movement".[36] In these texts, he explains in detail the evidence against Hauptmann. He provides an interpretation discussing both the pros and cons of that evidence. He concluded:

Today, the Lindbergh phenomenon is a giant hoax perpetrated by people who are taking advantage of an uninformed and cynical public. Notwithstanding all of the books, TV programs, and legal suits, Hauptmann is as guilty today as he was in 1932 when he kidnapped and killed the son of Mr and Mrs Charles Lindbergh."[37]

For more than 50 years, Hauptmann's widow fought with the New Jersey courts without success to get the case re-opened. In 1982, the now 82-year-old Anna Hauptmann sued the State of New Jersey, various former police officers, the Hearst newspapers that had published pre-trial articles insisting on Hauptmann's guilt, and former prosecutor David T. Wilentz (then 86) for over $100 million in wrongful-death damages. She claimed that the newly discovered documents proved misconduct by the prosecution and the manufacture of evidence by government agents, all of whom were biased against Hauptmann because he happened to be of German ethnicity. In 1983, the United States Supreme Court refused her request that the federal judge considering the case should be disqualified because of judicial bias, and in 1984, the judge dismissed her claims.[citation needed]

In 1985, more than 23,000 pages of Hauptmann-case police documents were found in the garage of the late Governor Hoffman. These documents, along with 34,000 pages of FBI files, which, although discovered in 1981, had not been disclosed to the public, represented a windfall of previously undisclosed information.[38] As a direct result of this new evidence, Anna Hauptmann again amended her civil complaint on July 14, 1986, to clear her late husband's name by continuing to assert that he was "framed from beginning to end" by the police looking for a suspect.[38] She suggested that the rail of the ladder taken from the attic, where they used to live in 1935, was planted by the police, and that the ransom money was left behind by Isidor Fisch, who was possibly the real kidnapper. Fisch applied for a passport on May 12, 1932, the same day that the Lindbergh baby was found dead. On December 9, 1933, he sailed for Germany, taking with him $600 worth of Reichsmarks.[39] In 1990, New Jersey's governor, James Florio, declined her appeal for a meeting to clear Hauptmann's name. Anna Hauptmann died on October 10, 1994.

Lindbergh, for his part, believed that Hauptmann must have been involved in the kidnapping and murder of his son.[40]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Chua-Eoan, Howard. . Time. Archived from the original on January 19, 2011. Retrieved February 1, 2011.
  2. ^ Linder, Douglas (2005). . University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law. Archived from the original on July 9, 2009. Retrieved June 24, 2009.
  3. ^ a b Hauptmann, Richard The Story of My Life, Autobiography: Unedited & Uncorrected (Translated). New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives, May 4, 1935.
  4. ^ Huddleson, Dr James H. Report to Mr James M. Fawcett: Examination of Bruno Richard Hauptmann; p.1, October 3, 1934. New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives.
  5. ^ Hauptmann, Bruno Richard. Statement. December 6, 1934. New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives.
  6. ^ Huddleson, Dr James H. Report to Mr James M. Fawcett: Examination of Bruno Richard Hauptmann; pp. 2–3, October 3, 1934. New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives.
  7. ^ Record Number 1 A 95/19 against Fritz Petzold and accomplice, County Court at Bautzen, June 17, 1919,
  8. ^ a b Richard ("Bruno") Hauptmann Biography, Famous American Trials, Richard Hauptmann (Lindbergh Kidnapping) Trial by Douglas Linder, 2000 Famous Trials – UMKC School of Law – Prof. Douglas Linder – Biography of ("Bruno") Richard Hauptmann June 21, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ The concise encyclopedia of crime and criminals. Hawthorn Books, 1961, p. 134
  10. ^ "Federal Sleuth Believes Bruno Wasn't Alone". The Washington Post. January 28, 1935
  11. ^ The North American Review, Vol. 237, No. 1, January 1934, p. 55
  12. ^ Horn, William F. Cpl. New Jersey State Police Report. Investigation concerning a recovered $10.00 U.S. gold certificate which is part of the Lindbergh Ransom Money; this report also concerns the arrest of one Richard Bruno Hauptmann, charged with Extortion in connection with the $50, Thousand Lindbergh Ransom Money. September 25, 1934. New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives.
