Morbid - Episode 391: The Butcher of Kingsbury Run Part 1
Episode Date: November 14, 2022The Cleveland Torso Murders, brought to you by Alaina!!! This is definitely a gnarly case that dates back to the 1930s when torsos started popping up left and right. Many bodies were never id...entified and to this day the identity of the Mad Butcher is unknown. Part 1 will cover the first six bodies to turn up in the area of Kingsbury Run and will touch upon the arrival of a fancy new inspector in town to lead the case. Thank you to our beautiful David White for research assistance! References:Badal, James J. 2014. In the Wake of the Butcher: Cleveland's Torso Murders. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press.—. 2022. The Kingsbury Run Murders. Accessed October 10, 2022.Collins, Max Allen, and A. Brad Schwartz. 2020. Eliot Ness and the Mad Butcher. Boston, MA: Mariner Books.Lytle, Alea. n.d. Kingsbury Run. Accessed October 12, 2022. https://clevelandhistorical.org/items/show/376.Plainesville Telegraph. 1934. "Police Seek to Trace Operation as Key to Torso Murder Mystery." Plainesville Telegraph, September 6.The El Reno Daily Tribune. 1935. "Decapitated Body is Discovered in Ravine." The El Reno Daily Tribune, September 24: 1.Toledo News-Bee. 1936. "Cleveland Maniac Hnuted in Murders." The Cleveland News-Bee, June 6.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey weirdos, I'm Ash.
And I'm Alena.
And this is morbid and it's after Halloween, no.
Officially. Officially. Officially. You know what? It's morbid and it's after Halloween, no. Oh, officially.
Officially.
Officially.
You know what?
It's like weird.
I'm excited for the holidays this year.
Why am I excited for this?
I'm always excited for them, but like this year, for some reason,
I feel like I'm like really excited for them.
Oh, maybe that's a good thing.
Yeah, I feel like, well, because the past three years,
we haven't seen our families.
Like luckily, we've had each other to hang out with
for the holidays,
but we literally haven't seen our families on Christmas.
Oh yeah, like a long time.
And we're used to having like my parents,
you said, big Christmas Eve party's growing up.
It was always a big event.
And then last year, we all had COVID.
Like John and I had COVID, like all of that. Like John and I had COVID.
Like all of that.
I think somebody else had COVID.
Yeah, none of us could get together.
So it was just a real bummer.
And I have been really looking forward to this year.
Yeah, Thanksgiving and Christmas
just have like big blowout.
I said it before, I'll say it again.
I am so fucking stoked for this.
Right.
Your Thanksgiving is like no other.
Thank you.
Absolutely.
You know what, that's my, my girls are like so excited about Thanksgiving.
They're like not even thinking about Christmas.
They're like no Thanksgiving.
Yeah, I respect that.
I do too.
They live in the holiday moment.
Like I'm sorry, it's not Christmas time yet.
Exactly. Everybody's like, November 1st, it's Christmas.
No, it's not.
No, it's November 1st.
It's actually all saints day, thank you.
We can get comfy.
Totally.
We can get cozy as fuck in here.
We can throw some white twinkle lights everywhere.
Not quite yet.
Oh no, throw them up.
Not quite yet. No, throw them up. Not quite yet.
No, throw them up.
Get them up.
In fact, the town's already putting them up.
I'm ready for white twinkle lights.
I would keep white twinkle lights up all year round.
I think they're so cozy and so delightful.
I agree with the cozy and delightful.
I just like having a moment where my home is my home again.
Yeah, between decoration.
But I love my home is my home again. Yeah, and it's between decorated, you know, yeah, but I love my home decorated too.
Exactly. No, I think I'm I like that too having like a little break between decorations,
but like you give me like a couple weeks white twinkle lights.
Yeah, okay.
Go on up.
See that I can get down with.
Couple weeks.
Yeah, twinkle lights.
I just I need a little little little breather.
Little uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
A little okay.
Oh god.
A little minute from changing batteries out of all the Twinkle
lights around the house. Honestly, I can't even take credit for
that though, because Drew was the fucking master of decorations.
The day after Halloween, that motherfucker had the whole
entire Shabang pattern. He was like Christmas or not Christmas,
he was like Halloween, you're out of here. Yeah, see, we have
an even attempted to take our zone. You have three children.
It's a little different.
I do.
We'll get there.
We have three children too, but it's like different.
It's so different.
They're like so quiet.
They're like so chill.
They like sleep in the rain.
You can pet them.
That's true.
You can pet mine too, but they might find that weird.
No, sometimes I do pet yours.
Yeah, sometimes they're just great.
We'll poop on the head. But you know what? Here we are wearing that weird. Sometimes I do pet yours. Yeah, sometimes they're just great. We'll poop on the head.
But you know what?
Here we are wearing that weird lull in holidays.
And we're gonna make this weird for you guys
because this case is not holidayous.
She's all we, but like she me, I'm going to.
I'm gonna make it weird.
I'm scared.
Hi, it's me.
I'm the problem.
It's me.
God, I can't get that out of my fucking hand.
I can't be there.
I don't want to mess with anybody, but like it's just not my jam.
It's, yeah.
No.
It's definitely, I'm, I've seen it way too many times on TikTok.
Yeah.
I respect Taylor Swift immensely, but I'm not necessarily sure.
I think she's about us.
I'm just not as wifty.
Yeah, it's just not my type of music.
I like some of her songs.
Yeah, yeah.
I like the old stuff. Like, yeah, I like the old stuff like
I don't know. I don't even know what I like certain songs when I hear them. I'm like, yeah, that's a that's a song and I think she's great
But I just don't want Swifties yelling at me, but
I think she's great. She's really cool. I agree. So today we're this is gonna be a two-patter
I agree. So today, this is going to be a two-pada. Two-pada, you get in the next part, like, within 48 hours, so don't worry. But this is going to be part one of the mad butcher of Kingsbury Run. Otherwise known as the Cleveland Torso murders.
Oh, okay. So that gives you a little bit of, we'll clue, we'll breadcrumb to let you know what this is all about.
The first one makes it sound like the Canterbury Tales.
Yeah, like the Mad Butcher of Kingsbury Run.
It's like, oh, a theater play.
Yeah, you go to the second one.
It should be Knights.
You're like, oh.
Second one, you're like, oh, that's not whimsical at all.
No, it definitely isn't.
This is like really bad.
And there's like a lot of body parts and dismembering.
And really just, it's not great. So I just want to let you guys know right ahead of time
Decapitation dismemberment
Comin' atcha medilation
I'm gonna throw it all at you. So just so you know when you go into this just sit down
Maybe wait to eat that meal. You were thinking to eat and you're gonna get into this
You're a fucking monster.
You are.
Well, you know what, this person was definitely a monster.
This murder beheaded his victims and most if not all of them were actually killed by
the act of decapitation.
Oh my god.
Which makes us even worse.
He would dismember them, he mutilated men's genitals, he doubled in burning body parts and using
some kind of unknown, like chemical preservant to that turn the skin, reddish and leathery
at times.
He would leave bodies in open places where they would be found and often they were wrapped
in their own blood soaked clothing or newspapers.
Yeah.
This is a, an intense one to say the very, very least, I would say.
So in the, in August of 1934, a handyman named Joseph Hayduk was walking along the beach
in North Perio, Ohio, which is about 30 miles east of Cleveland just for reference.
He was minding his own business, just taking in some fresh air.
That's the thing he's just walking down the beach.
I hate that, because I know what's gonna happen.
He's just walking down the beach,
not doing anything wrong,
when suddenly, just the most leisure
is what he is experiencing right now.
But suddenly he noticed something strange.
He saw a dead seagull that was lying next to some bones.
And he was like, oh, there's probably animal bones
because like seagulls, they're not.
But these bones were what looked to be a vertebrae
and a whole last rib cage.
What?
With a little bit of flesh still clinging to the bones.
Like intact rib cage.
Like I think it was like in some, like a couple pieces,
but it was like clear it was a rib cage.
He was shocked and immediately contacted
the Lake County Sheriff's Office.
They were not concerned, weirdly.
How about a ribcage?
They can...
Washing up on the beach?
Yeah, they considered this to be nothing more than a man
coming across some animal bones
and making a bigger deal out of it than necessary.
Anybody gonna come check it out though,
just like be sure.
So the deputy sheriff, Melvin Keener,
just told him over the phone, just like be sure. So the deputy sheriff Melvin Keener just told him
over the phone, just bury the bones on the beach.
Forget about him, they're just animal bones.
Are you shitting my dick?
And he was like, I'm not sure I think they might be human.
And he was like, are you an anatomist, sir?
I don't think so.
Can we send one out here?
Nah, they didn't do that.
They were like, bury him, forget about him.
