Morbid - Episode 549: The Lipstick Killer (Part 2)
Episode Date: March 25, 2024The brutal murders of Ross, Brown, and Degnan shocked the city of Chicago and terrified and outraged the city’s residents, who wanted only to feel safe once again. Under intense pressure fr...om the press, the public, and city officials, investigators were desperate to catch the killer and solve the case by any means necessary, even if they had to break more than a few rules and ignore some inconvenient facts in order to do it.Thank you to the incredible Dave white of Bring Me the Axe & 99 Cent Rental Podcast for research!ReferencesAmended Petition for Executive Clemency. 2002. C-06103 (Illinois Prisoner Review Board, April).Arizona Republic . 1946. "Defendant fails in plea to jury." Arizona Republic, June 20: 18.Banks, Joe. 1946. "Prisoner says he killed girl." Tucson Daily Citizen, June 26: 1.Chicago Tribune. 1946. "Police resift all clues in Degnan case." Chcago Tribune, January 12: 1.—. 1946. "2 rewards offered for 'execution' of girl's kidnap-slayer." Chicago Tribune, January 8: 2.—. 1946. "Call Heirens sane; today's plea in doubt." Chicago Tribune, September 4: 1.—. 1946. "Child stolen from her bed during the night." Chicago Tribune, January 8: 1.—. 1945. "Ex-WAVE slain, plea written in red on wall." Chicago Tribune, December 11: 1.—. 1946. "Handwriting similarity to killer's shown." Chicago Tribune, June 27: 1.—. 1946. "Heirens gets new grilling following 'futile' lie test." Chicago Tribune, July 1: 1.—. 1946. "Heirens made choice of plea, attorneys say." Chicago Tribune, August 7: 12.—. 1946. "Murders, assaults, thefts, shooting; Heirens' story." Chicago Tribune, August 7: 1.—. 1945. "Mystery grows in WAVE slaying." Chicago Tribune, December 12: 1.—. 1943. "Organize posse of tenants and catch prowler." Chicago Tribune, August 9: 18.—. 1946. "Repudiates his 'confession' in Degnan slaying." Chicago Tribune, June 29: 6.—. 1946. "Student held in Degnan case puzzles police." Chicago Tribune, June 29: 1.—. 1946. "Tubs in basement, saw and ax held best clews." Chicago Tribune, January 9: 1.—. 1946. "U.C. Sophomore, facing police quiz, fakes coma." Chicago Tribune, June 29: 1.—. 1946. "Use of serum in Heirens quiz still mystery." Chicago Tribune, July 1: 5.—. 1945. "Widow is found in home; suitor quizzed." Chicago Tribune, June 6: 10.Decatur Daily Review. 1946. "Chicago girl kidnapped; note demands $20,000." Decatur Daily Review, January 7: 1.—. 1946. "Janitors grilled in kidnap-death." Decatur Daily Review, January 9: 1.Decatur Herald. 1945. "Brutal WAVE slayer sought." Decatur Herald, December 12: 1.Higgins, Michael. 2007. "1940s killer denied parole." Chicago Tribune, August 3: 1.—. 2007. "Is 61 years in prison enough retribution." Chicago Tribune, July 29: 1.Kennedy, Dolores. 1991. William Heirens: His Day in Court. New York, NY: Bonus Books.New York Times. 1946. "Heirens confesses in no-chair deal." New York Times, August 7: 36.Pantagraph. 1945. "Former Wave found brutally slain in Chicago bathtub." Pantagraph, December 10: 1.People of the State of Illinois v William Heirens. 1954. 33165 (Supreme Court of Illinois, September 23).People of the State of Illinois v William Heirens. 1995. 1-90-2240 (Appellate Court of the State of Illinois, March 15).Priddy, Gladys. 1945. "Slain ex-WAVE a friend to all, roomate says." Chicago Tribune, December 14: 3.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 Alayna. And this is part two of the lipstick killer.
Part d- Part one was rough.
But then you got a little palette cleanser of our besties, Corinne and Sabrina.
Not between parts.
Bye.
The way you said it last time made me think that.
No, I meant between the career girls and the lipstick killers.
Two girls, one ghost.
Well, like I said, bye.
So part one was rough. Yeah. Not easy to get through. No, that was it. That was one of
the tougher ones. I think that we've got. Yeah. And this is one that I think a lot of
people have heard of. If you if you've studied true crime or like read true crime books,
you know, anything like that. The lipstick killer. You always like we said, associated
with William Hirons.
Yes.
And I do wonder, wonder if that's going to change today.
Interesting.
And we talked a lot about, you know, the police department beating up a grandpa.
That was horrible.
And then realizing that, oops, that wasn't him.
Maybe it's two guys.
Like, who knows?
Who's to say?
After all that.
Yeah. And I think when we last left you, they were in a true place of desperation. They
are not handling the public outcry and the pressure very well.
Not at all.
And the press is doing their part to really fuck this case up further by not practicing
responsible journalism in any shape of the word.
Great.
Yeah, they're just exploitation and just lies and riling people up like it was bad.
Sounds like it.
This was bad.
It sounds like it was awful.
And so things are not going great.
And then in late June 1946, at this point, and this is in, we're out of Chicago right
now just because we're bringing someone into the fold.
Oh, okay.
A jury in Phoenix, Arizona found 42 year old Richard Thomas guilty of quote, unnatural
sex acts and attempted rape of his 12 year old daughter.
Oh my God. Citing a guilty conscience and repeated nightmares, Thomas suddenly admitted to Arizona detectives
that he was responsible for killing six year old Suzanne Degnan in Chicago earlier in the
year.
Okay.
According to Thomas, he quote, frequently had spells on a kind of what he called spells, accompanied
by unnatural sexual urges, and would often resort to theft and robbery in order to make
quick money. Okay. In early January, Thomas was working at Woodlawn Hospital in Chicago,
I was waiting for the Chicago connection. There it is. And on the night of January 7th,
he told his supervisor he was sick and left work around 10 PM because quote,
he knew he had to rob some money.
And he claimed he had to, he had to.
He claimed he picked the Degnan house because quote, it looked like I would find money and
or jewels in there.
Now remember Jim Degnan is an executive.
Right.
So at first Thomas planned on using the painter's ladder he'd taken from a yard down the street
and even put it up against the house next to Suzanne's open window, which they did find
a ladder, when he remembered that he had several master keys for various types of locks and
one happened to fit the lock on the lock on the Degnan's front door.
Once inside, he prowled around the open rooms until he entered Suzanne's
room and found her sleeping.
So it is very possible that her mom did hear some dogs making noise if they had heard any
of that.
Exactly.
Wow.
That they might've heard him prowling around.
And he said when he walked into Suzanne's room, quote, I decided I could make a lot
of money quick by kidnapping her.
Thomas said, quote, so I scribbled a note on some brown paper I had brought along to
wipe away fingerprints.
Okay.
All adding up so far.
According to Thomas, Suzanne never woke up as he carried her out of the house and down
the street and only began screaming once they were a few blocks away.
That's horrible.
Now, anyone with like young kids knows
that's entirely possible.
Oh yeah.
Some kids, I was not gifted enough
to have those kind of children
that you can bring from the car to the house
while they sleep.
Like they wake up immediately.
I feel like most people aren't.
But honestly, there is a lot,
a lot of my friends have kids
that they can just take out of the car,
sound asleep and they will remain asleep. That's crazy.
That's why they put them in their bed.
I was never one of those kids.
Kids are like deep sleepers at times.
So this does make sense.
Yeah.
And it's horrific to think about.
Now, worried her screaming would alert someone,
Thomas said he put a bag over her head
and covered her mouth until she stopped screaming.