  13. ^ Note: Gold certificates were rapidly being withdrawn from circulation and were becoming rare
  14. ^ a b c Fisher, Jim (1994). The Lindbergh Case. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-2147-3. from the original on February 18, 2017. Retrieved September 25, 2016.
  15. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Death sentence by court to convict Hauptmann for kidnap and murder of son of avia...HD Stock Footage". YouTube.
  16. ^ a b Gardner, Lloyd C. (June 2004). The Case That Never Dies. Rutgers University Press. p. 336. ISBN 978-0-8135-3385-8. from the original on February 18, 2017. Retrieved September 25, 2016.
  17. ^ Report of Examination of Ladder for the New Jersey State Police: Summary of Observations and Conclusions; U.S. Forest Products Laboratory, Madison, Wisconsin. March 4, 1933.
  18. ^ "The State of New Jersey vs. Bruno Richard Hauptmann," Hunterdon County Court of Oyer and Termeer; vol. 5, p. 2606, 1935. New Jersey State Law Library.
  19. ^ Farr, Julia. Letter from Julia Farr to Lloyd Fisher; New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives, April 11, 1935.
  20. ^ "The State of New Jersey vs. Bruno Richard Hauptmann," Hunterdon County Court of Oyer and Termeer; vol. 11 pp. 4687–88, 1935. New Jersey State Law Library.
  21. ^ Bleam, I. C. Prison Clerk, New Jersey State Prison. Death House Menu, "Last meal served to Bruno Richard Hauptmann, #17400, April 3, 1936". 1600 File. New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives.
  22. ^ Runyon, Damon "Bruno Dies in Chair". The New York American. April 4, 1936
  23. ^ Folliard, Edward "Witness to an Execution". The Washington Post. July 17, 1972.
  24. ^ Hoffman, Harold Giles. The Crime – The Case – The Challenge (What Was Wrong with the Lindbergh Case?), Original Manuscript: Unedited & Uncorrected, circa 1937. New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives.
  25. ^ The crime of the Century: The Lindbergh Kidnapping Hoax, p. 164. (Gregory Ahlgren, Stephen Monier)
  26. ^ The State of New Jersey vs. Bruno Richard Hauptmann. Hunterdon County Court of Oyer and Termner. Vol. 5. New Jersey State Law Library. 1935. p. 2606.
  27. ^ An Account of the Trial of Bruno Hauptmann July 9, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ Turrou, Leon G. Special Agent FBI (62-3057) Memorandum For File: Unknown Subjects – Kidnaping and Murder of Charles A. Lindbergh Jr.; September 21, 1934. National Archives at College Park Maryland.
  29. ^ "People vs. Hauptmann," The Bronx Grand Jury; Charles Lindbergh Testimony, p. 5, September 26, 1934. The New York City Municipal Archive.
  30. ^ Tamm, E. A. Assistant Director FBI Memorandum For The Director; September 24, 1934. National Archives at College Park Maryland.
  31. ^ "Extradition". from the original on October 6, 2007. Retrieved June 10, 2007.
  32. ^ Bommersbach, Jana (1992). The Trunk Murderess: Winnie Ruth Judd. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1590580646.
  33. ^ Fagan, Kevin (January 2, 2024). "Retired Oakland judge has shocking theory about infamous Lindbergh kidnapping. And it's catching on". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved January 21, 2024.
  34. ^ Fisher, Jim. "Biography". from the original on July 19, 2011. Retrieved April 29, 2011.
  35. ^ Fisher, Jim (December 15, 1999). The Ghosts of Hopewell: Setting the Record Straight in the Lindbergh Case. Southern Illinois Univ Press. p. 224. ISBN 978-0-8093-2285-5.
  36. ^ Fisher, Jim. "The Lindbergh Case: A Look Back to the Future – Page 3 of 3". from the original on October 3, 2011. Retrieved April 29, 2011. For the Lindbergh case, the revisionist movement began in 1976 with the publication of a book by a tabloid reporter named Anthony Scaduto. In Scapegoat, Scaduto asserts that the Lindbergh baby was not murdered and that Hauptmann was the victim of a mass conspiracy of prosecution perjury and fabricated physical evidence.
