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Monday, June 5, 2023

Muriel Morrison 1940

 Fred & Muriel Morrison suicides 1940







A tragic case of a possible "mercy murder" followed by a suicide came to light when the bodies of Fred Morrison, 69, and his wife Muriel, 58, were discovered hanging from a beam on the back porch of their home at 1001 1/2 North Mariposa Avenue in Los Angeles. The unsettling discovery prompted authorities to consider the possibility that Fred Morrison had first taken his wife's life in an act of euthanasia before ending his own.

The theory of murder arose due to Mrs. Morrison's known illness and the condition of her body, which indicated she had likely been dead since the weekend, several days before her husband’s death. While Mrs. Morrison was last seen on Friday, neighbors reported that Fred Morrison, who had been unemployed and receiving county aid, was seen as late as Monday. The state of his body suggested that he had died more recently, possibly on Tuesday. According to their landlord, S.M. McCormick, Fred Morrison mentioned on Monday that his wife was "feeling all right," although by then, she may have already been deceased.

McCormick, who lived at 1001 North Mariposa Avenue and had rented the home to the Morrisons just six months prior, discovered the grim scene. He had noticed large flies swarming around the Morrison's back porch after not seeing any sign of life for two days. When he investigated, he found the couple’s bodies suspended from the porch beam. Neighbors informed police that Fred had been out of work for some time and that Muriel had been unwell.

Muriel Morrison's body was found hanging from a long belt tied to the beam, while Fred had used a section of bed sheet to hang himself. No suicide notes were found at the scene. Investigators prepared to conduct autopsies and expected to confirm their initial conclusions: that Fred Morrison and his wife had died as part of a suicide pact. Police believed that Fred assisted Muriel in taking her own life, leaving her body to hang for two days before he, too, tied a sheet around his neck and ended his life.

Adding to the theory, McCormick revealed that Fred had frequently spoken of suicide and had expressed attempts to convince his wife to enter into a suicide pact. A further detail emerged when an envelope containing $4 was found in the house, along with a funeral director’s card, suggesting the couple may have planned their deaths in advance.


Suicide prevention


If you are experiencing a suicidal or mental health crisis or are concerned for someone else, contact your local suicide prevention hotline.


🇺🇸 US ☎︎ 988 or 1-800-273-TALK (8255)

🇨🇦 CA ☎︎ 1-833-456-4566

🇬🇧 UK ☎︎ 0800-689-5652

🇦🇺 AUS ☎︎ 13-11-14 or 1300-659-467

ROK ROK ☎︎ 1393

🇩🇪 DE ☎︎ 0800-111-0-111

🇪🇸 ES ☎︎ 024

🌎 Worldwide




Genevieve Witherall 1931

 Oct 17, 1931.


Genevieve Witherall. 

Mrs. Alice Jones 1937

 Mrs. Alice Jones "Starvation" 1937 (found under her house).





Monday, January 2, 2023

Lipstick Murder 1947

"The Red Lipstick Murder. Mrs. Jeanne Axford French Age 40 (Nurse) of 3535 Military Ave, Sawtell. LA. Killed by ??. Her Body Was Found I A Field Near Grand View Ave, & National Blvd. LA. 2-10-57. She was Stomped To Death By A Fiend Who Crudely Printed An Obscene Phrase (Fuck You) On Her Chest."










Mrs. Jeanne Axford French, age 40 (nurse) of 3535 Military Ave, Sawtell, Los Angeles killed by ?? Her body was found in a field near Grand View Ave & National Blvd, LA 2/10/1947. She was stomped to death by a fiend who crudely printed an obscene phrase (Fuck You) on her chest.

Sunday, October 16, 2022

Miss May "Chuckie" Dasparro 1946

"Leroy Harris Geiger, 24, of 741 Stanford Ave., Los Angeles. He gave his occupation as a news vendor."
 