Now he was thinking he had inadvertently killed her
at this point,
like suffocating her.
Thomas dropped her body into an open coal chute
at the house on Winthrop Street,
then slid down the chute himself
to gain access to the basement.
There, he said he dismembered the body
using the surgical tools he had brought with him.
Now, by that time,
the story of the Degnan
kidnapping and murder had spread across the country and detectives in Arizona were very
familiar with the case. Sensing that Thomas might be telling the truth here, detectives
in Arizona contacted their counterparts in Chicago who, much to Arizona's surprise, didn't
seem enthusiastic or even all that interested in
this confession.
What?
Actually, although Chicago Chief of Detectives Walter Storms acknowledged, quote, there was
enough in Thomas's story to warrant a thorough investigation.
Definitely.
He added that Thomas, quote, might be trying to get out of being sentenced in Arizona on
the rape charge.
I think this would be a much worse charge.
You'd be facing death in Chicago for admitting to this, correct?
This is very improbable.
The brutality and cruelty of the Degnan murder and dismemberment, kidnapping, murder, dismemberment
had shocked and outraged.
I told you people were out for blood here.
It had shocked and outraged people all over the country with many in Chicago specifically
advocating for extrajudicial execution for the offender as soon as they were identified.
Exactly.
So the idea that someone would voluntarily confess to the crime and wave extradition
back to Illinois in order to avoid prosecution for a lesser charge, that just didn't make
sense at all.
And the other thing is, I don't know obviously how much was put into the media and like the
papers about all the different like details of the case.
Which a lot was like they were, the detectives were not good
at keeping anything private.
But, and so that makes sense,
but he does seem to have every single detail possible,
which again, every single detail
sounds like it was reported, but it's also very specific.
He's also a piece of absolute fucking garbage. And he literally raped his own child
or attempted to rape his own child. Like he's a literal monster. So this is very possible.
I wouldn't put this past someone who can do that. And he's in Chicago at the time. He
was in Chicago, employed in Chicago, not even just passing through. Exactly. Yeah, I don't, that. Yeah.
So what happens?
But, so everybody was just kind of like, what?
Like, how does this make sense that he wants to avoid the charge of rape by agreeing to
confess to the murder and dismemberment of a six year old child who everyone is literally
out for blood for the culprit of?
Like what?
But the reason for Storms' eagerness to minimize and ultimately ignore
Thomas's confession became clear because there was then an announcement of an arrest in the
Degnan case.
Okay.
So right away you go, Oh, you just didn't want the case that you probably manufactured
to fall apart.
You've zeroed in on someone.
No, on the morning of June 26th, just hours before detectives in Arizona contacted Chief
Storms for Thomas's confession, so just hours before they got this confession, neighbors
near the Degnan home spotted who they believed to be a prowler leaving the home or leaving
a home with some of the occupants belongings.
So somebody burglarized.
They alerted two police officers who immediately began pursuing this prowler.
After cornering the suspect on a set of stairs, police tried to subdue the young man who fought
back and almost managed to break free.
This next part is the only part of levity that you're going to hear in this case that
you feel free to give it a little giggle because this is wholly cartoonish and it really happened.
So he tried to break free when a neighbor
intervened by dropping a heavy flower pot on his head and knocking him unconscious. That's quite
literally like out of a slapstick comedy. Like from a window, dropped a flower pot, a la three
stooges. We love a good Samaritan. We love a good Samaritan. We love a comical good Samaritan. And
this is 100% true because he actually got very injured by this because unlike cartoons,
you don't just see stars around your head and be like, don't know.
You actually get a traumatic head injury.
You could also probably die depending on how high up that paper was.
So no matter what, this particular little detail, if you found yourself going, that's
okay.
It won't happen again.
It's okay. I want you to
live in that place of levity for a while because you've earned it after listening to part one.
Absolutely. Fucking lutely.
Now upon his arrest, the suspect was taken to a nearby hospital to be treated for a traumatic
brain injury. There it is.
Where he was eventually identified as William Hirons. Okay.
William Hirons at this time was 17 years old. Oh, wow.
And he was a University of Chicago sophomore and the son of a police sergeant.
Interesting. He did have a criminal record though.
Despite- His dad must have been
fucking pissed. His son was like, his dad was like,
really dude? Now, despite his young age, because 17, that's young,
Hirons had arrests for burglary dating back years.
Wow. He was a little thief. He was
a little shit and a little thief. His first arrest in 1942 when he was just 13 years old.
Jesus.
Someone was rebelling against that.
I think so.
Now at the time, Hirons was arrested for burglarizing a neighbor's home and then accidentally
causing a fire. But following his arrest, he confessed to at least 11 more
burglaries in the neighborhood.
Damn.
Yeah.
Now, another arrest followed a year later when Hirons was caught sneaking out of a building
after burglarizing several of the apartments inside.
And officers discovered, quote, several of the keys in the boy's possession were traced
to the apartments, which had been looted in other North side buildings.
So he was just like a, he was a burglar.
Can I also just say he doesn't seem like a criminal mastermind.
He certainly does not.
It doesn't seem like he would just walk out of a building unsuspectingly because he kind
of hasn't so far.
He seems like a bumbling teenager who's an asshole.
Yes, correct.
Like I'm not taking that away from him.
He's a shithead. He goes into people's homes and steals her shit. He's a shithead. And it's
like, but so far I'm not seeing much that leads up to abducting a six year old, taking
her from her home, strangling her and then dismembering her. And none of that. And then
anything that happened in the other two murders.
In the Brown or Ross case, I'm not seeing this whole like, you know, a bread knife through
a neck and stabbing somebody in the neck several times and in the face. I'm not seeing it here.
No, because people have to start somewhere. Absolutely. These burglars aren't even violent.
It doesn't sound like at least. No, I'm not here. These ones in particular were not like
armed robberies and stuff.
Yeah, I mean, they're fucked up.
Of course.
But just a weird thought.
A weird escalation.
I didn't see a 17-year-old kid with a criminal record of like burglary being caught for
this.
Being responsible for anything now like this.
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That's rocketmoney.com slash morbid, rocketmoney.com slash morbid. Although investigators were able to identify him from his fingerprints, because obviously
he had a criminal record, the head injury from the flower pot had actually caused tyrants
to slip in and out of consciousness.
So he wasn't able to make a statement at first.
But detectives and some physicians believed that at one point
he was either faking or at least exaggerating his symptoms. I'm sure. Which he kind of admits
he was later. Like at first he was genuinely hurt. But he keeps it going for a little while
and you'll see why. It's never been made clear why Hirons became a suspect in the Degnan
murder. What? Much less the murders of Ross and Brown.
Nobody knows how he became a suspect?
There's really no clear reason he became a suspect.
What?
The suspicion of burglary and resisting arrest was sufficient cause to at least take his
fingerprints, which obviously were submitted to the FBI for analysis and compare, in comparison
to the Brown and Degnan case. Cause those are
the only ones that had even slight fingerprint things to compare to, which they didn't even
really have. Despite not having received any results from that analysis, captain Emmett
Evans told reporters, I'm convinced that the two prints brought out in this case were made
by the same person. So let me make sure you guys understand this.
The Degnan case and the Brown case, Francis Brown and Suzanne Degnan, there were like
smudged like one fingerprint available.
It was like barely anything.
And they had not received analysis of these fingerprints.
You just said I feel it in my gut.
The comparison between the two.
And he said, I'm convinced they are from the same people.
I'm not talking about Josephine Ross and Francis Brown.
I'm talking about Francis Brown and six-year-old Suzanne Degnan.
