Detecting deception was paramount in
the Lindbergh kidnapping case. An entire nation demanded to
know the truth, and initially there were several suspects, one of
whom committed suicide within moments of being questioned. In
those days, the polygraph was a new device and the experts wanted to
test it, but it was resisted on all fronts---except by the one
person who might have benefited most.
On the evening of March 1, 1932, just
outside Hopewell, New Jersey, the twenty month-old baby of Charles
and Anne Lindbergh was stolen from his crib. It was a windy
night, and although Lindbergh had heard a strange crashing sound,
the dog had never barked to alert him to an intruder in the second
floor nursery. It was the nurse who discovered the child's
abduction. Lindbergh called the police and roadblocks were
quickly set up around the state.
Then a search team got busy.
Inside the nursery, they found several clumps of yellowish mud, and
outside, a ladder lying in three sections on the lawn. One of
the sections had split along the grain. A set of footprints
was also noted, and a carpenter's chisel was discovered near where
the ladder had stood by an open window.
An ominous envelope rested on the
windowsill, but Lindbergh left it untouched until the police could
handle it. Officer Frank Kelly slit it open and removed a single
sheet of folded paper. It read:
“Dear Sir!
Have 50000$ redy with 25 000 $ in 20 $
bills 1.5000 $ in 10$ bills and 10000$ in 5 $ bills. After 2-4 days
we will inform you were to deliver the Mony.
We warn you for making anyding public
or for notify the Police the child is in gut care.
Indication for all letters are
singnature and 3 holes.”
On the right-hand corner was a drawing
of two interlocking blue circles, an inch in diameter. The area
where the circles intersected was colored red, and three small holes
were punched into the design. Who had sent it remained a
mystery.
One week later, John F. Condon from
Brooklyn offered his services. A retired teacher, he had placed an
ad in the Bronx Home News, offering $1,000 of his own money.
He received a reply accepting him as a go-between, and Lindbergh
affirmed the appointment.
Condon then met a man named John in a
local cemetery to receive further instructions, and Lindbergh
prepared the ransom money. With the help of the IRS, two
packages of bills--$50,000 and $20,000--were made up, both
containing conspicuous gold certificates. The serial numbers
were secretly recorded.
Condon handed over the money, but the
directions to the baby proved to be false. Lindbergh returned
home empty-handed to his grief-stricken wife. They now
believed that their child might be dead.
On May 12, William Allen stopped his
truck on a road about four miles from the Lindbergh estate. He
walked into the woods and saw what appeared to be a child's skull.
He contacted the police, who found the remains of a child in a
shallow grave. It was not long before Lindbergh positively
identified it as his missing son. Now the police were seeking
a murderer.
There were several leads, but all
quickly dried up. Curiously, a maid named Violet Sharpe, who
worked for Lindbergh's in-laws, gave inconsistent stories. The
police questioned her several times and after one interrogation, she
swallowed a silver polish compound and was dead within minutes.
At this point, officials approached
Lindbergh about using a new lie detection instrument called a
polygraph on his servants. Leonarde Keeler was one of two
prominent criminologists who went to Hopewell to try to persuade
Lindbergh to accept their expertise in lie detection. Keeler
assured the state police that the polygraph had achieved a
ninety-percent accuracy rate.
Lindbergh rejected the proposal
because he did not believe that anyone who worked for him could be
guilty. However, that was not the last time that the polygraph
would be considered in this case.
That spring, the first gold notes from
the ransom money surfaced in several Manhattan banks, but no one
recalled who had brought them in. Finally, on September 15,
1934, over two years after the crime, a gas station manager wrote a
license plate number on a ten-dollar gold certificate used to buy 98
cents worth of gas. He remembered that the driver had spoken
with a German accent and had said that he had more certificates at
home. The license plate was traced to a carpenter named Bruno
Richard Hauptmann, who was arrested at once.
When police searched his home, they
discovered over $14,000 of the ransom money hidden between the wall
joists, $11, 930 beneath rags in a shellac can, and $1830 wrapped in
newspapers. They had no doubt that they now had the killer in
their possession. Later, the New Jersey State Police
discovered a missing rafter in Hauptmann's attic that corresponded
to one of the uprights of the kidnap ladder. The case seemed
open and shut.
However, Hauptmann maintained that his former business partner,
Isador Fisch, had given him the money and then had died in Germany.
No one believed him.
Soon he went before the grand jury in New Jersey. At the
proceedings, Lindbergh testified that he had heard Hauptmann's voice
in the cemetery when they had handed over the ransom money.
That was good enough for the court.
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Bruno Hauptmann in jail
(AP) |
While in prison, Hauptmann learned about the lie detector machine
and asked to take the test, but inexplicably this was denied to him.
Since his defense attorney believed he was guilty, barely spoke to
him, and often showed up drunk at court, no one fought on
Hauptmann's behalf to ensure that all possibilities were explored to
clear him. Although courts had already ruled the results of a
polygraph inadmissible, law enforcement had enthusiastically
embraced the procedure. Yet it was later learned that FBI
chief J. Edgar Hoover had scrawled on a memo, “Under no
circumstances will we have anything to do with the [polygraph] test
of Hauptmann.”
After a sensational trial, Hauptmann was found guilty and sentenced
to die. Then New Jersey's Governor Hoffman, believing that
there was reasonable doubt, gave Hauptmann a short reprieve so he
could further investigate the case, and he believed that Hauptmann
ought to be given a lie detector test. Anna Hauptmann agreed
and went to Chicago to talk with Keeler.
He was eager to be involved, and to demonstrate the test's
reliability, he used Anna as a subject. Reading off a list of
numbers, Keeler correctly judged her age when the needle on the
machine showed a change in her physiological response. She was
impressed. She returned to New Jersey to tell the governor
that Keeler would provide his services at no charge and in secret
from the press.
However, Keeler could not resist leaking the news and thereby blew
his chance to make a potentially monumental contribution to the
case. Instead, Boston attorney William Marston, who had a
different lie-detection technique, was brought in to perform the
test. He said it would take him two weeks, and arrangements
were about to be made when the trial judge denied Marston access to
Hauptmann. Hoffman's hands were tied and the judge's
resistance ended any further possibility that this device would be
used in the Lindbergh kidnapping case.
Yet there have been other cases in which the polygraph was actually
used, and the results still had little or no impact. This was
due to a monumental court decision about polygraph evidence that was
made back in 1923.
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