Belle Sorenson Gunness (born
as Brynhild Paulsdatter Størseth, November 11,
1859, Selbu
, Norway
- April 28,
1908? La Porte
, Indiana
) was one of
America's most prolific known female serial killers.
At 5'8" (173 cm) and over 200 lb (91 kg), she was a
physically strong woman. She may have killed both of her husbands
and all of her children (on different occasions), but she is known
to have killed most of her suitors, boyfriends, and her two
daughters, Myrtle and Lucy. Her apparent motives involved
collecting
life insurance benefits.
Reports estimate that she killed more than 40 people over
several decades.
Biography
Early years
Gunness' origins, like much of her life story, are shrouded in a
web of differing accounts and deliberate inventions.
Most of her
biographers state that she was born on November 11, 1859 near the
lake of Selbu
, Sør-Trøndelag
, Norway
and
christened as Brynhild Paulsdatter Størset.
Her parents were Paul Pedersen Størset (a stonemason) and Berit
Olsdatter. She was the youngest of their eight children.
They lived
at Størsetgjerdet, a very small
cotter's farm in Innbygda
, Selbu,
60 km southeast of Trondheim
, the largest city in central Norway (Trøndelag).
A Norwegian
TV documentary by
Anne Berit Vestby aired on
September 4, 2006 tells a common — although unverified — story
about Gunness' early life. The story holds that, in 1877, Gunness
attended a
country dance while
pregnant. There she was attacked by a man
who
kicked her in the
abdomen, causing her to lose the child. The man, who
came from a rich family, was never prosecuted by the Norwegian
authorities. According to people who knew her, her personality
changed markedly. The man who attacked her died only shortly after.
The cause of death was said to be
stomach
cancer.
Having grown up in poverty, she took service the next year on a big,
wealthy farm and served there for three years in order to pay for
the trip across the Atlantic
.
Following
the example of a sister, Nellie
Larson, who had immigrated to America some time earlier,
Gunness moved to the USA
in 1881 and assumed a more American-style
name. Initially, she worked as a servant. Her sister
allegedly stated years later, "Belle was crazy for money. It was
her great weakness."
First victim
In 1884,
Gunness married Mads Ditlev Anton Sorenson in Chicago
, where, a
couple of years later, they opened a confectionary store.
The business was not successful; within a year the shop burned down
in mysterious circumstances. According to Gunness's story, a
kerosene lamp exploded and started the
fire. No lamp was ever found in the ruins, but the insurance money
was paid.
It's likely that this money bankrolled the
purchase of the Sorensons’ home in the suburb
of Austin
, a house
that was also destroyed by fire in 1898. They collected
insurance once again, which paid for another home.
Though some researchers assert that the Sorenson union produced no
offspring , other investigators report the couple had four
children: Caroline, Axel, Myrtle and Lucy. Caroline and Axel died
in infancy - allegedly of acute colitis. The symptoms of acute
colitis—nausea, fever, diarrhea,
lower
abdominal pain and cramping—are also symptoms of many forms of
poisoning. Both Caroline and Axel were insured and the insurance
company paid out.On June 13, 1900 Belle and her family were counted
on the U.S. Census in Chicago. The census recorded Belle as the
mother of 4 children, of whom only two were living: Myrtle A. 3 and
Lucy B. 1. An adopted ten year old girl, identified possibly as
Morgan Couch but apparently later known as Jennie Olsen, was also
counted in the household.
Sorenson died on July 30, 1900 — the only day that two life
insurance policies on him overlapped. The first doctor to see him
thought he was suffering from
strychnine
poisoning. However, the Sorenson's
family doctor had been treating him for
an
enlarged heart; he decided that
death had been caused by
heart
failure. An
autopsy was not considered
necessary in the event of an unsuspicious death. Gunness was
confident enough to tell the doctor that she had given her late
husband medicinal "powders" to help him feel better.
She applied for the insurance money ($8,500), the day after her
husband's funeral. Sorenson's relatives claimed that Gunness had
poisoned her husband to collect on the insurance. Surviving records
suggest that an
inquest was ordered. It is
unclear, however, if that investigation actually took place or
whether Sorenson's body was ever exhumed to check for arsenic as
his relatives demanded. The insurance companies awarded her $8,500,
a large sum of money in those days.
It was with this money that she bought a
farm on the outskirts of La Porte, Indiana
.
