The Boston Strangler

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Authors: Gerold; Frank

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The Boston Strangler

Gerold Frank

A Note to the Reader

This book, which has taken on a shape and a direction I could not anticipate when I began, has been an extraordinary experience for me. I have lived it as well as written it
.

I first became interested in what was taking place in Boston in the late summer of 1963. At that time there had been a series of murders of single women, most of whom were middle-aged, under circumstances as baffling as any in fiction. Each woman had been strangled in her apartment. There were no signs of forcible entry. Around the necks of the victims were knotted nylon stockings or other articles of their apparel. Each woman had been sexually molested or assaulted. No clues were found; nothing had been stolen; there was no discernible motive. The victims were, so far as could be determined, modest, inconspicuous, almost anonymous women, leading blameless lives. Beyond the mystery of their deaths, there was something terribly sad and pathetic about these victims who apparently either knew or were unafraid of their murderer, and let him into their apartments and did not even put up a struggle before they were finished off. It was obvious that the murderer—or murderers—was insane. As a result, Boston was a city near panic
.

As a young reporter I had had my fill of crime. I had covered electrocutions in Sing Sing prison, and had never gotten over the sight of murderers in the electric chair, nor the sense that we, the spectators, were outraging decency by witnessing the last private moments of these men. Later, as a foreign correspondent, I had reported riots, revolutions, and political assassinations. Sudden death was not unknown to me and I was not particularly eager to explore the subject again. My interest, therefore, was not so much in writing a book about the Boston stranglings as it was to write about what happens to a great city when it is besieged by terror—terror stemming from a horrifying explosion of the violence that seems more and more a part of contemporary life. How do people behave in a climate of fear? What defenses do they put up? To what extremes are they driven? How does rationality cope with irrationality, common sense with hysteria?

The city, then, was to be my subject—and the victims. For if these murders were, as it appeared, utterly senseless, why should
these
women have been chosen to die? What brought them to this place, at this moment in time, so that their lives met that of their assailant, moving about the city tortured by some private anguish of his own—Death incarnate?

But it turned out that this was only the prologue. I could not know then that for the next three years I would be possessed—and obsessed—by this story as it grew and unfolded under my hand, as murder succeeded murder and new victims were strangled even while I was on the scene. I found myself, without having planned it, becoming the historian of a singular chapter in American social history: one of the world's greatest multiple murders, one of the most exhaustive manhunts of modern times, and finally, what is surely the most extraordinary and sustained self-revelation yet made by a criminal
.

As the only writer completely involved with the case, I was given the fullest cooperation—not only in Boston but in the neighboring towns where the stranglings and other crimes also occurred. The result is that everything that is in this book is based on fact. In some instances the identities of certain persons have been disguised but these persons were and are real. What appears in the following pages comes not only from my research and from hundreds of hours of personal interviews with the principal actors in the drama, and with scores of other participants, but also from the actual documentation—the police and court records, the medical and psychiatric reports, the transcripts of interrogations (some under hypnosis and hypnotic drugs), and the letters, diaries, and other source papers
.

In short, the words and thoughts of the hunters and the hunted are not my invention but are, within the limits of human error, true. Unavoidably, errors will have crept in; mistakes in emphasis and interpretation will have been made; but in all instances I have done my best to mirror faithfully what went on in Boston in the time of the Boston Strangler
.

GEROLD FRANK

New York, August, 1966

The Dead

JUNE
14, 1962

Anna Slesers, fifty-Five 77 Gainsborough Street, Boston

JUNE
30, 1962

Nina Nichols, sixty-eight 1940 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston

JUNE
30, 1962

Helen Blake, sixty-five 73 Newhall Street, Lynn

AUGUST
19, 1962

Ida Irga, seventy-five 7 Grove Street, Boston

AUGUST
20, 1962

Jane Sullivan, sixty-seven 435 Columbia Road, Boston

DECEMBER
5, 1962

Sophie Clark, twenty 315 Huntington Avenue, Boston

DECEMBER
3 1, 1962

Patricia Bissette, twenty-three 515 Park Drive, Boston

MAY
6, 1963

Beverly Samans, twenty-three 4 University Road, Cambridge

SEPTEMBER
8, 1963

Evelyn Gorbin, fifty-eight 224 Lafayette Street, Salem

NOVEMBER
23, 1963

Joann Graff, twenty-three 54 Essex Street, Lawrence

JANUARY
4, 1964

Mary Sullivan, nineteen 44A Charles Street, Boston

AND

JUNE
28, 1962

Mary Mullen, eighty-five 1435 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston

MARCH
9, 1963

Mary Brown, sixty-nine 319 Park Avenue, Lawrence

Dates are the original police estimates.

