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| | The Online Reefer Madness Teaching Museum
Harry
Anslinger's Personal Gore File's #2 of 2
Newspaper Reports On The Reefer Madness Lies He Used
Anslinger's
Gore Files 1of 2, Newspaper Reports on Reefer Madness Lies He Used #1
Please allow time for the large photo's to load its a must see.
==
ALABAMA
==
==
Arizona
==
[incident]-
Customs patrol inspectors at
Nogales
,
Ariz.
,
on
July 15,
1939
, apprehended Luciano Ramirez at a point about
one-half mile east of
Nogales
, as he crossed the border from
Mexico
, and seized from him one cloth sack, containing
1 kg. 814 gm., net, of marihuana, and five spice tins containing 680 gm., net.,
of prepared opium.
==
CALIFORNIA
==
[incident]-
1939
Modesta,
California
- Assaulted
a housewife. Sentenced, 50 years
[incident]-?
La Jolla
,
California
- M
16 Paroled juvenile
delinquent, under influence smoking marihuana, murdered Mrs. I. KacKeown, 67,
grandmother, inflicting 35 knife wounds. She called him marihuana user and
threatened to call police.
[incident]-
1950
Fresno
,
California
- M
26 Took 17-mo. old J. Yanez
from auto, spanked her for crying, shoved her face into mud 200 feet from car,
suffocated. Didn't know what happened until blood spots found on shoes and
clothes next morning. Blamed marihuana and whisky. His counsel stated: "
The real criminal in this case is marihuana ".
[incident]-
1953
Los Angeles, California -
M 18
Armed robbery M. Friedman, gun not loaded as afraid might hurt somebody;
previous record stole money to buy heroin; had started smoking marihuana in
Hollywood high school; 3 years reformatory; got worse.
[incident]-
1939
San
Leandro
,
California
-- M
20 Arrested after raping 5
women while under influence.
[incident]-
1939
California
- M
20 Raped 7-year old girl
Life, San Quentin, no parole.
[incident]-
Oct. 11,
1935
, State narcotic officers discovered one-half
acre of cannabis (growing in a field near
Azusa
,
Calif.
A
number of the plants had already been harvested.
These weighed approximately 300 pounds.
There were still about 309 flowering cannabis plants under cultivation.
These, when uprooted, weighed approximately 150 pounds.
The owners of the field, Pedro Lugo, Jesus Roigos, Antonio Figuerga,
Frank Vasquez, Roque Vasquez, and Mrs. Polita Vasquez, were arrested. together
with Donald W. Ramsey, Edward Dobrilien, and Toby Whidden,
[incident]-
Sept. 14,
1935
,
police in
Sacramento
,
Calif.
, arrested Tony Alvarez and confiscated 175
cannabis cigarettes and a supply of the plant in bulk form sufficient to produce
5,000 additional cigarettes.
[incident]- In
Eureka
,
California
, a man under the influence of marijuana actually decapitated his best friend;
and then, coming out of the effects of the drug, was as horrified as anyone
else over what he had done. - pre
Dec 1936.
==
COLORADO
==
DENVER
NEWS: -
Colorado
[incident ]- had
been reporting marihuana horror stories since the late twenties.
ALAMOSSA
DAILY COURIER: -
Colorado
[incident ]- (exact city region unknown, could be outside
Colorado
):(before
Sep. 4, 1936
) describing an attack by a Mexican
American allegedly under the influence of marihuana on a girl of his region.
-- Two weeks ago a sex-mad degenerate, named Lee Fernandez, brutally
attacked a young Alamosa girl. He
was convicted of assault with intent to rape and sentenced to ten to fourteen in
the state penitentiary. Police
officers here know definitely that Fernandez was under the influence of
marihuana.
[incident]-
On
Feb. 14,
1952
, Marvin Roy Pratt was arrested by
Denver
police after having committed an armed robbery.
Pratt had been under investigation by narcotic agents for dealing in and
smoking marihuana. Quantities of
marihuana were found by narcotic agents police in Pratt's automobile and his
clothing. His automobile
confiscated. Pratt was committed to
the Denver County Jail and while being held there, he escaped.
On or about
December 15, 1952
, Pratt robbed a bank in
Tustin
,
Calif.
, and while running from the bank with his loot,
he was shot and killed by the bank teller, the teller using a high-powered game
rifle. After first being arrested in
Denver Pratt had admitted to narcotic officers to being a longtime marihuana
smoker and having committed crimes while under the influence of marihuana.
Following
a series of crimes in
Huerfano
County
,
Colo.
, attributed to marihuana cigarette smokers,
chief of which was an attack on the sheriff by a marihuana user which nearly
resulted in the officer's death, local officers uprooted 75 pounds of marihuana
from one plot.
1937
DENVER
,
COLO.
- Among
the first cases tried under the Marihuana Tax Act
of 1937 were those against Samuel Richard Caldwell and Moses Baca, both of
Denver
,
Colo.
Caldwell,
an ex-convict, was arrested for selling and smoking marihuana.
He admitted possession and sale of the drug and stated that he had
personally brought it from the State of
Kansas
, claiming to have harvested it from a patch
growing wild outside of
Kansas City
.
Caldwell
had a criminal record showing 11 previous
arrests on various charges dating from 1921.
He was sentenced to serve 4 years in a Federal prison.
- Moses Baca was
arrested on a charge of assaulting his wife.
Although only 23 years old, he had a long criminal record involving 12
previous arrests dating from 1931. He
admitted being under the influence of marihuana at the time of the assault, and
upon search of his residence one-fourth ounce of marihuana was found in a bureau
drawer. He was then charged with a
violation of the Marihuana Tax Act and was sentenced to serve 18 months in a
Federal prison.
[incident]-
In
Denver
,
Colo.
, Juan Moya, alias
Juan
Valley
, was arrested while under the influence of
marihuana and fought the officers so savagely that it took four 200-pound men
almost 10 minutes to subdue him. At
the time of arrest, the defendant attempted to eat the contents of a can of
marihuana he was trying to dispose of. He
succeeded in eating about one-half of the can before the officers could take the
balance away from him. -
Moya was convicted and sentenced to 2 years' imprisonment and fined $500.
- He has had
numerous convictions for the use and sale of drugs, and is alleged to be a
habitual user of marihuana. He
usually resists violently when arrested, and on one occasion escaped from
arresting Federal officers under gunfire, after making three sales of drugs.
Moya has also been arrested several times for forgery.
Unknown newspaper.
Judge J. Foster Symes,
Denver
Colo.
, sentenced Sam Caldwell four years in the
penitentiary on
Oct. 8, 1937
, for violation of the marihuana act.
This was the first conviction in the
United States
under the new federal marihuana legislation.
In sentencing
Caldwell
the judge said: “I consider marihuana the
worst of all narcotics--far worse than the use of morphine or cocaine.
Under its influence men become beasts…Marihuana destroys life itself.
I have no sympathy with those who sell this weed.”
Delaware
[incident]-
A man was killed in
Wilmington
,
Del.
,
by one Pettyjohn. When the police
attempted to arrest Pettyjolin for the crime lie attacked the police with a long
knife. To protect their lives, the
police officers shot and killed Pettyjohn. On
the same date one Cleveland Hodge was arrested in
Wilmington
for possession of about 3 pounds of marihuana.
Hodge said he had gathered the plant from a plot of ground used by
Rhodes, the man who was murdered as above described, and further stated that
Rhodes had told him about the weed, which he called "weaver weed";
that if a tea was made from it, it would cure rheumatism.
Hodge said he used a cup of this tea three times a day and had done so
for a long time; and both Rhodes and Pettyjohn were apparently under the
influence of marihuana. This case
was prosecuted in
Delaware
under
the Uniform State Narcotic Act.
[incident]-
1936
Wilmington
,
Delaware
- M
Killed J. Rhodes while under influence marihuana.
ELECTROCUTION DEATH OF MURDERER
EXECUTION BLOTTER
(State of Ohio)
| NAME |
GARDNER, WILLIAM |
| AGE |
38 |
| RACE |
WHITE |
| SEX |
MALE |
| OCCUPATION |
? |
| CRIME |
MURDER-ROBBERY |
| METHOD |
ELECTROCUTION |
| DATE |
JAN 17 1938 |
| VICTIM |
ARCHIE B. COYNER |
WILLIAM GARDNER
He was executed on Jan. 17, 1938 - white-Male age 38 --- crime commuted in
Franklin County Ohio.