What the fuck?
So he said, you know?
And I love that he's literally like,
bury those bones on the beach, forget you ever saw him. What the f**k? So he said, you know, and I love that he's literally like, bury those bones on the beach, forget you have her song.
bury those bones on the dins. There you go, bury those bones on the dins.
And he just told, basically, he was like, make your own uble yet on the beach, just throw them
in the hole and forget about it. Meanwhile, he's like, I was just walking. I didn't sign up for
manual labor. He's like, okay, cool. I'll just bury this body, I guess.
For you guys.
What if you guys, like, I feel like
this is just incriminating myself, sir.
Well, and so Joseph just did as he was told by the police
because you got to.
He was thought he was like, maybe I am just overreacting.
Maybe these are just animal bones.
I don't want to cause any trouble.
He wasn't trying to like, you know,
make them allocate resources that they didn't need to.
So he did it and then went on his merry way.
Then two weeks, so nothing happened.
Two weeks later, on September 5th, 1934, a man named Frank Legassi was walking along the
shore of Lake Erie.
He was searching for driftwood.
He was going to use it for his fireplace in his home.
He did this often.
This was just a regular walk he did.
And as he made his way along the shore,
he saw something large that seemed to be partially buried
in the sand up ahead of him.
He thought it was just like a very big piece
of a tree trunk or like just some log.
But he was curious because he was like,
that's a weird thing just to like wash up on the beach.
And as he made his way to it,
he was greeted with something he never could have prepared
himself for. This item that he was greeted with something he never could have prepared himself for.
This item that he was looking at was not a log, but it was actually part of a woman's
torso.
No.
Yep.
The lower half, to be precise, it had been severed in the middle of the stomach and just below
her knees.
Oh my.
So there was just like that top halves of her legs were attached.
Completely panicked.
He ran to a nearby home and the police were informed
immediately, but at this time,
Legassi was going to be late for work
and this concerned him.
Oh.
So he told his wife, and this is from one of the reports
I saw, so he told his wife,
as gently as possible, why the police would be arriving.
Oh man.
And then asked her to please just relay the information
to them for him.
How do you make that gentle?
That's marriage right there.
That's a good husband.
Like that is, that's like, hey,
I know that you're just home right now
and you're probably having like a strong cup of coffee.
Waiting for me to bring home some firewood
so you can get cozy and cozy.
Yeah, like watch a movie today.
But like I found a torso on the beach.
And now you have to wait till the police get here
and you have to go bring them to that torso.
Love you so much.
You have about five pesos to work.
Yeah, see you when I get home.
Eat.
What's for dinner?
And there's a lot of things in this case
that reminds me of the Jack the Ripper case.
Oh.
And this is one of them where the guy is on his way to work.
Yeah, but he's worried he's going to be late for work.
And it's like, to all of us, it seems like this is a great excuse
to be late for work.
Like, hey, I found a torso, but to them, it is not.
And that is, it's just so funny.
I feel like back then, there was no good excuse to be late for.
Oh, yeah, finding a torso, finding a dead body.
They did not care.
They were like, cool, you found it, you should have kept going.
Right, you have to get to work.
This is the 30s, right?
Like, yeah.
Had the depression happen?
Oh, yeah, this is like depression era.
Yeah, they're like, get to work.
Yeah, they're just like, we don't have time for this.
Yeah, fuck that.
So the police did arrive unseen
and the coroner was shortly following them.
The torso was brought in for post mortem, post mortem examination
and it was thought that she had been killed
around six months before she was found and had been in the water for about three to four months.
Now weirdly, the body didn't reflect this time in the water, really.
And also it was described as being red, tough, and leathery.
And this led the coroner to believe it was treated with some kind of chemical preservation.
They couldn't figure out what it was though.
And aside from the lack of decomposition, there was also no water logging of the body.
So it seemed like she may have been in a container of some sort when she was put into the water.
And eventually through this six months or three months or four months she was in the
water, this container opened up somehow at some point and she floated on the shore.
Gotcha.
That's why she wasn't waterlogged.
It would be possible that whatever that thing was that was on her skin could have
created some kind of barrier.
Probably not that much of a barrier.
No.
I think a three to four months in the water with nothing around you, even a preserveant wouldn't
do that.
That wouldn't be able to work.
I would think you would become waterlogged at some point.
That's a long time.
Yeah, that's many days.
That's many days. Many days.
That's many days in the water.
Now, this discovery was all over the newspapers the following day.
And when you know it, Joseph, our friend Joseph Hayduke,
the man who had discovered straight up human remains two weeks earlier,
and was told to bury them on the beach, he was reading the paper
and he saw this story of the torso found on the beach.
And he immediately knew something was off.
And when he read the story, he was like,
you know what, there's something dark happening here.
I got to contact them again.
So he called the Lake County Sheriff's Office again
and he reminded them of what he had found,
which good for him,
because he could have just been like,
whoop, and do anything, true.
But he was like, no, this isn't right.
So they contacted the Cleveland Police
and they got in touch with Joseph, the Cleveland police,
and they asked him to bring them where he had buried the bones.
Now, this was not easy.
It had been two weeks, and they had brought a lot,
there was a lot of stormy weather
that had happened in those two weeks.
So the area looks different, the sand moved around,
the tide had gone in and out, like, that's the thing.
It was just a lot of stuff that made this, like things had blown onto the beach, which
made the area look different than it had before.
Yeah, the beach is a tough spot.
Yeah.
And it took a couple of days, actually, for them to locate the area that he had buried them
in.
But they were able to get to the place finally after a couple of days.
And they brought those bones to the corner to be examined.
And he looked at them and he said, yep, these are absolutely 100% human remains.
And also they perfectly matched the torso found by Frank Lugassee.
Oh, wow.
So these police officers told him to bury human remains.
And so he, the man found a torso and the rib cage was out of it.
Yeah. And if you, so what we know, because there are a lot of pictures from this case,
and I'm going to tell you, they're rough.
Because there's a lot of body parts to capitations, just straight up heads.
Some of them are in very poor condition.
This one in particular, it is basically a lump of flesh.
So I'm sure this flesh, this body, definitely decomposed,
but just not enough for them to think that it was floating freely in the water for four months.
Right, right. Because I think it would just be almost nothing at that point. Right. But I think it
loosened the skin so much that the bones were able to slip out. Oh, okay. So this wasn't like a
procedure for lack of other ways. No, it seems like this was maybe done. This happened
possibly like separately. I didn't even think of the possibility that that could ever happen.
Yeah, it's like slippage. Yeah, that makes sense. I don't know why I didn't think of that.
So, yeah, so that was that was rough and then again, the pictures are up there, but I'm just warning you, it's a lot. Hey there, fellow podcast listener, it's Elena.
And Ash, and we're taking you back to the days before streaming services.
Whoa.
You know, when you would come home from high school, and it was only a few hours until that TV show,
everyone was watching was about to come on.
Well, in 1999, that show was Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
In our podcast with Wondery,
the re-watcher Buffy the Vampire Slayer,
we take it back to 1999.
So get out your knee high boots
and paste that poster of Angel on the wall.
It's time to enter the Buffyverse.
Some of you avid morbid listeners already know what we've gotten store.
Hey, my nose.
Join us as we sway our way through Buffy's drama, action and romance.
Episode by episode slacy.
Follow the rewatcher Buffy the Vampire Slayer wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen early and add free on the Amazon music or Wondery app. Follow the rewatcher, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen early and add free on the Amazon Music or Wondery app. Darn, un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un-un- considering that they told this man to bury human remains without even looking at them. Their first inclination was to say that this was
probably suicide.
Let that sink in.
They found the lower torso of a woman
and bits of her bones on the beach and they were like,
yeah, that's probably self-inflicted.
I don't know what to say about.
I'm gonna need someone to explain to me
exactly how she would do that. Yeah. I'm gonna need someone to explain to me exactly how she would do that.
Yeah, I'm gonna need that. I would like that too.
What a journey they went on there. Like take me on that journey with you fellas. I need to know,
walk me down the path of how you get there.
I don't want to walk down that path though. I don't want to know how they got there.
It's truly wild. So I will play devil's
advocates slightly here for a second just to say that they were not like I'm hoping they
weren't complete buffoons because they were in charge of, you know, law in order. So
the theory to their credit was not completely out of the blue because they were saying this
because they felt like since the body had been in the water for months, it was likely that it could have encountered
a boat propeller or some kind of outside force or animal
that could have caused it to wash up in pieces.
All right.
So it's not, while it is still a wild conclusion
to come to, I guess if you're gonna float that
and that like no pun intended,
you're gonna float that theory out there,
you could be like, okay, I guess that, okay.
Yeah, like that, like sure,
it could have encountered some things
that could have made it come to pieces.