This man is saying that he is sure this is the same person
that committed those two crimes.
In what world? Again, we talked about this in part one. In what world is Suzanne Degnan's case
related to Francis Brown and Josephine Ross? I see Francis and Josephine being connected 100%.
Absolutely no doubt about it. I think those are two the same person.
Agreed. I do not think on any realm or plane of reality that they are connected to the Suzanne Degnan
case.
No, and I just can't stop thinking about the man. I'm sorry, I forget his name. The man
that confessed. He like he it's just perfect.
Thomas. Yeah, Thomas. It sounds perfect. And I mean, I know like Suzanne wasn't sexually
assaulted in any way, right?
Not that I don't think they could tell.
Okay, that's awful.
Because she was dismembered.
But either way, like, he takes a baby out of her home, like, that's fucking perverted.
And he also was accused of raping his daughter.
Like, there's a clear line there that connects those two crimes.
There's some kind of pathology here that you should be taking a closer look at as an investigator.
Exactly.
And I realize it's the 40s, but like, come on people.
This is just human.
Like this is just me with eyes.
I just can't believe, like I keep going back to the fact that they were just like, oh,
okay, yeah, like call you back.
Never.
To that confession.
Yeah.
They were just like, oh, cool.
We already have someone though.
We have this 17 year old that burgled the house.
We have this 17 year old that we literally have no evidence to claim that he has anything
to do with any of these murders, but we're just going to pin it on him, I think.
And we're never going to tell you why.
No, we're never going to.
Even though this guy just confessed and was actually in Chicago and has a record that
is very much on par with what has happened.
Like a perverted, disgusting, awful, violent, awful record.
And then like, again, knows a lot of details
of this case. I don't know. I don't fucking know, dude. So this Captain Emmett Evans told
reporters, I'm convinced that the two prints brought out, brought out in the case were
made by the same person. And we're like, cool. But curiously, it wasn't police who even thought
to check William Hirons prints.
It was James Gavin, a reporter for the Chicago Tribune who suggested, hey, why don't you
check the prints against those found in the Degnant case?
Let me be clear once again about that.
They arrested William Hirons for prowling.
They were like, cool, you have a record.
You're like a little shit. You burglarize. He was going to be charged with burglary.
Rightfully so.
And then James Gavin, a reporter for the Chicago Tribune.
That was not hard to say.
I don't know why it was.
Sometimes it is.
It's the o and the o.
My brain's going faster than my mouth.
That's why.
Because I'm just like, because your thoughts are racing.
This reporter.
I don't know why it was.
Sometimes it is.
It's the o and the o.
My brain's going faster than my mouth.
That's why. Because I'm just like's the o and the o. My brain's going faster than my mouth.
That's why, cause I'm just like, because your thoughts are racing.
This reporter looks at police and says, do you think he murdered that six year old?
And the police are like, Oh my God, brilliant.
Let's go check his face.
And he was like, and the police are like, how could we ever connect him to that though?
And James Gavin, a reporter for the Chicago Tribune says, maybe you should compare the
fingerprints.
Like what?
And they were like, holy shit.
Also, people say fuck shit all the time.
Of course they do.
Like, like, especially reporters, they come up with like random questions just to like
make a story a little more salacious or you know. This gets even better.
No, you kept saying that last time and it actually did not.
This gets even better because so James Gavin says, hey yo, you should check those fingerprints
against the ones found in the Degnan case. And they were like, holy shit, that's such a cool idea.
And Captain Evans was like, wow, awesome. And he grabs another police sergeant
in real time. After this reporter was like, you should check that. They were like, the
call nailed it. Good call. Solid idea. And then he grabs a police sergeant. They go into
an exam room for 10 minutes. No, come back out and announce the Prince match those in
the Degnan case. We just like two officers just went in the room and said like, hey, oh,
how what that sounds like an SNL. I'm not even joking. That sounds like an SNL.
That a reporter is like, do you want to know how to do your job? And the police were like,
that sounds so awesome. Let's give it a shot. And then they just go into a room together and come out and we're like, everybody, we found them.
And it's like, what?
There was nothing leading you to this, nothing.
And like, again, you're, sorry,
my thoughts are going way faster than my brain.
You were just saying, like, these are like partial prints,
if that, like they like, partial prints, if that like they're
fucked up prints. Yeah. And we don't have we didn't have nearly the technology to be
100% sure of that back then. No, we don't have the technology now for like to be 100%
on partial prints. No. Like, and that's, does this sound wild to you? No, don't you dare
sit there across from me and tell me it gets better.
Does it sound wild? Because I will surprise you in the end with something about these
fingerprints that you're hearing about.
Will you surprise me? Or will I just be like, yeah, that checks.
Hopefully I'll shock you because it's wild.
Oh God.
Now, while detectives continued their attempts to get Hirons to talk at this point, because
Hirons was like, no.
Like, I'm not going to. Other officers searched his because Hirons was like, no.
Other officers searched his dorm room, because remember he's a sophomore in college, where
they found two medical kits containing a surgical saw and a scalpel set.
Was he in medical school?
He was not.
Okay, that's a little weird.
It was absolutely weird.
As well as other items recently stolen from nearby homes.
So they were also like, was this just stolen?
Yeah, like, were you trying to like sell this? Yeah, like, including war bonds amounting to $2,100
jewelry, other items found in his room were several knives and guns recently reported missing around
Chicago. And there was also and this is interesting and also shows like who knows what this is about.
They found a photo album of Nazi soldiers and guards. Which they didn't know was if it was stolen or if that was something
he had or why he would have that.
What it was like fucking disturbing.
Fucking disturbing. Like I said, not a good guy.
Yeah weird fucking.
Not a good guy.
Bad dude.
But just as they had done with Hector, Verburg,
our grandfather. They beat the shit out of him. The local press made no attempt at objective
reporting and seemed to go out of their way to associate William Hirons right away with the
brutal murders, despite a literal total lack of evidence. Not a shred. Not shocked. Reporters
described him as being, quote, built like a good football end.
Having quote, a hint of a sneer and claimed that quote, it took four policemen to bring
him in and quoted one officer as saying they needed quote, two straps to subdue him.
If you go ahead and Google William Hirons.
Nope, I already did and I said none of that's true.
This also directly contradicts their claims that he was unconscious when they brought
him in.
Yeah.
But, okay, I guess.
But Okie Doki Artichoke.
Yeah, why not?
He's not a big dude by any means.
He's pretty lanky.
Yeah, actually.
To be honest. Now, when Hirons came into the hospital, he was very confused and believed that he had
been arrested for burglary.
So he was stunned when he realized that they suspected him of being a killer.
And especially when they said that they were suspecting him of being the killer of Suzanne
Degnan.
And William Hirons had followed the story in the papers.
And he remembered how Hector had claimed he was tortured by police for days in an effort
to get him to confess.
Terrible.
So Hirons later said about this time, he said, my best bet was to keep my eyes closed and
my mouth shut.
If the police thought I was still unconscious, maybe seriously hurt.
They couldn't take me to the police station, handcuff me and hang me over the door by my arms as I had heard they had done to Hector.
Oh, wow.
Unfortunately, Hirons knew he couldn't keep pretending for much longer. So that's why
the police and the doctors were like, I think he was like exaggerating because he did keep
it going for longer because he just didn't want to talk. I mean, and so, you know, he
knew he couldn't keep it going forever though, especially with
each new doctor who was being like, you're fucking faking it. Like, I know that you are
awake. And so he finally asked a nurse for a drink of water. And that's when they alerted
everyone to him being awake. Now locked in an exam room, one wave of detectives after
another took their run at him. They tried to get a confession out of him so they could
finally close the books on the Degnan case. And at first investigators tried the usual
tactics. They told them they had arrested his mother and quote, put her in with the
prostitutes.