What the Narc's were claiming
COLUMBUS, 0hio. October 1936. A young man was sentenced to the electric chair
for the robbing and unprovoked killing of a hotel clerk. He maintained that he
was a marihuana addict and was under the influence of the drug when he committed
the crimes. The judge of the Court in which he was tried refused to accept this
plea as an extenuating circumstance and served notice on smokers' of marihuana
cigarettes that they cannot escape punishment for crimes committed while under
the influence of this narcotic "Marihuana the New Dangerous Drug By
Frederick T. Merrill - March 1950
In Columbus, Ohio, a man sentenced to the electric chair for robbing and
murdering a hotel clerk, made the same plea of' insanity from marijuana. The
CHRISTIAN CENTURY - June 29, 1938
In Columbus, Ohio, a 35-year-old man was sentenced to the electric chair for
robbery and first-degree murder of a hotel clerk. His plea of not guilty was
based on insanity due to smoking marihuana cigarettes and the fact that he was
under the influence of marihuana when the crime was committed. Trafic 1936*
In Columbus, last October, the killer of a hotel clerk blamed his deed on
insanity resulting from the use of the weed. Cincinnati Enquirer - March 1,
1937
Last week the Ohio Supreme Court affirmed the death sentence imposed upon a man
convicted of having committed murder while under the influence of marijuana. Cincinnati
Enquirer - Oct. 18, 1937
1936 - M Charged with murder; offered defense he was under influence marihuana
at time. U.N. Publication*
Columbus, Ohio. October 1936. A young man was sentenced to the electric chair
for the robbing and unprovoked killing of a hotel clerk. He maintained that he
was a marihuana addict and was under the influence of the drug when he committed
these crimes. National Parent-Teacher (PTA Magazine) - May 1938
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
Akron Beacon Journal
[ ]- 'Held at Jacksonville, Fla for slaying of Archie B. Coyner, Aug. 14, 1936
19:6
[ ]- Sentenced, 6 29, 1936 - 36:1
[ ]- "Granted stay of execution - F 2, 1937 24:8
[ ]- denied reprieve, Je 2, 1937 21:5
[ ]- death sentence appeal overruled O. 14 1937 29:1
OHIO STATE JOURNAL
[ ]- Refused exec clemency on conviction for murder of Arch B. Coyner, Ja 17
1938 1:2
[ ]- electrocuted Ja 18 1938 1:5
[ ]- arrested as suspect in murder of Archie b Cyner Ag 14 1936 1:8
[ ]- claims alibi aug 15 1936 1:2
[ ]- confesses au 18 1936 1:1
[ ]- indicted S 5, 1936 1:1
[ ]- pleads not guilty S 12 1936 - 2:1
[ ]- Hearing set - S. 15, 1936 - 3:2
[ ]- Trial date announced O 20 1936 9:5
[ ]- pleads insanity photo O. 28, 1936 1:4
[ ]- convicted without recommedation of mercy O 29 1936 1:3
[ ]- files motion for new trial O 31, 1936 14:3
[ ]- motion denied N. 7 1936 3:4
[ ]- Only man in death row at Ohio Pen Ja 5, 1937 1:5
[ ]- awaits death photo F. 18, 1937 2:2
[ ]- granted indefinite stay of execution when appellate ct. consents to hear
appeal Mr. 30, 1937 2:7
[ ]- Ct. of appeals ravs case, Ap 29 1937 1:7
[ ]- My 6, 1937 3:6
[ ]- awaits electrocution My 10, 1937 2:3
[ ]- re-sentenced to death Je 2, 1937 3:1
[ ]- awaits execution Je 10, 1937 13:3
[ ]- appeals to Ohio Sup Ct; wins automatic stay of execution, Je 29 1937 1:1
[ ]- ct considers appeal O 6, 1937 2:7
[ ]- rejects appeal, sets execution date Photo O. 14, 1937 1:8
[ ]- granted reprieve by Gov Davey O 29 1937 1:5
[ ]- slated fro clemency hearing before Parole Bd, N. 25, 1937 2:4
[ ]- plea for clemency taken under advisement D 4, 1937 3:5
[ ]- granted 2nd reprieve by Gov. Davey D. 17, 1937 5:3
TOLEDO BLADE
[ ]- Electrocuted for slaying Arch B. Coyner Jan 18, 1938 1:7
[ ]- Electrocution postponed by Gov Dave, D. 16, 1937 1:1
YOUNGSTOWN VINDICATOR
[ ]- Executed for murder of Arch B. Coyner, Cols, Jan 18, 1938 19:6
[ ]- Granted stay of execution by Gov. Davey Cols D 17, 1937 17:4
[See Reefer Madness Newspaper Index pamphlet for more references]
WOMEN MURDERED Choked/Stabbed etc.
Name - Perez -- Mrs. V. Lotito (victim) -- Date: March 31, 1948 -- Location: New
York
What the Narc's were claiming
1948 New York - Male 36 Puerto Rican choked and stabbed Mrs. V. Lotito, while
under influence marihuana. A frequent user, he was married without his knowledge
while under influence. He was violent, desperate criminal and habitual user. U.N.
Publication*
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
NEW YORK TIMES [Note, no mention of Marihuana is made in any of the
articles]
[**]- March 31, 1948 - pp 28 - "Woman Murdered In Home in 55th St."
[**]- April 1, 1948 - pp 34 - "Woman's Murder is still unsolved"
[**]- April 2, 1948 - pp 46 - "Mrs. Lotito's Books Searched for Clue"
[**]- April 3, 1948 - pp 32 - "Suspect is Seized In Lotito Murder"
[**]- April 4, 1948 - pp 34 - "Woman's Murder is Still Unsolved"
[**]- April 5, 1948 - pp 16 - "Police Guard Wife of Slaying Suspect"
[**]- April 7, 1948 - pp 52 - "Suspect in Slaying Tells Third Story"
[**]- April 10, 1948 - pp 30 - "Perez Confesses In Lotito Slaying"
[**]- April 13, 1948 - pp 17 - "Murder Solution By Police Praised"
[**]- April 15, 1948 - pp 28 - ""Perez is Indicted"
[**]- April 17, 1948 - pp 32 - "Perez Makes Not-Guilty Plea"
[**]- Nov 5, 1948 - pp 56 - "Jury Picked in Murder Trial"
JANITOR SELLING MARIHUANA TO HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS
Name - William Alred -- Date: Nov. 23, 1935 -- Location: Chicago IL
What the Narc's were claiming
"Not long ago a high school janitor in Chicago was arrested charged with
selling marihuana cigarettes to pupils. Don't be a MuggleHead - Oct. 11,
1936*
Then there was the high-school janitor who, conspiring with a drug peddler and
four other men, ran parties for high-school children in Chicago "HERE'S
TO CRIME" By Courtney Ryley Cooper 1937
And this is the stuff that is being sold "just around the corner" from
high schools in almost every state of the union! Indeed, in one Chicago school
the janitor was charged with peddling "reefers" within the school
itself! Robert Divine - Assassin of youth 195?
All Chicago truant officers, teachers, and other school employees were called on
some weeks ago to cooperate with the city police in stamping out the marihuana
smoking which recent disclosures had shown to be gaining among the school
children of the city. The immediate reason for this action was the raid on an
alleged marihuana flat, a luxurious apartment said to have been furnished with
Oriental divans, where vicious literature was strewn about. It had been reported
that boys and girls were visiting the place at all hours, and leaving there in a
state of daze or hilarity. The raid resulted in the arrest, as a peddler of
narcotics, of the owner of the apartment, the janitor of one of the city high
schools. He was in the apartment at the time of the raid and had a number of
marihuana cigarettes on him. Union Signal Jan 1936
A typical way of introducing this weed to a group of young people is generally
brought about in the following manner: One of them may encounter one of these
peddlers, or as discovered in one Midwestern city, a school janitor was the
distributor of the cigarettes for a group of peddlers on the outside. The
youngster is told of the indescribable thrill resulting from a few puffs of
these homemade cigarettes. He is usually told that it is "something
different and causes no harm," but is a "real kick." He whispers
this around to his closer friends and he is delegated to procure one or more of
the cigarettes. INTERNATIONAL MEDICAL DIGEST - Sep, 1937
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
HAMMOND TIMES - Hammond, Indiana
[--Nov. 23, 1935 pg. 3] "6 Drug Peddlers Under Arrest
MEXICAN HOT TAMALE
Name: D. M. Miditis - Date: Sept. 29, 1929 -- Location: Tulsa OK.
What the Narc's were claiming
The Tulsa (Okla.) Tribune reports the home of a Mexican hot-tamale salesman,
recently arrested, was a dope den for boys and girls of high-school age. The
Literary Digest (Magazine) - Oct 24, 1936
In still another instance the Tulsa Tribune on September 10, 1929,(sic)
describing the arrest of D. N. Niditis, a Mexican hot-tamale salesman, said that
his home at 1019 E. Archer street, in that city, was a veritable dope den for
young boys and girls of high school age, as well as others who have been known
to go there to obtain the drugged cigarette. Journal of the American
Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology - vol. 23 pg1086
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS
TULSA TRIBUNE
[S-Sept. 29, 1929 pg. 3] "Mexican Arrested Here for Selling Marihuana
Plants"
[Museum Note, like the High School Janitor, the Hot Tamale salesman lurking
around every high school, would soon become legion.]
GIRL KILLED
Name: Pablo Rodriguez -- Date: Dec 8, 1943 -- Location: Laredo Texas
What the Narc's were claiming
Dec. 8, 1943 life imprisonment was decreed for Pablo Rodriguez of Laredo, Tex.,
when he was convicted of whipping to death his 10-year-old niece, Guadalupe
Flores. She and another niece had been kept in the back yard of the Rodriguez
residence in a doghouse-like shack where they were sometimes chained. When
Rodriguez was arrested, marihuana cigarettes were found on his person. It was
the opinion of officials that he had been a marihuana smoker. U.N.
Publication*
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS: [Marihuana not mentioned]
RENO EVENING GAZETTE - Reno, Nevada
[S-Nov. 11, 1943 pg. 1] "Crowd Attacks Slayer's Home"
TRIPLE MURDER
Name:Robert Irwin Date: June 26, 1937 - Location: New York City
What the Narc's were claiming
There are probably few in this audience who have not read about the gruesome
triple murder by one Robert Irwin last Easter, when he strangled a young woman
model and her mother, and killed a boarder with an ice pick. When he was finally
caught, they discovered a box containing scores of marijuana cigarette butts
under his bed. New York Herald Tribune Forum 1938
The press is still publishing stories and pictures of Robert Irwin of New York
City who last Easter strangled a young model and her mother and then killed a
boarder in the house with an ice-pick. He had set out to kill the model's sister
and not finding her had attacked her family. When he was arrested the police
found a box filled with cigaret butts under his bed. THE DAILY OKLAHOMAN Nov
8, 1938
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS: --- No mention of Medical Marihuana is made
APPLETONPOSTCRESCENT
[S-1937-06-26 pg.1 ] "Robert Irwin, Suspect in Gedeon Murders, Is Sought By
Officials at Cleveland"
CLEARFIELDPROGRESS
[S- 1937-06-29 pp.1] "Scullery Girl Comes From Here Kitchen to Pot of Gold
In New York; Gets Gedeon Reward"
HAMMOND TIMES
[S-1937-06-28 pp.1] Triple Slayer Gives Self up in Chicago"
MONESSEN DAILY INDEPENDENT
[S- 1938-10-26 pp.2 ] Sensational Irwin Murder Case Trial Opens"
OSHKOSH NORTHWESTERN
[S-1937-04-08 pp. 2 ] "Search for slayer of three turns to Pocono
Mountains"
[S-1938-11-15I pp.7] "Irwin Faces Life Prison Term for Killing of
Three"
SHEBOYGAN PRESS
[S-1938-11-15 ] Robert Irwin Slated For Life Imprisonment"
MARIJUANA CRAZED ADDICT - ONE MAN CRIME WAVE
Name -Robert Faulk Jr.- Date: Jan 1949-- Location: Boston Mass
What the Narc's were claiming
BOSTON, MASS. January 1949. After staging a series of beatings, robberies and
shootings, Robert H. Faulk, Jr., shot and seriously injured a police officer who
was trying to arrest him, and then shot himself through the head, causing total
blindness. Wide publicity given to this case attributed the crimes to marihuana,
and the judge commented about the influence of marihuana on Faulk.
