Stuff You Should Know - The Cleveland Torso Murders
Episode Date: May 18, 2021During the depths of the Great Depression, Cleveland’s most vulnerable and destitute residents were prey for one of history’s most horrific serial killers. The killer’s identity remains a myster...y to this day. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh. There's Chuck. Jerry's out there somewhere with a
magnifying glass and a toothpick. We don't know what the toothpick's for, but this is Stuff You
Should Know. Yes, content warning episode, everybody. This is one of our, I was about to
say rare. They're fairly rare, but one of our true crime episodes that is very grisly.
Gruesome. Gruesome, but took place in the 1930s. So there's something about
old and gruesome that makes it a little more palatable for me.
Totally. I don't know why, but you're absolutely right.
Time, I guess, you know? Yeah. Time heals all wounds, including the torso murders.
Yes, it does. Well, heals all wounds except for some of the things that happened in the torso
murders because you can't come back from that. Yeah, it's pretty crazy. You were familiar with
the torso murders already, right? I had heard of these and the more I read about them,
the more I was shocked that there wasn't a good period movie about this.
Yeah, absolutely. So, but if you haven't heard of the torso killer, that's fine. You're definitely
not alone. A lot of people haven't, which is kind of surprising because these are,
they're unsolved murders. There were a lot of them and, you know, they took place in the background
of a city that was like driven into a frenzy by this ghastly serial murderer who was, who continued
their murders despite this extraordinarily large, you know, manhunt to try to find them.
An unsuccessful manhunt still to this day. Yeah. I mean, it has all the makings of a good movie.
It's got a, and we'll reveal who this person is. We'll hang on to it for a second.
But it's got a famous investigator. Oh, sorry. Yes. He definitely was the famous investigator.
Yeah. Oh, you thought I meant who the murderer was? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You've got some false
starts. You've got some Cohen Brothers-esque whimsy with the dog discovery. I thought you'd
like that. Yeah, I did like that. And yeah, it has all the makings of a great movie in a cool
period setting, which was Depression-era 1930s Cleveland, Ohio. Which is almost indistinguishable
from current day 2021 Cleveland, Ohio. Oh, come on. We love Cleveland. Hey, man, I'm from Toledo.
I can totally back on Cleveland and Detroit. That's my birthright. That is your birthright.
So let's go back to September of 1934, when a woman's torso is washed up on the shore of Lake
Erie. Her legs are amputated below the knee. There is no head, which is why I said torso,
and arms. It's a suspicious way to find a body. A very suspicious way. She was never identified.
They called her the Lady of the Lake. And this was just sort of the beginnings. Nothing was put
together at this point, because it would be two years before any other murders took place.
And that they finally sort of put together that the Lady of the Lake was perhaps victim zero,
really victim one, but they called her victim zero of who would become known as the torso
murderer or the mad butcher of Kingsbury. Yes, Kingsbury run. And like you said,
it'd be about two years before they started to connect the dots. But in that time, between
the time the Lady of the Lake was found, about a year passed, and then all of a sudden two more
bodies were found. And now all of a sudden, because two bodies were found together, this really started
to capture people's attention. The Lady of the Lake, it was a weird thing. It was a terrible
thing to find, but it was singular. This was, by definition, not singular, finding two bodies at
once that were both dismembered. And they were found in the area of Kingsbury run, which is
where the mad butcher takes his name. That's right. They were both men in this case. They were
castrated. They were also decapitated, which would become sort of a signature, the decapitation,
and any kind of dismembering, really, would become the signature hallmark of this murderer.
And it's interesting in that victim one of these two men was actually one of the only ones that
they got a fairly positive ID for. They actually got some fingerprints and matched a man named
Edward Andressy. And he was sort of a petty thief that the police had brought in before.
So he was believed to be gay. And if he was, which all accounts say that he was, this was at a time
when in the 1930s, certainly, it was still illegal. And it was also listed as a mental
disorder in the, what's it called? Not the DMV. DSM. The DMV. The DMV didn't look too highly on it
either. No, that's right. So he I think was one of only two that was ever even positively identified
of what would end up being probably 13, maybe 12 murders. Yes. And again, these guys were found
together, not together like they were within, you know, a very short distance of one another. So
they were found virtually at the same time. And whenever you find, you know, a body missing its
head, that that is attention grabbing. And when you find two bodies, both missing their heads,
that really starts to get the presses juices running. And like we said, these were found around
Kingsbury Run. And Kingsbury Run is basically like an old riverbed that cuts through, I believe,
the west side of Cleveland. No, I'm sorry. I think the east side of Cleveland, down to the Coyahoga
River. And it was basically like the place where all of the oil companies and all of the heavy
industry along the river and along the lake would dump all of their waste. The city put a sewer in
there. It was just meant to be kind of like a wasteland, like a literal wasteland. And
it kind of stayed that way until the Depression hit. And by the time the Depression hit, things
were so bad that people were looking to basically live wherever they could for free. And they started
taking up residence in Kingsbury Run. So by the time the Kingsbury Run murders, the torso
murders started, this was like a full fledged, full swing shanty town, basically a great depression
era Hoover town is what they call them. Yeah, exactly. So it was a grim scene down there anyway.