Jesus.
That's a quote.
Of course.
And that they'd arrested his girlfriend, Joanne, and would keep grilling her until he confessed
and not to let her go home. And hour after hour, he just sat silently waiting
for his parents to arrive because he's 17.
So-
So are they even actually legally allowed
to be doing any of this?
And one detective after another aggressively confronted him
and they were shouting the details
of Suzanne's murder at him.
Oh God.
And so Hirons had been arrested before obviously
for burglary and shit.
Yeah. And given his age, he knew there was only so much And so Hirons had been arrested before obviously for burglary and shit.
So and given his age, he knew there was only so much they could do to him before they had
to let him go or turn him over to his parents.
He's technically a minor.
In fact, Hirons welcomed his parents arrival because he thought naively that they would
come to his rescue and make the whole thing go away.
He was like, I just want to go home.
But a long time had passed and they still hadn't arrived.
And he grew more anxious and like hours are going by and they're getting more and more
aggressive.
And finally, when one of the detectives started telling him they'd matched his fingerprints
to those found at the Degnan case, the seriousness of the situation started to sink in.
And he realized that they truly believed or they were going to intend to stick it on him.
They truly believe that he killed Suzanne Degnan.
Now, the more Hirons resisted and longer he remained silent, the more aggressive and impatient
the interrogators got until Hirons heard one of them say something about ether.
That's like an old like torture technique, essentially.
And they said, I can make this guy talk.
What is it?
Should I Google it?
Google it.
It's like, it was used in like, it's like, it's almost part of like the, like the truth
serum series of, of drugs, but it's not truth serum.
But the way they would use it was to elicit confessions.
And he remembers one of the men say, ain't none of them can keep still with this.
And a moment later he smelled the ether, because ether is also used as an anesthetic.
He knew the smell of ether because he had recognized it from a childhood surgery, because
they used to use ether. Then one of the men in the room lifted his hospital gown to expose his genitals.
No, he had no idea what was happening. And then he felt several drops of the ether hit
his scrotum causing a feeling of intense cold followed by excruciating pain that shot through
his entire body.
It's literally described as a volatile liquid.
Yeah.
Now, despite the physical and psychological torment, he remained silent.
He did not confess.
Holy shit.
He still was thinking too that his parents were going to come get him.
Where are his parents?
Or at the very least, he thought the police would realize they made a mistake with the
fingerprints.
That was what he alleged later. Now, his parents were busy at home trying to deal with the horde
of reporters who had descended upon their house as soon as his identity was announced
to the press. When Hiram's mother, Margaret, first heard the announcement on the radio,
her heart sank. And she immediately was like, I don't even know what we're going to be able to do to fix this. So she said after all his burglaries, they
would naturally suspect Bill. It did not take too much imagination to suggest the kinds
of pressures the police could bring to bear on a 17 year old boy.
Well, and they've already heard what they're doing to an elderly man.
The public, the press and the police wanted wanted the case cleared up so anyone would do so
long as the police could make their charges stick. Under such circumstances, I felt Bill
wouldn't have much of a chance.
My God.
Now while detectives continued their relentless attempts to coerce a confession, because remember,
he has not confessed anything.
And also AKA torture.
Yeah. Officers tore apart the Hirons home looking for evidence.
Chicago detectives had finally gotten around to talking to Richard Thomas, the guy in Arizona,
who literally confessed, and were quick to report that Thomas had actually changed his
story and recanted the whole confession.
Yeah, because now here's another fucking guy who's up for it.
Yeah, he's going to take the fall for it.
Now Thomas was claiming he had nothing to do with the kidnapping or murder.
And then he goes, Oh, you know what?
I actually only wrote the ransom note for the actual killer.
What?
He said, this man asked a few days before the kidnapping, if I wanted to go in on a
snatch with him, which is a kidnapping.
When he refused, because he was like, I have a long criminal record.
I probably shouldn't snatch a kid, you know, not for moral reasons, just, you know, just my record, I don't want to
get in trouble. He said the man asked if Thomas would at least write the ransom note. Who
the no, which Thomas agreed to do. And later on that day, the child was kidnapped and killed.
And he said, quote, I saw the man washing blood off his hands in the bathroom, which
several families used. So, to me, that says, don't ask me to write anything down because my handwriting is definitely
going to match that note.
Yep.
Because I definitely was there and definitely wrote that note, but no, I didn't know anything
about anything that.
Oops.
Did I tell you that I that I actually committed the murder?
What I meant was I just wrote the ransom note.
I feel like that guy's a pretty good fucking suspect.
Like, I don't, who knows at the end of the day, but he's at least a terrible human being.
Exactly.
And should be put away forever anyway.
Now Chief Storms' resistance to Richard Thomas' confession seemed odd to Arizona detectives
because they were like, Arizona is like, what the fuck is going on in Chicago?
Yeah.
But that's because they didn't know investigators in Chicago had already arrested
William Hirons and declared him the killer in the Degnan case. Under those circumstances,
Thomas's confession would have been a very serious complication to their theory and one that could
have undone their entire quote unquote case. It would have been easy for Chicago authorities to
reject Thomas's confession
as inaccurate when compared to the facts of the case, which they did claim. But what they couldn't
explain away so easily was that the handwriting analysis in Phoenix had examined to the ransom
note in the Degnan case and compared it to Thomas's handwriting, declaring that there were
unmistakable similarities between the documents and they
were most likely written by the same person.
Girl, what did I tell you?
Thus, Thomas's recanting and telling of a new story very conveniently solved the problem
and removed him as a suspect, leaving only William Hirons.
And they had no connection, I'm assuming.
No connection.
So William just found him on the street and said, Hey, you want to write a note for me?
No.
And this kid, this 17 year old kid's like, I don't know.
I think I want to like kidnap a kid and murder her.
Do you want to do it with me?
Never done that before, but I was just thinking of doing this today.
Like no.
Now in the days after his arrest, Hirons remained almost completely silent and refused
to cooperate with investigators, believing that if he didn't say anything, he couldn't
get in trouble.
So nevertheless, detectives continued building their case against him, routinely releasing
information to the press.
Not always accurate information either.
Of the information that would eventually be touted as irrefutable proof of his guilt, none
was more compelling or persuasive than the supposed fingerprint evidence that tied Hirons
to the case.
They were saying this is irrefutable.
I feel as though it's refutable.
I feel like there's so much refute here.
I feel refute in my bones.
I do.
I'd like, oh, I, someone's name is refute here.
Now, when the Degnan scene was processed Now, when the Degnan scene was processed,
the original Suzanne Degnan scene was processed,
FBI agents discovered two fingerprints
on the front of the hastily written ransom note.
Because remember there was like that substance,
which they photographed and returned to the Chicago police.
After Hirons's arrest, the handwriting analyst for the Chicago police department,
Sergeant Thomas Laffey reviewed the prints and declared them incomplete and quote impossible
to classify.
Uh huh. Much like we suspected.
Incomplete and impossible to classify. You cannot use these prints to classify anything.
Also Laffey compared the
prints to those collected from like, cause he was like, what I have here just to shoot
my shot and to like make sure I've crossed my T's and dotted my eyes. He compared those
prints to those collected from all persons arrested between January and June of that
year, but found no matches among them, despite Hirons having
been arrested in May. So he's, he would have already had his fingerprints compared to those.
But three days after Hirons arrest, Laffey told the press and his superiors that a print
found on the back of the ransom note was actually a match for William Hirons.
How convenient.
Wait, Thomas Laffey, I thought that you just said that it's impossible.