  37. ^ Fisher, Jim. . Archived from the original on October 3, 2011. Retrieved April 29, 2011.
  38. ^ a b Hauptmann v. Bornmann et al. USDC (NJ) Civil Action No. 86-2426
  39. ^ "Biography of Isidor Fisch - UMKC School of Law". from the original on March 2, 2022. Retrieved March 2, 2022.
  40. ^ Kennedy, L., The Airman and the Carpenter (1985)

Further reading edit

  • "Sleeping Dogs: A true story of the Lindbergh baby kidnapping," Split Oak Press, Ithaca, New York, ISBN 978-0-9823513-9-0, Copyright 2012 by Michael Foldes, 236 pages.
  • "The Sixteenth Rail," Fulcrum Publishing, Golden, Colorado, ISBN 978-1-55591-716-6, copyright by Adam Schrager, 2013, 314 pages.
  • "Hauptmann's Ladder: A Step-by-Step Analysis of the Lindbergh Kidnapping," Kent State University Press, Kent, Ohio, ISBN 978-1-6063519-3-2, Copyright 2014 by Richard T. Cahill Jr., 448 pages.
  • "The Dark Corners – Of the Lindbergh Kidnapping Volume 1," Infinity Publishing, ISBN 978-1-4958-1042-8, Copyright 2016 by Michael Melsky, 353 pages.

External links edit

  • Photographic Evidence from the Hauptmann Case on the New Jersey State Archives Website
  • Author Jim Fisher's Site on the Hauptmann Case
  • YouTube: Hauptmann Testifies, Millions Wait 1935/01/30

richard, hauptmann, bruno, november, 1899, april, 1936, german, born, carpenter, convicted, abduction, murder, charles, augustus, lindbergh, month, aviator, charles, lindbergh, wife, anne, morrow, lindbergh, lindbergh, kidnapping, became, known, crime, century. Bruno Richard Hauptmann November 26 1899 April 3 1936 was a German born carpenter who was convicted of the abduction and murder of Charles Augustus Lindbergh Jr the 20 month old son of aviator Charles Lindbergh and his wife Anne Morrow Lindbergh The Lindbergh kidnapping became known as The Crime of the Century 1 Both Hauptmann and his wife Anna Hauptmann proclaimed his innocence to his death when he was executed in 1936 by electric chair at the Trenton State Prison 2 Anna later sued the State of New Jersey various former police officers the Hearst newspapers that had published pre trial articles insisting on Hauptmann s guilt and former prosecutor David T Wilentz Richard HauptmannBornBruno Richard Hauptmann 1899 11 26 November 26 1899Kamenz Saxony German EmpireDiedApril 3 1936 1936 04 03 aged 36 Trenton State Prison Trenton New Jersey U S Cause of deathExecution by electrocutionOccupationCarpenterKnown forBeing convicted for the murder kidnapping of Charles Lindbergh Jr Criminal statusExecutedSpouseAnna Hauptmann m 1925 wbr Conviction s First degree murder Kidnapping ExtortionCriminal penaltyDeath by electric chair Contents 1 Background 2 Lindbergh kidnapping 2 1 Crime and investigation 2 2 Trial 2 3 Execution 3 Guilt questioned 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBackground editBruno Richard Hauptmann was born in Kamenz a town near Dresden in the Kingdom of Saxony which was a state of the German Empire He was the youngest of five children Neither he nor his family or friends used the name Bruno although prosecutors in the Lindbergh kidnapping trial insisted on referring to him by that name At the age of eleven he joined the Boy Scouts Pfadfinderbund 3 Hauptmann attended public school during the day while attending trade school Gewerbeschule at night studying carpentry for the first year then switching to machine building Maschinenschlosser for the next two years 4 Hauptmann s father died in 1917 During that same year Hauptmann learned that his brother Herman had been killed fighting in France in World War I Not long after that he was informed that another brother Max had also been killed while fighting in Russia Shortly thereafter Hauptmann was conscripted into the German Army and assigned to an artillery battery Upon receiving his orders he was sent to Bautzen but was transferred to the 103rd Infantry Replacement Regiment upon his arrival In 1918 Hauptmann was assigned to the 12th Machine Gun Company at Konigsbruck 3 Hauptmann later claimed he was deployed to western France with the 177th Regiment of Machine Gunners in either August or September 1918 then fought in the Battle of Saint Mihiel 5 that he was gassed in September or October 1918 and that he was struck in the helmet by shrapnel from shelling knocking him out so that he was left for dead When he came to he crawled back to safety and was back on duty that evening 6 After the war Hauptmann and a friend robbed two women wheeling baby carriages they were using to transport food on the road between Wiesa