But like, what's investigating?
It's like that, I don't know if that's the number one theory
I would go to.
But the coroner luckily quickly shot down that theory
saying that the cuts to the bone
were far too precise and clean to be made by things like a propeller or an animal.
And he said, in fact, it was so precise and so clean that he believed this was the work
of someone who had anatomical knowledge.
Very jacked the ripperish.
Well, that's what I was kind of wondering when the bones were set up.
But then the whole slippage thing came into play.
Which who knows?
Maybe he did pull those bones out.
Who knows?
That's just a theory that it probably wasn't like him doing it.
But he actually told the media no surgeon would have used a saw.
So he believed this person had anatomical knowledge, but probably wasn't like a working
surgeon.
Okay.
Maybe they could have been a surgeon at some point,
but they even believed they would be a surgeon
that was working right now
because they would have access to better tools.
Yeah, and so this also really does,
it really reminds me of Jack the Ripper
in several ways because they really are going with theories
that they were going with back then.
This victim became known as the Lady of the lake and she was headline news for days.
Oh yeah. Everyone was shocked and looking for answers, but none came.
In on September 11th, she was buried in a potter's field at Highland Park Cemetery
without an identity and without any knowledge of how or why she was killed. Little did anyone know,
a vicious serial killer was only beginning
his reign of terror on this community.
Now she was never identified.
Never.
And several of these victims were never identified.
Oh no.
And it's wild because a couple of them have very
distinguishing marks like tattoos and stuff.
Huh.
Never identified.
Well, there's still hope the lady of the dunes
was just identified.
That's true. Ruth Marie Terry the dunes was just identified. That's true
Ruth Marie Terry how wild was that? Yeah, just quick sidebar. She's from Tennessee. Yeah, but that's the thing
We we had faith that thought was gonna get solved you were like wow, it's been a long time
But you got a long time and if you got faith and then I mean the summer to man also identified there is always hope
Yeah, a cold case is never cold cold cold cold case is just chilling out for a minute
It's never frozen. It's like Heidi Jones says if there's hope there's a way exactly
And now we just have to use her identity to try to figure out who actually killed her exactly. That's that's what I need to know
I know that's the bigger part, But yeah, so that's, you know, maybe some of these people
can become identified at some point.
I hope so.
I mean, this is from the 1930s, it's a little harder,
but not impossible.
So the time period in location that this took place
is important here.
It was in the mid 1930s depression era
in a small community of self-built homes in Kingsbury Run,
which was located along the Kayahoga River in Cleveland.
I'm very sorry if I said that wrong.
I actually think you said that right.
Today?
Because I think I had to say that a few weeks ago
for one of my Ohio Ohio kids.
Hey, look at that.
But I could be, I'd maybe said it wrong.
I hope so.
Just spreading the word of saying it wrong.
Yeah, I'm doing my best here.
So this area had a bustling railway system
that during the hardest of times of the Depression era
became a method for people to travel from place to place
kind of looking for work or any kind of sanctuary
of any kind, really.
That's where...
Because it was real bad.
That's where the fucking big huge peninsula
of hyphon comes from.
There you go.
The railway.
Oh my goodness.
Yes, there it is.
I knew this was connecting somewhere.
Connection.
Now, there were various places around Cleveland where people completely down and hit hardest
by the Depression would take up residence on abandoned land plots and they would build
little shanties.
And if enough did this in a plot, they became like a shanty town, just like all self-built
homes, like a community living together. That's cool
Police would often destroy these that's
Eventually, but these people would just move on to live in Kingsbury run where they created even more of those
Apparently right near Kingsbury run was a place the police called the roaring third and it was a place with many
But I mean this is a quote many bars bars, brothels, flop houses, and gambling
dens.
Sounds fun.
So it kind of feels like the roaring third was like the white chapel.
Yeah.
It's really going to go there.
If we're going to jack the rip, and Kingsbury Run was kind of like right on the outskirts
of white chapel, if you want to save us, if you really want to make the reference.
Now apparently by the end of the 1930s, when things were beginning to be on a slow but kind of steady uptick, Kingsbury Run had more than a hundred of these self-built
shanties and contained a population in the Shanty town of more than 300 people. These were the most
vulnerable people. They were marginalized and a killer took full advantage of this, which is why
I think some of them aren't so many of them aren't identified. Because I think he took full advantage of this, which is why I think so many of them aren't identified.
Because I think he took full advantage
of the fact that these people were the most down on their luck
and the most, like they were probably not from there
in some cases, so they didn't have family there,
like really preyed on the vulnerability of these people.
Again, very Jack the Ripperish.
Very Jack the Ripperish.
Now, September 23rd, 1935, which was a year later after the Lady of the Lake is discovered,
16-year-old James Wagner and 12-year-old Peter Kostura were tossing a ball back and forth
as they walked along the side of King's Berry Run.
This was a place actually called Jack Ashill.
Awesome.
Which great name.
The ball got away from the boys and 12-year-old Peter ran into some brush just to go retrieve
it.
As he searched, he came across a corpse instead.
Boy.
This was a man.
He was headless and nude, wearing only black cotton socks.
There is a photograph of this man.
When you see it, I cannot imagine a 12 year old
coming across this while looking for a fucking ball.
Oh, the most horrifying.
I mean, it's just a naked, dead man in black socks
laying on the ground with no head.
Like, there goes your childhood.
That's it.
Like, not, it would be, it would be even horrific
just if he was a naked dead man in black socks
with a head.
This guy doesn't have a head.
That's a whole different, oh, like, and there was no blood on the ground or around the
corpse.
And again, I can't even think of how this poor kid thought, like what went through his
brain when he found this.
They immediately ran and got their parents who who called the eerie railroad police to report
it.
The body was brought to the corner who noted that the man's wrists showed signs that he
had been bound with rope.
There were clear rope burns in his skin.
Hate that.
His head was removed and it was also discovered that one of his testicles was missing and
his genitals were mutilated.
Part of them removed.
The body had signs that it had been thoroughly washed,
and it was clear he wasn't killed or beheaded
where he was found.
This was a secondary site, and this was a dumping ground.
Right.
This is also strange.
We don't cover that many cases where a serial killer
will kill both men and women.
Exit, that's very important in this case.
It's also men, women, and the age is kind of all over the place.
So anybody?
Yeah.
Like, he doesn't seem to have a type to be quite honest.
I can't actually even think of a serial killer or killer that we've covered.
Richard Ramirez, I would say, is the only one that didn't have a clear, victim profile
that he would go through.
I'm sure there might be another one
that I'm just not thinking of.
Yeah, but we haven't covered many.
But no, they're rare.
Like I think usually you find that there's,
that they're, it's a men killing women,
or you know, like well, there's,
there's at least a clear victim pattern.
Yeah, yeah.
But not here.
So strange and so much more scary.
So much more.
And it's very rare to hear of like
The murder being because of decapitation like yeah, these people are killed by having their head cut off right like that's
So yeah on another level sick and the amount of work he went through with each of these bodies. It's just very intense clearly
Whoever this was had a good amount of space
I would think in like a private space where they could do this.
That's what you would think.
Cause you, when, again, I know I'm comparing this a lot
to Jack the Ripper, but you can't deny the parallels.
Right.
It's kind of similar to Jack the Ripper
where they immediately were like,
he has to have a place where he's doing this.
Right.
But like, maybe not.
I know that that is the thing.
But maybe it's like in a very secluded area,
you know, like you must have some kind of place,
but it's like, not necessarily a home or anything, right?
Maybe it's like somewhere just,
I get to wait and see.
Maybe, you never know.
Now, this was bad enough that we just found
a headless naked body of a man,
a 12-year-old just found this.
But one hour later after this body was found, another
was discovered in the same area.
Oh, my.
Police were looking around for evidence for the first man when they ran into the body of
another man, an older male, heavier set, who was also missing his head, and one testicle,
one testicle, and he also had medallation to his genitals as well.
So same.
Same. And sorry, did you say he was also decapitated missing a head?
Right away, they could see that there was some kind of liquid covering his body
and the skin had turned reddish, tough and leathery like the first one.
The first torso.
As they continued their search of the area, they found the first man's head,
like half buried near the second man's body. And as they continued the search, near
the second body as well, was the head of the second body. And how would they be able to
determine whose head is whose? I think, well, this one might have been a little easier
because one was a younger, what we find out to be, I think, a 23 year old male or 28 year old male. So my second one was in his late 40s mid to late 40s.
One was a thinner athletic build. The other one was a heavier set guy. Okay. They made sense, I think.