1940 Boston - Male Assaulted woman; held up auto co.; beat woman stole $3 and
jewelry; beat Miss C. stole $75; negro shot Sgt. Cullinen, fled thru back alley;
trapped by Sgt. Cannon, so shot self in head, blinded. This started concerted
drive Boston vs. marihuana; several major violators arrested. U.N.
Publication*
On January 10, 194-, Robert F. assaulted Mrs. Mildred Y., stole a gun, and held
up his former employer. On January 15, he entered a salesman's car while it was
stopped in traffic, and when the salesman didn't follow directions, shot him in
the stomach. On January 21, he broke into a home, stole some money, and beat a
seventy-eight-year old woman severely. On January 22, he entered a cleaning
shop, attempted to rape the clerk, and stole $75. An aroused police force
tracked him down, and cornered him. F. shot one officer and then seeing that he
was trapped, shot himself. Each of these crimes was attributed to marihuana
intoxication. The TRAFFIC IN NARCOTICS By H.J. Anslinger 1953
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNT
NASHUA TELEGRAPH
[S- Jan 24, 1949 pg. 1] "2,000 Police Seek Armed Robber"
[S- Jan 26, 1949 pg. 9] "Hero Officer May Lose Leg Thru Operation"
[S- Jan 27, 1949 pg. 10] "Surgeons Hold Out Hope for Shot Policeman"
NAVAL OFFICER MURDERED
Name: Lt. Herman Haase (victim) - Date: July 9, 1948 - Location: Los Angeles,
Ca. What the Narc's were claiming
On July 9, 1945, at Los Angeles, Calif., two Navy officers, Lt. Herman Haase and
Ensign Norman Bicknese, picked up an automobile ride with two 19-year-old boys,
Leslie Howard Moore and Alvin Goldson, the latter a soldier. After the officers
entered the automobile, Moore and Goldson attempted to hold them up. Ensign
Bicknese resisted and was shot and killed by Goldson. A few weeks later Goldson
and Moore were apprehended by Los Angeles police officers and it was ascertained
that they were the leaders of a gang of six youths preying on servicemen. In
addition to the killing of Ensign Bicknese, another member of the gang admitted
the shooting and wounding of Army Lt. Armand Beford in another "hitchhike
hold-up" on July 22, 1945. The self-confessed trigger man of the gang,
Edward Priestley, Jr., aged 16, of Los Angeles, after his apprehension told the
police he shot Lieutenant Beford at the urging of Leslie Howard Moore, when the
Army officer started to run away. On Nov. 9, 1945, Leslie Howard Moore appeared
before Superior Court Judge Thomas L. Ambrose at Los Angeles, Calif., and was
sentenced to life imprisonment for murder and 12 counts of robbery. He made the
following statement in court: "If I had never used marihuana I wouldn't be
in this court today." Asked by the court what effect the, drug had on him,
Moore stated it made him, fearless and bold. When Judge Ambrose questioned him
as to how often he indulged in use of the drug, Moore said, "Only when with
the group I accompanied on the robberies and the murder." The judge
replied, "Mr. Moore, I wish this little sermon on the consequences of using
marihuana could be broadcast to the youth of the Nation." Judge Ambrose
also added that so many users do not realize the danger involved. Alvin Goldson,
as a result of the murder of Ensign Bicknese, was tried by a military court
martial during August 1945 and was sentenced to life imprisonment at hard labor.
This man also claimed to be a user of marihuana. Traffic 1945*
Los ANGELES, CALIFORNIA. July 1945. Two Navy officers, Lt. Herman Haase and
Ensign Norman Bicknese, picked up an automobile ride with two 19-year-old boys,
Leslie Howard Moore and Alvin Goldson, the latter a soldier. After the officers
entered the automobile, Moore and Goldson attempted to hold them up. Ensign
Bicknese resisted and was shot and killed by Goldson. A few weeks later Goldson
and Moore were apprehended by police and it was ascertained that they were the
leaders of a gang of six youths preying on servicemen. Another member of the
gang admitted the shooting of Army Lt. Armand Beford in a "hitch-hike
hold-up." When Moore was sentenced to life imprisonment for murder and 12
counts of robbery, he made the following statement in court: "If I had
never used marihuana I wouldn't be in this court today." Asked by the court
what effect the drug had on him, Moore stated it made him fearless and bold. He
said he indulged in the drug "when with the group I accompanied on the
robberies and the murder." The judge replied, "I wish this little
sermon on the consequences of using marihuana could be broadcast to the youth of
the Nation." judge Ambrose also added that so many users do not realize the
danger involved. Goldson, as a result of the murder of Ensign Bicknese, was
tried by a military court martial and was sentenced to life imprisonment at hard
labor. He also claimed to be a marihuana user. Dangerous Drugs (pamphlet)
1950
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
LOS ANGLES TIMES
[**]- Ensign Killed by Bandit Pair" - July 10, 1945 page 12 part 2. ---
marihuana is not even mentioned.
THE GIRL SLAYERS

Name: Ethel Sohl - Date: 1936-37 - Location: Newark,
N. J. What the Narc's were claiming
In New Jersey, a young woman recently confessed that she and a girl companion
lad held up and coldly murdered a bus driver. She had been smoking marijuana
cigarettes or "reefers," she said and didn't know what she was doing. The
CHRISTIAN CENTURY - June 29, 1938
The story of these two New Jersey girls who, under the weird distortion of right
and wrong, murdered a man for $2.10, has been re-enacted over and over with but
slight variations. Weed of madness 1939
A girl in Newark, N. J., got into an argument with a taxi-driver over his fare
of $2.10. She refused to pay it. When he insisted, she took a revolver from her
purse and killed him. "It seemed to be the only reasonable thing to
do," she told the judge. True Story (Magazine)1948
"It seemed the right thing to do," was the plea of Mrs. Ethel Sohl,
one of the two girls mentioned previously as on trial for the holdup and murder
of a New Jersey taxi driver for $2.10. Thus, in plaintive plea, she told how,
while intoxicated with marihuana, she thought it was the right thing to do, and
pleaded not guilty because of a temporary insanity induced by the drug that
destroyed her ability to distinguish between right and wrong. Weed of Madness
1939*
"In Newark, N. J., two young girls killed a bus driver for $2.10. In the
trial that followed it was found that the girls were Marijuana smokers; they
pleaded not guilty to the crime, under the claim of temporary insanity produced
by Marijuana. The girl who fired the shot when asked why she did it said: 'It
seemed right to me at the time. I guess I was 'high' on reefers." War
with the underworld 194?
In almost every big city and in many small towns reefer smoking is considered
"smart" by young and foolish patrons of questionable, so-called night
clubs. It was in such a place that Ethel Sohl took up the habit together with
her girl friend, Genevieve Ownes. One night while riding on a bus in New Jersey,
the "Devil's Weed" released all of Ethel's inhibitions. She had needed
money but had always been afraid of punishment if she stole any, but on this
night marihuana had removed her fear. When the bus had reached a lonely spot,
she shot the driver, William Barhorst, and robbed him of exactly $2.10. Ethel
and Genevieve drew life sentences. AMERICAN WEEKLY - S.F EXAMINER - July 28,
1940
In several cases where marihuana has apparently played a heavy role in murders
or holdups, investigation has shown the statement to be a mechanism of defense
attorneys, or newspaper invention. For instance, in the killing of a bus driver
by Ethel Sohl and Genevieve Owens, two female bandits in Newark, New Jersey,
last year, one of the girls insisted that marihuana had so distorted her sense
of right and wrong that she had no true knowledge of what she was doing. A
nearer approach to the truth, according to officers, was that Krafft-Ebing
elements were involved and that Ethel Sohl, masculine of manner and appearance,
dominated her feminine partner, and led the way into crime like a gangster with
his moll.-- Designs In Scarlet 1939
Twenty-year-old Ethel (Bunny) Sohl, daughter of a Newark, N. J., policeman, held
up, robbed and killed a bus driver, William Barhorst. The holdup netted her
$2.10. She and her 17-year-old companion, Genevieve (Chippy) Owens, testified on
the witness stand when being tried for the murder before a Newark jury that they
were "high' on marihuana when they committed the terrible deed, and blamed
their brief crime career on the use of the "loco weed." Their counsel,
offering "legal insanity" as the basis of his defense arguments,
stated that his clients were not normal, but were crazed addicts of the Mexican
weed when they killed Barhorst. "Legal insanity" and "marihuana
madness" are evidently synonymous terms. Watch for this "legal
insanity" plea. It has been used since it succeeded in saving these two
young girl criminals from the death sentence. Robert Devine Assassin of Youth
195?