and Nebelschutz The friend wielded Hauptmann s army pistol during the commission of this crime 7 Hauptmann s other charges include burgling a mayor s house with the use of a ladder Released after three years in prison he was arrested three months later on suspicion of additional burglaries 8 Hauptmann illegally entered the United States by stowing away on an ocean liner Landing in New York City in November 1923 the 24 year old Hauptmann was protected by a member of the established German community and worked as a carpenter He married a German waitress Anna Schoeffler 1898 1994 in 1925 and became a father eight years later 8 9 Lindbergh kidnapping editMain article Lindbergh kidnapping Crime and investigation edit On the evening of March 1 1932 Charles Lindbergh Jr son of aviator Charles Lindbergh was kidnapped from Highfields New Jersey a homemade ladder was found under the window of the child s room The 50 000 demanded in a ransom note had been delivered by John F Condon but the infant s body was found on May 12 in woods 4 miles 6 4 km from the family s home The death was ascribed to a blow to the head which some have theorized occurred accidentally during the abduction 10 11 On September 15 1934 a bank teller realized that the serial number on a 10 gold certificate deposited by a gas station was on the list of Lindbergh ransom bills 12 13 On the bill s margin the attendant who found the certificate suspicious had written the license plate number of the customer s car which turned out to be Hauptmann s Hauptmann was placed under surveillance by the New York City Police Department New Jersey State Police and the FBI On September 19 Hauptmann realized he was being watched and attempted to escape speeding and running through red lights He was captured after finding himself blocked by a truck on Park Avenue just north of Tremont Avenue in the Bronx 14 Trial edit His trial was dubbed the Trial of the Century 15 while Hauptmann was named The Most Hated Man in the World Evidence against Hauptmann included 14 600 of the ransom money found in his garage testimony alleging handwriting and spelling similarities to that found on the ransom notes 14 16 testimony that lumber used in constructing the ladder probably originated in Hauptmann s house 17 Condon s address and telephone number found written on the inside of one of Hauptmann s closets and what appeared to be a hand drawn sketch of a ladder found in one of Hauptmann s notebooks 18 Experts retained by the defense were never called to testify 19 During the trial Hauptmann was identified as the man who received the ransom money the man who had spent some of the ransom gold certificates and as a man seen near the Lindbergh home on the day of the kidnapping He had been absent from work on the day of the ransom payment and had quit his job two days later citation needed Hauptmann s attorney Edward J Reilly argued that the evidence against Hauptmann was entirely circumstantial as no reliable witness had placed Hauptmann at the scene of the crime nor were his fingerprints found on the ladder the ransom notes or anywhere in the nursery 20 Hauptmann was convicted however and immediately sentenced to death His appeals failed though his execution stayed twice while New Jersey Governor Harold G Hoffman reviewed the case Execution edit On April 3 1936 Hauptmann was executed in the electric chair at the New Jersey State Prison 21 Reporters present said he made no statement 22 23 His spiritual advisor said that Hauptmann told him before being taken from his cell Ich bin absolut unschuldig an den Verbrechen die man mir zur Last legt I am absolutely innocent of the crimes I am accused of 24 Hauptmann s widow Anna had his body cremated Two Lutheran pastors conducted a private memorial service in German A crowd of some 2 000 gathered outside Guilt questioned editIn the latter part of the 20th century the case against Hauptmann came under serious scrutiny For instance one item of evidence at his trial was a scrawled phone number on a board in his closet which was the number of the man who delivered the ransom John F Condon A juror at the trial said this was the one item that convinced him the most according to some accounts a reporter later admitted he had written the number himself 25 However Hauptmann stated in court that he had written it but could not remember why 26 Additionally neither Lindbergh nor the go between who delivered the ransom initially identified Hauptmann as the recipient 27 Condon after seeing Hauptmann in a lineup