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Dakota Datebook
October 23, 2003
"Winnie Ruth Judd"
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Seventy-one years ago today, Winnie Ruth Judd surrendered
to police in Los Angeles after the remains of two women, one from North
Dakota, were found in her traveling trunks.
In 1931, White Earth native 24-year-old Hedvig "Sammy"
Samuelson, was suffering from TB, so she quit her teaching job in Alaska
to move to Phoenix with her best friend, Anne LeRoi. They befriended 26
year-old Winnie Ruth Judd, who was also fighting TB.
Winnie was married, but she had taken up with a married,
arrogant hipster, Jack Halloway; the girls dubbed him Happy Jack.
The three young women often had parties with Jack, who brought along some
of his married business associates, as well as crates of bootlegged booze.
Winnie knew that Jack also visited Anne and Sammy on the side and, in
the fall of 1931, the girls triangle was becoming imperfect when
Winnie introduced Jack to one Lucille Moore, a woman who could give him
tips on where to hunt in the White Mountains.
The following night, Winnie was visiting Anne and Sammy
when an argument started over Jack being introduced to Lucille; Anne knew
Lucille had syphilis and therefore could endanger Jack's life. Name calling
led to threats of telling Winnies absent husband that she was sleeping
around. Things escalated and Sammy alledgedly brought out a Colt .25.
There was a struggle, and moments later, Anne and Sammy were dead, and
Winnie had been shot through the hand.
Winnie wanted to go to the police, but Jack promised
to fix everything and found a packing trunk for transporting the two dead
girls out into the desert. But the following day, Jack called Winnie and
said he had decided it would be better for her to take the trunk to Los
Angeles, where a friend of his would dispose of it. He promised to reserve
a train ticket for her and hung up.
The trunk turned out to be too heavy for rail freight,
so Winnie was forced to divide the contents. It was then that she found
that one of the bodies had been dismembered; but she carried out her task
according to Jacks wishes. When Winnies train pulled into
L.A., the contact didnt show. Alarmed, Winnied called Jack, but
his housekeeper said he was, and would remain, unreachable.
Meanwhile, a baggage-checker noticed Winnies two
lone trunks remained on the flatbed. They had a foul odor, and he suspected
hunters of smuggling venison past rail customs. When he noticed a dark
fluid dripping from the corners, he told his boss about it.
Shortly before noon, Winnie showed up in a car and presented
a claim ticket for her trunks. The boss came out and asked about the contents
and asked her to open them. Winnie made an excuse about having to get
the keys from her husband, went back to the car and took off.
The baggage handlers called LAPD, and the hunt was on.
In the ladies restroom, they found two bags containing surgery instruments,
a Colt .25 pistol, a box of ammunition, a bread knife and an assortment
of cosmetics all belonging to passenger Winnie Ruth Judd from Phoenix.
Newspapers dubbed Winnie the Trunk Murderess and offered
rewards for her capture. Five days later, she was found hiding in a funeral
parlor. Winnie told of a scuffle, of Sammy attacking her with a pistol,
of a bullet piercing her hand, of Anne clubbing her with an ironing board.
A doctors examination revealed 147 gashes and bruises that indicated
that Winnie had fought for her life.
When the story hit the papers, the public was shocked
that instead of the snarling mad-woman they expected, they saw a beautiful,
5'2", 100 pound waif with pretty blue eyes, dark sandy hair, and
a hand so badly wounded it had developed gangrene. Along with her weakness
from TB, she was hardly a likely candidate for the brutal crime.
Interestingly, Jack attended Winnies trial back
in Phoenix, giving her snide smiles and sneers. And when Anne LeRois
diary suddenly surfaced, with intimate details of the girls liaisons
with Jacks elite married friends, prosecutors hush-hushed it, and
it never made it to the courtroom.
Many believed it was Jack who committed the murders,
and Winnie was taking the fall. America sympathized, but she was found
guilty after a sloppy trial in which the prosecution alleged that Winnie
shot her friends while they slept, butchered them, shot a hole through
her hand and went home to sleep peacefully.
She was sentenced to hang. There was an appeal, and Winnie
was re-sentenced to life in a psychiatric hospital. Jack showed up to
gloat there, as well, until the staff barred him from the hospital. Winnie
managed to escape seven times until, in 1969, her parole board decided
to let her out for good.
And Sammy? Her remains were brought back to North Dakota
and buried near the family farm in White Earth.

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