I gotta go.
But now, no, it's like a full match.
Like what a great print that you guys just happened to miss the first time around.
That's so cool.
That's so cool.
So great for you guys.
Like I love that you just keep falling into these like awesome things.
You should play the lotto.
Yeah.
It would later be made public that there was in fact no fingerprints on the back of
the ransom note.
That was a fucking lie.
So that was just a bold faced lie.
Cool.
He lied out of his lying fucking face.
Lied.
To pin this on a random ass 17 year old.
Lied.
Like again, not saying this 17 year old is an awesome 17 year old, but-
But if he didn't kill a six year old, then let's not pin it on a man.
Yeah, I think that's something you would think we could all agree on.
Still, it was the supposed fingerprint evidence that served as the basis for Hirons being
the prime suspect and the evidence on which his conviction would stand.
This fake fingerprint that doesn't exist. It was also the fingerprints that supposedly
linked the Brown and Degnan cases together. Oh no. Detectives alleged that the fingerprints
on the ransom note were a match for the bloody fingerprint found on the door jam at the Brown
crime scene. That one fingerprint. That one fingerprint.
And since the Ross and Brown murders were believed to have been committed by the same
person, investigators linked all three and tied them all to William Hirons.
Isn't that so convenient how that all lined up for them?
The wildest thing to me is that in all of these cases, nothing is missing.
Nope.
Nothing is missing. He. Nothing is missing.
He's a burglar. He's a known burglar.
Thank you.
And he didn't take anything from the scenes.
Thank you. I shouldn't say nothing is missing,
like 20 bucks was missing in one of the first ones,
but of all the things to steal.
This can steal and shit from houses.
He steals like physical items, like not just like money.
So he can sell them.
Like that's, he's, his shit, his stick is stealing shit from people's houses.
Like, come on.
And one of the main things, especially in the Brown and Ross case, was it didn't appear
anything was really missing.
Right.
Like, there was jewelry, there was all kinds of stuff.
He didn't steal any of it.
And I'm sorry, but like, Suzanne's case is not connected to these other two.
You can't.
I don't know what somebody could say to convince me otherwise.
So while the district attorney's office and higher ups at the Chicago police department
continued feeding information about supposedly irrefutable evidence to the press, which is
very much refutable, detectives continued their assault on a still completely silent
Hirons.
He was still not confessing to it.
It's not like he was giving them information.
I can't believe how long he held out.
When he wouldn't talk or refuse to give them the answers they wanted,
detectives resorted to physical torture, including having a nurse perform a spinal tap without anesthesia.
Whose idea was that?
Which they claimed was being done to rule out brain damage.
But they had them do a spinal tap without anesthesia.
Just as physical torture.
Oh my god.
They're like sadistic.
It's like really wild.
Who the fuck was on this police force back then?
Like...
Yeah.
No. What the fuck was on this police force back then? Yeah. No.
What the fuck?
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Now on June 30th, William Hirons submitted to a polygraph examination, which he passed.
30th, William Hirons submitted to a polygraph examination, which he passed. No.
However, when the results were reported to the press, they were deemed futile and inconclusive.
But he passed the test, which again, hot dog trench coat.
But still.
But come on.
You have to remember too, because like, as much as you say, polygraphs are like, you
know, not the fuck knows really what's going on with them.
They are reacting to your body's physiological responses to certain questions.
So there's something to be taken from them.
Absolutely.
And obviously some people can beat them.
That's the thing.
I don't know about a 17 year old kid beating a polygraph.
A 17 year old kid who's up for murder.
I don't know about a 17 year old who's beating a polygraph. A 17 year old kid who's up for murder. I don't know how calm he is.
A 17 year old kid who probably has a traumatic brain injury and is up for murder that I don't
think he committed.
I don't think he's going to be able to control his shit that much.
I don't think so.
In order to skew these results.
Wow.
Now when the polygraph exam failed to produce the results they were hoping for, the state's attorney, William Toohey, agreed to pay psychiatrist, Dr. Roy Grinker, a fee of $1,000 to administer
sodium pentothal against Hiram's wishes and without consent of his parents.
Illegal, illegal, illegal.
Now in the news about the so-called truth serum leaked to the press,
state's attorney Toohey denied knowing anything about the drug or its use in the Hirons case.
Yeah, because he'd lose his fucking job otherwise.
He told reporters, I don't know anything about what those psychiatrists did. I will neither
confirm nor deny use of the drug because I do not know. When they testify concerning
this in court, what they say is their testimony will be my opinion. I do not know what steps
they took."
I genuinely hate people.
Despite his repeated, very clumsy denials of knowing anything about the administration
of the drug, when he testified under oath in a 1952 post-conviction review of the case,
Toohey admitted that not only was he fully aware, so he lied out of his fucking face,
like most of these assholes, he was fully aware that they used the drug, but he was in fact the
one who'd ordered it and authorized the payment to the doctor.
I have to go.
Oops. Once again.
It's so scary.
This is how wild.
It's so scary how people in positions of power
could just get away with whatever the fuck they want to
and it can come out later
and have no fucking bearing on anything.
No repercussions.
Like it's mind blowing.
Yeah.
What the fuck?
He just, he was like, I can't conserve it today.
I have no idea.
And then he's like, oh shit.
And he's like, oh I literally authorized it.
Yeah.
I literally fully knew about that.
In fact, I said to do it and oh shit, I authorized the payment because I paid him off to do it. Oh my God. And these are the guys saying, we closed the case. You didn't close.
You didn't do shit. This is the worst shit I have ever heard. It's like, what? You faked all of this
shit. And the worst part is it's like, whether William Hirons did it,
which I'm gonna say he didn't do it.
I don't think he did it.
Whether he did or not though,
you didn't figure it out.
No. You didn't prove it.
If this man did this, this 17 year old kid did this,
you did not prove he did.
No way. In any way, shape or form.
No way.
And that's what's so frustrating is you didn't even have
the fucking gall or you couldn't even, you don't even have the skill set
to prove that he did it.
If you really thought he did it, you could prove it.
Absolutely.
And you didn't even try.
You just, you rigged the game.
Yes.
Instead of winning it, you rigged it like a champion
and coming out of there and saying, hey everybody,
we finally did it.
We caught the fucker who did this.
You can sleep soundly tonight.
You rigged the fucking game because you're a little bitch.
It's like, that's such a cheap fucking way.
And it's like you said earlier,
I don't know if it was this part or part one,
but yes, they had pressure on them, but not for that long.
No, it's not like this was like-
This is within the same year.
And it's like, if you have pressure on you,
like I said, I think in part one-
Let it be a motivator.
Do it like the Delphi murder case, those investigators.
Yes.
At the very least, they held shit close to the chest and figured it out.
Everyone wanted to know details about that case.
We all did.
Yeah.
And they were like, I'm sorry, you're not getting them.
Because we don't want to give you details that are going to compromise this investigation because we're
going to do this shit right, whether you're putting pressure on us or not because we want
to do it and we want to close it, not just close it. And it's so frustrating. So this
asshole's remarkably evasive statement to the press about the use of the truth theorem. Yes, yes.
It represents one of the most important aspects of the case against William Hirons.
The case was incredibly suspiciously thin, obviously, but the best piece of evidence
that they had was fingerprint evidence. And this fingerprint evidence was apparently
a nine point match for William Hirons.
What?
Now, the FBI and fingerprint experts consider a 12-point match the bare minimum
for compelling fingerprint evidence.
Okay.
So this is not compelling.
That's the bare minimum, 12.
In fact, the nine-point loop pattern that matched with William Hirons would
have also matched 65% of the population.