In Newark two girls, one the daughter of a highly respected policeman, held up
and murdered a bus driver for some small change. "It was marihuana,"
they pleaded. DETECTIVE WORLD - Dec. 1947
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
[e Feb. 11,1938 pg. 46] "Mrs. Sohl Admits Hold-up Shooting"
[e Feb 12, 1938 pg. 7] "Parents Feared Mrs. Sohl Insane" - (She
describes girl's strange behavior - expert explains effects of marijuana) (James
Munch testimony- must read)
[e Feb 13, 1938 pg. 26] "Insanity Stressed in Mrs. Sohl's Case"
MURDER FOR HIRE
Name - Johnny Andrew Butler -- Date: July 1, 1945 -- Location: Texas
What the Narc's were claiming
In Dallas, Tex., on Dec.15, 1940, Johnny Andrew Butler, 21, who had just
completed a prison sentence for violations of the Federal marihuana law, and
Molly Suger, 38, were charged with the slaying of Mrs. Rose Suger, her
mother-in-law. Mrs. Suger was shot to death at her home in Dallas on July 2,
1945, by a person who fired a pistol bullet through a window in her home. Butler
is alleged to have admitted firing the shot, and said he was hired by Molly
Suger to kill her mother-in-law for about $500. The murder case is pending. In
1941 Butler was convicted for violations of the Federal marihuana law and
sentenced to 18 months' imprisonment. He was again arrested on similar charges
in 1943, and sentenced on January 26, 1944, to 6 months and placed on 3 years'
probation. Probation was revoked on August 8, 1944, and unconditional sentence
of 6 months imposed. Traffic 1945*
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
VALLEY MORNING STAR
[S- Oct 31, 1946 pg. 1] "Prosecution Ended In Suger Murder Trail"
PORT ARTHUR NEWS
[S-Oct 30, 1946 pg. 10] "Witness Tells of Plot With Butler"
Mexia Weekly Herald
[S-Dec 21, 1945 pg. 1] "Bond Hearing Set"
HITCHHIKER KILLS MOTORIST
Name - Vince Boss - Date: Aug 2, 1938 -- Location: Texas
| NAME |
BOSS, VINCE |
| AGE |
22 |
| RACE |
WHITE |
| SEX |
MALE |
| OCCUPATION |
? |
| CRIME |
MURDER-ROBBERY |
| METHOD |
ELECTROCUTION |
| DATE |
AUG 2, 1938 |
| COUNTY |
CALDWELL |
EXECUTION BLOTTER
(State of Texas)
What the Narc's were claiming TEXAS---Young hitchhiker, under the
influence of marihuana, murdered a motorist SURVEY GRAPHIC - April 1938
In Texas, a hitchhiker under the influence, of marijuana murdered a motorist FORUM
AND CENTURY - Jan 1939
HOUSTON, TEXAS. March 1937. Hitch-hiker under the influence of marihuana
murdered motorist. Dangerous Drugs(pamphlet)
On a road in Texas a marijuana-smoking hitchhiker shot and killed the stranger
who bad given him a lift. Narcotics: America's Peril by Will Oursler (1952)
In Texas, a hitchhiker whose cigarette was "mooted" made a sudden
unprovoked attack on the motorist who had given him a lift. The EAGLE
MAGAZINE - Nov 1941
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
LOWELL SUN - Lowell, Massachusetts
[S-Aug 2, 1938 pg. 1] "Loco Weed" Smoker Pays With Life"
MARIHUANA SOLD TO CHILDREN IN PLAYGROUND
Location - Finley Ohio -- Date - Aug 20, 1936What the Narc's were
claiming
In a small Ohio town, a few months ago, a fifteen-year-old boy was found
wandering the streets, mentally deranged by marijuana. Officers learned that he
had obtained the dope at a garage. "Are any other school kids getting
cigarettes there?" he was asked. "Sure. I know fifteen or twenty,
maybe more. I'm only counting my friends." The garage was raided. Three men
were arrested and 18 pounds of marijuana seized. "We'd been figuring on
quitting the racket," one of the dopesters told the arresting officer.
"These kids had us scared. After we'd gotten 'em on the weed, it looked
like easy money for a while. Then they kept wanting more and more of it, and if
we didn't have it for 'em, they'd get tough. Along toward the last, we were
scared that one of 'em would get high and kill us all. There wasn't any fun in
it." "Marijuana, assassin of youth" By H.J Anslinger - July
1937
In a small Ohio town a 15-year-old boy was found mentally deranged after smoking
marihuana cigarettes. Three men were arrested who had been peddling cigarettes
to more than twenty other youths in the town. HERE'S TO CRIME By Courtney
Ryley Cooper
FINLEY OHIO, "This took place in a community playground in Finley, Ohio.
The playground supervisors were the men who were selling the stuff. It all
developed from the case of this youngster who was evidently going crazy.
1936 After a 15-year-old boy was found mentally deranged from smoking marihuana
cigarettes be furnished information that led to the arrest of three men who
admitted making sales of the cigarettes. Fifteen to eighteen pounds of marihuana
were seized from their garage. At the time officers stated that there were 20
known addicts of high school age, in the Ohio town. The men arrested allegedly
told the officer that they had become alarmed several months previous to their
arrest when the youths appeared abnormal and began annoying them for heavier
supplies. The apprehension of this gang cleared up a serious situation. Traffic
1936*
A fifteen-year-old schoolboy was found mentally deranged in an Ohio city.
Investigation proved that marihuana was the cause of his pitiful condition. To
police officers he furnished information that led to the arrest of three
peddlers. These three beasts (and I apologize to all beasts when I use that word
to describe a peddler of "reefers") admitted making sales of marihuana
cigarettes to the school children. They used a garage near the high school as a
salesroom. From fifteen to eighteen pounds of marihuana was seized from the
garage. It was discovered that there were at least twenty addicts in the one
high school of that small town. Robert Devine Assassin of Youth 195?
The roll of misery is long and monotonously tragic in the Bureau of Narcotics
files on marihuana: A fifteen-year-old boy, found mentally deranged from smoking
"reefers," accidentally discloses a gang supplying twenty known
addicts of high-school age; Cosmopolitan - May 1938
In Ohio, the police picked up a high school boy who was out of his mind. After
treatment he regained his sanity and provided information that led to the arrest
of three garagemen who had been selling the smokes. They admitted to the cops
that they were glad to be arrested as their kid customers had formed a gang and
promised to kill them unless more cigarettes were supplied regularly. TRUE
STORY (Magazine) - Dec 1948
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
Cincinnati Enquirer== OHIO
[Mar 1, 1937 pg. 4] In one town of the state, according to the International
Narcotic Education Association, the finding of a fifteen-year-old boy mentally
deranged from smoking marijuana led to the discovery that 20 boys and girls of
high school age were addicts.
TOLEDO BLADE == OHIO
[Aug. 20, 1936 pg. 28] - "Lawrence Sands, George Hilkert and brother Carl
arrested for selling marijuana cigarettes to children, Findlay"
[Aug. 20, 1936 pg 28] Men Accused of Selling Doped Cigarets to Children --
Findlay Police Chief Says He Has Names of 15 Boys and Girls Who Are Addicts;
Trio of WPA Employees Arrested.:
AKRON BEACON JOURNAL
[ Aug. 20, 1936 pg. 21] - "Lawrence Sands, George and Carl Hilkert arrested
for selling Mexican narcotic weed"
[See Reefer Madness Newspaper Index pamphlet for more references]
BURGLARIES
Name - Philip Sorahan -- Date: Dec. 15, 1933+ - Location: San Jose Ca.
NOT A FEDERAL REEFER MADNESS CASE
What the Narc's were claiming
From Sacramento, California, comes the story of a 20-year-old-girt mother who
sobbed out to police a tragic story of how her husband, crazed with narcotics,
forced her to help him in a career of crime. The girl, a former nurse, is Mrs.
Ruth Sorahan, an attractive wisp of a blonde, who was arrested as she stepped
from a train in Sacramento last month. Her husband is Philip Sorahan under
arrest in San Jose for a series of burglaries which, according to Mrs. Sorahan,
encompassed the entire San Francisco Bay region. The girl sobbed: "Philip
was a good husband until he started to use marihuana. We were happily married,
and both looked forward eagerly to the birth of our first child. -- "Then
some one got him smoking marihuana. Over night he changed. From then on he
seemed like a stranger. He lost his job, and when our savings ran out, he
started to steal to get more money to buy the dope." -- Her story,
punctuated by wracking sobs, told how Philip was alternately hysterically gay
and inhumanly cruel. She continued: "He would beat me until I fainted from
pain. He threatened to kill me if I didn't help him dispose of the things he
stole. In fear of my life, I would take them to a pawn shop. Philip would go
into insane rages when I failed to get what he thought was a good price for the
things." --SAN FRANCISCO POLICE AND PEACE OFFICER' JOURNAL (of the State
of California) - May 1934 pg. 29 - MARIHUANA AND CRIME
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
OAKLAND TRIBUNE
[** Dec. 15, 1933] "Addict Burglar's Wife, Aid, Set Free
[** Jan. 13, 1934] "Brothers Sentenced On Burglary Charge"
[** Mar. 15, 1938] "Suspect Is Arrested for Burglary"
[** Mar. 18, 1938] Napa Suspect Faces More Crime Probes"
[** Mar. 19, 1938] "Felon Escapes From Napa Jail"
[** Mar. 22, 1938] "Napa jail Escape Caught"
[** Mar. 29, 1938] "Burglar Suspect To Face Sentence"
[** Apr. 1, 1938] "Jail breaker Given Life"
[** Mar. 21, 1938 - "Jail Escape Spurs Drive For Building"
[Note - Not much is known about this guy, but boy was he a total looser! ]
MEXICAN GROWING MARIHUANA
Name: Mexican Pete - Date: Nov 24, 1937 -- Location: West Virginia
What the Narc's were claiming
EVERETTVILLE, W. VA. - 1937 - Acting on information that Pete Lopez, alias
Mexican Pete, was growing and selling marihuana in Everettville, W. Va.,
narcotic officers assisted by local officers made four purchases totaling 7
ounces 309 grains of marihuana from him and from a colored woman, Lucy Vaughn,
then arrested Lopez and upon searching his house found and seized 15 pounds 8
ounces 120 grains of marihuana. It was found that he was growing the marihuana
in a corn field near his cabin and 345 stalks, bare of leaves and seeds, were
cut and burned. - Lopez, 37 years old, claimed to have smoked marihuana since he
was about 10 years old. Investigation disclosed that he was engaged in illicit
traffic in marihuana on a large scale solely for monetary gain. He was tried,
convicted, and sentenced to 10 years in a Federal, prison. Lucy Vaughn was
sentenced to 1 year in a county jail.Traffic 1937*
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
MONESSEN DAILY INDEPENDENT - Monessen, Pennsylvania
[S-Nov. 24, 1937 pg. 1] "Raised Marihuana" (Mexican Pete)
LARGE AMOUNT OF MEDICAL MARIHUANA WAS BEING GROWN
Name: Herman S. Jernigan -- Date:
April 28, 1936 -- Location: Blue Mountain, Miss
What the Narc's were claiming
Blue Mountain.--During April 1936, on a farm 3 miles east of Blue Mountain,
Miss., evidently used as a supply base for the marihuana traffic in a number of
neighboring States in addition to Mississippi, Federal narcotic agents and State
officers destroyed one of the biggest sources of supply in the South. Herman S.
Jernigan, owner of the farm, was raising marihuana on a large scale and giving
it the same careful attention that a wholesale farmer would give to the raising
of cotton for market delivery. The raiding party confiscated 3,000 pounds of the
-rowing marihuana, 300 pounds of seed, and I,000 pounds of dried marihuana, the
latter being contained in 10 large corrugated boxes which were concealed under
hay in a barn. The area under cultivation was about 5 acres. Traffic 1936*
Marihuana having a value of $40,000 if sold as a filler for cigarettes was
seized in Blue Mountain, Miss. The weed, when taken, was found parked in
cardboard cartons ready for shipment to the makers of these illicit Cigarettes.
