Morbid - Episode 97: Lizzie Borden Part 2
Episode Date: October 26, 2019It's the dramatic conclusion to Lizzie Borden's mysterious murder tale and we hope you brought your fans because, the vapors. Did Lizzie bump off her stepmother and father in cold blood after... trying and failing to slowly poison them, or did someone else come in the house that day only while Lizzie was inside of it and kill them without anyone detecting? We certainly have our own thoughts about her acquittal, but take a listen for yourself and let us know what you think. Visit our sponsors for this episode! Hunt A Killer is the fastest growing murder mystery subscription game that puts you in the mind of a detective. Visit HuntAKiller.com/MORBID for 20% off your first box AMC Shudder AKA "The Netflix of Horror", is a premium streaming video service, super-serving fans of all degrees with the best selection of horror and thrillers  Visit Shudder.com and enter code MORBID for 30 days free 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 Alena, I'm Ash and this is morbid. more bid.
We are back with more Lizzy guys. What the fuck is up?
What the actual fuck is up?
This time we are recording from the safety of our pod lab,
aka Alaina's laundry room, and I have never been happier to be here.
Even though this house was also from the 1800s,
do you know what? I rarely feel spook spook vibes here.
I feel like any spook spooks I feel in here are very pleasant spooks.
Yeah, they're just spooks. I just dig them.
I'm into them.
We call exists to hear in this in this haunted house.
We do. We cohabitate with our spooks spooks.
So that's why we don't cohabitate.
I like what we do, but it freaks me out.
Yeah, you can get some some scary vibes in there, but not in here.
In here, it's nice and pleasant.
Yeah.
But you know what was not pleasant?
I personally was really invested in this one case
that happened to come to a really bummer ending this week.
And I just wanted to briefly talk about it.
I can't let myself get into cases like this
because I always know that it's never gonna
end how I want it to.
I don't know why I held out so much hope for this one. I think it I like so this is the case of
Camille McKinney. I'm sure a lot of you were also following this case because I know a lot of you
were tweeting about it with me. In this kind of went like crazy on Twitter people were really hoping
that this absolutely beautiful,
imprecious three-year-olds from Birmingham, Alabama,
was going to be found alive and well.
Unfortunately, that was not the case.
She was missing, I believe it was October 12th,
she was gone for 10 days.
Even though 10 days went by, I was still holding out hope
that they were going to find her.
Or that like, you know, you just, I don't know, wishful thinking on my part.
Well, you always hope for the best, especially in a case like this.
Exactly.
And she was just so precious.
I was like, please find this precious little baby.
Okay.
It's unfathomable to me, cases like this.
It really is.
And she was, I think what really got me is, I'm sure a lot of you saw the
surveillance footage that was shot outside of the birthday party where she was abducted from.
And the surveillance footage shows two people walking by her and another little girl.
And one person walks by, the next person walks by and starts talking to the little girls.
And then they follow him out at the frame.
And watching that scene, I mean, I have three and a half year old twins watching this
little three year olds just walk off with this guy. My heart sank into my toenails. I swear
it like, it's playing over and over in my head now knowing because she was found yesterday not alive and in a dumpster,
not far from where she was abducted. It is the most fucked up place that you can put a human
let alone a fucking child. Just throwing our way like trash just really gets me and now seeing
that CCTV footage of her just bouncing out of the frame with the stranger
and now knowing how it ended, it's gut wrenching. That's the only way I can describe it as it
gut wrenching to watch now. And they did arrest two pieces of absolute fucking shit that they think did this. One of them is Patrick Stahlworth and the other was Derrick
Erucia Brown. And both of them, as far as I'm concerned, can fucking be terrorized in prison
for the rest of their lives. 50,000%. Like, they might go for the death penalty for them,
which honestly, I'm not, I'm like, I think we've said before,
I'm definitely in a gray area with the death penalty. I don't really stand on either side.
I think I take it case by case. I could get down with the death penalty for them because I want
them to die. Oh no, I want them to suffer every single fucking day of their lives. That's kind of
where I am now though. Like I'm like, you know what? I'm like, you know what?
I'm like, I'm like, you know what?
I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like,
I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I both. I want them to have hemorrhoids in the south and cankers in the north all day,
air day, till the end of days, and I hope they both live to be 120 years old. And they
just feel that all day, every day. And they can only have orange juice because orange juice
makes kinkersaws worse. It's true. And I hope that they, I hope they have fucking ravenous heartburn. Absolutely. Every day.
Every day.
So, and gaspains.
And gaspains, exactly.
Basically, this is an awful story.
We will cover it at some point,
because I, although I don't like to cover child cases,
as we've said a million times before,
and we don't really cover a lot of them.
We will hit ones that I think and that Ash thinks are important to tell the story.
Like usually it's we we feel some kind of connection to it and Camille just like tore my
heart out.
So I feel like her story absolutely needs to be told and we will tell it at some point
but we're going to tell it when we have more
information because right now we don't have any information, we don't know anything about what
happened there. I'm horrified to find out but eventually we will. So I just wanted to let everybody
know that you know that will come into a future podcast and that it's a real bummer. But now that we've talked about that awful scenario,
I think we should talk about Lizzie.
Oh, I think you mean Lizbeth.
I do mean Lizbeth. Sorry, I got remiss because we're not in her home anymore.
Well, don't be remissin' because you don't know what we brought back here.
Oh, girl. Just kidding.
I don't love that.
But I'm just signed to you.
Well, I think when we last left you,
Lizbeth was being arrested for the murders
of Abby Borden and Andrew Borden.
Yeah.
And she was inappropriately dressed at the funeral.