65% of the population?
65% of the population that have a loop pattern on their fingerprints.
Are you fucking kidding me?
Wait, the other thing here is like spoiler alert, anybody who knows this case, this guy
gets convicted.
Yeah. How? Yeah. In what fucking world? The other thing here is like spoiler alert, anybody who knows this case, this guy gets convicted.
Yeah.
How?
Yeah.
In what fucking world?
Because it just keeps getting worse.
It never gets, he never gets out.
He died in prison.
He was 83 when he died in prison.
Yeah.
Essentially, to a certain extent, our fingerprints kind of all look the same, obviously.
They only become unique when it comes to the finer details, which
is why a 12-point match is considered the bare minimum. Otherwise, the evidence against
Hirons was circumstantial at best, and at worst, purely speculative or completely manufactured.
So this sensational fingerprint evidence is literal garbage. Garbage.
Had they taken the case to a jury on its merits, the state would have likely lost and the murders
of Ross Brown and Degnan would remain unsolved today.
Thus, if Toohey and the district attorney's office wanted to close the books on those
cases, they needed to build a case for the public that convincingly portrayed Hirons
as a vicious criminal.
Which he wasn't.
Now, in the case against him, the use and willing participation of the press cannot
be understated here.
No way.
They have fucking blood on their hands and they should know it.
From the moment he was arrested, the police and other law enforcement officials leaked
and explicitly
gave information to the press that while not claiming it to be irrefutable fact was, were
nonetheless stated with confidence and authority so that reporters could infer that it was
the truth. That's why it was given to them with a lot of authority. Toohey's statement
on the use of truth serum is characteristic of all the types of statements
that are being given to the press on a regular basis here, where some nefarious or sensational
detail or clue is very heavily implied to be true, but it's also vague enough to be
denied, should it be proven false.
And when they weren't publishing vague statements from law enforcement, the press were publishing their own stories about Hirons that emphasized his criminal record,
his size and uncooperative disposition and anything else that would distract from the
fact that he was a 17 year old boy being held on suspicion of three crimes for which there
was very little if no evidence for him committing.
Literally none.
And for which doesn't make sense were're even connected in the first place.
Nope.
No one's even saying that.
No one's being like, this doesn't even fucking make sense that you're connecting these three
murders.
It makes no sense whatsoever.
So at one point, a reporter for the Chicago Tribune even manufactured a story about Hirons
confessing.
What?
He had never confessed.
But they just made it up and printed it.
Just printed it like it was fact.
The fuck?
The end result was that regardless
of how questionable the physical evidence was,
any jury picked for a trial would enter that courtroom
with a seriously negative impression
because this guy supposedly confessed.
But he never did.
He never confessed.
He never confessed to this point.
He had not confessed.
That was an outright manufactured bullshit story.
What the fuck?
How did they get away with that?
They all could just do whatever they wanted.
Like everybody is just playing their own fucking game.
Now on July 2nd, William Hirons was transferred from the hospital to the infirmary wing of
the Cook County jail, where he spent about a week recovering from the initial head injury
and the injuries sustained during his interrogation and torture.
During which time investigators continued questioning him relentlessly.
After one week, a defense attorney was finally assigned to him, though they wouldn't end
up being much help for him.
While he was in the infirmary, Hirons' attorney, John Coughlin, was summoned to the DA's office
where they were offered a deal.
This was the deal.
If William Hirons confessed publicly to all three murders, the state would assure that there would be no death penalty
and that the penalty would be one life term, all sentences running concurrently. Under
this plea agreement, Hirons would have gone to prison for life, but on just one count
of burglary, because he would confess to the three
murders but only be charged for the crime that they initially brought him in for, which
was burglary. They wouldn't charge him for the murders. Like they, like he wouldn't be
convicted on those murders. He would be convicted on burglary, which, but get life. What? But
that fact that he was only charged for burglary would be incredibly beneficial for
him for purposes of parole later.
Yes.
So that was the deal.
You're not going to get the death penalty.
Admit to killing these three people so we can close our books and look good.
Which also right then and there proves to you that they didn't think he did this because
had he done this, they would have wanted to put him to death.
Yeah. They would have wanted, and they also would have wanted to at least get him fucking
convicted. They would have wanted those charges sticking. 100%. You're not going to send them to
fucking prison for burglary when he murdered three of the biggest murder cases that the entire
nation is shitting all over you for. Like you think anyone's going to be happy about that? Like
shut up. What the fuck? It just gets more and more infuriating.
So without speaking to his client first, Coughlin agreed to get William to accept the deal and
confess reasoning that they stood no chance with a jury and the result would definitely
be him getting a death sentence. So a few weeks later, in a statement to the press, Coughlin, his attorney, addressed the
plea deal, essentially claiming it was William's idea to accept the plea.
But it was not.
He was never informed.
And he also, like, I would think that his parents would need to be informed if he was
taking the deal too, because he's a minor, right?
And he was just never even, he wasn't informed of it.
What the fuck?
What the fuck?
He said quote, for us to hazard his life on a plea of not guilty to the murder charges
would be taking a risk with no visible hope of benefit to the defendant.
When he advised us to his guilt, our course became clear.
We have followed it in strict conformity with the ethics of our profession.
The ethics of your...
Ethics is nowhere in this case, my friends.
There's no ethics in the press here and there's no ethics in the law enforcement here.
I don't think so.
And there's no ethics in the law here. None of you are ethical.
None. No one in this fucking case.
Ultimately, it wasn't the torture, it wasn't the constant questioning from the police or
even the defense attorneys agreeing to the plea deal without his consent. That ended
up breaking William Hirons. It was the Chicago Tribune article falsely claiming he had already
confessed. When the article ran on July 16th, claiming that he had killed all three and
robberies gone wrong. No. Remember those first two,
they were fucking adamant that those were not robberies.
But now it worked for the story.
And robberies gone wrong.
He washed the bodies.
Robberies gone wrong.
Come on.
Robberies gone wrong are fucking messy.
Yup.
You leave shit ton behind
cause it's a robbery gone wrong.
Cause you're trying to get the fuck out of there.
You're just trying to get the fuck out of there.
That's not what these are and they knew it.
Oh my God.
So the other papers followed suit.
They heard this false confession that it was a robbery gone wrong.
The other papers just went, sounds good.
We'll just run that whether it was true or not.
And by the end of the day, all of Chicago believed that he was the confess killer.
Wow.
And his lawyer wrote in a 2002 clemency appeal, quote,
"'The concocted Chicago Tribune story
broke Hirons' will and spirit.'"
Of course it did.
So they were like, this is what made him just go, fuck it.
Like, I'm never gonna win any, I'm already,
even if I leave here, the entirety of Chicago
thinks I confess to it.
What the?
I can't just stop saying what the fuck.
Now certain that he was truly completely out of options,
he agreed to a plea deal and per their agreement,
prepared to go before the state's attorney
and the chief of police and confess to all three murders.
What Hirons didn't know and certainly expected, was that in an effort to celebrate
their having caught the killer, these good old boys, they did their jobs and they caught
the killer, Ash.
Oh God, no.
You know?
I don't know what the fuck you're about to tell me.
Tooley invited every person who'd worked on the case and countless reporters and photographers
to witness Hirons confess.
And he had no idea.
On July 30th, 1946, he stood up before the room, shocked, and was asked by Tuohy to quote,
tell the truth about the murders.
But rather than live up to his end of the bargain after seeing that, he responded and
said, I don't know anything about them.
Wow.
Because he was like, fuck you, dude.
Like I'm not doing this.
Outraged.
So he didn't get his deal then.
So outraged that they'd been made to look bad in front of their precious press.