Okay. But as they so they found the second man's spot head, they found the first man's head,
both next to the second body. Weird. They both have all the same kind of things, the missing testicles, the genital
medilation. Near the body, they also found a bunch of rags and a bucket of oil. Yeah. So the first
victim was quickly identified because they were able to get fingerprints off him. Oh, okay.
The second body was a little more decomposed. Now, because of this, they were able to identify
the first body as 28- olds at Edward and Drossie
He had worked previously as a hospital orderly
But was also involved with a lot of the shadier elements of life
He was a petty criminal and was known to he was known in the roaring third
Like a lot, okay people a police said that he was always having run-ins with them was basically into whatever vice
You can dream of he was just really run-ins with them, was basically into whatever vice you can dream of.
He was just really going for it.
He was sleeping.
He was known around town for brawling, drunkenness, always having a concealed weapon around
him.
He was a ladies man, always had a lady on his arm.
Sounds like a good time to me.
He would go after other men's wives.
He was just like, he was living like, really?
Just like a car, like a, he's like, apparently just like a car like a,
he's truly, he's like a caricature.
Yeah, that's actually the exact word I was looking for.
Thank you because I literally said that and I couldn't think of it.
That's why I knew I was like,
I think this is what you're saying.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
The coroner said he had been dead only two to three days.
And his cause of death was decapitation. Yikes. Now again, the cuts were precise
and clean on this guy. The second man was more decomposed so they couldn't get fingerprints
from his body. And the coroner had him probably around his mid forties and age. And his time
of death was, his time of death was thought to be a few weeks prior.
This body was also partially burned,
which they figured was maybe why that oil and rag bucket
were next to the body,
maybe he'd use that to try to light him on fire.
Jesus.
But they thought that maybe why that reddish
shallethory appearance was there, but they weren't sure.
Now, the theories, because they figured maybe he looked
that was like oil on his body. Right, right. Because they don't know what the substance is. Yeah, they don't know what Now, the theories, because they figured maybe he looked at, was like, oil on his body.
Right, right, right.
Because they don't know what the substance is.
Yeah, they don't know what the hell is going on.
So, the theory started that this was multiple killers.
Which, okay.
Multiple killers to be entertaining everyone.
Yeah, now remember, serial killers were not a thing
that people knew about back then.
Because when did that term come around?
It wasn't until like the 80s. back then. Because when did that term come around? It wasn't until the 80s.
Oh shit.
I just forget that.
Or at least I think it was the 80s.
People think it's the 70s, but I'm pretty sure that's one of those myths.
Yeah, I think it's probably because of my time.
Kind of.
Yeah, I don't know.
It was the 70s or 80s.
Yeah, a while after this.
That's all we know.
Quite some years.
But they didn't connect the dots a lot
and assume like in any cases like this.
So they just assumed it was just multiple assholes
doing similar things in similar areas.
Yeah, which is wild that we all just were like,
yeah, that's fine.
They assumed that Edward, the victim that was identified,
was just killed by possibly a jealous husband
of one of the women that he was known to be with,
or they went the homophobic route,
and they said that he must be gay.
Oh, totally, because since his genitals were mutilated,
it was a lover who had masculated him in a fit of passion.
Oh yes, us gays just love that.
That's the only genitals.
I was gonna say,
because that is such a gay person thing to do.
Just gay things. Just gay things.
Just gay things, everybody.
Yeah, there was a lot of that.
And with this case, that comes up a lot.
It's just, it just like, in Jack the Ripper,
everyone was blaming Jewish people.
There's always a group of people
that they're gonna point to and say,
it must be you.
Steep goat.
It can never just be us.
So they spoke to Edward's mother, actually, who said that the family had last seen him September
19th in the evening.
And that night he was seen in a large dark car, resembling one that, quote, a gangster
would own.
And he was, no, like a, like a mafia.
No, I know.
Yeah.
I love when you say gangster.
It's my favorite thing.
And he was with another man in this car.
Now, his mother also said he had been a little unedgently
because recently a man had become very angry
and had come to their home looking for Edward
because he had paid too much attention to his wife.
Right.
So Edward, sister, Edna also said Edward Edna.
Cute. Also said he was very, he was kind of off in a little upset in the weeks leading up to his mother. So Edward's sister, Edna, also said, Edward Edna.
He also said he was very, he was kind of off
in a little upset in the weeks leading up to his murder.
She said he had gotten into some fights
with what they said was an Italian man
at the corner of East ninth in Boulevard.
And he had told his sister that he had actually
stabbed this man.
But there was no evidence that this crime ever occurred.
Huh.
So they never, like, no one was murdered.
Just a quick start.
Yeah, like, there's no evidence in any hospitals
that this man went to the hot, like,
no one can really identify this man.
It just never, it seems like it didn't happen.
So I don't really know what that was about.
Or maybe it didn't, it was just like normal.
Like, yeah, I don't know.
I stopped him. Bye.
And now the thing is too, that he is,
he was and still is in like newspapers about this.
He's used a little bit as a scapegoat in the press.
And especially now, in the murder cases,
the Scus stick can happen too.
It's like, it's presented that he brought it on himself.
Nice.
And that's, it's very victim blamey.
The way that this happens.
Usually one brings it upon themselves
to be decapitated.
Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, you can definitely bring that upon yourself. Usually one brings it upon themselves to be decapitated. Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, you can definitely bring that upon yourself.
So stupid.
You do not.
Like who says that?
In the book, in the wake of the butcher,
Cleveland's torso murders by James Badal,
he says this about Edward, quote,
certainly he was no alter boy.
And his lifestyle clearly distressed his parents.
But much of his totally negative images
based solely on the often sensational
contemporary accounts of his brutal murder.
And the authorities were looking for someone
who had reasons to kill him,
not those who cared about him.
So that's what they're saying.
They're like, what you're seeing is them talking about
the things that would have made him a likely victim.
Instead of looking at it as, well, who was he?
Right, you know?
And like, yeah, maybe he clearly hung out
with the shadier aspects of the town, you can tell that.
But like, that doesn't necessarily, like,
it also sounds like he was close with his mom and his sisters.
Exactly.
So like, that's the side of him.
And again, like they said in this,
you're looking for people who have a reason to kill him.
Right.
So you're looking at the worst parts of him.
Yeah, and it's like that doesn't define a person.
Of course it doesn't.
And again, he was brutally murdered.
Like at the end of the day, that's just bad.
Now unfortunately, even with Edward being identified,
no leads were turning up to this case.
They couldn't get ahold of any of these people
that supposedly were mad at him
about sleeping with their wives.
They were never able to even identify
the second man's body. Like, with his head and they had his head. So we have two unidentified
two to stay. So now we have two and we have way more than that only four out of what is
only about 12 were identified. Wow. Yeah. So this is a rough one. Now, the second guy's body,
like I said, it was so decomposed that they couldn't even get fingerprints. So even though they had a head, they had everything else, he was never identified and
it's really sad.
Well, I don't know if they couldn't do teeth.
Yeah.
I don't know if his, I don't know back then how dental records.
I know.
How great they were.
I know that they were used in one victim in this case.
They were.
But it was one victim and we'll get to it in part two, that they haven't officially
identified as this person, but they use the dental records to identify her.
Okay.
It's like a shame, which makes me think that dental records were not exactly up to what
they are today.
Yeah.
I mean, not in sense.
Yeah, so they couldn't look at them back then and go absolutely.
That's the person.
And also, it's the depression rehearsal, like how many people are going to the dentist.
Thank you. That's the other thing is a lot of these people and it seems like a lot of these people
are taken out of some of the poorest places, these shanty towns where like you said, people are
probably not able to get regular health care.. Now, it was 11 a.m. on January 26, 1936, when an unidentified woman was in her apartment,
and she could just hear dogs howling outside of it.
She said, they were always, you know,
outside of her apartment was always loud.
It was near King's very run.
And she said, but these dogs were like howling at something.
And so she was like, what is getting them all riled up?
So she angrily headed outside
and started looking around the heart manufacturing building.
It was like an alley behind this building.
And it was only a few blocks away from the run. As she peeked through the bushes nearby next to the alley,
she saw two strangely placed half-bushal baskets. Now, I had no idea what a half-bushal looked like.
To me, I was thinking like a picnic basket. I don't even know what a whole bushel looks like.
That's the thing. I don't know what a whole bushel looks like.
So I have bushel to me.
I was like, I don't know.
And when you say basket, I think of like a picnic basket.
Same here, yeah.
But no, I looked it up.
And they're those kind of big round baskets.
Almost that you would put like huge mums in.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
But like the big ones.
I put blankets in there.
There you go.
Like something like that. They're fairly big
Yeah, they really are so this was even stranger for her to just find and she found out
I went she found two and they were in half no, they're just like half bushel
Like that's the size of them. Okay, but she is and it had been snowing and they're just sitting there in the snow in the bushes
She's like what the hell is that clearly these belong to to someone. So she's like peeked in there,
because like, what's going on in there?