at New York Police Department Greenwich Street Station told FBI Special Agent Turrou that Hauptmann was not John the man whom Condon claimed he had passed the ransom money to in St Raymond s Cemetery He further stated that Hauptmann looked different for instance that he had different eyes was heavier and had different hair and that John was actually dead because he had been murdered by his confederates 28 While waiting in a car nearby Lindbergh heard the voice of John calling to Condon during the ransom drop off but never saw him Although he testified before the Bronx grand jury that he heard only the words Hey Doc and that it would be very difficult to say he could recognize a man by his voice he identified Hauptmann as having the same voice during his trial in Flemington 29 The police beat Hauptmann while in custody at the Greenwich Street Station 30 Other coverage has said that certain witnesses were intimidated and some claim that the police planted or doctored evidence such as the ladder or that the police doctored Hauptmann s time cards and ignored fellow workers who stated that Hauptmann was working the day of the kidnapping 31 These and other findings prompted J Edgar Hoover the first Director of the FBI to question the manner in which the investigation and the trial were conducted Hauptmann s widow campaigned until the end of her life to have her husband s conviction reversed Erastus Mead Hudson was a fingerprint expert who knew about the then rare silver nitrate process of collecting fingerprints from wood and other surfaces on which the previous powder method would not work He found that Hauptmann s fingerprints were not on the wood even in places that the man who made the ladder must have touched Upon reporting this to a police officer and stating that they must look further the officer said Good God don t tell us that Doctor The ladder was then washed of all fingerprints and Colonel Norman Schwarzkopf Sr the Superintendent of the New Jersey State Police refused to disclose to the public that Hauptmann s prints were not on the ladder 16 Several books have been written proclaiming Hauptmann s innocence These books variously criticize the police for allowing the crime scenes to become contaminated Lindbergh and his associates for interfering with the investigation Hauptmann s trial lawyers for ineffectively representing him and the reliability of the witnesses and physical evidence presented at the trial Scottish journalist Ludovic Kennedy in particular questioned much of the evidence such as the origin of the ladder and the testimony of many of the witnesses In her book about another high profile trial of the 1930s the Winnie Ruth Judd case investigative reporter Jana Bommersbach argued that Hauptmann could not have received a fair trial because the press created an atmosphere of prejudice against him Bommersbach noted that in those days newspapers acted as both judge and jury and covered crime in a way that would be considered sensationalistic today 32 In 1974 Anthony Scaduto wrote Scapegoat which took the position that Hauptmann was framed and that the police both withheld and fabricated evidence This led to further investigation and in 1985 Ludovic Kennedy published The Airman and the Carpenter in which he argued that Hauptmann had not kidnapped and murdered Lindbergh Jr The book was made into a 1996 television film Crime of the Century starring Stephen Rea and Isabella Rossellini Some authors suggest Lindbergh was involved in the kidnapping and or death of his baby including retired judge Lise Pearlman in her 2020 book The Lindbergh Kidnapping Suspect No 1 The Man Who Got Away She points out that instead of being investigated as a possible suspect due to his fame Lindbergh helped lead the investigation despite being home at the time of the abduction 33 Not all modern authors agree with these theories Jim Fisher a former FBI agent and professor at Edinboro University of Pennsylvania 34 has written two books on the subject The Lindbergh Case 1987 14 and The Ghosts of Hopewell 1999 35 to address at least in part what he calls a revision movement 36 In these texts he explains in detail the evidence against Hauptmann He provides an interpretation discussing both the pros and cons of that evidence He concluded Today the Lindbergh phenomenon is a giant hoax perpetrated by people who are taking advantage of an uninformed and cynical public Notwithstanding all of the books TV programs and legal suits Hauptmann is as guilty today as he was in 1932 when