Certainly the fringes of society. During the course of the investigation, there were
accusations of the press that they weren't working as hard as they needed to because these were people
on the fringes of society and sort of forgotten about. And I think one of the other people identified
was a few months later in January 1936, when they found the body of Flo Palillo. Florence Palillo
was a waitress and bartender and sex worker who was discovered once again dismembered wrapped
in newspaper and a couple of bushel baskets. And then about a week and a half later found other
parts of her body. So she was sort of found in this very grizzly but found in pieces over the
course of a week and a half in different places. Right. So far, as far as anybody can tell,
we're up to three and possibly four victims if you include the lady of the lake. But it wasn't
until the following June about six months after Flo Palillo was discovered because again, remember
these people were, they actually lived on the fringe of society. So just like today, just like
Robert Pickton, the pig farmer from Vancouver and so many other serial killers find their
victims in like the, just I guess the lowest stations of society because they're the most
vulnerable. They have the least protection and that's kind of what was going on. That's why it
took so many victims for the press to finally be like, okay, there's something really going on here.
And finally in June, I believe of 1936, victim number four, as far as canonical victims go,
but possibly the fifth victim was discovered. His head was found first by two boys who were playing
hooky and fishing along the Coyahoga. Can you imagine that man? No, I can't because they found
like a balled up pair of trousers and I guess grabbed them and found that there's something in it.
And when they opened it up, it was the head of a man in his twenties. But again, it's never been
identified like so many of these victims. Yeah. And not to trivialize any of this, but again,
that stuff is very ripe for, for movie making. Totally. This whole thing is, and it really
is surprising that no one's done this yet. Like you wouldn't, you know, you would write something
like that in a screenplay and this actually happened. So there's, I didn't see, I haven't
read it, but there's a graphic novel and maybe it's a series called Torso that is about all
this. And I'm guessing that would probably be a pretty good basis for the movie. Yeah. So victim
four, they were making great efforts to find out who this man was. So they actually, the police
circulated a photo of his face and made a death mask. If you don't know what a death mask is,
I encourage you to go listen to our episode on death masks. Nice. It's basically what you would
think. It's a, it's a recreation of this man's head. And they put this thing along with a tattoo
map. He had tattoos all over himself, an illustrated map of his tattoos and this death mask on
display at the Great Lakes exposition of 1936, where, you know, 100,000 people could walk. I
mean, it was a smart idea in one way because they had a, you know, could blast it out in the best
way possible to try and identify who this person was. But it was also, again, like something from
a movie, these people going to an exposition, all of a sudden are walking by these, this tattoo
map and the death mask of this man. And I'm sure the question came up like, well, why is it,
where's the rest of his body? Why didn't they just show pictures of the tattoos?
They're like, stop asking questions. Do you know the guy or not? No, go get some ice cream.
Exactly. Move along. Nothing to see here. But yeah, despite that, you know, very public
search for an identification, he was never, still has never been identified. And his tattoos were
really, he had people's names tattooed on him. He had a cartoon character named Jigs tattooed on him.
So this guy, you know, you could see his face. They had all his tattoos and he still has never
been identified. But his discovery, and I think the very public, like the cop circulated a photo
of his head on a gurney in the morgue at first before they made the death mask, among other
police agencies around the area. And I'm sure to the press as well. So it was kind of public,
even though it was kind of quiet, but it got the press's attention. And the press started
to connect the dots. And all of a sudden, we now were connecting the lady of the lake
to this latest guy and all of the other ones as well. And it became very clear that there was
what they call the mad butcher of Kingsbury Run on the loose in Cleveland. And no one had any
idea who it was or when or if they were ever going to stop. Yeah, I think there were seven more
victims over the next two years. Victim eight were skeletal remains. But they did think they
identified this person as Rose Wallace, a woman in her 40s. She had gone missing about a year
earlier. And there was quick lime use to decompose this body. And this one interestingly had evidence
of a more of a clumsy dismemberment. To me, this one stands out a little bit as one that
possibly might not be a victim and could have been misattributed to the to the mad butcher.
