Read The Boston Stranglers Online

Authors: Susan Kelly

The Boston Stranglers (23 page)

B
OTTOMLY
: And that came from where? Her ear, you say?
A
LBERT
: Ear.
B
OTTOMLY
: Which ear, do you remember?
A
LBERT
: I'll tell you in a second.
B
OTTOMLY
: O.K.
A
LBERT
: I'm tryin' to see, the uh—
B
OTTOMLY
: Take your time. Don't press yourself.
A
LBERT
: Blood came out of her ear I know.
B
OTTOMLY
: O.K. You're standing behind her and you fall over backwards?
A
LBERT
: Right.
B
OTTOMLY
: Did this blood fall on you?
ALBERT: No, it—as a matter of fact, it stopped.
B
OTTOMLY
: Did you see it come out at the time it came out?
A
LBERT
: The blood came out the right ear.
B
OTTOMLY
: Her right ear?
A
LBERT
: Right ear.
B
OTTOMLY
: And you saw it when it started coming out?
A
LBERT
: Yes.
B
OTTOMLY
: What'd you do, did you try to scramble out of the way of it?
A
LBERT
: It didn't come out like you're trying to say.
B
OTTOMLY
: Just sort of oozed out?
ALBERT: It came out a little bit, enough for me to see it.
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh—like Blake's nose?
A
LBERT
: Yuh, that was the same way as hers. Hers came out on the right side I would think and, uh, I saw it more clearly when I put the pillowcase around her neck.
B
OTTOMLY
: Saw the blood more clearly.
A
LBERT
: Yuh, that's—
B
OTTOMLY
: That's when you got out from under her, though?
A
LBERT
: I was—I was already out from under her.
B
OTTOMLY
: So you got out from under her and then what did you—
A
LBERT
: Came outa her right ear.
B
OTTOMLY
: All right. You got out from under her and what did you do then?
A
LBERT
: Took the—uh—took the pillow from the bed—
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh?
A
LBERT
: From the bed, she had black-white housecoat, housedress on, took the pillow. I think she—I'm almost positive she had underwear on, took it off and, uh, I ripped—there's something about it—B
OTTOMLY
: You ripped something?
A
LBERT
: I'm almost positive I ripped it open—
B
OTTOMLY
: Ripped open the dress?
A
LBERT
: The clothes, yuh, she was nude, I remember this here.
B
OTTOMLY
: You tore her dress?
A
LBERT
: Tore it open.
B
OTTOMLY
: And she was nude underneath?
A
LBERT
: No, I think she had pants on; I may have ripped them off her.
B
OTTOMLY
: Uh-huh? But no bra?
A
LBERT
: Uhhh—yes, she had a bra.
B
OTTOMLY
: Uh-huh.
A
LBERT
: But—uh—I did it—I don't know if I left that pillow under her, her bottom.
B
OTTOMLY
: Uh-huh?
A
LBERT
: With her legs on these two chairs—
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh?
A
LBERT
: Opened.
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh? Do you remember, do you remember, were you thinking of anything when you did this?
A
LBERT
: No.
B
OTTOMLY
: Just did it. What kind of a sex act did you perform with her, any?
A
LBERT
: No, nothing on her.
B
OTTOMLY
: Nothing at all.
A
LBERT
: I—I had intercourse with her but when you say, you said to me “sex act” right, I know what you're trying to have me—
B
OTTOMLY
: No, no. No, I'm not—any kind—normal or abnormal—?
A
LBERT
: Yuh, I had a—I think I had intercourse with her.
B
OTTOMLY
: Well what do you mean by intercourse? We've talked about this before. Does that mean you ejaculated in some manner?
A
LBERT
: Inside her—
B
OTTOMLY
: Was it inside her outside or what?
A
LBERT
: This is the most baffling thing. This is what bothers me.
B
OTTOMLY
: Do you specifically remember having intercourse with her or do you just want to remember it now?
A
LBERT
: I know how, how I set her up. I remember taking her clothes apart, ripping them right?