Suspicions of murder
The house on McClung Road was built in 1846 by John Walker (one of
the original settlers in the area of La Porte) for his daughter
Harriet Holcomb. The Holcombs supported the
Confederacy during the
Civil War.
The majority of La
Porte's citizens strongly supported the Union; in 1864, the distinctly
unpopular Holcombs moved to New York
. Over the next 28 years, the farm and house
changed hands half a dozen times.
In 1892,
Mattie Altic, a brothel-keeper from Chicago
, bought the property and transformed it into a
well-appointed rural whorehouse. Most of her regular clients
from Chicago visited the roomy building at La Porte; a
jetty,
boathouse and
expansive
carriage house were added
to accommodate their needs. After Altic’s death the house was put
on the market again; another four owners lived there and left in
quick succession until, in 1901, Gunness purchased it. Both the
boat and carriage houses burned to the ground shortly after she
acquired the property.
Belle met Peter Gunness, a Norwegian living in La Porte. They were
married on April 1, 1902; just one week after the ceremony, Peter's
infant daughter died (of uncertain causes) while alone in the house
with Belle. In December 1902, he met with a "tragic accident".
According to Belle, Peter was working in a shed when part of a
sausage-grinding machine fell from a high
shelf, split his
skull open and killed him
instantly.
Her husband's death netted Gunness another $3,000 (some sources say
$4,000). Local people refused to believe that Gunness could be so
clumsy. He had run a
hog farm on the property
and was known to be an experienced
butcher;
the district
coroner reviewed the case and
unequivocally announced that he had been murdered. He convened a
coroner's jury to look into the matter. Meanwhile, Jennie Olsen,
then aged 14, was overheard confessing to a classmate: "My mamma
killed my papa. She hit him with a meat cleaver and he died. Don't
tell a soul."
Jennie was brought before the coroner's jury but denied having made
the remark. Gunness, meanwhile, convinced the coroner's jury that
she was innocent of any wrongdoing. Belle was pregnant (in 1903, a
son, Philip, was born) and the jurors apparently were swayed by her
hardships. She was released and the matter was dropped.
After the hearing, Gunness generally employed a single hand, Ray
Lamphere, to help run the farm; by 1906 she was affianced to Ray
Lamphere. Later in the same year, Jennie dropped out of sight.
When
neighbors inquired about her, Gunness told them that she had sent
Jennie to a Lutheran College in Los Angeles
(some neighbors were informed that it was a
finishing school for young
ladies). In fact, Jennie had been killed and her body would
later be found buried on her adoptive mother's property.
The suitors
Around the same time, Gunness inserted the following advertisement
in the matrimonial columns of all the Chicago daily newspapers and
those of other large midwestern cities:
“Personal - comely widow who owns a large farm in one of the finest
districts in La Porte County, Indiana, desires to make the
acquaintance of a gentleman equally well provided, with view of
joining fortunes. No replies by letter considered unless sender is
willing to follow answer with personal visit. Triflers need not
apply.”
Several middle-aged men with comfortable
bank accounts and property responded to
Gunness' ads. They traveled to her farm armed with fat wallets and
the deeds to their farms. One of these was John Moe, who arrived
from
Elbow Lake, Minnesota. He
was a husky man of 50 and had brought more than $1,000 with him to
pay off her mortgage... or so he told neighbors whom Gunness
introduced him to as her cousin. He disappeared from her farm
within a week of his arrival. Next came George Anderson who, like
Peter Gunness and John Moe, was an immigrant from Norway.
Anderson,
from Tarkio,
Missouri
, was also a farmer with ready cash and a lovesick
heart.
Anderson, however, did not bring all his money with him. He was
persuaded to make the long trip to see Gunness in La Porte because
her eloquent letters intrigued him. Once there, he found that
Gunness (now in her mid-forties, portly and coarse-featured) was
not the beauty he had expected. He also realized that she had a
severe manner, but she made him feel at home and provided good
dinners while he occupied a guest room in the large
farmhouse. One night at dinner, she raised the
issue of her mortgage. Anderson agreed that he would pay this off
if they decided to wed. He was almost convinced to return to
Tarkio, retrieve his money, then start a life with her.
Late that night, Anderson awoke to see her standing over him,
peering down with a strange look in her eyes. She held a guttering
candle in her hand and the expression on her face was so foreboding
and sinister that he let out a loud yell. Without uttering a word,
she ran from the room.
