Axe syndicate

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The axe murder gang was a group of people believed to have been responsible for a four-year spate of brutal killings which started in November 1919 and ended in October 1923. In most cases, small shop owners, often foreign-born, were the targets. The killers were apparently motivated by robbery, though in a few cases no signs of robbery were found.

Five African Americans were arrested by Birmingham Police on January 6, 1924. They were convicted after confessing to the eight murders, but three members of the gang were presumed to remain at-large. The killings did not continue.

Accounts of the number of crimes committed by the gang vary, as to the lists of people killed or wounded in their attacks. The New York Times reported there had been 24 killed in 44 attacks, while the Birmingham papers counted only 15 dead and 13 wounded.

The men convicted included Peyton Johnson, O'Delle and Pearl Jackson, John Reed and Fred Glover. Their initial confessions were obtained after they were given doses of scopolomine, a purported "truth serum", but were confirmed after the effects of the drug wore off. Investigators described a "syndicate" of murderers who drew straws for the privilege of attacking selected targets. A man named Garfield was alleged to have founded the syndicate, but died of natural causes during 1922.

Incidents

1919

1921

1922

1923

  • January 10: Joseph Klein was robbed and killed.
  • January 24: Luigi and Josephine Vitellaro were robbed and killed.
  • May 28: Charles Graffeo was robbed and killed in his store. It appeared as if the attacker had come in and placed a nickel on the counter to purchase a bottle of oil. Graffeo was found behind the counter with his skull crushed by the blow of an axe. His pockets and the store's register had been rifled.
  • October 22: Elizabeth Romeo and her daughter, Juliet Vigilante, were robbed and killed at Bernard Vigilante's shop. The attacker used a meat cleaver and stole $60 from the cash register.
  • November 4: W. T. Conway and Jane Jackson, both African American, were attacked in a downtown alley with an axe or hatchet.
  • December 9: Edwin Sparks and his wife were attacked with a hatchet. Fred Glover, an African American who had earlier served a sentence for burglary and grand larceny, was identified by Mrs Sparks as the attacker. A search of his home produced a short-handled blood-stained hatchet and a pistol.

References

  • "'Truth Serum' Involves Five in Axe Murders, Clearing Up 44 Crimes in Birmingham, Ala." (January 1924) The New York Times
  • "Ax Murders - Alabama" (December 11, 2006) at Serial Killer Central