She was.
Same.
Quite like you.
Me too.
So right before she was arrested, what led to her arrest
was that there was five days of closed inquests
Where she had to take the stand every single day. Oh
She didn't take the stand a lot during her actual trial, but during these inquests she had to
Now the issue that really came from it was that no one could account for where the hell is Beth actually was during the murders
Was she in the barn?
Was she picking pears?
Was she ironing hanker chiefs?
Was she fucking churning butter?
Was she painting a still life photo of a pile of pears?
Yes.
Was she using one of those old-timey spinning hoop things
that people used to run around with for fun?
I don't know.
None of her answers were matching with Bridgetts who had testified earlier and Bridget gave like concise
Consistent testimony never changed for a second. She was like by the way my fucking name isn't Maggie. Exactly. It's me Bridget
And I'm here to tell you what the fuck is up. It's me Bridget. I'm here. I got the goods. Listen to the 4-1-1 with Bridget
Bridget. Just podcasts.
Bridget's podcasts.
Moody's point. If you don't get that, I hate you.
I love it.
So basically what was happening was Bridget gave all this testimony about what she was doing and what she saw Lizzie doing.
And Lizzie's was never lining up with that.
And Lizzie couldn't even keep track of her own stories
that she was telling.
She was on Helomorphine.
She was.
But it's curious that she would say a story.
And then they would ask her the same question,
literally a minute later, just to confirm.
And she would give a different one.
So it was like, yeah.
But you literally just said this 10 seconds ago.
Like, how are you already giving a bad?
Yeah, because I'm high out of my
Thanks, because I I am on a space level
Right now
Dizidisto. I am intergalactic right now guys
I'm on Mars. How about you?
Again, Bridget and Liz Beth were the only two in the technically in the area in the house when Abby and Andrew
were murdered. And technically, I think Lizzie was really the only one in the
house. Bridget was outside washing windows most of the time. So this is when
John Morse was interviewed. Now if you remember John Morse was the maternal uncle
of Lizzie and Emma. So Lizzie's and Emma's birth mom's brother.
Exactly.
And he had, I mentioned this in the first episode,
but if you forgot, he had been staying with the family
for a couple of days doing business shit with Andrew.
Uh, he had woken up that morning and he had left to go visit relatives.
He had a really weirdly detailed, um, you know, recollection of the morning.
An alibi.
Yeah, he got himself out of the house way before the murders, and he did.
Before even breakfast.
Yeah, he didn't even eat breakfast with them. He pieced.
I believe he's interesting.
I believe he even pieced before Andrew left for work.
So he was out of there.
At least we have that, and we know that.
But he said he was visiting relatives from nine to close to noon that day.
And he remembered things like the number of the street carriage he took, the words and
the number on the conductor's hat of the train that he was taking.
And he also remembered the names of six priests that he chatted with on board.
The carriage.
Very interesting.
Now, he never gave the names of the priests,
but he said he remembered them.
I mean, that's just a thing.
You would think the follow-up question would be
what other names?
No.
Now, of course, they were thinking at times
that like his answers seemed weirdly detailed
and he seemed to know exactly where he was
at every second of that
moment when they were being killed, but they could never tie anything to him. So they really
didn't go further with it because, I mean, maybe he just really wanted to make sure that they knew
that he wasn't anywhere near there. The judge declared her probably guilty.
I would say you're like a solid eight out of ten guilty. Yeah, like you yeah, you're slightly guilty, I feel.
Like, I'm going to say probably guilty on this one and that's when she was officially
arrested on August 11.
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So once she was arrested, she was sent to jail
like a legit criminal would be.
And she spent nine months in a very tiny cell.
That's a long time. I don't like that. Especially for some high class
broad that was used to live in a big fancy house with servants and shit.
Now she's living in a tiny cell in the county jail.
When they came to a restaurant, they said she was chill as fuck.
No emotion was just like, yep, sure. They offered to read her the arrest warrant
when they arrested her. And she was like, no, I don't need to hear it. It's like always warrant when they arrested her and she was like, no,
I don't need to hear it.
It's like always by fucking time.
Because I think she was like, I know.
I know what you're here for because I'm
rid of my parents.
It's cool.
After being arrested, family members of hers
did start talking and some of them
said that they thought she and John Morris
were responsible together.
So there were family members that were like, yeah,
she probably did it.
There were also all kinds of protests on the other side though. And remember, she was
involved with many charities and groups like we talked about. And she talked in
Tott Sunday School. She did. She was a Sunday school teacher. All of these groups
backed her initially because they were like, no, she couldn't have done this. These
groups also claim that she was not going to have a fair trial
because women weren't allowed to serve on juries at that time
because only those with voting rights were able to serve.
We were not given voting rights for quite some time.
That's a bunch of bullshit.
Exactly. Now, this made me think of in the Lizzie Boarden House,
there's a photo in the sitting room of the jury
for her trial.
And they all went down to like a like picture people and they all sat and got themselves
a fucking group photo of the jury.
And then didn't they give it to Lizzie as a gift or something?
Yeah, they gave it to her as a gift.
It's the most bizarre shit I've ever heard.
And when you look at the photo, you're just like,
huh, what's odd here?
And it's just a bunch of fucking old white dudes,
just all smiling on a jury.
I haven't a grand old time.
Yeah, it's great.
It's definitely a fair trial.
Now, the trial began June 5th in 1893 in New Bedford, and there were
very divided opinions all around. Some people thought she was super guilty, and they were 100% sure
that she was guilty. And then some people were like, no way is she guilty. And there were all kinds
of reasons behind this. It was the original OJ trial. It really was. It was really intense.