That's just my personal feeling. I don't know if anyone else is saying this, but it's the one
that stands out to me as being slightly different. Same to me. The killer clearly lacked a dismemberment
plan in that case. Is that a ban? Yeah. Are they good? Yeah, they were really good. They were
maybe math rock. Okay, dismemberment plan. I think they were. At the very least, they were
alternative. Victim nine was had his heart removed. Victim 10 had morphine in her system.
And I think they're not quite sure how they all died. I think at one point they thought
most of them died by the decapitation, but some were found with their blood completely drained
from their body. Like I said, this one woman had morphine in her system, which could make sense.
We'll get to something else later on of a potential victim that never happened where drugs might have
been a factor. But it's sort of all, there were men, there were women, there were black people,
there were white people. There wasn't any real rhyme or reason it seemed like aside from the fact
that they were probably culled from this area of Ohio. Yes. And the fact that the first two men
were emasculated, that there were women involved too, that somebody's heart had been ripped out,
like there was clearly a sexual element to the whole thing, which made the idea that they were
men and woman victims very confounding. You just don't normally see that in a sex killer. You see
one or the other and it's usually the sex that the person is oriented to or the victims. And then,
you know, just to kind of to cap that point off, the killer left victims 11 and 12 within a few
yards of one another on a dump, like a trash dump. And one was a woman, victim 11 was a woman,
and victim 12 was a man. Should we take a break? We should, because Cleveland doesn't know it at
the time, but those of us looking backwards through history can tell you that this was the last
canonical victims in August of 1938. So the killer, as far as anybody knows, is done.
That's right. And most of the grizzly stuff is out of the way. And we'll be back to reveal the
famous investigator right after this.
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How's that for a tease? It was, I can't take it anymore, Chuck. Please, please. Who is it?
It's my favorite thing when you play koi. It was Mr. Elliott Ness. It's very famous for being the
head of the Intouchables, for putting Al Capone behind bars. Good friend of Sean Connery's.
Very good friend. Oh, that was great. That wasn't very good. Because to do Connery.
You don't bring your knife to a gunfight. You bring a gun, you dummy.
Yeah, I think that was the line. If you go on to do Connery, well, you got to have an
esch in there. Right. But there was no esch. I did that, didn't I? I thought I nailed it.
There are no esches in that sentence. Right. They're implied. Then I would have done that
had there been esches. Don't bring a knife to a gun donch. How's that?
Right. You bring a gun. You're a drummer. All right. Back to the serious stuff. Elliott Ness
was the, after that work in, what was that, Chicago, I think? Oh, yeah. That was, he became the alcohol
investigator in charge of the Alcohol Tax Unit for Northern Ohio in August of 34.
The Republican mayoral candidate, Harold Burton, who had gone to win,
said, you know what, Ness, you're a famous guy. I like the cut of your jib. Let me make you,
in December, 1935, the safety director for Cleveland, and let me nudge you towards this
outstanding case that we have. So, yeah, when he was hired, the case wasn't quite clear that
it was a big old case. He came in just after, like a couple of months after victims one and two were
found, and just a couple of weeks before flow, uh, Polillo was found. So it wasn't evident that,
that there was a serial murderer on the loose. Um, but that also means that Elliott Ness came in
right at the beginning of this thing. So he was the public safety director for it. He became the
face of the frustrated police effort to capture the torso killer. Right. Although the lead
investigator, uh, what was that guy's name? Uh, Peter Marillo. Yeah, he was, uh, he was,
I don't know about obsessed, but it became sort of his main focus of work was to tirelessly
find out who this murderer was. And I assume that, uh, it's weird because I really don't know what a
safety director was. I don't think, is that even still a thing? Uh, yeah, I think there is a public
safety director position still there. They basically are in charge of the police department, the fire
department, basically all that stuff. You're, they're the head of that. They're like, they're
probably the liaison between the mayor and those services. But not the, uh, guardian angels because
they do what they want to do. Hey man, they're staying on their own too. Uh, the coroner, A.J.
Pierce of the case, uh, I think he was the first coroner on the first case said, you know what we
need to do? We need to get together. We need to have a little summit and start sharing information.
I'm going to call it the torso clinic, which was interesting. I don't know if he did or the press
did. Yeah, either way, because the press was very much involved in this whole run, obviously.
But, uh, at this conference is where he first put forward a profile, which was this is someone who
would not stand out in Kingsbury one, uh, run someone who knew the area could blend in. Uh,
somebody, you know, we think it's a man who is a powerful man because they need to be able to,
you know, it takes a lot of work to dismember a body and to haul these bodies around and drop
them off in different places. And we think he also might have some anatomical knowledge,
not saying that he's necessarily a doctor or a surgeon, uh, kind of like the Jack the Ripper
thing. But, but this, this person clearly, clearly knows their way around, uh, a knife and a scalpel.