he kidnapped and killed the son of Mr and Mrs Charles Lindbergh 37 For more than 50 years Hauptmann s widow fought with the New Jersey courts without success to get the case re opened In 1982 the now 82 year old Anna Hauptmann sued the State of New Jersey various former police officers the Hearst newspapers that had published pre trial articles insisting on Hauptmann s guilt and former prosecutor David T Wilentz then 86 for over 100 million in wrongful death damages She claimed that the newly discovered documents proved misconduct by the prosecution and the manufacture of evidence by government agents all of whom were biased against Hauptmann because he happened to be of German ethnicity In 1983 the United States Supreme Court refused her request that the federal judge considering the case should be disqualified because of judicial bias and in 1984 the judge dismissed her claims citation needed In 1985 more than 23 000 pages of Hauptmann case police documents were found in the garage of the late Governor Hoffman These documents along with 34 000 pages of FBI files which although discovered in 1981 had not been disclosed to the public represented a windfall of previously undisclosed information 38 As a direct result of this new evidence Anna Hauptmann again amended her civil complaint on July 14 1986 to clear her late husband s name by continuing to assert that he was framed from beginning to end by the police looking for a suspect 38 She suggested that the rail of the ladder taken from the attic where they used to live in 1935 was planted by the police and that the ransom money was left behind by Isidor Fisch who was possibly the real kidnapper Fisch applied for a passport on May 12 1932 the same day that the Lindbergh baby was found dead On December 9 1933 he sailed for Germany taking with him 600 worth of Reichsmarks 39 In 1990 New Jersey s governor James Florio declined her appeal for a meeting to clear Hauptmann s name Anna Hauptmann died on October 10 1994 Lindbergh for his part believed that Hauptmann must have been involved in the kidnapping and murder of his son 40 See also edit nbsp Biography portalJ Edgar film Presumption of guiltReferences edit Chua Eoan Howard Top 25 Crimes of the Century The Lindbergh Kidnapping Time Archived from the original on January 19 2011 Retrieved February 1 2011 Linder Douglas 2005 The Trial of Richard Bruno Hauptmann An Account University of Missouri Kansas City School of Law Archived from the original on July 9 2009 Retrieved June 24 2009 a b Hauptmann Richard The Story of My Life Autobiography Unedited amp Uncorrected Translated New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives May 4 1935 Huddleson Dr James H Report to Mr James M Fawcett Examination of Bruno Richard Hauptmann p 1 October 3 1934 New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives Hauptmann Bruno Richard Statement December 6 1934 New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives Huddleson Dr James H Report to Mr James M Fawcett Examination of Bruno Richard Hauptmann pp 2 3 October 3 1934 New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives Record Number 1 A 95 19 against Fritz Petzold and accomplice County Court at Bautzen June 17 1919 a b Richard Bruno Hauptmann Biography Famous American Trials Richard Hauptmann Lindbergh Kidnapping Trial by Douglas Linder 2000 Famous Trials UMKC School of Law Prof Douglas Linder Biography of Bruno Richard Hauptmann Archived June 21 2010 at the Wayback Machine The concise encyclopedia of crime and criminals Hawthorn Books 1961 p 134 Federal Sleuth Believes Bruno Wasn t Alone The Washington Post January 28 1935 The North American Review Vol 237 No 1 January 1934 p 55 Horn William F Cpl New Jersey State Police Report Investigation concerning a recovered 10 00 U S gold certificate which is part of the Lindbergh Ransom Money this report also concerns the arrest of one Richard Bruno Hauptmann charged with Extortion in connection with the 50 Thousand Lindbergh Ransom Money September 25 1934 New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives Note Gold certificates were rapidly being withdrawn from circulation and were becoming rare a b c Fisher Jim 1994 The Lindbergh Case Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 2147 3 Archived from the original on February 18 2017 Retrieved September 25 2016 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Death sentence by court to convict Hauptmann for kidnap and murder of son of avia HD Stock Footage YouTube a b Gardner Lloyd