Anderson jumped out of bed, struggled into
his clothes and fled from the house, soon taking a train to
Missouri
.
The suitors kept coming, but none, except for Anderson, ever left
the Gunness farm. By this time, she had begun ordering huge trunks
to be delivered to her home. Hack driver Clyde Sturgis delivered
many such trunks to her from La Porte and later remarked how the
heavyset woman would lift these enormous trunks "like boxes of
marshmallows", tossing them onto her wide shoulders and carrying
them into the house. She kept the shutters of her house closed day
and night; farmers traveling past the dwelling at night saw her
digging in the
hog pen. Her handyman Lamphere
also spent a good deal of time digging there and all about the
house and barn.
Meanwhile, suitors continued to arrive, all responding to her
advertisements. Ole B.
Budsburg, an elderly widower from Iola,
Wisconsin
, appeared
next. He was last seen alive at the La Porte
Savings Bank on April 6, 1907, when he
mortgaged his Wisconsin land there, signing over a deed and
obtaining several thousand dollars in cash. Ole B. Budsburg's sons,
Oscar and Mathew Budsburg, had no idea that their father had gone
off to visit Gunness. When they finally discovered his destination,
they wrote to her; she promptly wrote back, saying she had never
seen their father.
Several other middle-aged men appeared and disappeared in brief
visits to the Gunness farm throughout 1907.
Then, in December
1907, Andrew Helgelien, a bachelor farmer from Aberdeen,
South Dakota
, wrote to her and was warmly received. The
pair exchanged many letters, until a letter that overwhelmed
Helgelien, written in Gunness' own careful handwriting and dated
January 13, 1908. This letter was later found at the Helgelien
farm. It read:
In response to her letter, Helgelien flew to her side in January
1908. He had with him a check for $2,900, his savings, which he had
drawn from his local bank. A few days after Helgelien arrived, he
and Gunness appeared at the Savings Bank in La Porte and deposited
the check for cashing. Helgelien vanished a few days later, but
Gunness appeared at the Savings Bank to make a $500 deposit and
another deposit of $700 in the
State
Bank. At this time, she started to have problems with Ray
Lamphere.
In March 1908 Gunness sent several letters to a farmer and horse
dealer in Topeka, Kansas named Lon Townsend inviting him to visit
her. He planned to do so after his spring work was done-and
survived.
Turning point
The hired hand Ray Lamphere was deeply in love with Gunness; he
performed any chore for her, no matter how gruesome. He became
jealous of the many men who arrived to court his employer and began
making scenes. She fired him on February 3, 1908. Shortly after
dispensing with Lamphere, she presented herself at the La Porte
courthouse. She declared that her former employee was not in his
right mind and was a menace to the public. She somehow convinced
local authorities to hold a sanity
hearing. Lamphere was pronounced sane and released. Gunness was
back a few days later to complain to the sheriff that Lamphere had
visited her farm and argued with her. She contended that he posed a
threat to her family and had Lamphere arrested for
trespassing.
Lamphere returned again and again to see her, but she drove him
away. Lamphere made thinly disguised threats; on one occasion, he
confided to farmer William Slater, "Helgelien won't bother me no
more. We fixed him for keeps." Helgelien had long since disappeared
from the precincts of La Porte, or so it was believed. However, his
brother, Asle Helgelien, was disturbed when Andrew failed to return
home and he wrote to Belle in Indiana, asking her about his
sibling's whereabouts. Gunness wrote back, telling Asle Helgelien
that his brother was not at her farm and probably went to Norway to
visit relatives. Asle Helgelien wrote back saying that he did not
believe his brother would do that; moreover, he believed that his
brother was still in the La Porte area, the last place he was seen
or heard from. Gunness brazened it out; she told him that if he
wanted to come and look for his brother, she would help conduct a
search, but she cautioned him that searching for
missing persons was an expensive proposition.
If she was to be involved in such a manhunt, she stated, Asle
Helgelien should be prepared to pay her for her efforts. Asle
Helgelien did come to La Porte, but not until May.