It was the original OJ trial. It really was. It was really intense. Totally.
It totally was. It was that kind of vibe, though.
It was that kind of like really severe
opinions on either sides, like no gray area.
I don't think anyone sat in the middle
and was like, maybe I don't know.
They were like either yay or nay.
I kind of sit in the middle of this case.
I lean and I will just actually, you know what,
I'm going to wait till the end, because we'll talk about what we really think at the end.
But basically, the defense was that there was no real murder weapon
that they could tie to the crime, because all the hatchets and things that they were given from
the house, they said there was no blood on them. But let's let's think about this for a second.
It's 1893. They don't have Luminol. Yeah.
They don't have any of these tests to
determine. So if she just simply wiped that blade clean, there's no blood on there. You
don't see it. It's not there. That is true. So there could have been fucking copious amounts
of blood on there. And she just wiped that shit clean. So there's no murder weapon that
they can tie to the crime without a doubt. And they also were going off of the fact
that they said a woman could not have killed her parents
with a hatchet because that's man shit.
She wasn't able-bodied.
That is some man shit.
What's a fucking rude?
Basically, they were like women poison people.
That's there.
If they're gonna kill anyone, which women don't do that.
But if they did, they would do some passive shit like poison.
Listen, I'm gonna tell you, a woman gets matter
than any fucking person in the world.
And if I'm mad at you, maybe I will be your face
in with a hatchet.
It's true.
I'd rather do that than poison you.
It's true.
And...
If I ever get arrested for beating somebody in the face
with a hatchet, I'd like you to delete this audio clip.
Absolutely.
Thank you.
Everyone remember that.
Okay. Now, I also think that she did this audio clip. Absolutely. Everyone remember that.
Now, I also think that she did try to poison them.
I think so too.
I think that vicious illness they all got
was because she put only a tiny amount of...
You didn't know how much to put it.
Yeah, I think she was just,
I think she put a tiny amount,
wasn't enough to kill anyone,
but they all got viciously ill.
It wasn't working because again,
she tried to go get the pressic acid later, didn't get it.
And when she couldn't get it,
I think that's when she was like,
I gotta do something.
And it was like, I'm pissed the fuck off
that none of this is working and I hate you.
So I gotta do it.
So I'm gonna use a hatchet.
Now the judge determined after this inquest
that she was probably guilty
and that she should
remain jailed until a superior court trial.
So she stayed in jail more.
So she stayed in jail for more jail for you, Lizzie.
Then it was brought before a grand jury in November.
This is when the jurors convened to hear the case and reconvened on December
1st and that's when they started hearing all the testimonies from all the witnesses and
all that good stuff. One of the biggest ones was Alice Russell. She was kind of a bombshell
testimony. Remember she is Lizzie's good friend. We talked about her in the first part. She was the one who Lizzie sent Bridget to go get once she discovered her father's body.
Now Alice was the one that went up with Bridget and found Abby as well.
She also watched Lizzie burn a paint cover dress on the stove the Sunday after the murders.
Paint covered.
No, sure. Exactly.
Many, many air quotes.
Now, she had originally been one of the witnesses to testify at the original inquest
in front of a grand jury, but she had not told them that one important piece of information,
the one about the dress.
Because she probably had like a little conflict of conscious.
She definitely did.
Conjents.
They had asked her if all the dresses in the house were
accounted for after the murders.
And even though she was racked with guilt,
she said yes, they were.
Oh, girl.
Well, her guilt ended up becoming too intense for her.
And so she requested to come before the grand jury again
and tell that information because she didn't want to
hold it in anymore.
She literally called them and was like,
I'm freaking the fuck out.
I have this information and I know it's really damning
and I need to tell you.
I got to tell you,
the grand jury indicted Lizzie the next day
after she told them this.
Oh, come on.
So, Jose and Nolton was the Bristol County District Attorney.
And he was apparently a super badass.
If you look at a picture of him,
he just looks like an old-timey badass. Love that for him. Yeah, love that for him.
He really gave this case all his all because he really believed she was guilty.
The medical examiner testified that Abby was killed between 9 and 10 30 a.m. When Nolton asked
where Lizzie was during this time, she said she was ironing handkerchiefs that morning.
And when he asked her how long she did this for, she said, quote, I don't know, sir.
So she didn't have an alibi for the time of Abbey's death.
She could not place herself anywhere.
Now, this is from the official transcript.
Nolton said, where were you when your father returned?
Lizzie said, I was in the kitchen reading an old magazine that had been left in the cupboard,
an old Harper's magazine.
Now, this is bad for Lizzie.
Because when Bridget was asked about Andrew returning home, she said that he had trouble
opening the front door because it was jammed and it was locked.
And she tried opening it for him, Bridget did.
It was after he had rang the bell to get everybody's attention.
And she was having trouble opening the door.
And she swore, and I think our tour guide said she swore in Gaelic.
And she said once she swore, she testified
that she distinctly heard Lizzie laughing from the second floor.
So she definitely wasn't in the kitchen
because we were just in that house.
You can't mistake where someone is.
No.
If they're upstairs, they're right upstairs from the front door.
If she was in the kitchen, that's across the way from the front door, way across.
And if she heard her laughing, chances are she was at the top of the stairs.
Yep.
Right outside of the bedroom where Abby lay fucking brutally killed.
Exactly.
So if she heard her laughing, that's where she was.
And if she had heard her laughing from the kitchen, you would know you heard her from the kitchen,
because it's like across the house from the front door.
Right.
She probably wouldn't have heard her.
Exactly.