Yeah.
The district attorney's office rescinded their initial offer, but offered to one more chance
to confess.
This time they took the concurrent sentences off the table and instead he would be guilty
to the murder and receive three sentences to be served consecutively.
If he accepted the new deal, William could expect to spend the rest of his life in prison,
but at the very least he would avoid the death penalty.
Okay.
So they were like, those are your options.
You go to prison for life, three consecutive life sentences,
and just say that you murdered all three of them,
and whatever, you'll go for burglary?
This is like...
Or you get the death penalty because you know you're gonna get it.
This is heartbreaking.
Yeah.
I don't think he did this. I and also yeah,
who the fuck did this? Exactly. They just walked around the rest of their lives and
what two different people. Yeah, two different depraved disturbed people just walked around
the rest of their lives because let me tell you, yeah, those two first cases are connected. Second one, third one, excuse me, no. No. Exactly. Now after much discussion with his
parents and his attorney who assured him a jury trial was a bad idea. Which I think it was because
everybody was tainted as fuck. They had already said that he confessed. Right. No, even he didn't,
but they said he confessed. So any jury walking in there had in their mind, he confessed. No matter what. William Hirons accepted the
plea agreement and this time there would be no going back. So on August 6th, 1946, he
publicly confessed to murdering Josephine Ross, Francis Brown and Suzanne Degnan, during
which she provided details of the murders. And in a statement to the press, Tui said he was willing to negotiate a plea deal for
a confession quote, because of his desire to make certain not only in his own mind,
but also to the satisfaction of the public that in Hirons, the state had had the slayer
of Suzanne Degnan, Miss Brown and Mrs. Ross.
Honestly, go fuck yourself.
Without the confession, the state's case, he said this, I would like to point out, without
the confession, the state's case based wholly on circumstantial evidence was none too strong.
We need to go over that again.
They told William Hirons, you go to court for trial,
you're convicted and gonna die
because our case is air fucking tight.
We got fingerprints, we got all this shit.
So you can do that and you're gonna die.
Or you can take this plea deal
and you can just go to prison
for three consecutive life sentences, but you won't die.
And then they said-
And then after he did that, they go,
psych, if we went to trial,
we never would have got him convicted because we had shit.
Literally just said that.
That kid was duped and duped and duped again.
They had Chicago detectives had spent months touting the fingerprint and handwriting evidence, they insisted, proved
Tyron's guilt. And only after getting that confession, that's when Tuohy was willing
to acknowledge that going forward with a jury trial was risky on their part, not his. And
his own fucking dumb defense attorney railroaded him right along with everybody else. Oh my god. So as
part of his plea deal, Hirons agreed to describe in detail and even reenact the murders. They
made him do that. On August 7th, he spent more than eight hours describing how and why
he killed Degnan, Brown, and Ross, as well as several burglaries and other assaults.
As they traveled from one crime scene to another, Hirons and representatives from the district
and state attorney's offices were followed by a huge audience of onlookers, all hoping
to hear some piece of the shocking story.
One of the onlookers said, he's not like he looks in his pictures.
He looks gruesome.
I'm like, yeah, because you think he's a convicted child killer and like woman killer
now. Throughout the course of the reenactment, state's attorney, William Crowley asked one
leading question after another, like quote, you did get the knife in a burglary, didn't
you? And isn't this the one you took out of the Roderick home? Like, just here's all the information.
Each time, Hirons would just respond in whatever way was expected and they'd move on.
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On September 4, 1946, Hirons appeared in Circuit Court, where three psychiatrists told Chief
Justice Harold Ward that he was,, legally sane, but emotionally abnormal. So it ruled out an insanity claim and cleared
the way for sentencing. The following day, Hirons was back in court for sentencing and
the state's attorney called a long list of experts, including investigators, fingerprint
experts, handwriting experts, psychiatrist, they all testified
on the state's behalf. Unfortunately, there's no documentary evidence of their testimony.
Because the court reporter died before he was able to type up his notes.
Like of natural causes?
Like I have no idea.
Y'all.
Y'all. Regardless of what was said in court, the
outcome was as expected. Hirons pleaded guilty and was sentenced to three life sentences
with a minimum of 61 years served before he would even be considered for parole. 61 years
served. Before you're even considered for parole. Oh my God.
Now in the case of William Hirons, the facts and evidence have never really supported the
theory or conviction.
Most familiar with the case agree now that given the similarities between the two murders,
between the two of the murders, it's likely Josephine Ross and Francis Brown were killed
by the same person.
But given the lack of any similarities between those cases and the Degnan case, it's pretty unlikely the three are connected at
all and were only grouped together for the sake of closing all three at once. Those were
the ones everyone was mad about. Let's shove them together and close them all at once.
I just can't believe people bought that. Yeah. As for the evidence, because remember I told
you I had some more stuff about that, the fingerprints.
You thought I had already told you about the fingerprints.
So Hirons doesn't even remotely match the description of the suspicious individuals
that people would see in all three cases.
Nor did he possess the knowledge or experience believed to be held by someone who dismembered
Suzanne Degnan.
In fact, none of the evidence collected in any of the cases could be conclusively
traced back to him at all. Years later, during his many appeals, a team of experts reviewed
the evidence and came to the following significant conclusions.
One, despite what the press reported, the handwriting in the Degnan ransom note was
not a match for Hirons, though it bore great similarity to Richard Thomas's handwriting.
Two, also the handwriting on the wall at the Brown crime scene didn't match Hirons, nor
was it a match for the handwriting on the Degnan ransom note.
So those are two different people.
Several members of the review team believe that that message on the wall was likely written
by one of the reporters at the scene in order
to make the story more sensational. No. And I believe it. No, dude. Because now that you say that
a reporter's the one that found it alone in a room. And he said, guys, you got to come in here.
alone in a room and he said, guys, you got to come in here. And this entire fucking case is known as the lipstick and the lipstick.
And what a, what a fun way to get a fun nickname out of it that you can publish.
Who the fuck is that depraved humanity?
Where is it?
Let me know.
Exactly. Oh my God. No, I need one second. Just hold
on a moment. Hold on one moment. Because I'm really trying to process here. Go ahead.
Going back to the fingerprint found on the ransom note was only a nine point match for
Hirans, meaning it also matched 65% of the population with a looped pattern.
Which again is genuinely the most insane thing I've ever heard.
Then the fingerprint found at the Brown crime scene that was supposedly a match for Hirans
was determined to actually be a rolled fingerprint, like those taken for a police fingerprint
card and was not at all similar to the types of fingerprints
naturally left behind at a crime scene.
Right.
The implication here is someone was sent back
to that crime scene to plant the fingerprint
to connect the cases,
because otherwise they would have never been connected.
There was no way without that fingerprint
that they were able to connect those cases.
They needed that fingerprint.
Otherwise there was no conceivable way to connect these cases in any fucking world.
How did this guy?
But for them to go, here we have a fingerprint that's at Degnan case and Brown case.
Oh my God, they're all connected.
And isn't this so convenient?
Because we know that the Francis Brown and the Josephine Ross murders were definitely by the same person.
So if there was a fingerprint at the Brown case that's also at the Degnan case, well,
then that person must have killed Josephine Ross too. Oh my God. We just found the killer
of all three of these people. Oh my God. That's why it came out as a rolled fingerprint because
it wasn't left there naturally.
Like, that doesn't... You don't just, like,
roll up on a scene and just...
They took it and rolled that shit onto the door.
And finally...
And no, wait, I'm sorry.
No, wait, actually, just a sec.
Somebody was tasked with that job,
and then went to bed that night.
