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Book
Reviews
James
Jessen Badal, In the Wake of the Butcher: Cleveland’s
Torso Murders (Kent, OH: The Kent State University Press, 2001.
xii, 255 p., Paper, $18.00, ISBN 0-87338-689-2.)
With
respect to serial murder, “Jack the Ripper” of late
19th century London renown has nothing on the “torso murderer”
of Depression-era Cleveland. The two serial killers have much in
common, including the unfortunate fact that the identification of
both murderers remains subject to speculation.
While
several scorebooks have been published on the famous Victorian murderer
of London prostitutes, James Jessen Badal is the first to give the
torso murderer of Kingsbury Run the scrutiny these notorious crimes
merit. Drawing on previously unexploited collections, including
detailed police files, Badal tells us probably all we can ever hope
to learn about these gruesome crimes.
As one
of the major industrial cities in the United States at the time,
Cleveland experienced the Great Depression with shattering effect.
Already suffering from high unemployment, homelessness, and poverty,
Clevelanders also lived in fear of a horrific murderer who killed
and grotesquely mutilated perhaps a dozen victims between 1934 and
1938. Some students of the crimes put the number higher and insist
that the murderer did not mutilate his last victim until 1950. In
any case, the crimes mesmerized Cleveland, stupefied local law enforcement,
and captured national attention.
The
Cleveland killer preyed on transients, drunks, and the impoverished
residents of the Flats and Kingsbury Run area of the city. It did
not require a modern criminal profiler to determine that the crimes
appeared to be committed by the same individual, probably a good
sized man with more than passing knowledge of human anatomy. The
killer left the fruits of his labor--decapitated heads, legs, arms,
and torsos--in dumps and along the shores of Lake Erie and the Cuyahoga
River.
Pressed
by an angry, fearful public, Cleveland crime investigators worked
doggedly on the case that would never officially be solved. The
legendary Eliot Ness, brought in as Cleveland’s safety director
to combat Depression era crime, assumed his post just months before
the murders began. Ness may have conquered Al Capone but he never
brought the Kingsbury Run murderer to justice. Neither did the vainglorious
Samuel R. Gerber, the city’s coroner for half a century, and
the man most responsible for the wrongful conviction of Sam Sheppard
for the murder of his wife in 1954. That infamous crime, for which
Sheppard was declared not guilty in upon retrial in 1967, has long
overshadowed the Kingsbury Run murders in the crime annals of northeast
Ohio.
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