Yeah. Because I mean, if you really closely examine a body and like look at the places where,
you know, the body was separated with the knife, you can find hesitancy marks. You can find the
hacking. Um, there's all sorts of clues and telltale signs. And apparently this guy had a lot of
confidence and, uh, had a lot of skill or knowledge about anatomy. So like you said,
maybe not a doctor, but at the very least a very skilled butcher who had studied human anatomy,
um, before, but eventually they finally were like, this is probably some sort of doctor.
Yeah. And I think they eventually learned that most of the victims died within a few days,
a few days of being discovered and most were moved except for victim five,
five, where they found a blood bath, you know, that was, this didn't happen at the other crime
scene. So it was virtually no blood to be found. In fact, I think one was completely drained of
blood. Many were. Oh, really? So that, I mean, that takes, I don't know if that happened naturally,
just because of the, the nature of, of dismemberment or if it was a purposeful thing, but only one
body was found kind of clearly murdered there. Right. So, um, yeah, I think that the fact that
the blood wasn't on the scene and it wasn't in the body any longer means that it had to go somewhere.
So that, the fact that they were dismembered, um, and the, the, and packaged, I mean, like a
lot of them were found, you know, um, the one identified, unidentified tattooed man, his head
was wrapped in trousers, but other peoples were wrapped in newspaper or brown paper, like they
were meat. Um, someone was, was put in a makeshift box. Um, there was, there was a lot of time
dedicated to the, the, um, dismemberment of these bodies and that, that leaves a lot of evidence
and you need a place where you're not going to be interrupted. And that's not easy to come by. So
that became a really like big point is, you know, we were pretty sure that this person is,
is snatching victims from the, uh, from the Kingsbury run area. Um, but where are they
committing these acts? And they tried to find that, that place as much as they tried to find the
killer. Yeah. I mean, that would be a big clue if they had some murder room, uh, Dexter style.
Sure. That's a dead giveaway every time. That's coming back, by the way. I don't know if you
ever watched Dexter. What do you mean it's coming back? They're bringing Dexter back, man.
With the original like Michael C. Hall? No. Yes, they are indeed. And I had mixed feelings
because we loved that show for a long time, but it is, it is one of the shark jumpier shows of
all time. It's crazy. It's like the shark itself jumped a shark. I think so. It's insane. It's
amazing. I mean, I love Michael C. Hall though. We, we're just now finishing six feet under again.
So I'm always happy to see him again, but I'll give it a go. Did you see cold in July?
No, what is that? It's a little bit like a straw dogs type story. But he's like having a battle
Don Johnson. It's just really like, if you want, I know it's weird casting, but if you want to just
experience like a constant, you know, mid to low level dread for two hours, like just go ahead and
watch that. It's well done in that respect. Or watch The Lighthouse. It's probably better.
God, it's so good. Let's just stop talking about this and talk about The Lighthouse for the rest
of the time. All right. So Peter Morello, who, like we said, was a lead detective,
he's sort of obsessed with this thing. He starts not only focusing on this land down by the river,
but I didn't mean that, but that's what it was. But he started focusing on the rail roads and
these hobos, the rail roads. Oh, okay. You know where trains run on? Sure. Yeah. I just never
heard it pronounced the way you do the first railroad. The rail roads. It was hilarious.
Just, I got to lighten this up somehow. We're talking about this membered torso. I know,
exactly. So he started looking in these boxcars and I don't, I mean, is hobo an offensive word?
Can you still say that? I don't think so. I think it's a point of pride, a term of pride.
Oh, for people who still ride the rails? Okay. So he's still out there doing his thing. At this
press conference, Elliot Ness ends up holding a meeting with the head of scientific investigation
bureau. His name was David Cowles and an editor of the Cleveland Press. So this is a big deal.
They're actually getting the press involved at this point. Right. But secretly, this wasn't a
press conference. This is like a secret meeting. Oh, no, not a press conference at all. This was
very much in secret, but he's involving the press and they said, here's what we're going to do.
Ness says, let's, you go and pick out eight tough guys that can go undercover that know a lot of
bad guys in Cleveland and have all those connections. We'll give them the police support they need
and we'll fund them. How did they fund them with the press's money? What does that even mean?
I don't know. I think that like maybe the owners of the newspapers chipped in, like the wealthy
owners chipped in quietly to save their stuff off of the books. That's my impression of what
this happened. Have you ever chipped in the most got to break the story, I wonder? But well,
no, I think at the same time, it was a technique for bringing the press into the fold so that
there weren't outsiders drumming up trouble for the cops anymore because the Cleveland Press really
made the, they didn't make the police look bad. They pointed out just how badly the police were
handling this or ineffectively, which is not to say that the police were not trying really,
really hard. Supposedly, I saw a figure of 10,000 suspects were interviewed over four years during
the course of this investigation. They just couldn't find the guy. They could not find this killer
and the press kind of almost gleefully kept pointing that out.