So again, this places her upstairs right in front of where Abbey was murdered right in front of the guest room.
They told her this was bullshit. They were like, that's bullshit because that's not matching up with shit.
And they asked her again, are you sure you were in the kitchen when Andrew arrived home?
And she said, quote, I'm not sure if I was in the kitchen or the dining room.
So Nolton said, did you go back to your room before your father returned?
He was basically trying to get her to slip and say she was upstairs.
She said she had, because she remembered carrying laundry up to her bedroom.
So when she, when she have had to pass, yes, 100%.
So now Nilton's like, so you were upstairs when Andrew came home, you just told me you
weren't. And she said, quote, I was not upstairs when Andrew came home. You just told me you weren't. Right.
And she said, quote, I was not upstairs
when he came home.
No, sir.
It's like girl.
So he's, he then asked her a bunch of other questions
before circling back to the question
of where she was when the bell rang.
She answered, quote, I think in my room upstairs,
fuck Lizzie, you just fucking lied.
And then you confirmed Bridget's testimony,
but then you lied again and flipped it all,
like you're not making any sense.
And you're just confusing, every single time
he asks this question, she answers differently.
Yeah.
So come to think of it, I was in Wisconsin.
Yeah, she's like, you know what?
I was on a space level. I was intergalactic at this moment.
Actually, I think I was on a cruise.
I was on a cruise to the Caribbean, okay?
Okay.
So he was like, quote, so you were upstairs
when your father came home and she said, quote,
I don't know for sure, but I think I was.
Girl, Lizzie.
But again, she was on an ass load of morphine.
She was, but again, you shouldn't be doing that.
It shouldn't be because this is basically where you upstairs.
No, but were you upstairs?
Yes.
Were you upstairs though?
No, but were you upstairs?
Sure was.
Like, it's literally like, no. Yes, no. Yes.
I don't even know which question to ask next. He's like, I am just using all of my law skills right now to not
agree. You're probably guilty. You are definitely guilty. So the next day, she was wishy-washy again
about whether she saw Bridget washing windows or not, and about where she was again.
She's like, you know what?
Maybe Bridget did.
She's like, you know what, I bet it was Bridget.
Who's Bridget?
Who's Bridget?
She's like, we got a fucking Maggie living our house.
Who's this Bridget bitch?
It's like fuck.
She did it.
She did it.
Bridget did it.
It was Bridget.
Maggie didn't, but Bridget did.
So she said she, now she was saying she went to the barn
to look for lead for fishing poles,
but Nolton was like, well, there are no footprints in the dust in the barn,
and you were definitely not in there.
And also, your fishing poles don't even have lines on them, so they can't be used.
So why were you going to find fucking shit for your fishing poles that can't even be used?
And she was like, because I fucking was Jose.
And she was like, I just did.
That's actually where the term No Way Jose came from.
Is this testimony?
Is this testimony?
She's like, were you there?
And she's like, No Way Jose.
And he was like, my name is Jose Anilton, actually.
It's in the transcripts.
Go read it.
There was also something the police said. They said that there was a bucket of bloody rags in the transcripts go read it. There was also something the police said.
They said that there was a bucket of bloody rags in the home when they got there.
And when they were like, did she say she was at her period?
Yo Liz, what's that about?
She wasn't like, oh shit, I don't know what that is.
Because that's what I would do.
I'd be like, I don't know what that is.
Maybe the killer left it there.
Yeah.
She was like, I'm menstruating, guys.
That's just my bucket of bloody menstruating regs.
That is foul.
No, of course.
At that time, and today, most men are going to be like, you.
You.
No, they're just going to go, you.
I'm not going to ask any further about that.
He's like, and that's all I have, Judge.
And that's literally what the police did. They were like,
Kay, don't want to even touch that.
So those bloody rags were never, I mean, what they're not gonna test them for anything.
Right.
Because what the fuck are they testing for?
They have tests.
1893.
But she just literally was like, oh, that's just my period rags.
And they were like, okay, bye. It's like, dude, that's just my period, regs. And they were like, okay, bye.
It's like, dude, those were probably the shit she was wearing
when she murdered them.
And she's threw it in a bucket.
I mean, and nothing was done about it.
Good for her.
I mean, I don't want to say good for him later, but like,
but she's, she thought on her feet, man.
She's like, yo, they're not going to ask me further
about my menstruation.
And one thing, that's the thing.
One thing, and I'm calling her Lizzie now
because I'm gonna be honest with you.
I think she's guilty.
Okay.
But one thing Lizzie was really good at
was reading the fucking room.
In the room full of men.
Exactly.
And she knew what she needed to appear like at that time.
And she needed to appear like a helpless woman
with the kind of hair.
I don't have the constitution.
I'm so fragile.
I couldn't do this.
I have the vapors.
Like, she literally...
She would walk into it with a fan.
Like, just actually picked up her vaping.
She was,
Ha, ha, ha.
Lizzie, it's her jewel.
Pawn midfuckin.
You were a contestimony.
You would, you fucking young millennial.
Hold up, Jose. She's like, they've been what? Ha, ha. No. I thought midfuckin- You were- You were, you were, you fucked a young millennial.
Hold up, Jose.
She's like, they've been what?
Ha ha, no.
All of a sudden it smells like grape cool lead.
And everyone's like, this is delightful.
She didn't do it.
I cracked myself, bro.
She smells wonderful.
Everyone's like, shut the fuck up, Ash.
Ha ha. Well, note, Nolton actually had like close to a five hour long closing argument.
Okay.
Like, are you just reading it over and over again?
He just wanted to really hammer in there like this, this lady did it.
Five hours?