Lamphere represented an unresolved danger to her; now Asle
Helgelien was making inquiries that could very well send her to the
gallows. She told a lawyer in La Porte, M.E. Leliter, that she
feared for her life and that of her children. Ray Lamphere, she
said, had threatened to kill her and burn her house down. She
wanted to make out a
will, in case
Lamphere went through with his threats. Leliter complied and drew
up Belle's will. She left her entire estate to her children and
then departed Leliter's offices. She went to one of the La Porte
banks holding the mortgage for her property and paid this off. She
did not go to the police to tell them about Lamphere's allegedly
life-threatening conduct. The reason for this, most later
concluded, was that there had been no threats; she was merely
setting the stage for her own
arson.
Lamphere as a suspect
Joe Maxon, who had been hired to replace Lamphere in February 1908,
awoke in the early hours of April 28, 1908, smelling smoke in his
room, which was on the second floor of the Gunness house. He opened
the hall door to a sheet of flames. Maxon screamed Gunness' name
and those of her children but got no response. He slammed the door
and then, in his underwear, leapt from the second-story window of
his room, barely surviving the fire that was closing in about him.
He raced to town to get help, but by the time the old-fashioned
hook and ladder arrived at the farm at early dawn the farmhouse was
a gutted heap of smoking ruins. The floors had collapsed and four
bodies were found in the cellar. The
grand
piano was on top of the bodies. One of the bodies was that of a
woman who could not immediately be identified as Gunness, since she
had no head. The head was never found. The bodies of her children
were found next to the corpse.
County
Sheriff Smutzer had somehow heard about Ray Lamphere’s alleged
threats; he took one look at the carnage and quickly sought out the
ex-handyman. Lawyer Leliter came forward to recount his tale about
Gunness' will and how she feared Lamphere would kill her and her
family and burn her house down.
Lamphere did not help his cause much. At the moment Sheriff Smutzer
confronted him and before a word was uttered by the lawman,
Lamphere blurted: "Did Widow Gunness and the kids get out all
right?" He was then told about the fire, but he denied having
anything to do with it, claiming that he was not near the farm when
the blaze occurred. A youth, John Solyem, was brought forward. He
said that he had been watching the Gunness place (he gave no
reasons for this) and that he saw Lamphere running down the road
from the Gunness house just before the structure erupted in flames.
Lamphere snorted to the boy: "You wouldn't look me in the eye and
say that!" "Yes, I will", replied Solyem. "You found me hiding
behind the bushes and you told me you'd kill me if I didn't get out
of there." Lamphere was arrested and charged with murder and arson.
Then scores of investigators, sheriff's deputies, coroner's men and
many volunteers began to search the ruins for evidence.
Belle Gunness dead?
The body of the headless woman was of deep concern to La Porte
residents. C. Christofferson, a neighbouring farmer, took one look
at the charred remains of this body and said that it was not the
remains of Belle Gunness. So did another farmer, L. Nicholson, and
so did Mrs. Austin Cutler, an old friend of Gunness. More of
Gunness' old friends, Mrs. May Olander and Mr. Sigward Olsen,
arrived from Chicago. They examined the remains of the headless
woman and said it was not Gunness.
Doctors then measured the remains, and, making allowances for the
missing neck and head, stated the corpse was that of a woman who
stood five feet three inches tall and weighed no more than 150
pounds. Friends and neighbours, as well as the La Porte clothiers
who made her dresses and other garments, swore that Gunness was
taller than 5'8" and weighed between 180 and 200 pounds. Detailed
measurements of the body were compared with those on file with
several La Porte stores where she purchased her apparel.
When the two sets of measurements were placed side by side, the
authorities determined that the headless woman could not possibly
have been Belle Gunness, even when the ravages of the fire on the
body were taken into account. (The flesh was badly burned but
intact). Moreover, Dr. J. Meyers examined the
internal organs of the dead woman. He
reported that the woman died of
strychnine poisoning.
Morbid discovery
Gunness'
dentist, Dr. Ira P. Norton, said
that if the teeth/dental work of the headless corpse had been
located he could definitely ascertain if it was her. Thus Louis
"Klondike" Schultz, a former
miner, was hired
to build a
sluice and begin sifting the
debris (as more bodies were unearthed, the sluice was used to
isolate human remains on a larger scale). On May 19, 1908, a piece
of bridgework was found consisting of two
human
teeth, porcelain teeth and gold crown work in between. Dr.
Norton identified them as work done for Gunness. A coroner's
inquest accordingly found that the adult female body discovered in
the ruins was Belle Gunness.