And it was not what she expected.
There in the basket were pieces of fresh meat
that had been wrapped in newspaper,
like a butcher would, not cow.
And she was confused.
But there was a butcher shop called White Front Meat Market,
only around the corner.
So she went there, because she was like,
did someone leave these here when they got them
at the butcher shop, why would they leave them here?
So she went there and she tells the butcher what she's found
and she had described them as what she thought was like hams.
She was like, I don't know, I think they're full hams in there.
And the butcher was suspicious because he was like,
who would abandon fresh meat right now?
Right now, especially.
Two half-bushal things of fresh meat. So he's like, would abandon fresh meat right now? Right now, especially. Two half bushel things of fresh meat.
So he's like, you know what, you show me?
Like, I just want to know what kind of meat this is because like, that's wild.
Well, and then he could maybe figure out like who bought something.
Yeah, exactly.
So he followed her to the supposed hams.
And when he examined them, he was horrified because he said, these are not hams, ma'am.
These are pieces of flesh from a human body.
And they have been frozen.
Oh!
Yeah.
So, he called the police, and when they arrived, the details were even worse than people
could even imagine, because inside of the baskets, they found the lower half of a female
torso, two thighs and a right arm and a hand.
Yeah.
All neatly wrapped up in newspaper with burlap over the tops.
They discovered not, so they discovered most of the newspaper that it was wrapped in was from
August. But then there were some that was from only the day before, which told them some time
frames here. Right. As they searched the crime scene, they found another bundle near the baskets,
and it was also wrapped in newspaper in Burlap.
This newspaper was from November 19th, the year prior. Oh, wow. So that's interesting.
And this package had a two-piece set of white underwear in it.
Oh. And there was a small tag that said, William Danchee's poultry store.
Yeah. So they were like, what the hell does this mean?
And the coroner said,
they were brought to the coroner. The coroner examined the remains. They were able to pull fingerprints
from the hand. She was soon identified as Florence Polilo. Now she had worked as a waitress and a
bar maid. She was also working as a sex worker on the side. She was living a hard life and was
residing in the roaring third at the time of her death.
She had been in a lot of trouble with police several times
for solicitation, drugs, and alcohol related crimes.
Sorry, I can't talk today.
That's okay.
She was always moving around.
She was known to have a string of kind of terrible
and abusive relationships with men.
Oh.
All of this, of course, was used very salaciously
when describing her in the press.
Of course.
And I was able to find some background on her
at eeriehistory.com.
And she was born Florence, Genevieve Sadi,
on December 6, 1891 in Ashut, Ash Tabula County, Ohio.
And her parents were Nellie Eliza Robinson Sadi,
and her father was Fred
Othello SOTI.
They moved around a lot because her father was a day laborer and it's kind of unpredictable
work.
And when she came into adulthood in the 1920s, this is when it became clear that she was
struggling a bit and not hanging out with the best crowd.
In 1923, she met Andrew Pallila, who was a postal worker.
They eventually married.
They lived in Buffalo together until 1928, when she apparently told Andrew, according
to him, that she needed to get some help for addictions, and she was going to stay with
her mother and ash to be left for two weeks to do so.
She was like, I just want to get right.
And she didn't end up returning home, but her husband and her husband was like, she ran
away.
But he ended up seeing her very shortly after that in Buffalo again with another man. She didn't end up returning home, but her husband was like she ran away. Right.
But he ended up seeing her very shortly after that
in Buffalo again with another man.
Oh, that's a bad hit.
Yeah, that's rough.
So the divorce was pretty clear.
So she returned to Erie and had a couple of arrests
for solicitation.
She moved to Cleveland by 1930
and several more arrests followed for solicitation
and things of that nature.
Is it solicitation?
Is it solicitation?
It is, it's very hard.
I can't believe I'm like a solicitation.
It need to.
Because you feel like you should say,
solic, solic,
just be a solic,
for solic, solicitation.
It's like, all right, just call it solic.
I know, I like to shorten words anyway.
So like,
I'm just solicit,
I'm not solicit,
but no, but she wased for a solish. I'm a solish. Not a solish.
No, but she was arrested for it several times.
And she left for Washington DC at one point, was arrested there to force a leash.
And the charges were actually dropped there, but it was on the promise that she never returned
to Washington DC.
So she came back.
Yeah, they were just like, don't come back.
Not even to look at the monuments.
Not even for that.
So she was like, okay, what if she didn't solic. I back. Not even to look at the monuments. Not even for that, so she was like, okay.
What if she didn't salish?
I don't know, I guess she got the ronde of the deal there.
She sure did.
But she came back to Cleveland and unfortunately the pattern continued until she unfortunately
came into contact with the mad butcher of King's very run.
So not a great end of that story.
No, it's not a great story overall.
She had a tough life and the newspapers reflected
such. But what they didn't focus on was the fact that her landlord at the time where she was staying
when she died said she was a very sweet woman. And she said when she was drinking she was pecky
coralsome. But she never gave us any trouble. Paid her rent on time. Yeah. And the landlord said
she was actually very kind and sweet to her young daughters, the landlord's young daughters.
And even let them have a doll collection that she loved.
And it was one of the only things of value that she owned and she let them have it.
These are the things that you don't have to leave out all the rest.
No.
Like that was part of her too.
Exactly.
But these are the things you add because they are also part of her.
Exactly.
Like that's who she was.
Right.
Like all of those things.
Exactly.
You can be all of those things at once.
Multi-faceted, you know? So there's that. But so like she she went through it,
but she was a kindhearted person. Yeah. And she by no means deserved what she got.
Now after talking to the landlord, they went to William Danchee's poultry store,
which was what that tag said. Right. But no one there remembered seeing Florence
or could identify her as coming in at all. So they were like, I don't know why that was in there.
Like he put it in there, maybe I don't know.
Just to fuck with people.
Yeah.
Now, there were interesting features to this body.
Like, there was cinder and cold dust embedded into her skin.
Like, it had been rubbed into her skin.
Ouch.
This is harkening back to Jack the Ripper again.
This next one because Florence was missing her
reproductive organs.
Oh.
And her appendix, which maybe she had
her appendix that before, but I don't know. But either way, the reproductive organs were taken out
and they were not found. So these cuts were like all the others. They were very clean, very precise
with the knowledge of where to slice and where to remove. So I don't know. And this was, it was evident
that like whoever had killed her had removed her
reproductive organs.
It wasn't.
It was a direct evidence of a hysterectomy.
Wow.
So this person had definitely done it.
That's fucked.
And there's actually no evidence that she had her appendix removed before this
either.
So we can likely the same.
Now the coroner said he believed she had been killed two to four days before
she was found and her cause of death was decapitation.
This is awful.
It is.
Now, a second examination was done by another medical examiner, and like Jack the Ripper,
we kind of got a different perspective on the same corpse, which did happen in that case
too.
This coroner said he actually believed the cuts were pretty violent, and he said that
her limbs had been wrenched
from the sockets.
What?
So to me, this may be a little confusion
of descriptions here instead of two different ideas
of what happened.
I think you can do precise cuts and be clean,
but also probably be aggressive
with how you disarticulate the limbs.
Yeah.
So I think this is like, it was noted a lot
as like these are two different views on what happened here.
And it's like, no, I don't know about that.
Two different procedures.
I think they have two different perspectives,
but it's the same act.
Yeah.
And I think it makes sense with who this person is.
He's obviously a very bad person.
Unhinch.
Who is very unhinched and would wrench a socket out.
I don't have to say it again, though.
Now, two weeks after this discovery,
there was another call to return to the area
where they had found Florence.
This time, they were called to an abandoned house,
a few blocks away from the heart manufacturing building,
and the bushes where her partial remains were found.
When they arrived at this call,
they found Florence's upper torso,
oh, which was missing her head,
her legs, and an arm.
And around her was piled charcoal, hay, and chicken feathers.
Charcoal, hay, and chicken feathers.
Just like scattered around.
Like a pile of charcoal and then just scattered around hay and chicken feathers.
Maybe the person lived on a farm?
Maybe.
I don't know.
I don't know.
But the investigation was leading nowhere.
No leads, just stories about this woman's life.
That's all they had.
It also doesn't feel like they're really investigating.
They end up really investigating, but you're right.
Like they were, it seems like they were kind of like, yeah, I don't know.
They weren't connecting them.
That's a problem.
They're not connecting anything.
How are you not connecting? What do we have for headless bodies now? Like how's the thing?
Like those don't connect to you. How do you not sit there and go, that's weird at the very least.
But finally, the Cleveland news actually wrote a story where they pointed out that the lady of
the Lake murder from the previous year bore pretty strong resemblance to Florence's murder.