Part One

1

This is a story about Boston. It is a true story, about the people in it, what happened to them, and the strange and implausible events that took place there in a time which is today and—man being the creature he is—may again be tomorrow.

It begins on Thursday, June 14, 1962.

That day, under a sky that threatened rain but never carried out its threat, Bostonians went about their business—concerned with their private or public affairs, legal or illicit, generous or self-serving, history-making or utterly unimportant. Yet if we hold a microscope to it it becomes something of a special day.

In Cambridge, across the Charles River, Harvard University was holding its 311th Commencement, and in the Yard thousands of students, alumni, and guests were gathering about the buffet tables set up under canvas, heavy with the traditional chicken salad and beer. At 4:15
P.M.
, the sun came out from behind the clouds: since Boston had known only rain these last few days—it had forced cancellation of the Harvard-Yale baseball game the day before—that was a signal for everyone to break out in a mighty song, “Fair Harvard.” The ancient bells of Memorial Church chimed in, echoing across the campus.

At that time, through the Back Bay and downtown districts of the city itself, some 100,000 Bostonians lined the streets cheering Commander Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the nation's first astronaut. The man who had ridden the nose of a rocket more than a hundred miles above the earth a year before had come to his hometown, nearby Derry, New Hampshire, to receive a New England Aero Club award and be guest of honor on that day—Flag Day—at ceremonies on Boston Common. He stood in the back of a convertible, a shining, handsome man, and as he rode by the applause rippled up the street.

That was a cheerful scene. A stone's throw away in State Street—Boston's Wall Street—the scene was anything but cheerful. The stock market had fallen violently for the fourth consecutive day. This time the Dow-Jones averages, made up of thirty blue-chip stocks, had plunged below the floor set two weeks earlier on May 28—Black Monday—which had seen the sharpest one-day drop since the crash of 1929. Something close to panic was in the air. Although the market closed at 3:30
P.M.
as usual, the tape was late and it wasn't until some time later that statisticians could announce that American industry was then worth 5.6 billion dollars less than when the market had opened at 10
A.M.
that morning.

By six o'clock, however, all this was history. Then the microscope held to the city would have revealed a curious process under way. Boston is a town whose population swells and decreases by half every twenty-four hours. At 8
A.M.
, as workers pour into the city from the surrounding suburbs, it becomes a metropolis of 1,500,000; but at dusk as they flow back to their homes, it shrinks to a town half as populated, tenanted only by those who live there.

Among these was Mrs. Anna E. Slesers, fifty-five, a divorcée for more than twenty years, who had come to this country with her son and daughter in 1950 as a displaced person from Latvia. As dusk fell over the city, Mrs. Slesers was preparing her bath in her small, third-floor apartment at 77 Gainsborough Street, in the Back Bay area of Boston. Gainsborough Street is an old-fashioned, tree-lined, lamplit street of identical bay-windowed, four-story red brick homes, each with its cement stoop and low picket fence guarding a miniature lawn. Once these buildings, each a town house, had a certain elegance; now, remodeled into small apartments, they housed mainly students, transients, and elderly couples living on modest pensions.

For Mrs. Slesers, a small woman with a petite face and large dark eyes who looked much younger than her age, this Thursday had been leisurely. Little of the excitement elsewhere in the city had touched her. Trade had been slack at Decorator Fabrics, Incorporated, where she worked as a sixty-dollar-a-week seamstress. She had been sent home at 1
P.M.
the day before and told not to report again until Monday. A long weekend stretched before her. On Thursday she had shopped until nearly five o'clock, and then returned to cook a frugal dinner for herself and await her son Juris, twenty-five. He was to come by at seven o'clock to drive her to memorial services at the Latvian Lutheran Church in nearby Roxbury. For Latvians, June fourteenth is a national day of mourning for thousands of their countrymen, deported to Siberia when the Russians overran Latvia in World War II.

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