B
OTTOMLY
: Yes.
A
LBERT
: And, uh—
B
OTTOMLY
: Oh you set her up after you strangled her with the pillowcase?
A
LBERT
: Yes, after I strangled her with the pillowcase.
B
OTTOMLY
: Did you strangle her with your hands or with the pillowcase?
A
LBERT
: First, I put my arm around backwards, right?
B
OTTOMLY
: Right.
A
LBERT
: And then I put the pillowcase around her neck.
B
OTTOMLY
: Uh, did you, real tight?
A
LBERT
: I think so.
B
OTTOMLY
: Do you remember tying any knots in it?
A
LBERT
: Yes, I did, I did.
B
OTTOMLY
: How many?
A
LBERT
: Uhhh—
B
OTTOMLY
: Can you see that?
A
LBERT
: I can't see it, but uh—I'm almost positive, well, ya, I think I only made it one tight and then one more.
B
OTTOMLY
: Right.
A
LBERT
: Makes it two.
B
OTTOMLY
: Right. Were you standing over her while you did this?
A
LBERT
: Uhhh—this was tied uh—
B
OTTOMLY
: Where was the knot, in front or back?
A
LBERT
: No, it was tied in front. The knot should have been anywhere on the side or the front of her. B
OTTOMLY
: So you're standing right over her? A
LBERT
: Uh—
B
OTTOMLY
: Or beside her?
A
LBERT
: Yes, over her.
B
OTTOMLY
: Well, then you fixed her legs? You didn't have time to, you didn't do any sex act with her, did you? Can you specifically remember having intercourse with her? You're shaking your head which means no?
A
LBERT
: I—I'm trying to be sure about everything I say.
B
OTTOMLY
: Right.
A
LBERT
: Uhhh—
B
OTTOMLY
: Well you can remember so much here—
A
LBERT
: I—I would say yes, I have inserted my penis inside her and ejaculated I would say.
B
OTTOMLY
: But you don't sound very positive to me.
A
LBERT
: It's—to me, it's sickening even to talk about this.
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh.
A
LBERT
: It's so damn real—I can see that blood coming outa her ear.
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh, you can see that very clearly but you're not as positive when you're talking about the sex act. Are you saying you had intercourse with her because you think you did or because you remember you did?
A
LBERT
: I know I did.
B
OTTOMLY
: You positively remember it now? A
LBERT
: Yes.
BOTTOMLY: Are you positive you ejaculated inside her?
A
LBERT
: Coulda pulled out.
B
OTTOMLY
: You could have pulled out? Do you remember what time of the day this was now?
A
LBERT
: (Long pause) This happened to be around uh—around two something.
B
OTTOMLY
: Well when you pulled out, you ejaculated, you fixed her legs up, you propped her legs up. Did you then go through the apartment again to make it look as if it was messed up or did you just get out?
A
LBERT
: I just went out.
B
OTTOMLY
: You swung out. O.K. Downstairs? Did you meet anybody?
A
LBERT
: No sir.
B
OTTOMLY
: In a hurry? Took your time?
A
LBERT
: Walked out.
Perhaps nowhere in the entire confession is Albert's need to please Bottomly by giving him the “right” answers to his questions more urgently expressed than in this account of Ida Irga's murder. And Bottomly's maneuverings to elicit those appropriate responses from Albert are equally blatant, particularly in the passage dealing with the purported rape of the victim.
In fact, Ida had not been raped—at least, there were no spermatozoa found in either her vagina or rectum, which is why Bottomly had to attack Albert's initial confident assertion that he'd had full intercourse with the victim. No one had, although the slight injury to her external genitalia discovered during the autopsy indicated that she might have been assaulted with an object. Albert was insistent that he had committed no such brutal perversion.
Albert was entirely correct in claiming that Ida had been strangled by a pillowcase tied tightly around her neck; that the pillow itself had been placed beneath her body; that she had salt and pepper hair (it was actually brown and gray rather than black and white as he said); that she was found supine with her feet propped up on two chairs; and that her bedroom furniture was made of dark wood.