They wrote, quote, the speedy solution
of the identity of Mrs. Polila
recalled the still unsolved torso murder of a woman
that dismembered pieces of whose body was washed ashore
at the foot of East 156th Street early in September 1934.
And the newspapers were seeing these things
that the bodies were dismembered in identical ways.
They were left to be found by people, but not right out in the open. It was like well trafficked areas. They knew
someone would stumble upon it, but it was like they didn't want right in the center of
everything. It was pretty like on the nose. But the police were just like, nah, I think
this, I don't know. I think that, nah, no. Like what? I should understand that you're not.
You're not thinking these are connected.
They literally refuse to acknowledge a connection
at this point.
So it just went by the wayside as a one-off murder
that weirdly was identical to three others before it.
It's also just weird to me.
Like that, that's sus.
That is weird, because it's sus.
Even though you don't have the serial killer name,
you really don't have the studies into the psychology
of somebody who would do this kind of thing,
you do have to look at just straight up cold heart logic here
and be like, this is weird.
I mean, did you not know patterns existed in life?
I think we were all aware in the 30s that, like, patterns happen sometimes.
So, like, when she looked at this and say, well, well, gee, was this is a pattern.
It seems like, like, maybe something is connected here.
I'm like changed as a human from your children because all I could think of when you said pattern
was pattern power.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's all I could think of.
Like, I'm a changed gal.
Yeah, you are. We all are. In the best way. I mean, I would knock them back to the gal I was before to yell pattern power whenever you hear a pattern. Yeah, the best This time by an 11 year old boy named Lewis Chile
and his friend 13 year old Gomez IV,
which how cute of a name.
Absolutely adorable.
The two of them had skipped school
to go fishing together at a spot near Keir.
It's very run, pure.
The purist, the most wholesomeist.
And they went along the New York Central Railroad tracks
and near the East 55th Street Bridge.
That's when they noticed a pair of brown pants rolled up
in like a ball under a willow tree.
Don't unroll them.
Of course they were like, we gotta know what those are
because they are pre-teen boys skipping school.
Adventure is what that is all about.
You have just come across a strange package
you need to look in it.
Yeah. I get it. So they just come across a strange package. You need to look in it. Yeah.
I get it.
So they made their way toward the package of pants and using their fishing rods, they just
kind of started like poking at a bit.
You got it.
You got to poke at a package with whatever you got on hand.
Maybe not once you hear what's in this.
I mean, don't feel.
This is not great, but like I get it, I would have done the same thing.
Would have.
Yeah, would have won't do it now.
As they poked it, it began to unravel
since it was just crudely tied together,
made of men's pants.
Yeah.
And as it unraveled, a human fucking head rolled out.
Oh, yeah, these poor little boys.
Yeah.
11 and 13.
That's fucked.
They ran the hell out of there.
So far away.
They went to get help, but no one was at home at their house.
And remember, they were skipping school.
So their parents were just at work.
Like they were supposed to be at school.
So they waited at home until five o'clock when Gomez's mom returned home from work.
They told her what they found.
Imagine this woman.
She comes home from a hard days of work.
Her kids are there and her kid is there and his friend.
And he's like, hey mom, I skipped school one.
Sorry.
You're like, damn it.
They must.
They never skipped school.
Never, that was a lesson learned.
Absolutely.
And then you immediately follow that with,
and we found a head wrapped in some pants.
Yeah.
You just came home from work.
Yeah.
That's a lot to digest all at once.
I just feel like that's the classic, like, talk to your father.
Yeah, that really is.
Like, I don't know what to do with this.
Go talk to your father.
But you know what?
This woman, this woman's a real one.
I felt that about her.
Yeah.
Right?
You just know Gomez and his mom is a real one.
Because they told her and she contacted the police right away and she was like, where did
you find that head, guys?
You got to tell us.
Yeah.
Well, unfortunately, this was kind of a tough scene in many ways.
They were so scared and shocked by this.
I mean, their babies running his severed head.
They had fled so quickly that they were not super keen
on the details of where they had found this head.
So it was like the initial discovery of the lady of the lake
in Joseph, who had to remember where discovery of the lady of the lake in Joseph,
who had to remember where he buried the bones on the bridge. It took a while for them
to locate the bundle, but they did eventually find it. It was just kind of hard going for
a little bit. They found the head wrapped in the pants. The pants had been ripped in the back.
It was also a completely blood-soaked white polo shirt that had to label Park Royal Broadcloth.
blood soaked white polo shirt that had the labeled Park Royal Broadcloth.
Okay.
Another dress shirt that was also soaked in blood
and thought to be brown striped,
but now I'm wondering like with the beauty of hindsight,
if I'm like that might have not been brown striped.
Like blood turns brown when it oxidizes.
Sure does.
This had a Desmond's label in it,
and a pair of men's box or shorts
with blue stripes on them also soaked in blood.
There was a black leather belt and a men's handkerchief that was described as soiled.
As they searched the area nearby, they found a pair of old size 7.5 oxfords with dark
stripe socks, just like stuffed and balled up inside. They also found a ton of cinders around about 30 feet from the head and it had
a dirty, oily brown cap like in the middle of the cinders. What's even scarier and creepier
about these things being found, like the items found with the bodies, is the clothing
items are always described as being soaked in blood, which proves to you that these people
were likely alive when
they were decapitated because a lot of blood happened.
All you could hope is that it was quick, but when you're thinking about a human decapitating
another human without the use of like a guillotine, because I'm assuming that whoever this
was didn't have one, you're like, what are you using to decapitate someone?
That's one of the really the most chilling parts of this case is knowing that they were
decapitated and that was the method of murder.
Right.
Like, oof.
Also, do you guys say guillotine or guillotine?
Yeah, we were trying to put this recently.
Because I grew up saying guillotine.
I think I say guillotine now.
Ash says guillotine.
Yeah, I've always said guillotine.
John doesn't know what he says.
He thinks he says both. He probably doesn't say guillotine. Yeah, I've always said guillotine. John doesn't know what he says. He thinks he says both.
He probably doesn't say guillotine very often.
Yeah, and it's so I'm just curious
because I think you can say it both ways,
but let us know.
I'm just really curious.
Yeah.
That was my little, well cornered.
If you're from France, let us know.
Yeah, let us know.
We French people.
You've fricked a file.
You've fracked you.
You love France.
So France.
France.
I just love France.
I'm so American.
We truly are, unfortunately.
So his head was brought to the coroner's office, and the coroner believed him to be about
20 to 35 years old.
He thought he had been killed pretty recently, somewhere actually within 48 hours before
his head was found, which is so chilling to think that this murder dumped this head there
just hours before those kids came across it.
It's just something about that.
It's like, yeah, it's really scary
because like what if I had to chose
to skip school a day earlier?
Yeah, and it's like, it almost means
you feel like the air should be changed
with that kind of, you know,
yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, absolutely.
The energy is probably still like hang in there.
Oh, it definitely was. The evil energy of this person being there, I don know, like it's like the energy is probably still like hang in there. Oh, it definitely was.
Because the evil energy of this person being there, I don't know, it's like,
you know, that's probably what kind of brought them to that area.
Yeah, maybe it just was like leading them to it.
Now, he, this time he noted that there were multiple cuts and this is interesting.
There were multiple cuts under the chin where it appeared the killer had hesitated to make the deadly cut.
Oh, so that's interesting that there were hesitation cuts here. Was it hesitation or was it
like an torture? Because this one, like some of them did, they weren't cut in a like in the middle
of the neck. Some of them were cut like further down kind of thing. It's yeah, which is not great.
Is that even like decapitation at that point? Yeah, I don't even know what that would be.
Just a member called.
But what he did do, which was smart,
was the corner ended up making a plaster cast of his head
and face for reference.
So if they were to, you know, he was going
to have to be buried at some point.
And especially if they found some kind of family member
or anything, but he wanted to be able to have this for reference.
So they put the cast, and actually they put the head on display to see if anyone recognize
it, like in the morgue, to see if anyone recognized this poor man and could identify him.
They did that often back then.
And even after an estimated 2,000 people came through the morgue to see it in 24 hours,
no one could identify him.
Wow.
So everybody was just like going for something to do. Yeah.
Which is really sad. We see this a lot.
Now June 6th, one day after the head was discovered, and one day after 2,000 people tramped through
the morgue to look at it, a crew of crane operators discovered a nude and headless corpse
on the boundary before the...
...between the New York Central Railroad Tracks and the Nickel Plate Railroad Tracks.
This was very close to the location that the head was found, which was interesting that
they didn't find it in their search the previous day.
Yeah.
And it makes you wonder if it was put there within that 24 hour period.
I was just going to say, which, whoa, terrifying.