Is it closing arguments supposed to be like a solid few minutes?
No, I think you can, I mean, most, they're usually pretty long.
Not five hours, but pretty long.
She is.
He said, one of the things he said that really struck me as like kind of brilliant
for him to really hammer in there.
Well, he said,
was he said,
isn't it kind of weird that both times Bridget left Lizzy alone?
One of her parents ended up murdered.
It is strange.
She said, Bridget went out to wash windows.
Yep, out of the dead.
I'll be done.
Bridget goes upstairs to the third floor to take a nap
andrew ends up murdered.
Yeah.
Every single time that she left Lizzie alone, boom,
one of the parents are dead.
So, he also pointed out that it was pretty curious
that Lizzie said she was in the barn
Because that happened to be the one place where she wouldn't have been able to see someone enter or exit the home
So she didn't have to lie and say I saw somebody she was like I was in a place where I wouldn't see anybody. Right
He also pointed out that the story about Abby leaving to see a sick friend
because remember when every when Andrew came, he said, where's Abby? Right. And Lizzie said, she received a note from a sick friend, she's out seeing that
sick friend. Uh-huh. He said, that's really weird, because they never
found a note. Where's the note? We never found the note. No
notice found. And he also said, if a messenger was sent with this
note to tell her to come see her sick friend. That's BS because
one, the note isn't there. And two, where's the sick friend or the messenger to come forward and
say, yeah, that did happen. Right. Nobody's coming forward and saying this happened. Um,
any saying like, why wouldn't somebody come forward and give her story credibility if it was true?
Right. No one has. Now, there was also the fact that the house is bonkers when
it comes to layout. And he said, that house is wild. And it's true. He said some random
stranger would not have been able to walk through this home unnoticed. No way. Without
being in this home before. Right. Because it's true. Like, it's bedrooms are on top of
bedrooms. The bedrooms are like, it's like a nesting doll of a home. The entire second floor is just bedrooms.
And it's all bedrooms that are just like all on top of each other.
You have to walk through other bedrooms to get to other bedrooms.
It's very interesting.
Very odd.
So somebody who didn't know this house would not have been able to go through it without
in his two separate staircases too.
Exactly.
Lizzie's lawyers also knew like we said how to play the all-male jury. They had her dress
super fancy. She was wearing black. She was wearing like, you know, tight corsets. They had a
scroll at it. And Derry, according to a Smithsonian article that I read, they had her come into court with
fans and holding bouquets of flowers like being being, they played with a bouquet of flowers to walk in.
Because Beth was a bouquet of flowers to walk in.
Oh yeah, that's just 1892.
And she walked in with the bouquet of flowers.
People would be like, oh, she did it.
But back then they were like, she's just a lady.
She just picked these on the way.
She's just living her feminine life.
That's all she's doing.
She's just growing flowers. Everything is nifty. She's just living her feminine life. That's all she's doing. She's just growing flowers.
Everything is nifty. She's so fragile. Now, you know, just women's shit. So one newspaper
described her as quote, quiet, modest, and well bred. Well bred. Yeah. That's how I want to be
fucking described. Well bred. Yikes. Another one said that she lacked, quote, Amazonian proportions.
So could you not-
She wasn't tall.
So she could not have wielded that hatchet the way that they are saying she wielded it.
What a way to say someone is short.
Yeah.
You do not possess Amazonian proportions, youngness.
Okay.
It's like, appreciate it.
Thank you.
You're like, you're a writer, huh?
Now, again, most of- all the jurors were male and most of them were farmers or blue collar workers and most of them had daughters Lizzie's age.
Oh, because fall river, the bustling metropolis that it was, couldn't be used for jury candidates because of, you know, bias in the usually from the place where the crime happened. Yeah. They acquitted her, the jury acquitted her.
Right. And they did it so quickly that they had to sit
around for an hour and twiddle their fucking thumbs to make it
look like they actually took time to decide. Oh, good. So
they didn't take an hour. They took like four seconds. And
then they just sat around with their thumbs up their asses
for an hour to make it look like they actually deliberated. Perfect.
Uh, when the verdict was read, Lizzie fell to her knees and started to sob.
Probably because she was like, I got away with that.
She was like, I never thought this was going to happen.
She's probably like, these dumb fucks are actually acquitting me.
Or she was probably like, I don't have to go back to that tiny ass cell.
They praise the god.
They praise the God. Praise the Lord.
Now, it's important to remember that in order,
in the order that these two people were killed,
benefited Lizzy greatly.
And this is why I believe Lizzy Borden is guilty.
Okay.
This is just something that really strikes me.
First of all, why was Abby killed at all?
Because she didn't like her.
But if it wasn't Lizzie, I mean,
you can kind of see, I'm not saying,
justifying it by any means.
But maybe Andrew wasn't a really liked person.
He was a businessman.
Yeah.
Sometimes businessmen, they go, go awry.
And they can have people that are nemesis of them
and want them gone.
But Abby, why would Abby be killed?
And why would Abby be killed first?
Right.
That doesn't make sense.
And Lizzie was in the fucking house,
and so was Bridget.
Why weren't all of them killed?
If you're in a kill one, why are you killing?
Why are you only killing Abby and Andrew?
It doesn't make sense.
And where would the killer have hid for a few hours?
Exactly.
Abby was killed first.
So all her shit was transferred to Andrew by her will.
Right.
So that makes sense that she was killed if it's Lizzy.
Because Lizzy gets rid of Abby.
Now all of Abby's assets are immediately transferred
by her will to Andrew.
So then Andrew was killed.
Andrew? I don't know. I just got very fancy.