The confiscated weed found at Blue Mountain weighed nearly one ton. At right is
shown a close-up of the marihuana plant. --- New Orleans appeared to be the
chief and most profitable market. Eleven persons arrested there for unlawful
marihuana purchases acknowledged that their supplies had originated at- this
farm. It was reported that school children were sold marihuana cigarettes from
the same source. This was the first large seizure after enactment of the
Mississippi uniform narcotic drug law on March 16, 1936. Jernigan was arrested
and charged under this law and later released under a $1,500 bond. His queer
actions were partly responsible for the raid on his farm. He said he had become
addicted to marihuana 8 years ago. A brother about 14 years of age is also an
addict DON'T BE A MUGGLEHEAD-Oct 11, 1936*
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
RENO EVENING GAZETTE - Reno, Nevada
[S-April 28, 1936 pg. 16] "$100,000 Worth in One Dope Haul"
[See Reefer Madness Newspaper Index pamphlet for more references]
WOMEN STABBED -- CASTRATION

Name: Alvin Arnesen/Georgia Castenada (Victim) - Date: Nov. 27, 1944 -
Location: Los Angeles What the Narc's were claiming
1944 - M 39 Murdered Ga. Castenada, 29; mutilated her hips and head with razor
blades, then castrated self; had been smoking marihuana for an hour before
attack. U.N. Publication*
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
Reno Evening Gazette
[S-Nov 27, 1944 pg. 2] "Man Confesses Slaying Woman"
CURRENT DETECTIVE MAGAZINE
[Winter 1945 pg. 12 ] "Torture Death of the Reefer Queen"
MARIJUANA IN A TRUNK

Name: Vincent Pellicer- Date: Nov 1940 - Location: New Jersey
What the Narc's were claiming
Not long ago the American Express office in New York auctioned a trunk that had
remained unclaimed for over a year. The purchaser found it full of marijuana. --
He reported his find to the Federal agents and they started on a trail that led
finally to a hemp farm in southern Missouri where a married couple were shipping
box after box of dried seeds to the lucrative New York market. Their records
revealed shipments of enough marijuana to make 2,000,000 cigarettes. At the
current price of fifty cents to a dollar per stick they were getting rich. TRUE
STORY (Magazine) Dec. 1948
COMIC BOOKS
Wanted Comics #14 - July 1948 - A short (2 page) story about Vincent Pellicer, a
marihuana peddler. The story is about a trunk bought at an action that had
medical marihuana in it. Soon the DEA gets into the act. The story ends with a
---"If you know his location, notify Commissioner H.H. Anslinger, Bureau of
Narcotics."
LEADING DETECTIVE MAGAZINE
[May 1947 pg. 22] "Cracking the Reefer Racket" By David Carver
GIRL EXPOSES MARIHUANA DOPE RACKET
Name:Name - -- Date: Nov. 1935- Location: San Francisco
What the Narc's were claiming
There were revelations in San Francisco that an owner of a taxicab service was
delivering marihuana to hotel parties. The weed was purchased by a young girl on
the streets from peddlers who worked the sidewalks, hotels and beer taverns.Marihuana,
the New Dangerous Drug 1937
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE
[e-Nov. 18, 1935 pg. 1] "Police Close in on Dope Traffic Here" (Girl's
story reveals big marijuana trade among children of city)
[e-Nov. 19, 1935 pg. 1] "Girl Guarded after threat by Dope Ring"
(Police, protecting S.F. Informer, push drive on Marijuana Gang)
[e-Nov. 20, 1935 pg. 1] "Mother, girl dope victim are reunited"
| NAME |
PEREZ AUGUSTO |
| AGE |
22 |
| RACE |
WHITE |
| SEX |
MALE |
| OCCUPATION |
? |
| CRIME |
RAPE |
| METHOD |
HANGING |
| DATE |
JUN 12 1936 |
| COUNTY |
MARYLAND |
EXECUTION BLOTTER
(state of Maryland)
What the Narc's were claiming
"A young man in Baltimore was sentenced to be hanged for criminal assault
on a 10-year-old girl. In his plea of not guilty he testified that he was
temporarily insane from smoking marihuana cigarettes. Don't be a MuggleHead -
Oct. 11, 1936*
1936 - M Raped 10-year old girl, previous arrest for possession marihuana. U.N.
Publication*
In Maryland, a boy was recently electrocuted for rape and murder. Weed of
madness 1939*
Reports of the bureau of narcotics list stores of murders and other crimes
committed by marijuana addicts. In Baltimore, a young man, sentenced to be
hanged for criminal assault on ten-year-old girl, testified that he had been
temporarily insane from smoking marijuana cigarettes.The CHRISTIAN CENTURY -
June 29, 1938
"To these incidents should be added ... that police in Baltimore were
called to investigate the selling of 'muggles' to high-school boys and girls;
that the defense of a Maryland killer, sentenced to hang for the rape of a
ten-year-old child, was that he was crazed from smoking marihuana cigarettes. On
and on goes the gruesome story." HERE'S TO CRIME (a book) By Courtney
Ryley Cooper
A young man in Baltimore, Maryland, was sentenced to be hanged for criminal
assault on a ten-year-old girl. In his plea of not guilty he testified that he
was temporarily insane from smoking MARIHUANA cigarettes. The Union Signal
Jan. 30, 1937*
"A man 25 years old, charged with criminally assaulting a 10-year-old girl,
entered a plea of not guilty because of insanity. He was convicted and sentenced
to death." SIERRA EDUCATIONAL NEWS - Nov. 1938
A young man in Baltimore was sentenced to be hanged for criminal assault upon a
ten-year-old girl. His plea of not guilty was based upon his claim that he had
been driven temporarily Insane from smoking "reefers. Cosmopolitan - May
1938
A boy named Perez, in Baltimore raped a ten-year-old girl, and of course he
blamed it on Marihuana. It so happened that, just a year before that, Perez had
been picked up by the Baltimore police for the sale of 2,500 grains of Cannabis,
and got three months in jail. This sex offense happened the following year. Dec
1938-Marihuana Conference
1936 - M Raped 10-year old girl, previous arrest for possession marihuana. U.N.
Publication
Such was the defense of a young Baltimore, Maryland, lad, sentenced to be hanged
for criminal assault upon a ten-year-old girl. In his plea of "not
guilty" he testified that he had been smoking marihuana cigarettes and was
temporarily insane at the time the act was committed. Robert Devine Assassin
of Youth 195?
1935 - Baltimore, MD. M 30 Assaulted 10-year old girl; admitted being under
influence marihuana, so " crazy "; convicted in court trial. - A young
man in Baltimore, Md., was sentenced to be hanged for criminal assault on a
10-year-old girl. In his plea of not guilty he testified that he was temporarily
insane from smoking marihuana cigarettes. Augusto Perez, age 22 -- [incident] A
young man in Baltimore, Md., was sentenced to be hanged for criminal assault of
a 10 year old girl. around sent to Maryland Penitentiary Nov. 22, 1935. Hanged
June 12, 1936. U.N. Publication*
A few years ago a young marihuana addict was hung in Baltimore for criminal
assault on a ten-year-old girl. DETECTIVE WORLD (Magazine) - Dec 1947
MAGAZINE ACCOUNTS:
See Inside detective Nov. 1937
FIENDISH MURDER - ROBBERY
Name: (victim) Alfred Jones - Date: Mar 1952 - Location: Detroit Mich.
What the Narc's were claiming
March 1952, four youths, the youngest sixteen, robbed and murdered a filling
station attendant at Detroit, Mich. When three of the youths were later arrested
at Kirkwood, Mo., 23 marihuana cigarettes were found in their possession. They
admitted having smoked marihuana just prior to committing this atrocious crime.
During the trial for murder in December 1952, a defense effort was made to show
that they should not be found guilty because they were so strongly under the
influence of marihuana that they didn't know what they were doing. The jury
refused to accept this as a defense found them all guilty of murder in the first
degree Traffic 1952*
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
TRAVERSE CITY RECORD EAGLE
[S-Mar 24, 1952 pg. 1] "Nab Trio in Robbery Spree"
[S-Dec 17, 1952 pg. 9] "Mother of Accused Killer Goes on TV"
[S-Dec 18, 1952 pg. 20] "Life Terms for Four Youths"
HOLLAND EVENING SENTINEL
[S- April 2, 1952 pg. 1] "Wants to Charge Youth With Murder"
[S- Dec 12, 1952 pg. 10] "Model Son Held As Burglar Suspect"
HERALD PRESS
[S-Mar 22, 1952 Pg. 1] "Hunt Gang in Brutal Killing"
[S-Mar 25, 1952 Pg. 2] "Youths Admit Dope Slaying"
[S-Dec 19, 1952 Pg. 9] "Given 4 Youths Terms of Life"
FIENDISH MURDER - BOXER - HANGED
Name:Matt Seminary - Date: Oct 15, 1926 - Location: Baton Rouge La.
| NAME |
MATT SEMINARY |
| AGE |
31 |
| RACE |
WHITE |
| SEX |
MALE |
| OCCUPATION |
BOXER |
| CRIME |
MURDER |
| METHOD |
HANGING |
| DATE |
Apr 20, 1928 |
| COUNTY |
ORLEANS |
EXECUTION BLOTTER
(state of Louisiana)
What the Narc's were claiming
NEW ORLEANS --The general public knew nothing of marijuana until a New Orleans
prizefighter entered a streetcar in 1910(sic) and shot his sweetheart and the
man at her side. When his trial was called, he pleaded that he didn't know what
he was doing as he was under the influence of marijuana. The jury hanged him,
and the case initiated an investigation that roared across America and revealed
some startling facts. TRUE STORY (Magazine) - Dec. 1948
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
Bee (Danville VA)
[S-Feb 9, 1928 pg. 2] "Death Warrant for Boxer Signed"
"Baton Rouge. Feb. 9 - (AP)-March 9 is execution day for three alleged
slayers in Louisiana, with the signing by Gov. O.H. Simpson of a death warrant
for Matt Seminary, 39, alias Joe (Battling) Nelson: The pugilist was convicted
of the murder of Ralph Sturdy, in New Orleans October 15, 1926. Sturdy was
slain aboard a street car in company with Dolor[ ] Bevins, of Seminary, who
was also killed."