At 6:30 a.m.on February 25, 1946, a bus driver made a grim discovery in a parking lot near 7th and Wall Streets, located near the Pacific Electric depot, in downtown Los Angeles’ Skid Row district.  The driver, on his way back from a run to the beach saw the lifeless body of a woman, with brown wavy hair, nude except for her blue bobby socks, sprawled against a building, not far from the bus depot. Her clothes had been torn from her body which had shown clear signs of a brutal and violent attack. She had been stabbed 21 times in the left breast and one time in the one on the right, her jaw had been fractured in two places, and a gag had been placed in her mouth. Police said she apparently had been sexually assaulted. 

The victim was soon identified through her fingerprints as Miss May "Chuckie" Dasparro, also known by the aliases May Ola Foote and Mrs. May R. Gasbarro. Her history revealed numerous run-ins with the law, including at least 12 arrests for charges such as intoxication, bunco (a form of swindling or conning people out of money), resorting (likely referring to being in or involved with illegal or disreputable establishments), prostitution, and other minor offenses. Her last known address was listed as 1423 East 75th Street, and her profession was noted as a beauty parlor operator.

Several hours before Miss May Dasparro’s body was discovered, Leroy Harris Geiger was arrested by patrolmen A.V. Worthington and J.M. Doctor. The officers saw him running through downtown Los Angeles with his hands and sweater stained in blood. The situation became even more suspicious when Geiger was observed throwing an object onto the roof of a nearby building. Without knowing the extent of the crime, the patrolmen arrested him on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon. Geiger's behavior, combined with the blood on his hands, made him a person of interest. It wasn’t until later that the significance of his capture became clear when a bus driver found the body of Mrs. Dasparro. Nothing was known of the woman's slaying at the time. Her body was not found until five hours later. 

Captain Jack Donahoe, head of the central homicide bureau, called for all overnight stabbings, cuttings and slashings. Geiger was the only person involved in knifing in the vicinity of the murer. "Go and see this Geiger,: Donahoe told Detective Lieutenants Tommy Bryan and bill Cummings.

The primary suspect, Leroy Harris Geiger, who had been found with blood on his hands and carrying a jackknife, initially claimed self-defense. He alleged that the blood and the knife were the result of an altercation with a robber who attempted to hold him up. However, after police thoroughly searched the neighborhood and found no evidence to corroborate his story, Geiger's narrative unraveled.  Upon further questioning, Geiger confessed to her murder, admitting that he had been overtaken by a "mad frenzy" after the woman, whom he had met in a Main Street bar, rejected his advances. He stated that her refusal enraged him, and he lost control, stabbing her repeatedly even after she was dead. "When she turned me down. I felt the urge to see blood, it was too overpowering. I continued to stab her even after she was dead," said Geiger. The detectives quickly reported by telephone that Geiger had confessed the killing. 

Geiger's confession revealed more horrifying details of the crime. He said that after selling his newspapers, he went to a "Skid Row" bar. After drinking together, at her suggestion, he and Dasparro had walked to a secluded parking lot near the Pacific Electric Company depot. When she resisted his advances, he became furious, striking her with his fist with such force that he broke her jaw in two places. To silence her screams, he gagged her with his handkerchief. In a fit of rage, he stripped her clothes off and stabbed her repeatedly with a pocketknife, an act of excessive violence that investigators later described as "overkill." The nearby discovery of her purse's contents, though missing the purse itself, indicated that there may have been additional motives behind the attack. Police also suspected that she had been raped.

The tragic discovery shocked the local community, and Geiger's eventual confession painted a disturbing picture of an uncontrollable fit of violence, leading to a senseless and brutal murder.











Captain Jack Donahoe remarked that Leroy Geiger's sudden flight upon spotting a patrol car was likely due to his guilty conscience. "If he hadn't had a guilty conscience, he probably wouldn't have started running when he saw the patrol car," Donahoe noted, adding that the officers might have passed him by had he remained calm, as the darkness would have obscured the blood on his hands. Geiger's instinctive decision to flee only drew more attention to him, setting off a chain of events that led to his arrest.