C June 2004 The Case That Never Dies Rutgers University Press p 336 ISBN 978 0 8135 3385 8 Archived from the original on February 18 2017 Retrieved September 25 2016 Report of Examination of Ladder for the New Jersey State Police Summary of Observations and Conclusions U S Forest Products Laboratory Madison Wisconsin March 4 1933 The State of New Jersey vs Bruno Richard Hauptmann Hunterdon County Court of Oyer and Termeer vol 5 p 2606 1935 New Jersey State Law Library Farr Julia Letter from Julia Farr to Lloyd Fisher New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives April 11 1935 The State of New Jersey vs Bruno Richard Hauptmann Hunterdon County Court of Oyer and Termeer vol 11 pp 4687 88 1935 New Jersey State Law Library Bleam I C Prison Clerk New Jersey State Prison Death House Menu Last meal served to Bruno Richard Hauptmann 17400 April 3 1936 1600 File New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives Runyon Damon Bruno Dies in Chair The New York American April 4 1936 Folliard Edward Witness to an Execution The Washington Post July 17 1972 Hoffman Harold Giles The Crime The Case The Challenge What Was Wrong with the Lindbergh Case Original Manuscript Unedited amp Uncorrected circa 1937 New Jersey State Police Museum and Learning Center Archives The crime of the Century The Lindbergh Kidnapping Hoax p 164 Gregory Ahlgren Stephen Monier The State of New Jersey vs Bruno Richard Hauptmann Hunterdon County Court of Oyer and Termner Vol 5 New Jersey State Law Library 1935 p 2606 An Account of the Trial of Bruno Hauptmann Archived July 9 2009 at the Wayback Machine Turrou Leon G Special Agent FBI 62 3057 Memorandum For File Unknown Subjects Kidnaping and Murder of Charles A Lindbergh Jr September 21 1934 National Archives at College Park Maryland People vs Hauptmann The Bronx Grand Jury Charles Lindbergh Testimony p 5 September 26 1934 The New York City Municipal Archive Tamm E A Assistant Director FBI Memorandum For The Director September 24 1934 National Archives at College Park Maryland Extradition Archived from the original on October 6 2007 Retrieved June 10 2007 Bommersbach Jana 1992 The Trunk Murderess Winnie Ruth Judd Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1590580646 Fagan Kevin January 2 2024 Retired Oakland judge has shocking theory about infamous Lindbergh kidnapping And it s catching on San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved January 21 2024 Fisher Jim Biography Archived from the original on July 19 2011 Retrieved April 29 2011 Fisher Jim December 15 1999 The Ghosts of Hopewell Setting the Record Straight in the Lindbergh Case Southern Illinois Univ Press p 224 ISBN 978 0 8093 2285 5 Fisher Jim The Lindbergh Case A Look Back to the Future Page 3 of 3 Archived from the original on October 3 2011 Retrieved April 29 2011 For the Lindbergh case the revisionist movement began in 1976 with the publication of a book by a tabloid reporter named Anthony Scaduto In Scapegoat Scaduto asserts that the Lindbergh baby was not murdered and that Hauptmann was the victim of a mass conspiracy of prosecution perjury and fabricated physical evidence Fisher Jim The Lindbergh Case How Can Such a Guilty Kidnapper be so Innocent Page 3 of 3 Archived from the original on October 3 2011 Retrieved April 29 2011 a b Hauptmann v Bornmann et al USDC NJ Civil Action No 86 2426 Biography of Isidor Fisch UMKC School of Law Archived from the original on March 2 2022 Retrieved March 2 2022 Kennedy L The Airman and the Carpenter 1985 Further reading edit Sleeping Dogs A true story of the Lindbergh baby kidnapping Split Oak Press Ithaca New York ISBN 978 0 9823513 9 0 Copyright 2012 by Michael Foldes 236 pages The Sixteenth Rail Fulcrum Publishing Golden Colorado ISBN 978 1 55591 716 6 copyright by Adam Schrager 2013 314 pages Hauptmann s Ladder A Step by Step Analysis of the Lindbergh Kidnapping Kent State University Press Kent Ohio ISBN 978 1 6063519 3 2 Copyright 2014 by Richard T Cahill Jr 448 pages The Dark Corners Of the Lindbergh Kidnapping Volume 1 Infinity Publishing ISBN 978 1 4958 1042 8 Copyright 2016 by Michael Melsky 353 pages External links editPhotographic Evidence from the Hauptmann Case on the New Jersey State Archives Website Author Jim Fisher s Site on the Hauptmann Case YouTube Hauptmann Testifies Millions Wait 1935 01 30 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Hauptmann amp oldid 1212731987, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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