And just said, like, yeah, fuck, that's my job. Yeah. Like, they're like, I guess. was tasked with that job and then went to bed that night
and just said like, yeah, fuck, that's my job.
Yeah, like the like, I guess,
I guess that child murderer can just keep roaming around.
How do you not think?
Like how do you not?
We'll get that William Hirons off the streets,
so that's good.
This makes me wanna cry.
Like how do you not think that way?
Like that you just fucked up three murder cases
and pinned them on some random fucking kid.
Like sure, not the best kid in the whole world,
but a child murderer and now like a crazed lunatic killer
are just tortures women and murders them in their homes.
Are not facing any kind of justice.
They're walking free.
Like maybe not walking free.
Maybe not walking free.
There are two, well, not anymore, but there were two murderers in this case that got away
with it.
Right.
Two, two different ones.
And I mean, maybe not walking free because I think that Richard Thompson.
Oh yeah.
Richard Thomas.
Richard Thomas.
It does feel like he's, regardless of what was going on there, like he should be in jail
anyways.
I mean, again, forties, but.
And finally analysis of Hirons confessions, quote, revealed numerous inconsistencies between
the confessions and the known facts of the crimes.
And he was frequently wrong about basic facts of the cases, including locations, times,
related events, like same exact thing.
Like they-
And no one gave a shit.
And it was just fine.
And despite all this question, a wild amount of questionable evidence in Hirons' case,
the official position of the state of Illinois was and remains that William Hirons murdered
Josephine Ross, Frances Brown, and Suzanne Degnan.
In 1954, Hirons appealed his sentence on numerous grounds, ranging from illegal search and seizure
to fake false arrests and abuse, and it was shot down by the Supreme Court, who concluded,
the finding of the criminal court against petitioner on the issue is adequately supported
by the evidence.
It's not though.
Still in their summary, the court acknowledged that quote, it may be conceded that the circumstances
under which the crimes were committed, the opinions of examining psychiatrists, the involuntary
disclosure of petitioner while under the influence of sodium pentothal and other matters in evidence indicate the presence of an abnormality rendering him unable to control his conduct and might well
have justified a finding that he was not legally responsible for the acts at the time they were
committed. But the mere fact that council failed to advise their client to defend on such grounds
does not amount to a denial of due process. But a lot of other things do amount to it.
Other appeals were filed in the years that followed, but none were successful. amount to a denial of due process. But a lot of other things do amount to it.
Other appeals were filed in the years that followed, but none were successful.
How?
And in 1995, Hirons filed his final appeal, which resulted in the appellate court upholding
the previous ruling and noting, litigation has a beginning and of necessity an end.
The end for William Hirons has long since passed as far as those claims are concerned."
So they were like, we don't want to hear it anymore.
After serving 61 years of his sentence, Hirons came up for parole in July 2007.
He told the Chicago Tribune, I figure I'll be getting out this year.
It's a bad thing on the reputation of Illinois that they lock people up forever.
Yeah, it is.
In his previous bids for parole,
Hirons had been denied in large part
because he wouldn't admit to what he didn't do.
Because he didn't do it.
And unfortunately, this time would be no different.
He said, one parole board member said,
"'The words I still haven't heard from Bill Hirons
"'are I ask for forgiveness for my crimes.
So they wouldn't parole him because he wouldn't admit to doing it.
A second time or a third time really.
It turned out that that would be William Hirons' last attempt at parole because on March 5th,
2012, he was found unresponsive in his cell at the Dixon Correctional Center and was
transported to the University of Illinois Medical Center,
where he was pronounced dead
from complications from diabetes.
He was 83 years old.
And justice was not served.
I am without, I'm without words.
That's one of the most corrupt cases
I've ever heard of in my life.
That man spent, are you ready?
66 years in prison for three crimes that I am fully willing to say he did not commit.
I do not believe he committed those crimes. I do not believe he committed those crimes.
66 years, his entire life. 17 years old, died at 83.
I'm like, I'm shell shocked right now.
Like absolutely shell shocked.
It's just like, wow.
And like, obviously, like obviously that's not the first time or unfortunately the last
time that will ever happen.
But this is so egregious.
It is egregious.
And it's just like, I just can't rationalize it in my brain that people
can do this to other people. And yeah, just to close a case to quote unquote close a case.
And it makes me angry that it's like, you didn't catch the person who snatched a baby
out of her bed and dismembered her or brutalized that person away. You didn't put two person away. You didn't catch the person who broke into two women's apartments and brutalized them
and left them in strange, unsettling, awful, brutal positions for their family members.
And like the cleaning woman to find those people get out scot-free.
And then you just went around planting evidence at different scenes.
Like, that's wild.
There's not words. There are not words.
Wow. Yeah.
I'm so upset right now.
I'm genuinely so upset.
It's a very rough one.
I just can't believe that man spent 66 years of his fucking life in prison.
That's the thing.
And whoever did that was probably just laughing all the way around town.
That's the thing.
And who knows? I'm sure they went...
I don't think a person like that just stops murdering people.
Yeah.
How many other people were murdered?
That's the thing. I'm like, okay.
And honestly, I kind of want to.
I want to go back in the
records and see where there are other crimes, were there anything else that was even slightly
like these? Right. Or like, did he see that somebody else got it pinned on him? And so
he changed his MO or maybe moved somewhere, moved somewhere else and started doing it.
Like, I want to look into that. And just like there was no other suspects ever. And they
just, and they brought William Hirons in
with nothing connected to these cases.
Just a burglary. And it's like, dude,
and then listen, that's such a fucking cautionary tale.
That's why you don't get yourself wrapped up in bad shit
because more bad shit follows.
Like, don't take that path.
Like I'm not saying he did that to himself,
but it's like you don't want to be in the
wrong fucking place at the wrong time.
Yeah.
Cause that was wrong, wrong, wrong lifestyle choice at the, at the right time for the police.
Exactly.
Is what it was.
Like it was, they saw their chance and they took it.
I'm so shook right now.
I want to, I'm going to go donate money to the Innocence Project by...
It was wild.
It really is a wild, wild case. I thought forever that William Hirons was
the lipstick killer because I never really looked into the case that far.
And it's just, I can't believe there's not more information out there about...
I just don't think he is. If you start Googling, like look through, you'll see a lot of people
suddenly realized a lot of things about the case and were like, oh, fuck. Like it was just like,
holy shit.
Way too late.
Yeah.
It's so sad that there was no activist at the time
that was able to help him in any way.
I know, to even try.
Because now.
And everything was so corrupt then, you know what I mean?
Like it was just like, now.
If this was happening, he would absolutely be like helped
in some way. At least he would be getting like
some kind of representation.
And like you look and it's like the detectives are all wearing
like the detective hats.
So, you know, like they're all like, it's the classic,
like very corrupt, very different way of doing things
back then that like everything just gets swept
into the rug.
Holy, this one moved me to like a place.
I feel like I've never been moved.
It's a wild one.
It is.
And again, not saying William Hirons was like, you know, this bastion of like, you know,
moral superiority or something like that.
Like he was not, you know, he was also 17.
So you hope he would be able to turn shit around if he was given the chance to, who
knows?
His fucking brain wasn't even developed yet.
But it's like, I don't think he was a murderer.
No, I really don't know. And I think that's really where it lies. I don't think he was a murderer. No, I really don't. No. And I think that's really where it lies. I don't think he was a murderer. I don't think
he did this. No. Wow. And that's unfortunate. Wow. All right. Well, we hope you keep listening.
And we hope you keep it weird. But never so weird as any of this because my freaking God,
all of this was absolutely the weirdest fucking shit I've ever heard in my life.
I'm real stressed. I'm glad that this is out.
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