 As a result, he was held for trial on a murder charge, he had to answer in superior court by Municipal Judge Edward Jefferson. At this preliminary trial on March 11, 1946, Geiger protested the charges and denied being a murderer, stating that "Aw, I ain't no murderer, I just sort of went wild and lost control," trying to explain why he could not stop himself once the violence had begun. Officers said he admitted stabbing the woman, tearing off her clothes and leaving her in a downtown parking lot when "she displeased me" and he "suddenly felt the urge to see blood."

On trial for the murder on May 14, 1946, he pled guilty to the brutal lust killing. As a result, Superior Judge Thomas L. Ambrose fixed the murder at second degree. Geiger was sentenced to five years to life in San Quentin prison, where he worked as a trusty in the prison's forestry camp, an occupation reserved for inmates who had earned a degree of trust. Despite his violent crime, Geiger's time in the camp suggests a level of rehabilitation or control during his incarceration. You'd think that he would be grateful for the opportunity, but that was not to be. In 1950, he was held in the Oroville county jail for return to the prison. A.O. Hunkins of Magalia, supervisor of the prison forestry camp where Geiger had been working, said the prisoner failed to meet the requirements of a trusty.

Geiger’s personal background provides further details about his life. Born to Sallie Mae Roark and Oscar Geiger on May 8, 1921, in Philadelphia. His siblings were Mattie M. Bishop, Eugene Bishop, Regina Adeline Geiger, Everton Merrell Geiger, Lester Edwin Geiger, Evelyn Bernice Geiger Sticht , Adeline Miriam Geiger, Virginia Marcella Geiger, Dallas Elbert Geiger and  Viola Geiger Keller.

He stood 5 feet 9 inches tall and weighed approximately 135 pounds, with a light complexion, hazel eyes, and blonde hair. He also had a distinct scar on the palm of his left hand, which may have been a unique identifier for him during his life. He remained in Los Angeles until his death on January 21, 1989, marking the end of a life marred by a notorious crime in his youth. 

Crime Facts:
  • Offender age - 24
  • Victim age - 31
  • Victim -  high risk
  • Met at bar
  • Both drunk alcohol
  • Secluded Parking Lot
  • Refused his advances
  • "Mad frenzy" - Could not stop himself
  • Broken jaw
  • Gag in mouth - His Handkerchief 
  • Clothes torn from body
  • Weapon - Jack knife
  • Stabbed 21 times in left breast, once in right breast (piquerism)
  • Overkill
  • Body left on display in parking lot near bus depot
  • Nude except for socks
  • Purse missing (probably kept as trophy)

Thursday, September 15, 2022

Human Skin Mystery 1932

From the book -  "Human Skin Complete Found in the City Dump 12/30/31. Unsolved. LA. Cal."



Friday, July 22, 2022

Marie Castaneda 1944

From the book -  "MARIE CASTANEDA AGE 29 KILLED BY HER BOY FRIEND VERNON ARENSON. HE BROKE A WINE BOTTLE AND CUT HER. 6/19/44. L.A. Cal. 612½ No SPRING ST."





Thursday, July 21, 2022

Case File: Murder Suicide 1941

From the book - "Dr. Stuart E. Noland (correctly spelled Nolan)  gave his wife, (Kay Larson Pengra Noland) a hypodermic out her wrist, combed her hair, put a jade plaque on her, then got in the bath tub and committed suicide. 8963 Burton Way, Hollywood, Calif. 11/15/1941."

Wednesday, May 25, 2022

The Sweetheart Murder of Benancia Savedra 1939

 The Sweetheart Murder of Benancia Savedra (incorrectly spelt Salidra on the book) born April 1, 1901 in Texas and died 5/16/1939 in Los Angeles.



Wednesday, April 20, 2022

Murder of Dora Hope 1939

 In the book, Death Scenes, a black and white photo is titled "John R. Hope paid $1 for a gun. He confessed to slaying his wife."