cover of episode Episode 600: Winnie Ruth Judd: The Trunk Murderess

Episode 600: Winnie Ruth Judd: The Trunk Murderess

2024/9/12
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Ash: 温妮·露丝·贾德(温妮)早年生活艰难,体弱多病,但声称童年快乐。她与比她大二十多岁的威廉·贾德结婚,婚姻不幸,威廉吸毒成瘾,导致经济困难和婚姻破裂。温妮与朋友安妮和萨米关系密切,后因经济和生活空间问题发生争吵。温妮与杰克·霍勒兰有婚外情,安妮和萨米也与杰克有染,三人因杰克而互相嫉妒。最终,温妮杀害了安妮和萨米,将尸体肢解后装入箱子,逃往洛杉矶。在洛杉矶,她被捕,并被引渡回凤凰城受审。审判期间,温妮有多个供词版本,她一会儿声称自卫杀人,一会儿又承认自己杀害了安妮和萨米。最终,温妮被判处死刑,但因被诊断为精神疾病而免于一死,并在精神病院度过了三十年,期间多次越狱。她于1971年获得假释,并于1998年去世。 Alayna: 温妮的案件充满了争议和神秘。她的多个供词版本,以及她与杰克·霍勒兰的婚外情,都让案件扑朔迷离。检方认为温妮是蓄意谋杀,而辩方则以精神疾病为由为她辩护。最终,温妮被判处死刑,但由于精神疾病而被送往精神病院。她多次越狱,最终获得假释。温妮的案件引发了人们对女性犯罪、精神疾病和司法公正的思考。案件中,杰克·霍勒兰的角色也备受关注,他与温妮、安妮和萨米的复杂关系,以及他是否参与了谋杀案,都成为案件中的未解之谜。

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Winnie Ruth Judd, known as Ruth, had a difficult childhood marked by illnesses. Despite a loving family, she felt like an outsider due to her strict religious upbringing, which limited her social experiences and later impacted her adult relationships.
  • Born in 1905 and suffered from pneumonia and tuberculosis.
  • Described her father as kind and her mother as hardworking.
  • Felt isolated due to her religious upbringing.

Shownotes Transcript

On October 20, 1931, baggage agents in Los Angeles received a tip that two trunks on the incoming Southern Pacific Railroad could contain contraband material. When the agents located the suspicious trunks, they opened them and were horrified to find within them the dismembered remains of Anne LeRoi and Hedvig Samuelson, two young women who had gone missing in Arizona days earlier. Both women had been shot to death. 

Railroad agents quickly traced the trunks back to twenty-six-year-old Winnie Ruth Judd, but Judd disappeared into the crowd before authorities could apprehend and question her. Two days later, Judd surrendered to the LAPD, setting off one of the decade’s most sensational murder cases and making Winnie Ruth Judd, the “Trunk Murderess,” an object of public curiosity for decades to follow. Some called her a butcher and a psychopath, yet many others found it impossible to believe that she’d acted alone or that she was anything more than an unwilling accomplice. 

Winnie Ruth Judd was ultimately found guilty of murder and sentenced to death, but her life was spared, and her sentence was overturned when psychiatrists determined her to be mentally incompetent and she was sent to a psychiatric institution. Judd spent thirty years in an Arizona mental institution, from which she escaped and was recaptured six times, before finally winning parole in 1971.  

Thank you to the incredible Dave White of Bring Me The Axe Podcast for research and writing support!

References

Arizona Daily Star. 1932. "Testimony in Judd trial is before jurors." Arizona Daily Star, February 7: 1.

—. 1932. "Winnie Judd breaks under trial's strain." Arizona Daily Star, January 22: 1.

Associated Press. 1932. "Winnie Judd guilty, must hang for murder." Arizona Daily Star, February 9: 1.

—. 1932. "Mrs. Judd guilty of first degree murder." New York Times, February 9: 1.

—. 1939. "Mrs. Judd, slayer, escapes asylum." New York Times, October 26: 27.

Bommersbach, Jana. 1992. The Trunk Murderess: Winnie Ruth Judd. New York, NY: Simon and Schuster.

Los Angeles Evening Express. 1931. "Youth reveals sister's story." Los Angeles Evening Express, October 20: 1.

Los Angeles Times. 1931. "Doctor wants to hunt wife." Los Angeles Times, October 21: 9.

—. 1931. "Trunk murder suspect dodges great dragnet." Los Angeles Times, October 21: 1.

—. 1931. "Trunk seeker ex-employee." Los Angeles Times, October 20: 2.

New York Times. 1932. "Alienist asserts Mrs. Judd is sane." New York Times, February 4: 9.

—. 1931. "Confession letter laid to Mrs. Judd." New York Times, October 25: 3.

—. 1931. "Mrs. Judd gives up in trunk murders." New York Times, October 24: 3.

—. 1932. "Mrs. Judd to die on scaffold May 11." New York Times, February 25: 44.

—. 1971. "Winnie Ruth Judd free on parole." New York Times, November 30: 53.

Stanley, Thiers. 1931. "Fears grip Mrs. Judd." Los Angeles Times, October 31: 1.

Tucson Citizen. 1931. "Accomplice sought." Tucson Citizen, October 20: 1.

—. 1932. "Eludes guard while mother is on stand." Tucson Citizen, January 26: 1.

—. 1931. "Student tells of trip to claim bodies of victims." Tucson Citizen, October 20: 1.

United Press International. 1982. "Trunk murderer wins big court settlement ." UPI Archive, December 31.

Winnie Ruth Judd v. State of Arizona. 1932. 41 Ariz. 176 (Ariz. 1932) (Supreme Court of Arizona, 12 December 12).

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