Archive for July 13th, 2006

Resolved Answers?!!

Posted in Are They Crazy?, Borden Buzz, Case Related, On the Web on July 13th, 2006 by Stefani Koorey

Ok, these are pret-ty darn bad. Read at your own risk. Not to be taken before operating heavy machinery. May cause irritability. Could dangerously affect your ability to drive or work. Not to be taken with alcohol. Can cause stomach upset and ulcers.

Don’t say I didn’t warn you!

From ANSWERS.YAHOO.COM, voted the “Best Answers”:

Do you think Lizzy Borden killed her father and step-mother?

Best Answer - Chosen by Asker

I have studied this case since 1991, trying to figure it out, including reading old newspaper clippings about the murder and trial. I have read the trial and pre-trial transcripts, as well as numerous books on the subject, including the book that Lizzie allegedly bought all the copies of and had burned by Edwin Porter in 1893. I admit I haven’t done much research in recent years, but one book I read, though I can’t remember the title, made a lot of sense. It talked about Lizzie’s illegitimate half-brother, Charles, who apparently helped Lizzie kill her father and step-mother for revenge and money purposes. I don’t know if Charles was involved or not, but I am certain that Lizzie was behind the killings, either she actually killed them herself, or she manipulated or bribed someone else to do it. In either case she is guilty. She had the most to gain from the murders, and in fact went out and almost immediately bought herself a mansion with her inheritance, where she hosted elaborate parties. All accounts state that she was not allowed to socialize in the Borden home, and that she felt stifled, on top of the fact that she was afraid her step-mother’s family was being written into the will which she could not tolerate. I also think her sister Emma knew about Lizzie’s plan and wanted nothing to do with it which is why she was conveniently out of town when the murders took place. And then of course there is the mysterious Uncle John Morse who was staying at the house during the time of the murders, but who was out running errands at the time of the murder. Did he have something to do with the murders. Again, I think he knew about them, and that Lizzie discretely gave him his cut. As far as time frame is concerned,if Lizzie had even just one accomplice, they could easily have taken evidence away from the crime scene with them. It’s possible Lizzie was out in the barn as she says when the murders took place, but I believe she had a front row seat. Did she lift the hatchet herself, most likely, but on the other hand her accomplice could have done it so that she could keep herself clean for appearance sake as soon as the police arrived and play the innocent daughter. Another thing to consider, the maid was also home apparently taking a nap in the 3rd story of the house. The point is that yes, Lizzie was guilty. She was the mastermind behind the elder Borden deaths. She had motive, opportunity, and means.
Source(s):
New York Times, various books which I will try to find the title to if required, trial transcripts, my own sense of logic and a true crime aficionado.

Does anybody know what became of the Lizzie Borden house?

It is a bed and breakfast and some of the same furniture is still there like the couch her father was killed on. I saw it on the discovery channel or something. It is suppose to be haunted too.

Who was Lizzie Borden?

to those who havent researched deeply into the trial, murders etc. Lizzie and Emma had an illigitamate brother whom they knew of and had met. He had tried to blackmail thier father (Mr.Borden) into giving him money after Mr Borden refused o acknowledge him as his son- and the son was actually seen leaving thier street and town that day by many witnesses who tesitied at trial. It was unclear, although it was insinuated, that he and lizzie had talked together privately in the barn. It may have been a conspiracy- the brother would kill the mother off, so that the girls would inherit what thier father had given her,( and share a portion with him) but it may be that the brother got angry at the father that in a murderous rage he killed his father as well. ( it was said he was deranged and carried an axe) the book on Lizzie borden clears up alot of questions, although one has to wade through many chapters of VERY BORING tril transcripts to get to all the facts
Source(s):
read the book, and researched the heck out of the subject for years.

Do you think that Lizzie Borden should have been convicted and not acquitted?

Lizzie was the prime suspect, she was acquitted following a sensational trial that included some of the most horrible abuses of evidence law in history.