[S-March 10, 1928 pg. 6] "Man Hanged After Trying to End Life"
ROBBERY / MURDER HANGED
Name: Felipe Rios, Joaquin Rodriquez, Jose Crus /George Booris (Victim) -- Date:
July 1954 -- Location: Camden New Jersey.
| NAME |
RIOS, FELIPE |
RODRIGUEZ, JOAQUIN |
CRUZ, JOSE |
| AGE |
27 |
33 |
25 |
| RACE |
ASIAN |
ASIAN |
ASIAN |
| SEX |
MALE |
MALE |
MALE |
| OCCUPATION |
? |
? |
? |
| CRIME |
MURDER-ROBBERY |
MURDER-ROBBERY |
MURDER-ROBBERY |
| METHOD |
ELECTROCUTION |
ELECTROCUTION |
ELECTROCUTION |
| DATE |
MAY 3 1955 |
MAY 3 1955 |
MAY 3 1955 |
| COUNTY |
CAMDEN |
CAMDEN |
CAMDEN |
POLICE EXECUTION BLOTTER: (state of New Jersey)
What the Narc's were claiming
1954 Chicago -- Male 27 Shot and killed G. Booris, 69, in lunchroom in Camden,
N. J., during holdup for $21; then with R. Joaquin, also under influence, F.
Crus threatened to shoot him. U.N. Publication*
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
Gettysburg Times
[S- July 1, 1954 pg. 2] "3 Puerto Ricans in Holdup Get Death Penalty"
MEXICAN TURNS INTO A (marihuana) SAVAGE
Name: Juan Moya -- Date: Oct 12, 1937 -- Location: Denver, Colo.
What the Narc's were claiming
In Denver, Colo., Juan Moya, alias Juan Valley, was arrested while under the
influence of marihuana and fought the officers so savagely that it took four
200-pound men almost 10 minutes to subdue him. At the time of arrest, the
defendant attempted to eat the contents of a can of marihuana he was trying to
dispose of. He succeeded in eating about one-half of the can before the officers
could take the balance away from him. - Moya was convicted and sentenced to 2
years' imprisonment and fined $500. - He has had numerous convictions for the
use and sale of drugs, and is alleged to be a habitual user of marihuana. He
usually resists violently when arrested, and on one occasion escaped from
arresting Federal officers under gunfire, after making three sales of drugs.
Moya has also been arrested several times for forgery. Traffic 1937*
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
THE DENVER POST
[Oct 12, 1937 pg. 17] "Arrest of Four Aliens Reveals Denver marijuana Sales
Ring"
SEX FIEND - SERIAL RAPIST
Name: John Navarro -- Date: Oct 1939 -- Location: San Leandro Ca.

What the Narc's were claiming
1939 San Leandro, California -- Male 20 Arrested after raping 5 women while
under influence U.N. publication*
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
SAN LEANDRO REPORTER
[e Oct. 27, 1939 pg. 1] "S.L. Youth Admits Attacking Women"
[e Nov. 3, 1939 pg. 1] "Grand Jury Hears Attack Victims Of San Leandro
Cannery Worker"
[e Dec. 1, 1939 pg. 1] "Navarro Sentenced to Life Imprisonment"
OAKLAND TRIBUNE
[** Oct. 25, 1939 pp 1] Bay Youth Admits Attacking Women"
[** Nov. 28, 1939 pp 1] "Attacker of women gets life term
1953
Camp
Gordon
,
Georgia
- M
23 Indecent exposure 6
occasions to girls 10 to 12 years old; each time under influence marihuana;
trum-pet, musician; smoking marihuana over year.
POLICE TROOPER WAS KILLED BY MARIHUANA ADDICT
Name: Alcide Benoit / (Victim) Richard Hammond Date: Jan 22, 1937 --
Location: Michigan
What the Narc's were
claiming
Perhaps you remember the young desperado in Michigan who, a few months ago,
caused a reign of terror by his career of burglaries and holdups, finally to be
sent to prison for life after kidnapping a Michigan state policeman, killing
him, then handcuffing him to the post of a rural mailbox. This young bandit was
a marijuana fiend. "Marijuana, Assassin of Youth" By H.J Anslinger
- July 1937
In Michigan, a teen-age kid kidnapped a state policeman, killed him, and then
handcuffed his body to a mailbox. TRUE STORY (Magazine) - Dec. 1948
Then again, the case of the young desperado in Michigan who, a few months ago,
caused a reign of terror by his career of burglaries and holdups, finally to be
sent to prison for life after kidnapping a Michigan state policeman, killing
him, then handcuffing him to the post of a rural mailbox. This young bandit was
another marihuana fiend. INTERNATIONAL MEDICAL DIGEST - Sep, 1937
In Michigan, a marijuana addict manacled a trooper to a mail post and put a
bullet through his head. FORUM AND CENTURY - Jan. 1939
In Michigan, Alcide Benoit, after forty robberies and two murders, was accused
during his trial for murder of having committed every one of his major crimes
while under the influence of marijuana. In his murder of State Trooper Richard
Hammond, Benoit knocked Hammond unconscious, fastened him to a post with his
handcuffs, then calmly waited for him to regain consciousness before shooting
him through the head COLLIER'S (Magazine) - June 1949
In Michigan, a marijuana-crazed ex-convict manacled a state trooper to a rural
mailbox and then shot him through the head. Narcotics: America's Peril by
Will Oursler (1952)
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
GETTYSBURG TIMES - Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
[S-Jan 22, 1937 pg. 2] (Picture of ALCIDE Frenchy" BENOIT) gore file
[S-Jan 23, 1937 pg. 5] "Slayer of Trooper Sentenced to Life" Gore File
[See Reefer Madness Newspaper Index pamphlet for more references]
PRISON KILLINGS
Name - Tylczak -- Date: June 9, 1932 - Location: Marquette State Prison
Michigan
[Not a Federal Gore File Case]
What the Narc's were claiming
"Sometime ago the silence of the state prison at Marquette, Michigan, was
shattered by the sound of fusillade of pistol shots and an hour later a kindly
prison doctor lay dead and beside him lay the trusty who had given his life
trying to save his friend the doctor. An investigation developed that arms and
ammunition had been smuggled into the prison in the false bottoms of herring
containers and that the MARIHUANA from which Tylczak, the murderer of the doctor
and trusty, had derived his demoniac courage, had also been smuggled into the
prison." The pamphlet "the Drug Demon" 1940
A recent one-man riot in the Michigan State Prison at Marquette, staged by a
prisoner named Tylczak, was due to marihuana and firearms smuggled into the
prison. When the smoke from the gun of the marihuana-crazed prisoner cleared,
the kindly prison doctor lay dead. Beside him was the body of a trusty who gave
his life trying to protect his doctor friend. The gun, ammunition and marihuana
had entered the prison in false bottoms of herring buckets. Inside Detective
Nov 1937
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNT HELENA (Daily) INDEPENDENT - Helena, Montana
[S-Dec 1, 1933 pg. 2] "Open Season is On in Detroit" Tylczak - Gore
File
WISCONSIN RAPIDS DAILY TRIBUNE - Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin
[S-June 9, 1932 pg. 1] "Indict 3 for Gun Smuggling"
[See Reefer Madness Newspaper Index pamphlet for more references]
MURDER OF ELDERLY WIDOW
Name: James Buchanan / Ida Koogle (victim) -- Date: June 30, 1948 -- Location:
Cleveland, Ohio
EXECUTION BLOTTER
(state of Maryland)
| NAME |
JAMES BUCHANAN |
| AGE |
26 |
| RACE |
BLACK |
| SEX |
MALE |
| OCCUPATION |
? |
| CRIME |
MURDER-ROBBERY |
| METHOD |
ELECTROCUTION |
| DATE |
JAN 26 1949 |
| COUNTY |
CUYAHOGA |
What the Narc's were claiming
June 30, 1948 at Cleveland, Ohio, James Buchanan was arrested by police of that
city for the murder of a 60-year-old East Cleveland widow. After questioning by
Police detectives he admitted his participation in the crime and also accused an
accomplice. Buchanan admitted having participated, during the previous 6 months
in the brutal attack of 16 women for the purpose of robbing them of their money.
He stated further he wanted the money to buy wine and reefers (marihuana
cigarettes) which he would consume at the same time. Before venturing out to
commit their atrocious crimes, Buchanan and his partner would fortify themselves
with wine and marihuana. Buchanan was 24 years of age at the time of his arrest,
married and the father of three children. Traffic 1948*
Cleveland, Ohio. June 1948. James, Buchanan, who was arrested by police for the
murder of a 60-year-old widow, admitted that he and an accomplice had
participated in brutal attacks on 16 women for the purpose of robbing them of
their money. He said he wanted the money to buy wine and reefers (marihuana
cigarettes) which he consumed at the sum time. Before committing their atrocious
crimes, Buchanan and his accomplice always fortified themselves with wine and
marihuana.
1948 - M Murdered widow, 60 years old, with accomplice, to obtain money to buy
more marihuana for both; confessed attacking and robbing 16 other women. U.N.
Publication*
1948 - M Negro, smoked marihuana before going out to commit various crimes
including murder Mrs. I. Koogle. " Poor man's poison. " U.N.
Publication*
Cleveland, Ohio. 1948. James B., who was arrested by police for the murder of a
sixty-year-old widow, admitted that he and an accomplice had participated in
brutal attacks on sixteen women for the purpose of robbing them of their money.
He said he wanted the money to buy wine and reefers which he consumed at the
same time. Before committing their atrocious crimes, B. and his accomplice
always fortified themselves with wine and marihuana. The TRAFFIC In NARCOTICS
By H.J. Anslinger 1953
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS:
MANSFIELD NEWS JOURNAL
[S-July 03, 1948 pg. 1] "Second Man Questioned in Murder"
[S-July 07, 1948 pg. 1] "Koogle Case Suspects Will Face Grand Jury"
ADVOCATE - Newark, Ohio
[S-July 07, 1948 ] "Pair Held to Jury"
LIMA NEWS
[S-April 6, 1948 ] "Cleaners Check for Murder Clue"
MARIJUANA CRAZED ADDICT - ONE MAN CRIME WAVE
Name -Robert Faulk Jr.- Date: Jan 1949-- Location: Boston Mass
What the Narc's were claiming
BOSTON, MASS. January 1949. After staging a series of beatings, robberies and
shootings, Robert H. Faulk, Jr., shot and seriously injured a police officer who
was trying to arrest him, and then shot himself through the head, causing total
blindness. Wide publicity given to this case attributed the crimes to marihuana,
and the judge commented about the influence of marihuana on Faulk.