Right. So this is in a way attempt to assuage them and bring them into the inner circle a bit.
Right. That was my impression. Yeah.
All right. So the police are, they've got these undercover guys working there. They're seen.
They're checking cars randomly at all hours. They're canvassing laundromats and places where
you wash your clothes. So, you know, if there are people like trying to get blood stains out of
something, they're kind of doing everything they can at this point. And this is where the
Coen Brothers sort of moment comes in, which is in Sandusky, a dog and Sandusky's about,
now it's about an hour or 10 minutes away by car. I don't know what it would have been back then,
but probably less than two hours, I would say, even in an old-timey car. A dog shows up in
Sandusky with a human leg in its mouth. I want to say that literally happened in a Coen Brothers
movie. It might have just been a bone of a body, but I can't think of which one it might be. Someone
will write it and tell us. It sounds like a Barton Fink kind of thing.
It is, but it's not. Or I might be thinking of the kids who ripped the toupee off the guy in
Miller's Crossing in the alleyway. Oh, I don't remember that part. Although I remember one of
the neighbors lost his toupee in the Burbs and they thought it was evident to this murder.
There's definitely a movie, it might not have been Coen Brothers, where a dog shows up with a
body part in its mouth, probably more than one movie. But this dog shows up in its mouth,
and Morello goes to Sandusky, and it turns out that the leg was actually surgically removed
during a real surgery, not a serial killer surgery, and just didn't get disposed of right,
ended up in the lake, ended up in the dog's mouth. Right, but the police were so hyped up
in Cleveland at the time that they traveled to Sandusky to chase down this lead, which all the
other ones went absolutely nowhere. Again, just a tremendous amount of public pressure,
including something you mentioned earlier too, a lot of allegations and accusations that
the police weren't doing enough because these people were not wealthy, were not well thought of,
they were very poor, the poorest of the poor during the Great Depression, were the ones who
were suffering this serial killer. There was a tremendous amount of pressure, and I think my
impression is that that pressure is one of the, I guess, the thing that drove Elliot Ness to do
something really terrible. Because the killer was picking from the shanty towns of Kingsbury Run,
Elliot Ness got it in his head that if you did away with Kingsbury Run, you'd do away with the
killings, and so he raided the homeless camps at Kingsbury Run and roused it everybody,
and then ordered the place burned to the ground. Yeah, and I'm sure he thought this was a great
idea at the time, but he really didn't think it through because the people of Cleveland did
not take kindly to that. They hated him for what he did, and this was during the Depression,
and everyone was struggling basically, or not everyone, but most people were struggling at
this point, unemployment rate of 20% in Cleveland, and so the idea of this big shot Chicago G-man
coming in and basically running these homeless people out of their only option and burning it
to the ground was not a good look at all. However, there were no more murders after that.
I know. Strangely, it seemed to have worked, and it depends. We'll talk more about a lot of
different views of whether the murder stopped or not, but as far as canonical victims go,
he burned the place to the ground two days after victims 11 and 12 were found,
and after that, there were no more victims, so it didn't solve the murders by any stretch
of the imagination, but it seemed to have put an end to them weirdly. Yeah, I think before we
take a break, we should mention there was one, and get into who we think is probably the real
suspect, there was one suspect in Cuyahoga County that the sheriff brought in name,
he was a bricklayer named Frank Doleziel, who did confess he was brought in for the murder of
Flo Pelillo originally, because he'd lived with her for a little while, but supposedly he knew
Rose Wallace and Edward Andresy as well, but then they looked into it, and by all accounts,
that confession was not just induced, but in the days where you would literally beat a victim into
confessing. Yeah, and then murder him in his cell after he recanted his confession.
So was he murdered? Yeah, well, he hung himself, but he hung himself from a hook that was shorter
than he was, which I mean, I guess if you really, really want to die, you might, you could do that,
you could overcome the urge to stand up, disinclination towards self-harm, I guess you'd
put it, but his friends at the time seemed to be like, no, he was murdered. So at the very
least his confession was beaten out of him, and no serious scholar of the crime believes that
Frank Doleziel was the killer. He didn't have any, there was no evidence whatsoever of any kind
of surgical knowledge. There was like a lot of boxes he just didn't check. It was basically,
he knew Flo, and he may have known Edward Andresy, and he may have known Rose Wallace,
and the sheriff basically ran him in very publicly. Right. All right, so let's take that break,
and then we'll come back and talk a little bit more about the investigation, and who
people now believe committed these horrible murders right after this.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new I Heart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest
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Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Mangeh Shatikler. And to be honest,
I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life.