All those details had been printed—more than once—in the
Record
.
So had the fact that there was blood on Ida's head.
So had the fact that she had been assaulted in the bedroom.
Albert said twice that Ida had been wearing a black and white housecoat with “squares” on it.
The “Strangle Worksheet” claimed she wore a “polka dot duster.”
The police report, written by the first officer to arrive at the crime scene, stated that Ida's body was clad in a torn light brown nightgown.
Albert said he had placed the chairs on which he propped the victim's feet on their backs.
The crime scene photo shows them standing upright.
But Albert made his worst mistake when—after a long hesitation—he told Bottomly that he'd assaulted the victim around 2:00
P.M.
If Albert was in Ida Irga's apartment at that time, he was there by himself. She was in the Public Garden with a friend—until shortly before six o'clock.
23
The Confessions of Albert DeSalvo, III
It was August 19, 1965, and George McGrath, Albert's legal guardian, had joined Bottomly in the small room at Bridgewater.
“Okay,” Bottomly said. “Now—so when you grabbed her, you probably fell back into the kitchen, into the kitchen area, I mean—”
“In the kitchen area,” Albert repeated.
“Boy, there must have been a thud when the two of you hit the ground,” Bottomly commented.
“Oh, yeah,” Albert agreed.
“And she gave you a good struggle, huh?”
“No struggle,” Albert said. “She just didn't move, but I mean she couldn't do nothin' about it.”
“But it took a long time to knock her out, though?”
“No, I wouldn't say too long. It was just another—” Albert paused.
They were talking about the murder of sixty-seven-year-old Jane Sullivan, who, like fifty-six-year-old Anna Sleser, sixty-five-year-old Helen Blake, sixty-eight-year-old Nina Nichols, and seventy-five-year-old Ida Irga, had died in the summer of 1962.
Jane's body was not found until nine days after her death, and its state of decomposition was well along, making the medical examiner's task a more difficult one. He was, however, able to establish that she had been strangled with a ligature of two stockings. There was no evidence of trauma to her vagina or anus.
When her body was found, it was facedown in a kneeling position in the bathtub. A housecoat covered the upper torso; the underpants were pulled down on the legs. Jane's bra was on the bathroom floor.
There were bloodstains on the kitchen floor, in the hall, and in the bathroom. The apartment did not appear to have been ransacked.
The “Strangle Worksheet” reported accurately the date and manner of Jane's death as well as the position in which the killer had left the corpse. It also reported that the victim was wearing a duster, a slip, and a girdle, and that her underpants were around her ankles.
Albert's confession to this murder was not specific in its details, and Bottomly had to work particularly hard to wrest answers from him that weren't either evasive or contradictory.
B
OTTOMLY
: Did you have regular, normal sex relations with her? Did you ejaculate before—?
A
LBERT
: Uhhh—no—I don't know about her. This is somethin' different now, you see? This is gonna be a weird one. This is a weird one.
B
OTTOMLY
: This one is a weird one?
A
LBERT
: Yes, uh, because the urine made me disgusted—
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh?
A
LBERT
: Right, uh.
B
OTTOMLY
: Oh, yuh, when she—Did she get on you? Did she urinate on you?
A
LBERT
: No.
B
OTTOMLY
: Or had you gotten out from under her?
A
LBERT
: Maybe it's possible she did or did not, I don't know.
B
OTTOMLY
: Well anyhow she urinated?
A
LBERT
: Yuh—and uh—I do not believe—its possible I did a movement on her, you know what I mean, it's possible because afterward I put her in the tub, you see, but I'm trying to see if I can remember if I had intercourse with her—I do remember biting her bust, possibly other parts of her body, too, her stomach maybe, too.
(The medical examiner's report shows no indication that during the autopsy any teeth marks were found on the body.)
A
LBERT
: Uh, what I'm trying to do is see if I had intercourse with her. It is possible.
B
OTTOMLY
: It isn't fresh in your mind right now?