1940 Boston - Male Assaulted woman; held up auto co.; beat woman stole $3 and
jewelry; beat Miss C. stole $75; negro shot Sgt. Cullinen, fled thru back alley;
trapped by Sgt. Cannon, so shot self in head, blinded. This started concerted
drive Boston vs. marihuana; several major violators arrested. U.N.
Publication*
On January 10, 194-, Robert F. assaulted Mrs. Mildred Y., stole a gun, and held
up his former employer. On January 15, he entered a salesman's car while it was
stopped in traffic, and when the salesman didn't follow directions, shot him in
the stomach. On January 21, he broke into a home, stole some money, and beat a
seventy-eight-year old woman severely. On January 22, he entered a cleaning
shop, attempted to rape the clerk, and stole $75. An aroused police force
tracked him down, and cornered him. F. shot one officer and then seeing that he
was trapped, shot himself. Each of these crimes was attributed to marihuana
intoxication. The TRAFFIC In NARCOTICS By H.J. Anslinger1953
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNT
NASHUA TELEGRAPH
[S- Jan 24, 1949 pg. 1] "2,000 Police Seek Armed Robber"
[S- Jan 26, 1949 pg. 9] "Hero Officer May Lose Leg Thru Operation"
[S- Jan 27, 1949 pg. 10] "Surgeons Hold Out Hope for Shot Policeman"
MARIJUANA CRAZED ADDICT
Name Gregorio Salas Date: June 11, 1930-- Location: El Paso, Texas
What the Narc's were claiming Further, The Tulsa Tribune of June 11,
1930, carried the following article under an El Paso, Texas, date line,
"Four men, including a deputy sheriff, were seriously injured last night by
a Marihuana-crazed Mexican before the bullets of another officer killed him, as
he charged this officer with a knife. The Mexican, Gregorio Salas, thirty, died
after being shot through the body and both legs. H. S. Palmer, the deputy
sheriff, was badly cut on the nose by a rock thrown by the Mexican." JOURNAL
OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CRIMINAL LAW AND CRIMINOLOGY - May-June
1932/Mar-Apr 1933
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNT
RENO EVENING GAZETTE
[S-June 11, 1930 pg. 8] "Four are Hurt by Crazed Man"
19 YEAR OLD BOY (Marihuana addict) SHOT DEAD BY POLICE
Name - Howard Horn -- Date: Dec 13, 1936 -- Location: Columbus Ohio
What the Narc's were claiming
Police in Columbus, Ohio were called upon to investigate a disturbance on a
public street, where a young man, Howard Horn, was menacing citizens with a
pistol. The officer, while attempting to subdue Horn, was attacked by him and
wounded three times. He was obliged to return the fire to save his own life 7
and Horn was killed instantly. Investigation by the vice squad showed that Horn,
who was 19 years of age, was a marihuana addict and at the time of his attack on
the officer was under the influence of this narcotic.- Traffic 1936*
Howard Horn, a lad nineteen years of age, had acquired the marihuana habit while
in high school in Columbus, Ohio. Except for certain peculiar actions, there was
nothing to indicate to school or police authorities that Howard was a victim of
this dread habit. But one day police were called upon to investigate a
disturbance on a public street, and there they found Horn menacing passersby
with a pistol. just a kid, of course, but kid's fingers trembling on the trigger
of a six-shooter may cause a lot of injury and sorrow, especially if the brain
directing those fingers has been "stepped up" to "high" with
marihuana. The officer who attempted to subdue Horn was attacked by him and
wounded three times. Forced to return the boy's fire in order to save himself
and others, the officer killed Howard. Investigation by the vice squad showed
that Horn was a marihuana addict and that at the time of his attack upon the
officer he was suffering from marihuana madness. Robert Devine Assassin of
Youth 195?
Then there was the 19-year-old addict in Columbus, Ohio, who, when police
responded to a disturbance complaint, opened fire upon an officer, wounding him
three times, and was himself killed by the returning fire of the police.
INTERNATIONAL MEDICAL DIGEST - Sep, 1937
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNT
CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER:
[e Dec. 13, 1936 - A1:4] "Killed by Patrolman Mansberger in gun fight,
Columbus"
CHILD KILLER/ CHILD RAPE
Name - Paul Gutierrez -- Date: Nov 1950 -- Location: Fresno Ca.
EXECUTION BLOTTER
(state of California)
| NAME |
PAUL GUTIERREZ |
| AGE |
26 |
| RACE |
HISPANIC |
| SEX |
MALE |
| OCCUPATION |
RANCH HAND |
| CRIME |
MURDER-RAPE |
| METHOD |
ASPHYXIATION-GAS |
| DATE |
Dec 01 1950 |
| COUNTY |
FRESNO |
What the Narc's were claiming
1950 Fresno, California - 25-year old Paul Gutierrez, Took 17-mo. old J. Yanez
from auto, spanked her for crying, shoved her face into mud 200 feet from car,
suffocated. Didn't know what happened until blood spots found on shoes and
clothes next morning. Blamed marihuana and whisky. His counsel stated: "
The real criminal in this case is marihuana." U.N. Publication*
On a Saturday evening in November, 1945, a pretty seventeenmonth-old baby girl
was left in the family car while her parents went in search of a relative. When
they returned to the car less than ten minutes later, the baby had disappeared.
The next afternoon, scarcely 200 yards away, the body was found in the furrow of
a cotton field. The baby was naked except for one small white shoe and a
red-knitted bonnet. She had been violated. Teeth marks covered her body. Her
tiny contorted face had been shoved into the mud and particles of dirt in her
lungs showed that she had been alive at the time and suffocated later. -- Police
arrested a twenty-five-year-old cotton picker, Paul G., who readily admitted
kidnapping the child and "spanking her a little bit." G. stated that
on the Saturday evening in question he had been drinking when a friend offered
him a reefer which he accepted and smoked. Further intoxicants followed. Then G.
went to a dance hall, from which he departed because no one would dance with him
in his condition. As he left, he heard the child crying in a car. Annoyed, he
picked up the infant and spanked her, but remembers nothing further except he
"guesses he just went crazy." His next recollection was when he came
to in his cabin the following morning with mud and blood on his clothes. -- For
what the district attorney described as "the most horrible, the most brutal
crime in the history of the area," Paul G. was sentenced to death. The
final words of his counsel are well worth remembering: The real criminal in this
case is marihuana!" The TRAFFIC IN NARCOTICS By H.J. Anslinger and
William F. Tompkins 1953
Paul Gutierrez, 25 years of age, a cotton picker, held in the Fresno, Cal.,
county jail admitted having attacked a 17-month-old Huron, Cal., baby girl,
Josephine Yanez. The little child was kidnapped from her parents' parked car,
was criminally attacked and brutally killed, in what the police agreed was the
most vicious murder in Fresno county history. The little one's battered body was
found in a muddy field. Gutierrez, when arrested, admitted that he had
"spanked" the child, but said he could remember nothing more than
that, because his mind had blanked out after smoking a marihuana cigarette. No
one is immune from attack when a brain is inflamed and stepped up on reefers. "The
Assassin of Youth"---"The Moloch of Marihuana." Rev. Robert James
Devine
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNT(S)
SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE
[e Nov 22, 1949 pg. 1] "Kidnap Confessed - Fresno Baby Rape Suspect
Talks"
[e Nov 23, 1949 pg. 1] "Murder Charge Filed in Rape-Slaying of Baby
Girl"
[e Nov 24, 1949 pg. 13] "Raped Child Buried"
[e Nov 26, 1949 pg. 2] "Child-Slaying Suspect's Hearing Set"
[e Nov 27, 1949 pg. TW3] "California, "I Don't Know Why"
[e Nov 30, 1949 pg. 11] "Gutierrez Is Charged With Rape-Murder"
[e Dec. 15, 1949 pg. 16] "Gutierrez Pleads Innocent In Baby Killing, Waives
Jury"
[e Dec. 21, 1949 pg. 2] "Baby Rape Trial Opens In Fresno"
[e Dec. 22, 1949 pg. 24] "Baby Rapist to Die"
[e Dec. 24, 1949 pg. 17] "I Did It,' Cries Fresno Rape Slayer"
[e Dec. 28, 1949 pg. 3] "Gutierrez to Die for Baby Rape-Murder"
SAN JOSE MERCURY:
[-- Nov. 22, 1949 pg. 1 "Man Charged With Murder of Yanez Baby - Cotton
Picker, 25, Booked for Killing, Ravishing Infant
[**]- Nov. 23, 1949 - pg. 1 - "Suspect in Murder of Infant Faces Court;
Preliminary Set"
SAN FRANCISCO CALL BULLETIN
[**]- Nov. 22, 1949 pp 1 - Guard Girl Slaying Suspect In Fresno
[**]- Nov. 23, 1947 pp 3 - Suspect Resigned To Fate in Girl Slaying"
[**]- Nov. 24, 1949 pp 7 "Reveal Slaying Suspect is Dad"
[**]- Nov. 29, 1947 pp 6 - Gutierrez In Court Today
SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER:
[**]- Nov 22, 1949 pp 1 - Youth Admits Fatal Kidnap of Fresno Tot
[e]- Nov 23, 1949 pp 7 - Fresno Baby Murder Suspect Faces Court
[e]- Nov 24, 1949 pp 23 - Second Charge Against Killer of Fresno Baby
[e]- Nov 26, 1949 pp 6 - Teeth Tests In Slaying
[**]- Nov 27, 1949 pp 10 - Five Jailed in Oakland marijuana Ring Raid.
[e]- Dec. 22, 1949 pp 5 - Cotton Picker Guilty of Slaying Infant Girl
[See Reefer Madness Newspaper Index pamphlet for more references]
CHILD MOLESTER / CHILD KILLER
Name: Albert Dyer (Eddie the sailor) - Date: June 1937 - Location: Inglewood
Ca.