Bold, like very bold.
The coroner received this headless body and was able to get fingerprints from it, luckily.
And they also recorded that he had, he seemed to have a small amount of food in his stomach and a blood alcohol level of about .03, which is very, very low.
But like all the drinks.
It's, I think that actually might be like the first register of like you've had any alcohol
so, but they put it in his report.
Now, unfortunately, the coroner also kind of fucked this up a little because he waited until
June 8th to do the autopsy
He waited till you know a very special day to do the autopsy
So decomposition had set in was he just
Busy I don't know, but I was like I don't you should maybe make some time for these headless torsos
That's all I'm saying. I think those should be priority one
That's what I was gonna say one might assume that that could be top priority
Yeah, like I don't know I think those should be priority one. That's what I was gonna say. One might assume that that could be top priority.
Yeah, like I don't know,
but I think because they're really not looking at these
for some reason as connected, they're like, whatever.
But decomposition kind of mess things up
and it made some of the evidence
that they maybe could have collected, disappear.
And this man had only been killed
within the last couple of days.
So if he had autopsyed right away,
maybe he would have got something more useful. Yeah, I don't know. Either way, it was just a strange thing to do. But there is one
lucky and unique thing here when the body was discovered. The body had many tattoos,
which are great for identification purposes. That's why I do it. There you go. That's the only
reason, sole reasons. This man had six tattoos. On his outer calf, he had a character called Jigs from a comic strip, Jigs and Maggie.
Cute. He had a butterfly on his left shoulder.
I love it.
He had a heart and an anchor on his left forearm.
Very sailor chic.
Two flags crossed over each other in the letters WCG on his left forearm as well.
And a cupid and anchor tattoo on his outer right calf,
and on his right forearm with the name Helen and Paul above a dove, which makes me think
like, do you have kids?
Yeah.
Because those are your kids.
I hope so.
And they drew all of these tattoos so they could use them as reference along with the
plaster cast of his head.
Nice.
They actually did a ton of plaster casts of all these victims, which are very spooky, and
they're on display at a museum, which I will tell you about.
But it seems like the investigators were at least starting to scratch their heads at this
point at the clear similarities between the cases.
That's good.
Yeah.
But they still were not going to say that this was one killer committing various horrific
homicides.
That's bad.
They did a press conference where detective inspector Charles Neville said this killer
was quote, a maniac with a lust kill.
You don't say.
And said they believe that his latest victim had, and this was a theory that they came up
with that of the pure blue.
I was like, wow, what a tale.
They said they believed his latest victim had been found sleeping, but the killer had
cut his throat while he was sleeping very quickly, then hacked his head off.
And he believed that the killer then took off his clothing and said he undressed him
because people at the press conference were like, why did he do that?
Like why would he undress him?
And he said, that's the maniacs trick.
Okay, my dude. I don't, yeah.
All right, you're trying.
Seems like the police force was really doing great.
They were doing something.
They were making a lot of sense.
They were not muddying the waters at all
or confusing people.
They were providing a clear outlook on this case.
Absolutely. That's exactly what I've been thinking this whole time.
You're like, wow, wow, what work? Yeah, it just, wow.
Top notch police work here.
Our goodness.
So they were getting desperate at this point to find the maniac.
And they decided to display the plaster headcast and the tattoos at
something called the Great Lakes Exposition.
This was over the summers of 1936 and 1937, so two full years,
which these were the only years that this expo happened apparently.
This exposition was a huge fair where they basically celebrated all the technological and
scientific advancements and achievements from the Great Lakes area.
Even then, nothing. No identification, no leads.
How?
Yeah, that doesn't make sense.
Even with the tattoos.
Yeah, I don't understand that.
Like someone had to know this man.
He has six tattoos.
Six very distinct tattoos.
In like with names.
Yeah, like who's Helen?
Yeah.
Like what's going on?
Now, he's known still now today as victim number four
or tattooed man.
Wow.
That's it.
That's so sad.
I know.
Now, maybe we got to get him identified, man.
I know.
July 22, 1936, two months after the tattooed man was found,
another body was discovered.
17-year-old Marie Barclay was walking in the woods
near her home in Kingsbury Run.
She was just on a stroll. She was walking through the woods near her home in Kingsbury run. She was just on a stroll.
She was walking through the woods.
When she came across a naked, headless man lying face down in a small ravine near a place
called Big Creek in the Cleveland suburb of Brooklyn.
Oh, yeah.
Just on a stroll.
Alrighty.
She ran to let somebody know, not quite her who.
You can't find that information. Just ran ran. She's ran and luckily
Apparently remembered where she had found the body
The police arrived two hours after the discovery
Such a good job, which seems like a long fucking time. They were watching a movie like my guy
She found you severed
Like a body with a severed head.
Yeah.
Hops to it.
Hops to it.
They said, hop to it.
Knees to chest.
What are you doing taking your time?
I don't know why it took that long, but whatever.
They searched the perimeter of where the body was found and they did discover the man severed
head, only about 20 to, or 10 to 20 feet away from the body.
Well, the head was covered by completely soaked in blood clothing,
including a dark gray suit with clear cuts to the sleeves.
A light blue polo, blue socks to match, white underwear,
a brown leather belt, old size eight black oxfords,
and a black hat with gray stripes.
Okay. So a whole of it.
Yeah, a lot of clothes.
Now, the scene showed that there was a massive amount of blood
that had seeped into the ground.
Like, this is very different from all the other ones.
Every other case, when they found the body,
there was blood on the clothing, but no, not on the ground.
It was very clear that they had been dumped there,
killed somewhere else.
This time, massive amounts of blood at the scene.
Killed there?
Yeah. So they think, again, this is very different, but like you said,
very clear that he was killed there, not dumped there. This is different. It's weird.
Like, and he was also dismembered there, which is like, whoa. Well, maybe this whoever this was
was getting so confident because they hadn't been caught yet, that they were like, I'm not as well
just up my game a little here. Well, that's the thing you would think that,
but this is a more isolated place
than what the other ones are normally found.
So it's like he took a step backwards.
But then, so this is just not,
it wasn't found in the vicinity of Kingsbury Run,
but not close to it as the other ones were.
Okay.
The other ones were like in Kingsbury run
or right on the outskirts.
This one was a little further out, like in the woods.
So it was just a strange little,
little change in the system.
Do you think that it's possible that whoever that was
was going to be moved closer to Kingsbury?
That's what I'm wondering.
And I'm wondering is this where he does this stuff?
Right.
In the woods.
Like is that and he just like you said
didn't get to move this one? Cause that In the woods. Yeah. Like is that?
And he just like you said, didn't get to move this one.
Because that kind of makes sense.
It's a very, it's a possibility to me.
And is that the only one that wasn't found in or on the outskirts of Kingsbury?
Yeah.
This one so far is the only one.
And I think most of them are found pretty close to Kingsbury, right?
Yeah.
So that's interesting.
But he was brought into the corner.
And he noted that the man was about 40 years old.
He was murdered by decapitation. This man was very badly decomposed and had likely been killed about two months
earlier. This is, that's weird. He would have had a chance to move him, you would think.
Well, this is what's weird too, is this meant that this man was killed a couple of days
at least before the tattooed man was killed? So the tattooed man who they just found was
killed after this guy. And that's weird because he had time to move the tattooed man was killed. So the tattooed man who they just found was killed after this guy.
And that's weird because he had time to move the tattooed guy.
And the tattooed guy was out in the open kind of thing and he moved him. So it's not like
he switched. It's not like this is a sudden switch. It's like, what, when was this guy?
You know, like it's a very weird scenario. But like we said, the scene is different. It's more isolated. He was killed at the scene.
What's going on here? But September 10th, and again, no leads for this one, no identification.
September 10th, 1936, 25-year-old Jerry Harris was just enjoying a quiet moment sitting
next to some water in Kingsbury Run. I say some water because I don't really know what the description of this would be.
It's not a river, it's not a creek, it's not a pond. It's just a giant stagnant body of dirty water
next to some mud piles. It's a something. Essentially, it's water. It's some water. I think there's water
in there somewhere. There you go. In the mud. But not super chill to hang out, but Jerry was hanging out like he was fine.
Whenever I'm sitting by some water, I've usually had a day.
So I think, and he was waiting to go.
He said, this will do.
He said, you know what, this is water.
Water.
And you know what, he said later, he was waiting for a freight train to take him to find
some work.
So I think he was just taking a pause.
Yeah.
And he was like, well, that's water.
But as he gazed out over the mud, he noticed a white thing floating in the water. Upon
closer inspection, he realized he was looking at half of a severed torso of a human being.
The torso had no head, no legs, no arms. Police were immediately called and they sent
the torso to the corner. Remember, there were no hands, no head, so no identifying this man.