A
LBERT
: No, maybe at this moment it isn't. But I—I just like I'm trying to remember as to what I even put on her, you know what I mean?
B
OTTOMLY
: Right.
A
LBERT
: I do know that I—I know I didn't strip her naked.
B
OTTOMLY
: What did you do—just push her dress up out of the way or something?
A
LBERT
: Yuh—
B
OTTOMLY
: And then you pulled off her bra?
A
LBERT
: Yuh—This here thing she had on her, I think it was still on her becuz I ripped open her bra and ripped it off.
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh?
A
LBERT
: Or pulled it up or somethin'—either I either pulled it up—
B
OTTOMLY
: Or pulled it off?
A
LBERT
: Or off, and I don't know if she had the heavy-type girdle on or what, heavy-type bra thing, I'm not sure but she had that heavy-type—
B
OTTOMLY
: She must have—well she was an older woman?
A
LBERT
: Oh, yeah, she was around 55, 60. I think she had on one of those wider ones, ever see the wide ones? Well the wider type.
B
OTTOMLY
: But anyhow you pulled it off?
A
LBERT
: It went off, right?
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh.
(The tape transcript is riddled with incidents like these in which Albert asks Bottomly to confirm a detail of a crime scene, and Bottomly does.)
A
LBERT
: And, uh, I remember putting the nylon stockings—I don't know if on her I used those white nylons. I'm not positive on her.
B
OTTOMLY
: (Word distorted)
A
LBERT
: White nylons, possibly.
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh?
A
LBERT
: On her.
B
OTTOMLY
: How many did you use, do you recall?
A
LBERT
: Two, I think.
B
OTTOMLY
: Uh-huh.
A
LBERT
: And I think maybe, you know what I—
B
OTTOMLY
: The sex part of this one isn't too clear in your mind, huh, I mean it doesn't seem to be as big a part as some of the others?
A
LBERT
: No, that's why I say this here part of the sex to my opinion was a way of revenge.
B
OTTOMLY
: It's an incidental thing, really? A
LBERT
: Yuh.
B
OTTOMLY
: So why did you pick her up? Have you ever thought about that? Why did you put her in the tub?
A
LBERT
: You know something, the tub was filled, so full.
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh? Do you think she was getting ready to take a bath?
ALBERT: Same way with Nich—uh, Anna, Anna Slesers.
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh?
ALBERT: She was getting ready to take a bath, right? All she had on was the blue robe, stripped naked underneath, right.
B
OTTOMLY
: Right.
A
LBERT
: There was nothing about her that would interest any man. You follow me? And that's why I'm trying to figure this one out here, too. B
OTTOMLY
: That's why you think sex didn't have too much to do with it?
A
LBERT
: Yes, I'm very sincere about this here. I don't feel sex had somethin' to do with this here. As the green man, yes I—I feel sex had something but this is a different thing but still I'm trying to keep on one subject now.
B
OTTOMLY
: Right.
A
LBERT
: I can't understand why I didn't put Anna Slesers [
sic
] in the tub when she was taking a bath and why did I put Mrs. Sullivan in the tub and she was taking a bath. Just like why did I leave a broom and a bottle?
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh?
A
LBERT
: Everything was done differently.
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh.
A
LBERT
: You see, but it was done and, uh, the tub—much different—
B
OTTOMLY
: Well, was this, is this in the morning then? Or is it the end of the day?
A
LBERT
: No, this to me would be around the middle of the day, around two o'clock—
B
OTTOMLY
: About two o'clock.
A
LBERT
: Uh, this time element there I don't know.
B
OTTOMLY
: Uh-huh. Well is it after lunch? Can you place your lunch that day?
A
LBERT
: No. I don't know the exact time of day.
B
OTTOMLY
: What day was it, do you remember? ALBERT: No I don't. You see—
B
OTTOMLY
: Where were you working then, do you remember?
