The Blood Evidence (Part 2).
On its own, as evidence, the trail of blood supposedly found between rooms 31 and 33 is not that important. Without it the New York Police and the District Attorney’s Office could still point to all the blood supposedly found in room 33, the blood on Ben Ali’s clothes and the blood allegedly found under his fingernails. However, according to the police the blood trail led them to the blood on the door and then into the blood spattered room 33, as if without it they never would have looked in the room. It was seen as an important part of the evidence pointing directly at Ben Ali’s guilt. The blood trail takes on greater significance, conversely, when the newspapers quickly, and continuously, pointed out that reporters had not seen any evidence of it when they had searched the 5th floor of the hotel on the 24th of April:
“But everybody will assume that the physicians and chemists believe what they say. Some of them are counted upon to declare that bloody marks were found in “Frenchy’s” room, on its door, chair and bed, and that there was a faint trail of blood from the one room into the other. But if any such marks exist they escaped the attention of the reporters who came in upon the scene while the murdered woman yet lay where she fell, and to do that they must have been very faint indeed.” (The New York Tribune, 2 May, 1891.)
In fact, in 1902 affidavits by newsmen, stating that they had seen no blood in the hallway, would help in getting Ameer Ben Ali’s sentence commuted. As I have already pointed out Dekle doesn’t mention newspaper denials of a blood trail until late in his book, and therefore takes them out of their chronological context, but there is more – much more – to the blood trail supposedly found in the hallway between rooms 31 and 33 than you will find in Mr. Dekle’s book. A comparison of the testimony, from the inquest and the trial, of several policemen shows that the police changed their stories about the facts surrounding the trail of blood in order to fill holes in the District Attorney’s case.
We know from interviews Inspector Byrnes’s gave to the press that the blood trail was allegedly found on Friday the 24th of April, the first day of the police investigation. Information about the trail was then fleshed out when various members of the police gave testimony at the inquest into Carrie Brown’s death. Let’s start with who actually found the blood trail, since there is some confusion about this.
At least one report claimed that the trail had been found by “chemists” from the Health Department (early CSI New York?), but this was wrong. A claim that Captain Richard O’Connor of the Oak Street Police Station had found the blood trail was also incorrect. O’Connor said on the stand at the inquest that he was with Captain McLaughlin and Detective Sergeant Crowley when the trail was found but that “I can’t say which one of us first discovered the spots.” (The New York Telegram, Wednesday 13 May, 1891.)
The man who reportedly found the blood trail was Captain William McLaughlin of the 1st Precinct, the Acting Chief of Detectives. Detective Sergeant Michael Crowley, of the Detective Department, said during his testimony at the inquest that McLaughlin had found the blood trial: “Did you see spots of blood outside of the room?”
“Yes, sir. Captain McLaughlin called attention to blood spots on the floor and on the door of room 33. We also found blood spots on the inside of the door and on the bed ticking.” (The New York Telegram, Wednesday 13 May, 1891.) McLaughlin agreed:
“Captain McLaughlin told of the discovery of the drops of blood in the hall between Room 31 and 33…. They were discovered by Captain McLaughlin and Detective Sergeant Crowley, as they were cutting some bloodstained paper from the wall to the right of Room 33…. (The New York Tribune, Thursday, 14 May, 1891.)
What, exactly, did the blood trial look like? Unfortunately we don’t have an exact description of it, or, at least, the various members of the police who gave descriptions can’t seem to agree on the point. At the inquest Captain O’Connor thought that there were only “a few blood spots on the floor of the hall leading from room 31 to room 33,” (The New York World, Wednesday, 13 May, 1891). O’Connor also reportedly said that “There were three spots of blood in the hallway…” (The New York Evening Sun, Wednesday, 13 May, 1891). Captain McLaughlin apparently agreed with O’Connor and was reported as saying that “There were three small drops and they were about a foot from the door of Room 33,” (The New York Tribune, Thursday, 14 May, 1891). The New York World (Thursday, 14 May, 1891) gave the most detailed description of the blood trail:
“In the hallway between room 31, where the dead woman lay, and room 33, which it was later learned was occupied by Ben Ali, there were several spots of blood. The distance between the two doors was less than four feet. The first spot of blood was a foot from the door of room 31. Two feet further there was another single spot and then three spots in a group,” which by my math makes it five, not three.
What, then, did O’Connor, McLaughlin and Crowley do with this evidence? According to O’Connor and Crowley Captain McLaughlin took out a knife and cut the blood evidence out of the floor and the other locations, with the exception of one long blood stain supposedly found on the door of room 33, then carefully put them in his pocket. This blood evidence was supposedly then given by McLaughlin to Dr. Edson of the Health Department. Most of this seems to be a fairly simple story. Until it wasn’t.