Andrew is killed. Some like old timey spirit just possessed me.
Like posting a TV show.
But then Andrew was killed. And so all of Abby's shit
and all of his shit immediately transfers to Emma and Lizzie.
Right. So it's very beneficial of her to get rid of Abby first.
Right.
Because it transfers just all that shit into her name.
And it doesn't make sense for some stranger to do it that way because what the fuck are
they getting out of this?
Right.
Nothing.
Nada.
If just Andrews killed, I could totally buy into the idea that it's some random stranger
that. But if she had killed Andrew, his shit would have gone to Abby.
Exactly.
So Abby had to die if it's Lizzy.
Right.
But if it's some random stranger, why?
And Abby was our, Lizzy was pissed that Andrew was giving money to Abby's family.
Exactly.
So I think they were like-
And she stopped calling her mother.
She did. She called her Mrs. Bolden. Ooh. I don't know were like, and she stopped calling her mother. She did. She called
her Mrs. Bowden. Ooh, I don't know why we're in the South suddenly, but we keep doing that throughout
the set of the set. It feels old time. It does. It does. Now, Abby had two sisters, Bertie and Priscilla.
Call me Bertie from these days. I think it's important to note in the, you know, just to be transparent
and not in play devil's advocate here, that Emma and Lizzie did give them both money from
Abbie's estate. So guilty fucking conscious. I agree. But I'm just putting you know, sorry, I
fucking hacked off your sister. Here you go. And they did transfer her estate to them for $1.
So they didn't hold back everything from them, but
they also didn't, they didn't give her a ton of it. They even herred it a shit ton of money.
Yeah. Now, Emma and Lizzie inherited $500,000 altogether. Back then. Back then, this is like
$10 million. Yeah, that's a lot of fucking money. It's a lot of dough. Now soon after this in September of 1893,
Emma and Lizzie moved in together into a giant mansion on the hill.
That was in the hill, which is where Lizzie, especially always wanted to live in the
because all their family was up there.
And that's the fancy ass part of town.
That's where all like the debutants live.
That's where all the parties that you meet you feature.
You feature Jenna Mankala are Thomas Revanale. Oh god. So then charm guys, but Thomas
Revanale is terrible. Horrible. He's a terrible man. Lizzy named this
mansion maple craft. I like that name. Very I love that. I just want to name my
house. I think we should name my house something very imposing and fancy
like made for craft. Spooks filled is not sound elegant. Sure does. Now four years after her quiddle, she was
still getting a little bit in trouble, Lizzie. Oh, she was not wiping her slate clean. What happened?
Four years after a warrant was issued for her rest in Providence. For why? She was charged with shoplifting.
Oh, sis.
And she had to make restitution.
Girl.
You don't need to be shoplifting.
That's, you've just got $10 million,
but bumping off your stepmother and your daddy.
I remember watching a TV show where she got in trouble
for shoplifting before the murder.
Yes.
So she had some moments.
It's okay. She had some things going on.
Don't we all now Lizzie Lizzie finally got to be in the hill and live in that society life. She
always wanted because she always just wanted to be a part of this. She wanted to be part of the
fancy parties and all that. Me too. And that's I get it. I get it girl. You have tons of your
family's tons of money. You want to be in that shit. Even if you don't have tons of money, I want
to be in that shit. So when they moved't have tons of money, I want to be in that shit.
So when they moved into Maplecroft together, she was throwing parties with high society.
Left and right.
She was also partying with theater folk, including actress Nance O'Neal, and apparently theater
people back there were considered kind of low brow.
Which is interesting.
I know, it's really weird.
But I think it kind of made me think of like the great Gatsby
in her like crazy friends.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it's just like really crazy part of the beginning.
But it's like yeah, so it's like these high society people
like hanging with these like, you know, lower brows.
There's a lot of times they just like God fucking shit face.
Exactly.
Like the drugs together.
Exactly.
And Emma did not love this.
In fact, she fucking hated it.
She did not like Nancy O'Neill.
That would have been you and me.
Right?
So Emma was not feeling this whole thing.
And they actually had a falling out over this,
over the partying, over the kind of people
that she was associating with.
And she was like, dude, we're on the hill.
I wanna associate with fucking Hill people.
Right. Not Hill people, not hill people.
Like hills have eyes people.
But like the hill, the hill, the hill and fall ripper.
Now they actually, and it was basically her relationship with
Nance O'Neill was a problem for Emma.
And Emma was also kind of weirded out by her relationship with their
driver, Joseph Tetralt. She was kind
of like, what's going on there? Don't we all? And in 1905, Emma left maple craft. She moved out.
And this is crazy. They never spoke or saw each other again. Like, they never spoke again.
Never spoke again. Oh, after she moved out, that was it. Like it was the end of their relationship,
which makes me think that something else, big made that happen, which maybe Emma found
something out and was like, by, I'm not living with you anymore. And maybe that's why she
cut the relationship off because she might have found something out. And maybe she wasn't
ready to give her sister up to the authorities for it, but she wasn't
going to be anywhere near her.
Yeah.
That's what I think at least.
But Lizzie fucking loved her lifestyle.
She was loving partying with theater people and all that shit.
And she ended up owning one of the first vehicles in the neighborhood.
Oh shit.
And even had her own gas pump at the home.
That's amazing.
And it was put in in 1924,
and it's still there today in work, so I guess.
And she had something the tour guide told us
that it was like, oh yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Where if she had her car driven into the garage,
it would turn it around her entire fucking car
around so that when it was ready to be driven again,
you could just pull right out.
It was just facing outwards, which is badass.
And very ahead of the time.