Asle Helgelien arrived in La Porte and told Sheriff Smutzer that he
believed his brother had met with
foul play at
Gunness' hands. Then, Joe Maxon came forward with information that
could not be ignored—he told the Sheriff that Mrs. Gunness had
ordered him to bring loads of dirt by wheelbarrow to a large area
surrounded by a high wire fence where the hogs were fed. Maxon said
that there were many deep depressions in the ground that had been
covered by dirt. These filled-in holes, Gunness had told Maxon,
contained rubbish. She wanted the ground made level, so he filled
in the depressions.
Smutzer took a dozen men back to the farm and began to dig. On May
3, 1908, the diggers unearthed the body of Jennie Olson (vanished
December 1906). Then they found the small bodies of two
unidentified children. Subsequently the body of Andrew Helgelien
was unearthed (his overcoat was found to be worn by Lamphere). As
days progressed and the gruesome work continued, one body after
another was discovered in Belle's hog pen: Ole B. Budsburg of Iola.
Wis(vanished May 1907); Thomas Lindboe of
Chicago, who had left Chicago and had gone to work as a hired man
for Gunness three years earlier; Henry Gurholdt of Scandinavia,
Wisconsin
, who had gone to wed her a year earlier, taking
$1,500 to her-a watch corresponding to one belonging to Gurholdt
was found with a body; Olaf Svenherud, from Chicago; John Moe of
Elbow Lake, Minnesota-his
watch was found to be in Lamphere's possession; Olaf Lindbloom from
Iowa
. Reports of other victims began to come in:
Herman Konitzer of Chicago who disappeared in January 1906; Charles
Edman of New Carlisle Indiana; George Berry of Tuscola, Illinois;
Christie Hilkven of Dover Wis who sold his farm and came to La
Porte in 1906;;Chares Neiburg a Scandinavian immigrant who lived in
Philadelphia told friends that he was going to vist Gunness in June
1906 and never came back; John H. McJunkin of Coraopolis/Pittsburg
Pa left his wife in December 1906 after corresponding with a
LaPorte woman; ; Olaf Jensen a Norwegian immigrant of Carroll,
Indiana wrote his relatives in 1906 he was going to marry a wealthy
widow at La Porte; Henry Bizge of La Porte who disappeared June
1906 and his hired man named Canary of Pink Lake Ill who also
vanished 1906;Tonnes Peterson Lien of Rushford Minn is alleged to
have disappeared April 2, 1907; . A gold ring marked "S.B. May 28,
1907" was found in the ruins; A hired man named George Bradley of
Tuscola Ill is alleged to gone to La Porte to meet a widow and
three children in October 1907; . T.J. Tiefland of Minneapolis is
alleged to have come to see Gunness in 1907; Frank Riedinger a
farmer of Waukesha Wis came to Indiana in 1907 to marry and never
returned; Emil Tell a Swede from Kansas City Mo is alleged from
have to come to La Porte in 1907;Lee Porter of Bartonville Oklahoma
separated from his wife and told his brother he was going to marry
a wealthy widow at La Porte;John E. Hunter left Duquesene Pa on
November 25, 1907 after telling his daughters he was going to marry
a wealthy widow in Northern Indiana. Two other
Pennsylvanians-George Williams of Wapawallopen and Ludwig Stoll of
Mount Yeager-also left their homes to marry in the West. Abraham
Phillips a railway man of Burlington WV left in the winter of 1907
to go to Northern Indiana and marry a rich widow-a railway watch
was found in the debris of the house.Aug. Gunderson of Green Lake
Wis; Ole Oleson of Battle Creek Mich; Lindner Nikkelsen of Hurron
S.D; Andrew Anderson of Lawrence Ks; Johann Sorensen of St Joseph
Mo. A possible victim was a man named Hinkley;Reported unnamed
victims were: a brother of Miss Jennie Graham of Waukesha Wis, who
had left her to marry a rich widow in La Porte but vanishedA
brother of Mrs. B.F. Curling of Chicago left in 1907 to marry a
wealthy widow; a hired man from Ohio age 50 name unknown is alleged
to have disappeared and Gunness became the "heir" to his horse and
buggy .A unnamed man from Montana told people at a resort he was
going to sell Gunness his horse and buggy-which were found with
several other horses and buggies at the farm There were many others
who could not be identified. There were the remains of more than 40
men and children buried in shallow graves throughout her property.