Detective Jeremiah J. Griffin took the stand right after O’Connor, Crowley and McLaughlin. Griffin was an Oak Street Precinct detective, not one of Byrnes’s men, and was one of the first policemen to arrive at the hotel on the morning of the 24th. He was asked by Frederick House, of the Defense, if he had seen the blood that his three police colleagues had testified to. Griffin testified that he had, but not on the Friday. He had seen the blood on Saturday, the 25th; a day after the inquest had just been told it had been cut from the floor. Griffin was asked twice to repeat this and he did so without changing his testimony. This caused a bit of a sensation.
Dekle gives a quick recount of Griffin’s testimony and adds that the New York World pointed out that Griffin had contradicted the earlier witnesses. That’s it. That’s all. He quickly moves on. He doesn’t comment on Griffin’s testimony nor does he offer any speculation or thoughts on what it might mean. Was there a mix up? Was someone confused or lying? Apparently police eyewitness testimony that contradicts other police eyewitness testimony is not worth remarking on in a case that is considered a miscarriage of justice (but which Dekle argues was not).
This little fly in the ointment had to be addressed. And it was when Detective Sergeant William Frink, of the Central Detective Bureau, was called to give testimony the next day. According to newspaper reports Frink stated that he had seen the blood trail in the hall as well as the blood on the door to room 33 on Friday, the 24th. Frink added that Captain McLaughlin had cut out only some of the blood trail on the Friday and so Detective Griffin could have seen the blood spots that were left. Frink, himself, had cut out more of the blood on Wednesday the 29th of April. Mystery solved.
Except… why hadn’t Griffin seen any of the blood evidence on the Friday? And why had the newspapers been told as early as the 30th of April, that all the blood evidence was cut out on the Friday, a story corroborated by O’Connor and Crowley at the Inquest, if it hadn’t? Also, why did newspapers point out that their reporters, who returned to the East River Hotel on the Friday, Saturday or Sunday, failed to see any blood or any evidence that blood had been cut from the floor, or anywhere else? Once again we are left with conflicting and dubious, police testimony that suggests that they couldn’t keep their stories straight.
In the end, the inquest jury found Ameer Ben Ali complicit in the murder of Carrie Brown and, when the Grand Jury found a true bill, he was given over for trial. This gives us a second shot at getting answers about the blood trail supposedly found in the hallway of the East River Hotel.
Wolf.
On its own, as evidence, the trail of blood supposedly found between rooms 31 and 33 is not that important. Without it the New York Police and the District Attorney’s Office could still point to all the blood supposedly found in room 33, the blood on Ben Ali’s clothes and the blood allegedly found under his fingernails. However, according to the police the blood trail led them to the blood on the door and then into the blood spattered room 33, as if without it they never would have looked in the room. It was seen as an important part of the evidence pointing directly at Ben Ali’s guilt. The blood trail takes on greater significance, conversely, when the newspapers quickly, and continuously, pointed out that reporters had not seen any evidence of it when they had searched the 5th floor of the hotel on the 24th of April:
“But everybody will assume that the physicians and chemists believe what they say. Some of them are counted upon to declare that bloody marks were found in “Frenchy’s” room, on its door, chair and bed, and that there was a faint trail of blood from the one room into the other. But if any such marks exist they escaped the attention of the reporters who came in upon the scene while the murdered woman yet lay where she fell, and to do that they must have been very faint indeed.” (The New York Tribune, 2 May, 1891.)
In fact, in 1902 affidavits by newsmen, stating that they had seen no blood in the hallway, would help in getting Ameer Ben Ali’s sentence commuted. As I have already pointed out Dekle doesn’t mention newspaper denials of a blood trail until late in his book, and therefore takes them out of their chronological context, but there is more – much more – to the blood trail supposedly found in the hallway between rooms 31 and 33 than you will find in Mr. Dekle’s book. A comparison of the testimony, from the inquest and the trial, of several policemen shows that the police changed their stories about the facts surrounding the trail of blood in order to fill holes in the District Attorney’s case.
We know from interviews Inspector Byrnes’s gave to the press that the blood trail was allegedly found on Friday the 24th of April, the first day of the police investigation. Information about the trail was then fleshed out when various members of the police gave testimony at the inquest into Carrie Brown’s death. Let’s start with who actually found the blood trail, since there is some confusion about this.
At least one report claimed that the trail had been found by “chemists” from the Health Department (early CSI New York?), but this was wrong. A claim that Captain Richard O’Connor of the Oak Street Police Station had found the blood trail was also incorrect. O’Connor said on the stand at the inquest that he was with Captain McLaughlin and Detective Sergeant Crowley when the trail was found but that “I can’t say which one of us first discovered the spots.” (The New York Telegram, Wednesday 13 May, 1891.)