In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're gonna get secondhand astrology.
And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop
running and pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars, if you're willing to look for
it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric
curses, Major League Baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I
had a handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology, my whole world came crashing down.
Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father. And my whole view on astrology,
it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too.
Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right. So Elliot Ness has run everyone out of the Kingsbury run camps, did not go over well.
Well, he then says, here's what we'll do. Let's skirt the warrant rules so we don't have to
require warrants. And let's get together since I'm the safety director and I control the fire
department too. Let's get, let's go around and start searching for quote, fire code violations
in quote, basically so they don't have to get any kind of warrants. And they can just basically
go into people's houses and just at will and search and do whatever they want to
under the guise of searching for fire code violations. He was desperate.
He was very desperate. And again, they were looking not just for the killer, but really
more than anything, they were looking for that grisly workshop as the Cleveland plane dealer
had put it, a place where he was draining the victims of their blood and dismembering their
bodies. They didn't turn anything up, but it really kind of goes to show like just what lengths
Elliot Ness, who was considered like this squeaky clean law man, was willing to go to. This is
extraordinarily unconstitutional and underhanded. And he went, he went to that degree and well
beyond it turned out actually too. Very much. And I think we're at the point now where we can
talk about this mystery person, right? Yeah. This is why I said he went way beyond unlawful
search of homes. He actually engaged in what amounts to kidnapping of a private citizen who
he thought was the killer. Yeah. And he kept it very secret. He even used a pseudonym for this
person. He called this person, this gentleman, Gaylord Sundheim. Pretty good name, good hotel
check in name. And privately, word gets around a little bit what's going on, but privately he
would describe this person as an alcoholic, maybe bisexual, a doctor who came from a wealthy family
and who had a relative in Congress who was protecting this person and took this man
under the dark of night to a hotel room in Cleveland, held there without charging him for
two weeks where they interrogated this person. Yes. And apparently the guy who this Gaylord
Sundheim was in the middle of a bender when he was picked up. And he had, he was so profoundly drunk
that it took him three days to become sober again. I don't buy that. I know. But when he did, I know,
but you got to add those two. Sure. Thank you for keeping it, keeping it even keel though.
I mean, I've had nights where they were a little rough and you're always okay the next day.
I don't know what you're talking about. It's so weird. Like alcohol affects us so differently,
man. I can have like a drink and a half these days and I'm like hating life the next day.
No, no, I'm not talking about a hangover, but you're not still drunk the next day.
Oh, gotcha. Or in two days or three days. I think that's what they were saying is that this guy was,
he had like a hangover stupor basically. Oh, okay. I could buy that then. That was my impression.
All right. Not that he was still just flying high, but that he was just hating it. All right.
I should just shut up about the whole thing. But regardless, they kept him, whether he was sober
as a judge or drunk as a skunk when they picked him up, they held them in this hotel room without
charge and outside of the legal system for two weeks and interrogated him for up to eight hours a
day. Yeah, but I think he did it. So who cares? That's exactly how Elliot Ness was approaching
this. And again, everybody thought he was this squeaky clean lawman and he's engaged in kidnapping.
But the thing is he brought in the guy who was one of the early inventors of the polygraph.
He invented the Keeler polygraph and it was called that because his name was Leonard Keeler.
And I think he brought him from Chicago and Leonard Keeler administered a couple of different
polygraph tests to this Gaylord Sondheim and said, if this isn't your man, I might as well throw my
machine out the window if I say anything else because that guy, that's the guy. It's definitely
the guy. You got to take that with a grain of salt because especially today, polygraphs are just
total junk science, but it certainly confirmed Ness's suspicions that much more at the time.
I think that polygraph back then was, there wasn't even a machine. Keeler would just sit there and
look for a bead of sweat to break out on the forehead and then punch the guy if it did.
That's right, exactly. So the case was never solved. Ness's reputation obviously took a big hit.
He eventually got out of Cleveland after a drunk driving hit and run accident that he was involved
with and tried to cover up. So he left in great shame. But back to this Gaylord Sondheim, later
on, many years later, there were crime investigators and writers who put two and two together and
basically identified and in fact, in one case, a crime writer, Marilyn Bardsley, came out and said,
yeah, this is who this person was. It was a former World War I Army medic who was discharged for
mental instability following head trauma, which was big warning lights going off.
And he was an alcoholic, another big warning light. And his name was Francis Edward Sweeney,
who also happens to have a relative in Congress. Right. A guy named Representative Martin Sweeney,
who was a huge critic of the Burton administration, of which Eliot Ness was a major part. And he was
just the kind of guy who was a political opponent to the degree that I'm sure Eliot Ness thought
if he tried to arrest Francis Sweeney, he would be obstructed from up on high by this
Congressperson. Whether he would have or not, I don't know. I saw some references to the idea that
Martin Sweeney was well aware that Eliot Ness was looking at his cousin for this and was already
getting in the way. But I only saw that in one place, so I'm not sure if that's the case or not.