On May 19, 1908 remains of seven unknown victiums were buried in La
Porte's Potter's FieldAndrew Helgelien and Jennie Olson are buried
in La Porte's Patton Cemetery
The trial of Ray Lamphere
Ray Lamphere was arrested on May 22, 1908 and tried for murder and
arson. He pleaded guilty to arson, but denied having murdered
Gunness and her three children. His defense hinged on the assertion
that the body was not Gunness'. Lamphere's lawyer, Wirt Worden,
developed evidence which contradicted Dr. Norton's identification
of the teeth and bridgework. A local
jeweller testified that though the
gold in the bridgework had emerged from the fire almost
undamaged, the fierce heat of the conflagration had melted the
gold plating on several watches and
items of gold jewelry. Local doctors replicated the conditions of
the fire by attaching a similar piece of dental bridgework to a
human jawbone and placing it in a blacksmith’s forge. The real
teeth crumbled and disintegrated; the porcelain teeth came out
pocked and pitted, plus the gold parts were rather melted (both the
artificial elements were damaged to a greater degree than those in
the bridgework offered as evidence of Belle’s identity). The hired
hand Joe Moxon and another man also testified that they’d seen
‘Klondike’ Shultz take the bridgework out of his pocket and plant
it just before it was ‘discovered’. Lamphere was found guilty of
arson, but cleared of murder. On November 26, 1908, he was
sentenced to 20 years in the State Prison (in
Michigan City). He grew ill in jail and died
of
consumption on December 30,
1909.
On January 14, 1910, the Rev. E. A. Schell came forward with a
confession that Lamphere made to him while the clergyman was
comforting the dying man. In it, Lamphere revealed Gunness' crimes
and swore that she was still alive. Lamphere had stated to the
Reverend Schell and to a fellow convict, Harry Meyers, shortly
before his death, that he had not murdered anyone, but that he had
helped Gunness bury many of her victims. When a victim arrived, she
made him comfortable, charming him and cooking a large meal. She
then drugged his coffee and when the man was in a stupor, she split
his head with a meat chopper. Sometimes she would simply wait for
the suitor to go to bed and then enter the bedroom by candlelight
and
chloroform her sleeping victim. A
powerful woman, Gunness would then carry the body to the basement,
place it on a table, and dissect it. She then bundled the remains
and buried these in the hog pen and the grounds about the house.
Belle had become an expert at dissection, thanks to instruction she
had received from her second husband, the butcher Peter Gunness. To
save time, she sometimes poisoned her victims' coffee with
strychnine. She also varied her disposal methods, sometimes dumping
the corpse into the hog-scalding vat and covering the remains with
quicklime. Lamphere even stated that if
Belle was overly tired after murdering one of her victims, she
merely chopped up the remains and, in the middle of the night,
stepped into her hog pen and fed the remains to the hogs.
The handyman also cleared up the mysterious question of the
headless female corpse found in the smoking ruins of Gunness' home.
Gunness had lured this woman from Chicago on the pretence of hiring
her as a housekeeper only days before she decided to make her
permanent escape from La Porte. Gunness, according to Lamphere, had
drugged the woman, then bashed in her head and decapitated the
body, taking the head, which had weights tied to it, to a
swamp where she threw it into deep water. Then she
chloroformed her children, smothered them to death, and dragged
their small bodies, along with the headless corpse, to the
basement.
She dressed the female corpse in her old clothing, and removed her
false teeth, placing these beside the
headless corpse to assure it being identified as Belle Gunness. She
then torched the house and fled. Lamphere had helped her, he
admitted, but she had not left by the road where he waited for her
after the fire had been set. She had betrayed her one-time partner
in crime in the end by cutting across open fields and then
disappearing into the woods.
Some accounts suggest that Lamphere admitted
that he took her to Stillwell
(a town about nine miles from La Porte) and saw her
off on a train to Chicago.
Lamphere said that Gunness was a rich woman, that she had murdered
42 men by his count, perhaps more, and had taken amounts from them
ranging from $1,000 to $32,000. She had allegedly accumulated more
than $250,000 through her murder schemes over the years - a huge
fortune for those days. She had also left a small amount in one of
her
savings accounts, but local
banks later admitted that she had indeed withdrawn most of her
funds shortly before the fire. The fact that Gunness withdrew most
of her money suggested that she was planning to evade the
law.