The man who reportedly found the blood trail was Captain William McLaughlin of the 1st Precinct, the Acting Chief of Detectives. Detective Sergeant Michael Crowley, of the Detective Department, said during his testimony at the inquest that McLaughlin had found the blood trial: “Did you see spots of blood outside of the room?”
“Yes, sir. Captain McLaughlin called attention to blood spots on the floor and on the door of room 33. We also found blood spots on the inside of the door and on the bed ticking.” (The New York Telegram, Wednesday 13 May, 1891.) McLaughlin agreed:
“Captain McLaughlin told of the discovery of the drops of blood in the hall between Room 31 and 33…. They were discovered by Captain McLaughlin and Detective Sergeant Crowley, as they were cutting some bloodstained paper from the wall to the right of Room 33…. (The New York Tribune, Thursday, 14 May, 1891.)
What, exactly, did the blood trial look like? Unfortunately we don’t have an exact description of it, or, at least, the various members of the police who gave descriptions can’t seem to agree on the point. At the inquest Captain O’Connor thought that there were only “a few blood spots on the floor of the hall leading from room 31 to room 33,” (The New York World, Wednesday, 13 May, 1891). O’Connor also reportedly said that “There were three spots of blood in the hallway…” (The New York Evening Sun, Wednesday, 13 May, 1891). Captain McLaughlin apparently agreed with O’Connor and was reported as saying that “There were three small drops and they were about a foot from the door of Room 33,” (The New York Tribune, Thursday, 14 May, 1891). The New York World (Thursday, 14 May, 1891) gave the most detailed description of the blood trail:
“In the hallway between room 31, where the dead woman lay, and room 33, which it was later learned was occupied by Ben Ali, there were several spots of blood. The distance between the two doors was less than four feet. The first spot of blood was a foot from the door of room 31. Two feet further there was another single spot and then three spots in a group,” which by my math makes it five, not three.
What, then, did O’Connor, McLaughlin and Crowley do with this evidence? According to O’Connor and Crowley Captain McLaughlin took out a knife and cut the blood evidence out of the floor and the other locations, with the exception of one long blood stain supposedly found on the door of room 33, then carefully put them in his pocket. This blood evidence was supposedly then given by McLaughlin to Dr. Edson of the Health Department. Most of this seems to be a fairly simple story. Until it wasn’t.
Detective Jeremiah J. Griffin took the stand right after O’Connor, Crowley and McLaughlin. Griffin was an Oak Street Precinct detective, not one of Byrnes’s men, and was one of the first policemen to arrive at the hotel on the morning of the 24th. He was asked by Frederick House, of the Defense, if he had seen the blood that his three police colleagues had testified to. Griffin testified that he had, but not on the Friday. He had seen the blood on Saturday, the 25th; a day after the inquest had just been told it had been cut from the floor. Griffin was asked twice to repeat this and he did so without changing his testimony. This caused a bit of a sensation.
Dekle gives a quick recount of Griffin’s testimony and adds that the New York World pointed out that Griffin had contradicted the earlier witnesses. That’s it. That’s all. He quickly moves on. He doesn’t comment on Griffin’s testimony nor does he offer any speculation or thoughts on what it might mean. Was there a mix up? Was someone confused or lying? Apparently police eyewitness testimony that contradicts other police eyewitness testimony is not worth remarking on in a case that is considered a miscarriage of justice (but which Dekle argues was not).
This little fly in the ointment had to be addressed. And it was when Detective Sergeant William Frink, of the Central Detective Bureau, was called to give testimony the next day. According to newspaper reports Frink stated that he had seen the blood trail in the hall as well as the blood on the door to room 33 on Friday, the 24th. Frink added that Captain McLaughlin had cut out only some of the blood trail on the Friday and so Detective Griffin could have seen the blood spots that were left. Frink, himself, had cut out more of the blood on Wednesday the 29th of April. Mystery solved.
Except… why hadn’t Griffin seen any of the blood evidence on the Friday? And why had the newspapers been told as early as the 30th of April, that all the blood evidence was cut out on the Friday, a story corroborated by O’Connor and Crowley at the Inquest, if it hadn’t? Also, why did newspapers point out that their reporters, who returned to the East River Hotel on the Friday, Saturday or Sunday, failed to see any blood or any evidence that blood had been cut from the floor, or anywhere else? Once again we are left with conflicting and dubious, police testimony that suggests that they couldn’t keep their stories straight.
In the end, the inquest jury found Ameer Ben Ali complicit in the murder of Carrie Brown and, when the Grand Jury found a true bill, he was given over for trial. This gives us a second shot at getting answers about the blood trail supposedly found in the hallway of the East River Hotel.
Wolf.
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