Either way, his presence and his connection to Francis Sweeney was enough that Eliot Ness never
charged Francis Sweeney, despite apparently going to his grave believing that Dr. Francis Edward
Sweeney was the Cleveland torso murderer. Have you seen a picture of the guy?
Dude. He looks like the definition of a torso murderer.
If you, like seriously, you have to be careful with that stuff. I know, of course.
If you ever end up a juror, you can't be like, you look like a killer, but this guy looks like a
torso murderer. You're exactly right. The quick sidebar. I'm not sure if I ever mentioned it on
this show. I know I've talked about it on a movie crush, but I want to recommend this great,
great documentary. And forgive me if I'm repeating myself here, but it's called Crazy Not Insane.
It's an HBO documentary about this doctor, Dr. Dorothy
Otno Lewis, who basically spent her life trying to understand serial killers. And one of the
main, she was kind of one of the first people to really try and understand what's actually going
on. And she put together, I think, like three very common common commonalities among serial
killers. But one of them is head trauma. And that's why this really stands out to me about Francis
Edward Sweeney was that he was discharged from the army because of head trauma leading to mental
instability. It's a commonality in most serial killers is some sort of head trauma, especially
when you're younger. Wow, that's interesting. I did not know that. Yeah. And I may have thought
I talked about on this, but it was the, who was the guy in LA that also just had a great
docu-series on the night stalker, Richard Ramirez. He suffered multiple head traumas
when he was younger as well. So I think it's, I can't remember the third one. It's head trauma,
some sort of physical and even sexual abuse as a child. And then there was like one more thing.
And those are like, that's just a recipe for ending up some sort of sociopath or serial killer.
I think the third one is disappointing birthday presents.
Yeah, maybe so. Be warned. It's a great, you'd really love it. It's a really good documentary.
Yeah, I'll check that out for sure. It sounds like it's totally at my alley. I'm actually
a gog that I've not heard of it. Don't be a gog. I'm a little gog. All right, come back.
So like you said, Marilyn Bardsley confirmed from one of the investigators that Francis
Sweeney was Gaylord Sondheim, but that does not mean that Francis Sweeney was the torso murderer.
True. Although again, like you were saying, if you look at a picture of Francis Sweeney,
you're like, that's totally the torso murderer.
Well, another stuff, you know, the head trauma, the medical training. He was a surgeon and
residence at St. Alexis Hospital. His career deteriorated because of his drinking.
Right around the time the first murderer victims started showing up, too.
Yeah, he also had a deal apparently with a local mortuary where they would give him
bodies to practice surgery on, which would explain maybe the kill room or the dismemberment room.
He would have a place to go and dispose of these bodies without, you know,
there being a big blood trail, you know.
Right. I mean, this is a place where it wouldn't seem weird that somebody was decapitating a body
or draining the body of all of its blood. Like, that's exactly the kind of place.
And that didn't turn up until years later. And it was thanks to a guy named James Badal,
who's written some books on it on the torso murders. And he interviewed one of the early
investigators and found out that he had privileges at that funeral home and started to put two and
two together. Yeah, there was one, a couple of other things. He did send taunting letters
to Elliot Ness for years. Yeah. One of them was signed F.E. Sweeney Paranoidal Nemesis.
Yeah. But was this after he had been kidnapped by Ness?
Yes. So he knew Ness by this time. And he also didn't say like, I did it. You didn't catch
me anything like that. I get the impression it was more like you didn't catch the guy.
You're terrible at this. Right. Everybody hates you. But still taunting stuff. But yes,
this would have been after he was kidnapped because this was up into like the 40s.
Yeah, that's true. And then I think to me, one of the biggest red flags pointing in the direction
of Sweeney is I mentioned a near victim earlier in the episode. This was a transient. His name was
Emil Fronek. And he was living in Cleveland in 34. And one day he was lured into a doctor's office
on the second floor along Broadway Avenue. And the doctor said, here, I'll give you some shoes
and a meal. If you come up here, Fronek goes up, eats a little bit of the meal, starts to feel
lightheaded and bolts and makes it to a train car and basically passes out for three days.
And then later on, I think in 1938 was being interviewed after the cops year about this.