Aftermath and Gunness's fate
Gunness was, for several decades, allegedly seen or sighted in
cities and towns throughout the USA.
Friends,
acquaintances, and amateur detectives apparently spotted her on the
streets of Chicago, San
Francisco
, New York
, and Los
Angeles
. As late as 1931, Gunness was reported alive
and living in a Mississippi
town where she owned a great deal of property and
lived the life of a doyenne. Sheriff Smutzer, for more than
20 years, received an average of two reports a month. She became
part of American criminal folklore, a female
Bluebeard.
The bodies of Gunness' three children were found in the home's
wreckage, but the adult female corpse with them was never
positively identified — her head was missing. Her true fate is
unknown: La Porte residents were divided between believing that she
was killed by Lamphere and that she had faked her own death. In
1931, a woman known as "Esther Carlson" was arrested in Los Angeles
for poisoning August Lindstrom for money. Two people who had known
Gunness claimed to recognize her from photographs, but the
identification was never proved. Carlson died while awaiting
trial.
Burial, exhumation and DNA analysis
The body
believed to be that of Belle Gunness was buried next to her first
husband at Forest Home Cemetery
in Forest Park, Illinois
.
On
November 5, 2007, the headless body was exhumed from Gunness' grave
in Forest Home Cemetery by a team of forensic anthropology graduate students from the University
of Indianapolis
. At least one modern researcher on the team
believes Gunness did not die in the fire. Many contend the remains
of the woman found at the scene was a victim beheaded by Gunness
and planted at the scene before the farmhouse was set on fire.
DNA testing will be conducted
in the next few months to determine if the headless skeleton is
indeed Belle Gunness. If the remains prove not to be Gunness,
researchers might exhume Carlson's corpse.In April 2008 forensic
scientist Andi Simmons revealed that the casket contained the body
parts of two children, but not ones who died in the farmhouse
fire.
It was initially hoped that a sealed envelope flap on a letter
found at the victim's farm would contain enough DNA to be compared
to that of the body. Unfortunately, there was not enough DNA there,
so efforts continue to find a reliable source for comparison
purposes, including the disinternment of additional bodies and
contact with known living relatives.
Legacy
Belle Gunness's notoriety was formidable enough to inspire a
folk song in 1938:
The 2004 movie, Method, was
inspired by and loosely based on the Belle Gunness murders. A 2009
movie, described as a psychological thriller, about (and also
titled) Belle Gunness is in development.
A second 2009 film based upon Belle has been announced in the
Hollywood Reporter , to be directed by Edward Bass and produced by
First Line Media. The project, titled "Belle," was written by Bass
and Eva Mayer, whose family purchased the Guinness property and
discovered her love letters.
There was a film released as part of the annual 8 Films to Die For
Horrorfest in 2009 called "Slaughter" that was based on the story
of Belle Gunness, although the names had been changed, and some of
the story, it was still said to be inspired by her story.
See also
Lonely hearts killer
References
- Google Maps
- [1]
- [2]
- [3]
- [4]
- [5]
- [6]
- [7]
- [8]
- [9]
- [10]
- [11]
- another account identities him as William Riedinger
of Delafield Wis
- [12]
- [13]
- [14]
- [15]
- [16]
- [17]
- [18]
- [19]
- [20]
- [21]
- [22]
- Find A grave
- Indianapolis Star report, Dec 30.
2007
- Autopsy 8: Dead Giveaway -
Documentary from HBO
-
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3if21dd856cfb9103e9bc50578aa646eac
External links
- Crime Library: Belle Gunness
- The Legend of Belle Gunness, with book citations
- , chapter by Janet Langlois in Women's Folklore, Women's
Culture (1989) via GoogleBooks. ISBN 0812212061 Accessed April
22, 2008.
- Legendary Murderess Mystery: Case Closed?,
January 14, 2008, Discovery News. Gunness relative allows DNA tests
to compare to remains purported to be Belle's.
- A century-old mystery: Did serial killer fake her
death?, February 12, 2008, Chicago Tribune.
- 100-year mystery: Did Indiana woman get away with
murders?, April 27, 2008, AP on ABC News.
- Children's remains exhumed in 100-year-old murder
mystery, May 14, 2008, Chicago Tribune.
- DNA may solve century-old mystery of serial
killer, October 8, 2008, Chicago Tribune.