A
LBERT
: On Jane Sullivan, it was in, uh, let me see—Jane Sullivan. If I knew what year it was, I can tell you where it was and then maybe I can place where I was working, but uh—
B
OTTOMLY
: I'll give you the year—it was 1962.
Albert had a great deal of difficulty recalling the murder of Evelyn Corbin, whom he kept calling “Ellen Corbett” or “Evelyn Corbett” despite Bottomly's constant corrections. He also did not know when the crime had been committed.
“Is there any chance of me knowing what year it was?” he asked Bottomly. “You tell me,” Bottomly replied, and Albert chuckled.
B
OTTOMLY
: You hate to talk about Corbin?
A
LBERT
: Corbett, Corbett the name is.
B
OTTOMLY
: Corbett? C-O-R-B-I-N.
A
LBERT
: Uh, Corbin, uh—
B
OTTOMLY
: You don't like to talk about her?
A
LBERT
: Well, uh, there was no intercourse with her.
B
OTTOMLY
: Yuh? What did you do with her?
A
LBERT
: Well she did it for me.
B
OTTOMIY
: Yuh? What'd she do? (Pause) What'd she do? Come on.
A
LBERT
: They—use a professional name for it. Also—
B
OTTOMLY
: What's the professional name for it?
A
LBERT
: Also the pillow was involved on her.
B
OTTOMLY
: Oh.
Reluctantly, almost coyly, Albert admitted that he'd gotten Evelyn to perform oral sex on him. She couldn't have regular intercourse, he said, because of a medical problem.
Bottomly then tried to pin him down on when the murder had occurred. Albert said he thought it was either in the wintertime or the summertime.
Evelyn had been slain on September 8, 1963.
Albert was correct when he told Bottomly that the victim had died on a Sunday, that she had been getting ready to go to church, that she was going to have Sunday dinner with a man friend, and that another woman in the building had a key to her apartment.
All these facts had been widely publicized.
Albert thought the weather had been “nice” that day; in fact, it had been foggy in Salem the morning Evelyn died.
Albert must have been sweating bullets throughout this interrogation. At one point he said to Bottomly, “I can't get no breaks.” Said Bottomly, “You're getting plenty of breaks.”
When Bottomly asked Albert how old he thought Evelyn had been, Albert replied, “She looked, uh, to be about fifty-two or fifty-three and she had, uh, brownish hair like. She was, uh—”
Press accounts of the murder had in fact variously given Evelyn's age as fifty, fifty-one, and fifty-three. But everyone who knew her agreed that her appearance was startlingly youthful; she was often mistaken for a woman in her thirties.
Albert said that Evelyn had been wearing only a “negligee” and a housecoat. In fact she had been clad in a short robe, a nightgown, and white socks. Her killer had left her supine on her bed, two stockings tied around her neck and a third around her left ankle. She lay with her right hand and forearm tucked beneath her. To Salem Police Inspector John Moran, one of the first investigators on the scene, it looked as if someone had tied her feet together and then cut the bond.
Albert had told Bottomly that he'd tied Evelyn's hands behind her back. Bottomly kept pushing him on this detail.
B
OTTOMLY
: You say you tied her on the bed. You mean hand and foot?
A
LBERT
: No. Just her hands.
B
OTTOMLY
: What did you do about her feet? Anything?
A
LBERT
: It, it's possible that I did.
All he would admit to was binding the victim's hands. There was no indication at the scene that that had been done; at any rate, the stocking Albert said he'd used to do so was missing and he didn't say he'd taken it with him.
Albert told Bottomly that after Evelyn had finished fellating him, he'd ejaculated into a tissue. Bottomly asked him if he thought the victim had caught any of his semen in her mouth. He wasn't sure.
That she had was confirmed by the autopsy. The really interesting detail here is that Albert was clearly aware that crumpled semen-stained tissues, as well as lipstick-stained underpants, were found on the bedroom floor. His knowledge of this would seem to indicate that he had a firsthand knowledge of the crime.
But it could just as easily have been gleaned from the close-up photos of the scene—which Bottomly had shown Albert for identification purposes
prior
to the confession.

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