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Most interesting unsolved non-serial killer cases

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  • louisa
    replied
    Thanks to folk mentioning the book 'Open Files' on this thread, I thought it sounded interesting and have just bought a used copy from Amazon.

    Thanks guys!

    Leave a comment:


  • sdreid
    replied
    I knew Percy was a big deal here in Illinois but I was only recently made aware that the interest extended far beyond our borders.

    Leave a comment:


  • sdreid
    replied
    I remember that one real time Jeff.

    Was that Open Files Holly?

    Leave a comment:


  • HollyDolly
    replied
    Most Interesting unsolved non-serial killer cases

    Originally posted by stevenb View Post
    Just dug out the story - chap 11 "the dark age killer" - in "From the X Files of Murder" 1996 by Mike James, The True Crime Library ( the publishers of True Detective etc mags in the UK).

    July 1929 in Detroit, Beniamino Evangelista a contractor is found beheaded in his office over a copy of an occult book he was writing, upstairs his wife and 4 kids similarly beheaded. Several links on line about the case.

    Talk of occultism, cults and other crazy **** of that ilk....

    http://www.hourdetroit.com/Hour-Detr...=4&siarticle=3
    I believe Jay Robert nash has this in a book he wrote about unsolved murders,forgot the title to it right now.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mayerling
    replied
    Death of a Victim's father today.

    It is not quite the same as the rest of this thread, but I saw in the New York Times obituraries that former Illinois Senator (and Presidential possibility) Charles Percy died. He had been suffering from Altzheimer's disease for several years. As you may remember, in 1966 (when he was in his first U.S. Senatorial contest) Percy's daughter Valerie was bludgeoned to death in their home. Nobody was ever arrested or tried or even openly suspected of the murder (although the authorities insisted it was not a burglary murder). So it remains, fifty five years afterwards, an unsolved crime. Her twin sister eventually married Senator Rockefellerof West Virginia.

    Jeff

    Leave a comment:


  • E.J.H.
    replied
    That's a great thread. Aside Jack the Ripper, Jack the Stripper, The Texarkana's one and of course Zodiac, I didn't know that there was so much cases ... I'll check on them.

    Leave a comment:


  • sdreid
    replied
    Before the Pound was devalued in the mid-1960s, $36,000 would have been equal to about 8,000 Pounds.

    Amelia Zelko had a huge diamond ring and a relatively new luxury car. Those two things alone should have totaled up to about $36,000 so she had absolutely nothing else?

    Leave a comment:


  • louisa
    replied
    "I was surprised that her estate was only something like $36,000 which, even in 1957, seems quite meager for a supposedly successful single woman in her late 40s"

    I think that $36,000 was a huge sum for an individual to have in those days.

    I don't know what the exchange rate was like back then, but I know that in Britain the average annual salary (before tax) was around £650.


    My favourite cases:

    The Croydon Poisonings
    The Dominici Affair
    The A6 Murder (James Hanratty)
    The Wallace Case

    Leave a comment:


  • Ausgirl
    replied
    sdreid - funny how both cases are linked, then, even if indirectly.

    I am currently so excited - we have a pile of new information coming in about one of the perps in the Keddie case. There was no new information at all on this case for many years, and this past year there's been an absolute avalanche of it - so many things to slot into place! Tiny pieces of the puzzle, though, and few of them join up neatly but we can hope at least to figure out some of the picture of why those people were murdered. Having surviving family members and people who lived in the area being involved with the board has made this very personal - hard to see it as just another case.

    Leave a comment:


  • sdreid
    replied
    Over there on that site, I have Zelko at #84 on my list of top 200 most interesting classic (more than 20 years old) unsolved murder cases. Cabin 28 is #81.

    Leave a comment:


  • sdreid
    replied
    Hi Ausgirl:

    Both those cases are very interesting and I've discussed the Zelko disappearance recently over on websleuths.com

    I was surprised that her estate was only something like $36,000 which, even in 1957, seems quite meager for a supposedly successful single woman in her late 40s.
    Last edited by sdreid; 08-01-2011, 02:00 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ausgirl
    replied
    I noticed a few mentions of the 'Cabin 28' murders, aka the Keddie murders. I've been researching this case pretty heavily for the past year or so and even helped turn up some info on one of the suspects.

    There's been a lot of new developments in the past year, and there's a new discussion board free of a lot of the vitriol and misdirection present in the old one: http://keddiemurdersfilm.com/forum/index.php

    It really is a mystery, and quite a convoluted one because the crime scene on close inspection makes -no- sense (we've found there's evidence it was staged after the murders for reasons we cannot yet discern), there's a deal of evidence that the cops and DoJ buried the crime early on in the investigation, and the main suspects who really should have been arrested - one confessed, even - never were (one was linked via the message board members' research to mob crime and bank robberies in Chicago and Indiana, and who was a protoge of Jim Rini, the guy who claimed involvement the Molly Zelko case, another fascinating unsolved crime).

    It's a labyrinth of hearsay and misdirection, and my suspicion is that the Keddie murders were not directly drug related, but perpetrated by men involved in a local drug trade which included county officials and their friends, and who were possibly also police informers - and thus, they sailed free into the sunset and the investigation stalled at every turn.

    The murders themselves are really odd - we discovered the bodies were bound both pre- and post-mortem, for example, and the body of Sue Sharp arranged to suggest a rape that never happened. And of course, little Tina Sharp was abducted from the scene - her skeletal remains were found three years later and some 65 miles away in Butte County. Apparently the Butte county cops received a call some weeks before the body was found, stating that they'd soon find Tina - the call was ignored, as the cops in Butte had no idea what the guy was talking about.

    Anyhow, I do think it's fascinating, and it also sparked me to look into the Molly Zelko case which is equally interesting.

    Apparently Jim Rini had Bobby Kennedy and a pile of FBI agents out digging up an orchard in search of Molly's body, which wasn't found. Rini (who later recanted and claimed no knowledge of the crime) boasted that Kennedy took a swing at him with a shovel in sheer frustration.

    Leave a comment:


  • sdreid
    replied
    Originally posted by sdreid View Post
    Since I first read about it, the Spyglass Murder Case has been a minor fascination to me. On July 23 of 1956, 50-year-old Margaret Gallagher was sunbathing in Chicago's Lincoln Park along the lakefront when she was attacked, strangled and beaten to death. The crime got its name because a resident in a nearby high rise actually witnessed the slaying through a telescope. A man named Barry Zander Cook was charged with the killing but a jury was unconvinced and he was found not guilty leaving the crime unsolved officially.
    Since he appears to have been engaged in some voyeurism, I'm actually surprised that the witness came forward. It must have been embarrassing for him. I don't know but I'm assuming it was a man.

    Leave a comment:


  • glyn
    replied
    Magpie,
    Much of what you said has a basis in truth.But to say there was NO evidence against them isnt true....there was circumstancial evidence,a fair bit of it,issues regarding Echols mental problems,Misskellys confession,and more besides....conclusive evidence? of course not,so one has to deal with what there is.Abscence of conclusive evidence doesnt necessarilly mean innocence.But I guess we will have to agree to differ on that one.

    Leave a comment:


  • sdreid
    replied
    I would hate to vote not guilty when I thought the person committed the murder and the case wasn't proven against them but that's what I'd do of course. Here however, I don't think I'd be all that bothered voting not guilty.

    Leave a comment:

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