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| The
kidnapping |
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March 1,
1932 |
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Tuesday evening: Betty Gow, and Anne Lindbergh, put
twenty-month-old Charles Jr., to bed at eight
PM.
He was looked
in on at nine, and found to be sleeping peacefully.
Fifty
minutes later, when the nurse made her final check,
the baby was gone. The Lindberghs were sitting in the
living room |
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Lindbergh told to use the
underworld
On day 2 ,
Congresswoman Ruth Pratt calls Lindbergh and
recommends Morris Rosner, a gangster.
Rosner appoints two Jewish gangsters, Irving Bitz and S.
Spitale, to act as liaisons to the
underworld.
Lindbergh felt it was
organized crime, who kidnapped the
baby. |
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The Mysterious
Negotiator
A good Samaritan
named Dr. John Condon places ads in a Bronx
newspaper seeking contact with the kidnappers. Not
long afterwards, Condon was sent the pajamas the
Lindbergh baby was wearing when he was kidnapped,
along with ransom notes.
Condon meets
with the kidnapper twice during the ransom
negotiations: first to ascertain the welfare of
the child; and later to deliver the ransom money.
Both meetings took place in
cemeteries | |
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Ransom
paid
$
50,000 was paid to a mysterious man at this
cemetery |
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Baby found
dead |
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On May 12, 1932, the body of the
kidnapped baby was accidentally found, partly buried,
and badly decomposed, about four and a half miles
southeast of the Lindbergh home, 45 feet from the
highway, near Mount Rose, New Jersey, in Mercer County.
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Col.
Schwarzkopf of NJ police took a backseat in the
investigation till the body was found, and then he pursued
Hauptmann. He was cashiered out of the NJ police - rejoined
the army, and was rewarded with the post of a two star
general.
This flunky
did nothing. |
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Hauptman's lawyer hired by NY
Jewish newspapers
Ed Reilly,
Hauptmann's defense attorney, had his fee paid for New
York Evening Journal .He was literally bought,
and paid for, by a Hearst newspaper.
Reilly spent no more
than 40 minutes with his client over the course of the entire
trial. He was an over the hill glad handing
drunk.
Another
flunky. |
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Prosecuting Attorney David Wilentz ,
and Harold Fischer, called Bruno Hauptmann "Public Enemy
Number 1 of the World", and a baby killer. Wilentz, a Jewish
attorney, was well rewarded with a successful law practice
in Perth Amboy and became a power in state Democratic
politics.
This
flunky railroaded Hauptmann. |
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Bruna Hauptman ... A
gullible German immigrant carpenter
He was found with ransom
money given to him by Fisch. The negotiator said it was
Hauptmann he met in the cemetery. |
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Isadore Fisch ...
A slick German Jewish swindler who befriends
Hauptman
In early 1932, Fisch met
Hauptmann and the two became both friends and business
partners, agreeing to split the profits and losses of Fisch’s
fur business and Hauptmann’s stock investments equally.
In December 6, 1933
Fisch leaves for Germany paying with the ransom money. One witness testified he had seen Sharpe and
Fisch together. Hauptmann testified that Fisch gave him a
package to hold, the Lindbergh ransom money.
On March 29, 1934, Fisch
supposedly died in Liepzig, Germany. |
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State brings Fisch family
from Germany as character witnesses
The prosecutors
brought Fisch family where they stayed in expensive
hotels, entertained in expensive restaurants, theater
tickets, etc - all provided by the State.
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