Tag: Murder
Mug Shot Monday! Theodore Coneys, the Spiderman of Denver, 1941
Theodore Coneys was born November 10, 1882 in Petersburg, Illinois to T. H. Coneys, a Canadian immigrant who owned a hardware store in Petersburg, and his wife. After the elder Coneys died in 1888, Mrs. Coneys and her son moved to a farm near Beloit, Wisconsin, then to Denver, Colorado in 1907, where she worked […]
Posted: September 21st, 2015 under Mug Shot Monday.
Tags: 1940s, bizarre, Colorado, Murder
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DNA Evidence in 1984 Murder Leads to Suicide by Criminologist
Like everyone here, I’ve read many good crime stories over the years but this one, by James Vlahos for The Atlantic, is one of the best. Two gruesome murders from 1978 and 1984 are seemingly related and lead police to three good suspects who all go on to commit suicide. There are about five or […]
Posted: September 15th, 2015 under Rediscovered Crime News.
Tags: bizarre, Murder
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Excellent Police Work Solves 1919 Murder
Nichan Martin Executed in Arizona 1921
During the late evening hours of October 4, 1919, a shepherd tending a flock east of Seligman, Arizona, discovered the smoldering, badly burned body of a man behind a small hill located one hundred feet from the transcontinental road known at the time as the National Old Trails Road. The following day, he reported the […]
Posted: September 10th, 2015 under Short Feature Story.
Tags: 1900-1919, Arizona, Murder
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Mug Shot Monday! Richard Lee Tingler Jr., 1968
Richard Lee Tingler Jr was a six time murderer who was placed on the FBI’s Most Wanted List on December 20, 1968. He was arrested in Dill City, Oklahoma, on May 19, 1969. The following article is from the FBI’s booklet, Ten Most Wanted 60th Anniversary, 1950-2010. Scroll down to see Tingler’s slideshow. On the […]
Posted: July 27th, 2015 under Mug Shot Monday.
Tags: 1960s, FBI Most Wanted, Mass Murders, Murder, Ohio
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The Torture Murder of Alice Porter, 1942
During the early part of April, 1942, Donald Fearn, a twenty-three-year-old railway mechanic living in Pueblo, Colorado, sat in his tan colored Ford Sedan and watch night after night as a bevy of pretty young girls departed from a nursing class. Beautiful sixteen-year-old Alice Porter, a high school student taking night classes, caught his attention […]
Posted: July 23rd, 2015 under Short Feature Story.
Tags: Colorado, Execution, Murder, Psychopath
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Mug Shot Monday! John Cooper, Alaska, 1912
John Cooper 1912 During the winter of 1910, Walter Wimbish and John Cooper were working a gold mine claim near Pedro Creek, Alaska, when Wimbish suddenly disappeared in November. This did not raise any immediate alarms since miners during this era often moved about the frontier filing and exploring new claims. But after six […]
Posted: July 13th, 2015 under Mug Shot Monday, Short Feature Story.
Tags: 1900-1919, Alaska, Murder
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Car thief Martin Durkin’s 1925 Murder of the FBI’s first special agent killed in the line of duty
The following story was written and provided by the History Section of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. A link to a photo gallery of high quality black and white images from the Chicago Tribune taken during Martin Durkin’s trial can be found at the end of this article. These images are amazing to view and […]
Posted: July 8th, 2015 under Feature Stories.
Tags: 1920s, Illinois, Murder
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Ambush and Betrayal, Satterfield & Grice, 1933
Sunday, October 22, 1933, 8:30 p.m. Goldsboro, North Carolina Herbert Grice was in the middle of untying his shoes when he was stopped by the frantic barking of his dogs. They often barked at everything and anything they didn’t approve of, and Grice quickly dismissed their clamor as insignificant. But before he could get […]
Posted: July 2nd, 2015 under Short Feature Story.
Tags: 1930s, Love and Jealousy, Love Triangle, Murder, North Carolina, Women
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The Sensational Murder of Alexander Crittenden by his Mistress, Laura D. Fair, 1870
Article by Thomas S. Duke, Celebrated Criminal Cases of America Alexander Crittenden was born in Lexington, Ky., on, January 14, 1816. Andrew Jackson was a close friend of his family, and it was through Jackson’s influence that Alexander was sent to West Point. He graduated from this military college with Sherman and remained in the […]
Posted: June 28th, 2015 under Short Feature Story.
Tags: 1800s, Love Triangle, Murder, Women
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Mug Shot Monday! Pvt. James Stine, 1912
In 1912, forty-two-year-old Private James Stine was sentenced to life in prison for the first degree murder of Corporal David Austin who he shot and killed on the parade grounds of Fort George Wright in Spokane, Washington. Stine said he killed Austin because of his harsh methods of disciplining soldiers of the all black 25th […]
Posted: June 22nd, 2015 under Mug Shot Monday.
Tags: 1900-1919, Murder, Washington State
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