This old Morello goes to pick him up and they narrow down the area to 50th to 55th streets along
Broadway where Sweeney had a doctor's office. Yeah, he couldn't specifically say that was the
place where it happened and that author James Bedall says that he thinks he came in the back
way rather than the front way where they were showing him. But he did say he had an office
right there, right around that area. And he was there at the time. I mean, that's some pretty
serious circumstantial stuff. I think so. But the thing is, there's no smoking gun. There's no
anything that says definitively and we probably will never have anything definitively that says
it's Francis Sweeney. So we've kind of reached this point, this plateau where it's like,
you just basically choose a side, either it's Francis Sweeney or it wasn't. And some people
who say, no, I don't think it was Francis Sweeney make some pretty good cases. There were other
similar murders in the area starting in the 20s and going into the 50s that really bore a lot
of resemblance to the torso murders. And then other people say, okay, I feel the opposite of
that where there's like, I don't think Rose Wallace was one of the victims. I think there were
multiple killers doing similar-ish stuff, maybe copycats even, and that it wasn't all just one
person. There is, and there's probably always going to be a lot of competing theories about
what, you know, who is responsible. Yeah, the one theory that it wasn't him that I don't buy,
did you say where he was living in Sandusky? No. All right. So here's the deal. Francis Sweeney
was apparently enrolled or checked into the soldiers and sailors home in Sandusky, which I
guess is an old, like a veteran's home, right? Yeah. Yeah, I think yes. So that's what it seems
like. So he was checked in there. And one of the reasons that people say he didn't do it was because
he was checked in in this place in Sandusky, like a couple hours away. And I just don't buy that.
They later came out and said, you know, they could come and go as they pleased. He could easily have,
if he didn't want to get caught, be committing these murders in Cleveland and then going back
to Sandusky as well. Right. Yeah, because he was there voluntarily. So he would not have been
watched or monitored or they wouldn't have kept tabs on him. And when they figured this out,
it was years later. So no one would have been able to recall where he was or wasn't on a certain day,
you know? Yeah, I think it's Sweeney. Yeah. And not because of his picture.
Sure. But there were other murders in the area that, you know, it could have still been Sweeney,
too. Some people connect the Black Dahlia murder to it because there was a taunting note that the
cops got in 1938 that said the cops can rest easy because the killers moved to sunny California.
But if you look at the Black Dahlia murder, there's really not a lot of resemblance between the two.
The MOs are really rather different. So that's probably not the case. Agreed.
Well, if you want to know more about the Cleveland torso murders, there's a whole rabbit hole on
the Internet and in books, including one by James Badal and another by Marilyn Bardsley,
that you can follow. And if you do, good luck with that. Since I said good luck with that,
it's time for Listener Mail. I'm going to call this. We did not help out this gentleman.
Okay. Hey, guys, love the podcast. I've been listening for the past several years.
I've almost gotten through the whole library. Has some left from 2018, apparently. I work as a
musical instrument repair technician at a local university and independently in Greensboro, North
Carolina. So I usually listen while I work on repadding clarinets and cleaning tubas. Nice.
Cool job. Anyway, I was listening to your show this evening on Korean fan death. Remember that?
Yeah. We talked about it. I don't think it was all about that, but it was.
It was the short stuff about it. Was it? Okay. I remember that being like a top 10 or something.
Anyway, I immediately thought, finally, a way that I can find some legit reason
for getting rid of the fan in our room. My fiance, Abby, loves having a fan and that noise when you
go to sleep. It's something I can deal with, but honestly, I do not care for it. So when I finally
got home, I told Abby, Hey, we got a serious episode of stuff you should know we should listen to.
I started the episode without pre-screening and trusted you guys would pull through for me.
Needless to say, an interesting episode, but I did not get the confirmation bias I was looking for.
Instead, we had a good laugh and a great evening. Looking forward to getting the book.
I wish you guys the best and looking forward to many more. And that is from John Goodman.
Holy cow, John Goodman. We love you in the Coen Brothers stuff. His name is John Goodman.
I'm going to plug his business, Goodman Custom Woodwinds. If you're in the Greensboro, North
Carolina area and you need that clarinet re-padded, go to John Goodman. For sure. And even if you're
not, it's probably worth the drive, right? I mean, where else are you going to do it? Charlotte?
I don't. Yeah, come on. Heck no. Well, thanks a lot, John Goodman. We appreciate that. Sorry,
we couldn't help you output. At least you enjoyed the episode. And ultimately, isn't that what counts?
Yes. If you want to get in touch with us like John Goodman did, you can send us an email to
stuffpodcast.ihartradio.com. Stuff you should know is a production of I Heart Radio.
For more podcasts, My Heart Radio, visit the I Heart Radio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new I Heart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. Do you
ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this
situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help and a different
hot sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you through life. Tell everybody,
yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say
bye bye bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Munga Chauticular, and it turns out astrology is way
more widespread than any of us want to believe. You can find in major league baseball, international
banks, K-pop groups, even the White House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject,
something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are
about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever
you get your podcasts.