Among the evidence withheld from the jury—Lizzie had purchased poison from the local pharmacist the day before the murders; Lizzie and her mother had fought violently on many occasions; Lizzie’s having disposed of bloody towels (covered with paint) in the days following the murder, and the prosecution theory that Lizzie’s clothes had no blood on them because she killed her parents in the n

Do u think that Lizzie Borden killed her parents all by herself? I have a book called Goodbye Lizzie Borden and it’s by a man named Robert Sullivan it came out in 1973..the book is awsome and well written it’s the complete story of Lizzie..plus it has the entire trial in the book word to word..In my mind i feel that Lizzy only meant to kill the stepmother but also had to kill the dad cause ooops he came home and took a nap and he wasn’t soppose to..i also feel that Lizzy and the maid did this together..cause common sense will tell u that there is no way to kill 2 people like that and not hear a word or see a thing..The maid said she went upstairs in the attic room to lay down her room was above the room where the mom was killed and u mean to tell me she didn’t hear this woman screaming for her life?(autopsy shows some defence wounds on her hands)so she was yelling something..What do u think?

think she acted alone. Her sister was a very frightened and nervous person. I think she did it in the nude so she didn’t soil her clothing. An ax if sharp enough wouldn’t make a loud noise when slicing through human flesh and bone. When enraged a human can have super strength. I don’t think that her step mother screamed as I believe Lizzie came up behind her. She could have gone into shock after the first blow and not uttered a word. I also believe her father was a evil man who may have molested Lizzie. He was a control freak and at the time wives and children were thought of as chattels. I think she planned to kill them both. The will would have been settled between Lizzie and her sister.

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Walt Satterthwait Speaks

Posted in Book and Media Reviews, Case Related, On the Web on July 13th, 2006 by Stefani Koorey

On Walter Satterthwait’s site (author of the historical novel Miss Lizzie), he offers a reprint of an interview he gave to “Mystery News.”

In it he briefly discusses his interest in the Borden case and how he solved it to his own satisfaction. Click on his home page and write him an email if you wish. He seems really open to people communicating with him.

walter

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Cheaters never prosper

Posted in Are They Crazy?, Case Related, On the Web on July 13th, 2006 by Stefani Koorey

wackyYou know those sites that offer, usually for a fee, essays about whatever subject you want so students don’t have to do the work themselves? You know, plagiarism? Well, there are hundreds of them out there and I recently found one that has a free, yes free, Lizzie Borden essay that is high-larious in its volume of mistakes, both grammatical and factual.

Note to students thinking of using this one: This poorly written and researched essay will not earn you anything higher than an F. What did you expect for free?

If you want to make comments to this essay, please feel free to go to the site it is on and add them. Heck, they are asking for it!

Who exactly is “Flenn”?

Lizzie Borden

On a hot morning on august 4, 1892, Mr. Andrew Borden and his wife, Abby Borden, were brutally murdered. A daughter of the victims, Lizzie Borden was arrested, tried and acquitted of the crime. “ She was a woman of spotless character and reputation, and more than that she was educated, refined and prominently connected with the work of the Christian church in the Fall River”(Gates 2).The town and the country were divided in their opinions of who could commit such horrifying murders. Many theories have been made to explain that day; the finger has been pointed in every direction- even a Chinese Sunday school student of Lizzies. To this day people are unsure as to weather or not Lizzie brutally murdered her parents.

Background/Synopsis:
The day started off with the usual routine. Mr. And Mrs. Borden made their way downstairs to eat breakfast a little after seven. The next to wake up was Lizzie’s uncle, who had shown up unannounced and with out luggage the evening before so he could visit a friend in the area the next day. The day of the murder he left the house at nine thirty. Prior to that time Lizzie work up, waited for her parents to finish eating and went downstairs herself to eat breakfast. (It had become a custom for her and her sister to avoid eating meals with their father and stepmother.) Not long after this Mrs. Borden asked the maid to wash the windows. She did as she was told and spent the rest of the day going throughout the house. Mr. Borden went out to run some errands then the came home, lay down on the couch and proceeded to take a nap. This was the last time that he was seen alive. (Martins, Michael, and Binette 72)

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History Mystery

Posted in Off Topic, On the Web on July 13th, 2006 by Stefani Koorey

I found a cool blog by author Daniel Elton Harmon of Spartanburg, SC. It is called Mysterious Expeditions, and includes a weekly history mystery quiz. The subtitles of his blog is “For the aficionado of historical mystery literature & the student of real-life mysteries & intrigues.”

It doesn’t look like he gives any answers to the questions, so it might be a place to visit if you have time to find the answer on your own. It hasn’t been updated in the past few months, but I hope he comes back and gives us more. If you check into the older archives, you get some nice surprises.

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Lizzie Says She is Innocent

Posted in Borden Buzz, Case Related on July 13th, 2006 by Stefani Koorey

From the Chicago Daily Tribune, April 15, 1893.

innocent

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