Really innovative, because people have that in their house now.
Like that's a thing. Yeah, that's like a big like fancy people.
That is so cool. Yeah.
You never have to back in anywhere.
Yeah, because you two fancy to back out of your drive.
I'm always back in in places so that I can pull out because you're fancy.
Lizzie also really liked traveling and
and as she got older, yeah, she would travel the Boston, New York to all kinds of places.
And she actually hired a traveling buddy who was named Trudy and lived in the house with
her for a time. Okay, just saying Trudy. Hello Trudy. Hey girl. She continued charity work.
She still loved doing charity work,
but she did it anonymously a lot of the time now
because she was not great.
It might not take money from her.
Because Lizzy was a pariah.
Because even after her acquittal,
people were pretty sure that she killed her parents
with a hatch of kids would literally come to Maplecroft
and sing that awful nursery rhyme outside of her house.
Yes.
She, people would stare, people would whisper.
She was shunned by her church.
Oh.
Who she had been very much a part of.
She also, remember the tour guide said that
she like passed these women on the street
who were like her tenants at one of her houses.
Oh, yeah.
And they all turned their heads,
but then she got them evicted.
Yeah.
She was like, okay, bitch.
You don't want to talk to me?
Yeah, you don't want to talk to me?
I don't live there, no more.
Well, and these, like Ash said, these kids would,
because this nursery rhyme came out in the 1920s,
I believe it was when it came about that,
we, you know, Lizzy Borden had an axe,
gave her mother 40 wax,
which she saw what she had done to give her father 41.
And when that came out, these kids would come to maple craft and they would sing it outside of
maple craft, which I'm like, what the fuck is wrong with you? If you think this bitch hacked two people,
her fucking parents did that with a fucking hatchet. You think it's stopping her from hacking you
did that? What the fuck are you doing sitting out there singing that song to her? I'd be like, nope, I'm gonna leave that crazy old bad alone and let her live in her house in maple crop forever.
Well, and then they would also put pins in her doorbell so that it would ring continuously.
Oh, that's horrible.
Isn't that fucked? Yeah.
Like they would put the pins in and it would just be like ding, ding, ding, ding, ding.
So she'd have to come out and like take the pins out to get it to stop ringing.
Oh, that would piss me the fuck off.
You guys are lucky.
You did not get hatchets to the face because I would have hatched your face for that.
I would hatch your face.
Like what the fuck?
It's funny.
What the fuck?
What the fuck?
And it's funny because we were talking.
Actually, I was talking to my mother in law about this case.
Absolutely.
And I was saying how these kids would stand outside of her house.
And I was saying, how fucked is it if she really didn't do this?
Yeah, that is really innocent.
What a life that she, that sucks.
And it's funny because my mother in law, who is hilarious, was saying, well, you know what
I would do if these kids are out there singing this song.
I would just like swing a hatchet outside the window or something.
Like, she's like, I would lean into that shit.
I would come to the door like with my hair all crazy holding a hatchet and just scare
the shit out of the house.
I feel like you want to fucking sing at me?
Oh yeah.
Oh yeah.
And I was like, mother fucking same. I would do that. Yeah, I want to do that now
I would love to be like the neighborhood crazy bitch
Like I would know he's singing outside of your house. You can't be doing. Oh god
I hope someone does because I will totally lean into that shit. Don't don't test a lady
I live in just waiting to go crazy. I am, I so am. I'm crazy.
I'm waiting to be like the creepy old witch of the neighborhood
because I live in like an old creepy house.
Sweetie, I don't think you're waiting.
I think you are.
I'm ready.
I'm ready to get that reputation.
I think you had, there's about 50 pumpkins on your porch.
Sure is.
Yeah.
I think you're good.
And it's gonna get worse.
Like this year, the pumpkins didn't even reach their full potential because I was so
pretty with tailborn shit.
Just wait, just wait, everybody.
So Lizzie died at the age of 66 of pneumonia.
Oh, that's pretty young.
That is young.
And it was in 1927.
What was that young back then?
Yeah, probably not.
But well, in the 20s, that's 60s pretty old.
But 60s, I mean, yeah, whatever.
Either way, Emma died nine days later in New Hampshire,
I believe.
Which is interesting because she was nine years older.
Isn't that very weird?
Yeah.
That's strange and spooky and awesome.
So Lizzy loved animals.
She was a big animal advocate. She had a loved animals. She was a big animal advocate.
She had a doge.
She had a doge.
And there is a photo in the house of her sitting
on the porch of Maple Crafthold in her dog.
And she's like, all elderly and shit.
And she's sitting in this white gown.
And she's holding her doge, which is a Boston Terrier.
And she looks like this like
kind old lady and you're looking at the photo and you're like, I'm pretty sure you
fucking hatched it at your parents' faces like a few years earlier. And that is something
that is very hard to reconcile with this photo of you sitting on your porch in a rocking chair
like an old lady with a doge. Like it's you're looking at the photo like these are not the same people.
Yeah. And so, and again, is she is innocent? What a fucking terrible
rest of your life. I know you got to live in maple croft on the hill and all that good stuff,
but you were basically isolated. Like bullied. And you were being bullied constantly. And it's like if she was innocent,
then someone murdered her parents.
And she never found no way.
And now she has to hear a song about it.
Yeah, all the time.
Like that's real fucked.
Yeah.
But again, I think she was guilty.
Yeah, I just don't know.
I mean, I will say, like I said, she loved animals
like we were saying,
she left $30,000 to the fall river animal rescue league
when she died.
That was a lot of...
So she was even doing,
like she was really into charity work and stuff.