It was going to be pretty impossible if he didn't have any really distinguishing marks or tattoos, which he didn't.
As we saw with the tattooed man too, even that is in a guarantee to help you.
Right.
But what he could tell, he noted that the man would likely be around 25 to 30 years old.
He had an average build and he was killed by decapitation with what he described as, quote,
two powerful cuts, one from the front, the other to the back, which, whoa,
that also to me is like, what position did this guy have these people in?
That's what I was just thinking to do one to the front and one to the back.
Did he do front, roll over and hit the back or was he hung up on something? Right. That's what I was just thinking to do one to the front and one to the back. Did he do front, roll over and hit the back or was he hung up on something?
Right. That's what I wanted. Those were my exact thoughts.
Yeah, it's to even have to think about that is really horrifying.
But he was missing part of his genitals like Edward and the unidentified man in the bushes
earlier. And this one was a little different as well
where the torso was bisected,
because it wasn't in a place that the killer
likely intended to do it,
because he had sawed right through the kidneys
in the stomach, which is messy as fuck.
And this guy was messy,
but like his cuts were pretty clean.
Okay.
So this would be a weird place to bisect So someone, it just causes a lot of havoc.
Cutting through a stomach isn't, no, no.
Do you think that he wanted to create more of a mess?
Possibly.
That's the thing.
And it could be that he just by chance
didn't cut through it before.
And maybe this was not like he wasn't that perfect.
It was just maybe just got away with it before.
But still, it was weird.
So these cuts were again strong, precise and not hesitant. maybe just got away with it before, but still, it was weird.
So these cuts were, again, strong, precise and not hesitant.
Like it had been found on the tattooed man's chin.
And again, there was a strong knowledge of anatomy that was noted in the pathology report.
And he said this was a very confident killer.
Like he could tell these were strong cuts, no hesitation.
Now one of the things that absolutely destroyed me while reading about
this particular murder was that the coroner discovered and wrote in his report that this
man's heart was still beating as he was being dismembered, meaning he was alive as he
was being bisected and taken apart. What? What? So he was bisected first and then decapitated.
Mm-hmm. Oh my god.
And the death was by decapitation.
So he was tortured. Yeah.
Which I was, that one like, yeah.
Now firefighters were brought in and they dragged the water and found the
lower part of the torso with the upper legs attached.
So same kind of cut too, right above, right below the knees.
That's, and it's just like the lady in the lake where it was like the torso was cut that
way.
It's just like the other ones.
And those were also sent to the morgue, but they weren't particularly helpful in identification
either.
And in their search of the area, they came across, of course, the victims clothing.
They found a blood-soaked denim shirt wrapped in
newspaper from September 4, and this shirt had several knife slices in the neck area, which is
horrifying. Like what? They also found faded green underwear with the label JW, but it didn't help
figure out who he was. So during the search, they were methodically dredging the disgusting water with their hands and hooks
Reveidence which must have been next level horrific yet not good
Meanwhile thousands of spectators kept gathering to watch
What it got so bad that they were flowing into the morgue to try to see the body parts the corner had to officially close the morgue to the public
Jesus so lucky lose couldn't keep coming in with no helpful intentions the body parts, the corner had to officially close the morgue to the public. Jesus.
So looky-loose couldn't keep coming in with no helpful intentions.
People are so weird.
Like come on humans.
Right, like go get a hobby.
I would say be better, but we know that we don't get better.
Like this is the 30s, I could go back there and be like, yeah guys, we don't get much better.
We're almost at the 30s again.
We still have not been filling in.
We still haven't learned to be better.
So they ended up borrowing, I almost turned Canadian per second, borrowing.
They ended up borrowing pumps from the East Ohio gas company to drain the water.
And then they restarted the dredging through the mud again, hoping to find the head or hands,
but it was leading to nothing. Yeah. Obviously, by evidence of the massive amount of spectators, this victim was in a very open
spot. It's like the killer was escalating the theatrics of the crime scenes, because this water pool
was in the center of King's very run. Ooh, not on the outskirts, not in the woods, not on a railroad
track, it was right in the middle.
Now apparently up to 600 spectators crowded around to watch them remove these two torso haps
from the water. And the newspapers went wild. They now dubbed this killer. Remember they're the
only ones that are trying to say this is a serial killer without actually using the term.
They named him the mad butcher of King's Berry Run. And reports were lamb-baseding the police,
saying they were on a path to nowhere with no leads
and unwilling to see any true connection
that everyone else saw.
The lie.
Exactly.
Spot the lie.
Exactly.
It was getting bad in the press,
and they were really holding the police to the fire.
They were starting to be like, what are you going to do
about it?
I'm actually getting on it. Are you? When fire. They were starting to be like, what are you going to do about it? I mean, actually get on it.
Are you?
When this happens though, it's like, yeah, it needs to happen,
but it's also, it can sometimes create a situation where the investigators feel like
they just have to get a suspect.
That's true.
And they have to arrest somebody just to shut everything up.
This can lead to West Memphis 3 Gary Getchell, how solid is the case on a scale of one to 10
with him answering 11 vibes.
Yeah.
If you know what I mean.
It can.
You know, in this case,
they started just detaining and arresting anyone
they thought looked like they could physically carry
a dead man's body or have a saw that could cut through bone.
Actually.
Like they just started
Arresting they're like you big man over there. I think you could do it Why so they started detaining all these people
Which this is a bad move because I can physically carry a dead man's body and we'll decide to cut through bone
I would have just floated through this place completely undetected if they were going by someone who looks strong
Yeah, I do not.
So don't judge a book by its cover.
They also started the classic move of thinking it was people who just escaped from institutions.
Oh, totally.
Obviously, weirdly, none of this was working to turn up any kind of workable lead.
How strange.
Yeah.
Then only four days after the discovery of the man's body floating in the stagnant muddy
pool at the center of Kingsbury
Run, two younger boys discovered human bones sticking out of the ground in a field.
They told their parents and the police came to dig them up. They found a headless woman's skeleton,
and part of the skeleton was in a box that had been hastily buried. And the label said, LD Menel on it. And when they traced to this, it was a Cleveland school teacher.
Ooh.
So they spoke to this man and he said, yeah, those are mine.
And they were like, what?
And he said, yeah, that's a teaching skeleton
that I received from my father-in-law years ago.
But I didn't want it, so I buried it in the field.
Okay.
Weird move.
But wow.
Why couldn't you just like throw it out? Yeah, I don't really know.
Give it to another teacher. But of course what this did was as soon as these quote-unquote
remains were found, the newspaper had the headline that said, headless body of woman
taken from shallow grave near spot where killer has left six others. No. No, it's just,
it's a fake skeleton. Just Kelly. So that didn't help things. It's just, it's a fake skeleton. Just a Skelly.
So that didn't help things.
It's just like everyone's going crazy now.
Now it was at this point that they decided to call in some big guns to help get literally
even one shred of evidence that were lead to this case.
They called in Elliott Ness, who you may recognize that name you may not.
He was one of the untouchables
who went head-to-head with Al Capone and his gang.
Well, shit.
Eventually playing a pivotal role
in securing Capone's indictment
on nearly 5,000 violations of the Volsted Act in tax evasion.
That'll do it.
Just a note, the Volsted Act,
because I was like, what is that?
I know that.
You might have known it from history class
and like, drew your eye.
Remind me.
The whole set act was what made Prohibition
and Inforcible Law here in the US worst.
So, compones many operations were in definite violation of it.
And after this huge win, Elliott Ness was in the National Spotlight,
but when Prohibition was repealed in 1933,
he was just kind of bopping around
drop-kicking moon chiners until his unit was split up and he was actually sent to Cleveland.
So this was during the torso murder case.
He was there for this.
He sounds like a squid.
Well he became the city, he became Cleveland's safety director in December of 1934.
Right.
There you go.
And he was not on the torso case initially until after this last body was found and there
were no leads to be found, like not one single shred of anything to be found.
He had a reputation as a pretty iconic investigator and the mayor of Cleveland himself asked him
to lead the case on the mad butcher.
Does he do a good job? I guess you'll have to see in part two. Mayor of Cleveland himself asked him to lead the case on the mad butcher.
Does he do a good job?
I guess you'll have to see in part two.
I felt it.
Calm down.
A really good way to ask that.
I know.
I like it.
I helped me.
That was good.
I'm very impressed.
I love that.
So we got many other bodies coming your way.
We are not done.
We are about halfway through those.
Oh.
I think we are.
Because I think you said 12ish.
Yeah, I think we're halfway through.
It's gnarly, it's awful, and I can't wait to tell you about more.
With that being said, we hope you keep listening, and we hope you keep it.
We're not so weird that this.
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