So it's like, she had these like good qualities about her,
but fucking, I don't know.
And then I did read that on Bridget's deathbed,
the maid, she told her sister that she lied on the stand to
protect Lizzie. Oh shit. And she never elaborated or said what she lied about. She just said she wanted
to put out there before she died, that I lied on the stand to protect her. Interesting. So it's like,
what did Bridget see? Yeah. Because our
tour guide told us that like Bridget left after these murders and never fucking talked about it again,
would not discuss it was like really fucked up about it. I think she died pretty young too, I
think she did, I think. And I think Bridget saw what happened. Maybe. And I think Bridget had to lie.
And I think that she lived the rest of her life knowing
what happened.
And that's probably why she was like,
I fucking lied to protect her.
I think she saw some shit go down.
Maybe.
I really do think she saw something.
And that's why she wouldn't speak about it ever again
because she was probably super fucked up.
You just have to wonder, to know what makes somebody do something
like that. I think that seemed like they were a chill-ass person. I honestly think it had something,
it definitely had something to do with money, but I don't think that was the full main
thing. The main purpose of why this happened. I think something must have been going on. Listen, I'm here to tell you that sometimes parents aren't so great.
If that's what I'm here to tell you.
So definitely not.
I'm just going to leave it at that.
And maybe that's where Lizzy was.
And that's what is good that I moved in with my grandparents.
And maybe Lizzy felt like there was no way out.
This was her way out.
Could have moved him with her grandparents.
Again, there's no justifying this right now.
And the thing, like the anger in hacking somebody's,
beating someone in the head with the hatchet alone,
you're so pissed.
11 and 18 times over however many blows it was,
there is fury behind that.
And they did say that the first blow to Abby Borden was in the front of her face in her
head.
And they said someone, obviously it was a hatchet wound.
They said someone had to be real close to her to do that.
And there are no defense wounds.
Which means she was standing in front of them.
Yeah.
Which means she probably knew them.
Yeah.
So it could have been Lizzy walking up into her,
talking to her, and then whipping out a hatchet
and hitting her in the face with it.
Yeah.
That's what I think.
And they said that the first blow to Andrew
was probably fatal.
Yeah. But then there was like, however many more.
So.
Well, then I did read something that said,
they found a hatchet, like a bunch of years after this
happened on the roof of one of the neighbor's houses.
Oh, they did.
They found it because one of the kids had like,
was getting a ball off the roof,
and there was a hatchet on the roof.
Terrifying.
And they saw this hatchet was all like rusted,
but they said, underneath the rust, they could tell that this was a brand new hatchet was all like rusted, but they said underneath the rust, they could
tell that this was a brand new hatchet.
Now, this is important because when they looked at Abby's wounds, they found pieces of,
I believe it's called guilt, that is from a new hatchet.
So when they looked at these wounds, they were like, oh, this was a brand new hatchet that
was used for these wounds because pieces of it came out in her skull. So they're thinking maybe this hatchet was thrown
up on the roof by whoever did it, which would make sense if it was Lizzy because she's right there,
she's throws it onto the roof, and maybe it wasn't found until now, and it's like they can't do
anything about it, but that was an interesting note to me that like they could have the wild case. It's such a bonkers case. I will never go back to that
house. I can tell you that much. I loved that house. I loved the the experience
that we had there. I'm glad that we did it. But I will not be doing it again. I
loved it. I totally I kind of was like, I'm going back every year.
I kind of want to do it again because it was so fun.
I literally can't feel my entire leg right now. But what I want to do is I want to go back and I want to rent out the whole house with like a bunch of people.
Well, I hope you all have fun when you do that.
Who's with me?
Nauta, I said raise your hand.
Good day, sir.
with me. Not I, sir. Raise your hand. Good day, sir. So that is the story of Lizzie Borden who had an axe and in my opinion gave her fucking parents 40 wax. Well not 40. No,
but close to it. Well I am not gonna state my opinion and I hope you all have a good night. So
in the meantime of deciding whether or not Lizzie's guilty, why don't you go ahead and follow us on Instagram at
morbid podcast hit us up on Twitter at a morbid podcast
I know a lot of people have been accidentally tweeting at morbid podcast and that is actually the morbid curiosity podcast
And they are really sweet and correcting people and sending them to us
Like go listen to their podcast.
But maybe just get it right the first time. Well, just kidding. Totally kidding. But they are morbid
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join the Facebook group morbid. Colin, a true crime podcast. That place is fucking awesome.
And you need to go join it. I love it there. It's great. Oh
My whole leg is asleep. Um join us in an email
Yes
Send us an email is what I meant my fucking like hurt so bad join us in Gmail at morebidpodcast at gmail.com
Donate to that patreon if you're feeling so inclined. We did just add a new episode. You're welcome. Patreon.com slash more
Bit podcast. We hope you keep listening and we hope you keep it
Weird, but that's the way that you go to the Lizzie Borden house and you experience all these creepy things and you say hey
I'm never going back, but then Elena says hey, I'm gonna throw a party there
You're gonna come and I say no no no no no, I'm not coming and then we put this episode out And it's a great episode and don't kill your parents, but Thank you. Yn yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw And for those petronuses that are waiting for their shout outs, I promise you they're coming back.
We just needed to get our shit together for a little while.
And we are finally reorganizing ourselves. We just have a lot of petronuses to get through.
We want to make sure we hit everybody and we want to make sure we hit the,
the oldies, the veterans, you know, the old school original gangsters first. So we are going
to be doing our shout outs again. We're hoping we're going to start next week for next week's
case. So hang in there, Patronis, they are coming back. I promise.
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