EXECUTION BLOTTER
(state of California)
| NAME |
DYER, ALBERT |
| AGE |
33 |
| RACE |
WHITE |
| SEX |
MALE |
| OCCUPATION |
SCHOOL GUARD |
| CRIME |
MURDER-RAPE |
| METHOD |
HANGING |
| DATE |
SEP 16, 1938 |
| COUNTY |
LOS ANGELES |
What the Narc's were claiming
In Inglewood, California, a crazed sailor attacked three girls, each under
twelve years of age. -- TRUE STORY -- Dec. 1948
Some of the brutal and unspeakable sex crimes of recent years have had their
cause in marihuana. In Inglewood, California, recently, three little girls, all
under twelve years of age, were fiendishly attacked and killed by an ex-sailor -
a marihuana fiend. The horrible, sadistic attacks upon girls, even upon
children, are sometimes inspired by this drug. Weed of madness 1939
NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS
Edwardsville Intelligencer
[S-July 1, 1937 pg. 2] "Continue Hunt For Slayer of Girls"
Chronicle Telegram
[S-June 29, 1937 pg. 1] "Three Little Girls are Found Slain"
Harmmon Times
[S-July 2, 1937 pg. 4] "Civilians and Police hunt Girls' Slayer"
[S-Aug. 14, 1937 pg. 2] "Child Witness Traps Slayer of Three Girls"
Nevada State Journal
[S-July 5, 1937 pg. 1] "Stranger Jailed for slaying of California"
Reno Evening Gazette
[S-June 28, 1937 pg. 1] "Children Missing From Home and Foul Play is
Feared"
==
Florida
==
[incident]-
MIAMI
,
FLA.
- A
seizure of marihuana of international significance was effected near
Miami
,
Fla.
, on
October 9,
1937
. An
old oil drum containing 53 1/2 pounds of the drug was found on the beach where
it bad been landed and buried in September by Capt. William Hood, British
subject, resident of British Honduras, master of the Honduran schooner Alert,
and Octavio Carrillo, a Mexican, both of whom were arrested.
The marihuana is alleged by the defendant to have come aboard the vessel
at Baca La Chica,
British Honduras
, in two sacks which came from
Xcalat
,
Mexico
, and was removed from the vessel before it came
through quarantine at
Miami
.
==
Illinois
==
1938
Chicago
- M
Broke nose J. N. by striking with gallon clay jug and pulled knife.
Police officer then destroyed growing crop nearby.
Was Arrested.
1937
Chicago -- M
24 Attacked woman.
Was Arrested.
1954
Chicago
-- M
27 Shot and killed G. Booris,
69, in lunchroom in
Camden
, N. J., during holdup for $21; then with
R. Joaquin, also under influence, F. Crus threatened to shoot him.
William Barnett of
Chicago
,
ILL.
, was arrested for the possession of marihuana.
At the time of Barnett's arrest he was in possession of a letter from
Pete Gurralo, alias Joseph Fierro, of
Mankato
,
Minn.
, offering to furnish marihuana in any quantity
from 1 pound up. On
September 22, 1936
, Balli, alias Tom Gurrola, killed a man at
Albert Lea
,
Minn.
Following
the murder he escaped from prison and fled to the farm of his father.
He was identical with the man who offered to supply marihuana to Barnett.
When the officer went to the farm to apprehend him, he found 6 or 7
bushels of marihuana contained in a sack and two cardboard boxes, and concealed
under a haystack.
==
INDIANA
==
==
KANSAS
==
KANSAS
CITY
KANSAN:
[ ]- (dispatch concerning the discovery by Wichita
Police of the prevalence of Marihuana parties held by young boys and girls at
roadhouses near this city) -
August 24, 1929
1933
Wichita
,
Kansas
- M
Killed in fight over marihuana.
==
Kentucky
==
==
Massachusetts
==
[incident]-
1940
Boston -
M
Assaulted woman; held up auto co.; beat woman stole $3 and jewelry; beat
Miss C. stole $75; negro shot Sgt. Cullinen, fled thru back alley; trapped by
Sgt. Cannon, so shot self in head, blinded.
This started concerted drive
Boston
vs. marihuana; several major violators arrested.
[Incident]
--
BOSTON
,
MASS.
January
1949. After staging a series of
beatings, robberies and shootings, Robert
H. Faulk, Jr., shot and seriously injured a police officer who was trying to
arrest him, and then shot himself through the head, causing total blindness.
Wide publicity given to this case attributed the crimes to marihuana, and
the judge commented about the influence of marihuana on Faulk.
==
MARYLAND
==
1935
-
Baltimore
,
MD.
[incident]
M 30
Assaulted 10-year old girl; admitted being under influence marihuana, so
" crazy "; convicted in court trial.
- A young man in
Baltimore
,
Md.
, was sentenced to be hanged for
criminal assault on a 10-year-old girl. In
his plea of not guilty he testified that he was temporarily insane from smoking
marihuana cigarettes.
Augusto Perez, age 22 --
[incident] A young man in
Baltimore
,
Md.
, was sentenced to be hanged for criminal assault
of a 10 year old girl. around sent
to Maryland Penitentiary
Nov. 22,
1935
.
Hanged
June 12,
1936
.
[incident]-
October 1936, the chief
engineer of a vessel arriving at
Baltimore
complained
to the Federal narcotic office that the crew of his
vessel were using some unknown narcotic that was so virulent in its
effects on the men that the officers were obliged to protect themselves by
carrying blackjacks to ward off attacks. The
narcotic agent made an extensive investigation and ascertained that a fireman,
aged 22, was a marihuana user, and that two of the seamen on the ship had
purchased a bag of dried marihuana while ashore in the Canal Zone and smuggled
it aboard the ship where it was consumed by members of the crew.
Officers of the steamer said these men were “under the influence of
this narcotic throughout the trip to
Baltimore
and that their conduct bordered on the
mutinous."
[incident]- Baltimore.-On
October 2, 1936, Baltimore City police raided two locations at which several
hundred pounds of green and dried marihuana were stored and arrested Joseph
Martinez and Ruben Sanchez. Further
investigation by local and Federal officers led to discovery of a farm located
near the city where large quantities ,of growing plants were found to have been
cultivated between rows ,of corn, under circumstances leading to a belief that a
carefully planned cultivation of the weed had been carried on for 2 or 3 years
previous. The harvesting of the crop
had been proceeding for several days prior to discovery, trucks carting the
leaves -and tops into
Baltimore
, where the drying, grinding, and packaging
processes were carried out. The
defendants were convicted and sentenced to jail terms and large quantities of
the growing plants and dried bulk marihuana were confiscated and destroyed.
[incident]-
1936
Baltimore
: engineer
of a vessel arriving at
Baltimore
complained to the Federal narcotic office that
the crew of his vessel were using
some unknown narcotic that was so virulent in its effects on the men that the
officers were obliged to protect themselves by carrying blackjacks to ward off
attacks. The narcotic agent made an
extensive investigation and ascertained that a fireman, aged 22, was a marihuana
user, and that two of the seamen on the ship had purchased a bag of dried
marihuana while ashore in the Canal Zone and smuggled it aboard the ship where
it was consumed by members of the crew. Officers
of the steamer said these men were “under the influence of this narcotic
throughout the trip to
Baltimore
and that their conduct bordered on the
mutinous."
[incident]- Oct
1936 chief engineer of a vessel arriving at
Baltimore
complained to the Federal narcotic officer that
the crew of his vessel were using some unknown narcotic.
Officers were obliged to protect themselves by carrying black jacks.
[incident]-
BALTIMORE
,
MD.
On
October
31, 1938
, customs officers at
Baltimore
,
Md.
, seized 1 kg. 899 gm., net, of marihuana from
Augustine Rios and Joe Rodrigues, seamen on the Brazilian steamship Parnahyba
coming from
Santos
. Subsequently,
sentences of 2 years were imposed on each of the defendants.
[incident]-
Customs officers at
Baltimore
,
Md.
, on
August 20,
1939
, purchase through a Puerto Rican I kg. 899 gm.
Of marihuana which they obtained on the Brazilian steamship Ayuruoca.
On
November 20, 1939
Concalo R. Nascimento, the man who delivered the
marihuana, was sentenced to serve 1 year and I day in a Federal penitentiary.
[incident]-
Customs officers at
Baltimore
,
Md.
, on
July 15,
1939
, seized kg. 41 gm., net, of marihuana which they
found concealed on the steamship Pocone, coming from
Santos
,
Brazil
. Ownership of the marihuana
was not ascertained.
==
MISSISSIPPI
==
[incident]-
Blue Mountain.--During April 1936, on a farm 3 miles east of
Blue Mountain
,
Miss.
, evidently used as a supply base for the
marihuana traffic in a number of neighboring States in addition to
Mississippi
, Federal narcotic agents and State officers
destroyed one of the biggest sources of supply in the South.
Herman S. Jernigan, owner of the farm, was raising marihuana on a large
scale and giving it the same careful attention that a wholesale farmer would
give to the raising of cotton for market delivery.
The raiding party confiscated 3,000 pounds of the -rowing marihuana, 300
pounds of seed, and I,000 pounds of dried marihuana, the latter being contained
in 10 large corrugated boxes which were concealed under hay in a barn.
The area under cultivation was about 5 acres.
New Orleans
appeared to be the chief and most profitable
market. Eleven persons arrested
there for unlawful marihuana purchases acknowledged that their supplies had
originated at- this farm. It was
reported that school children were sold marihuana
cigarettes from the same source. This
was the first large seizure after enactment of the
Mississippi
uniform narcotic drug law on
March 16, 1936
. Jernigan
was arrested and charged under this law and later released under a $1,500 bond.
His queer actions were partly responsible for the raid on his farm.
He said lie had become addicted to marihuana 8 years ago.
A brother about 14 years of age is also an addict
==
MONTANA
==
MONTANA
STANDARD:
[ ]-
Jan. 27, 1929
pg. 3 col.2. - Article about - “There was fun in the House Health Committee
during the week when the Marihuana bill …. Marihuana is Mexican opium, a plant
used by Mexicans and cultivated for sale by Indians.
Note date maybe wrong. - reefer madness the book
==
NEW
JERSEY
==
[incident]-
New Jersey
- pre Jan 1937 -
In
New Jersey
a particularly brutal murder occurred, in which
case one young man killed another, literally smashing his face and head to a
pulp. One of the defenses was that
the defendant's intellect was so prostrated from his smoking marihuana
cigarettes that he did not know what he was doing.
The defendant was found guilty and sentenced to a long term of years.
The, prosecutor was convinced that marihuana had been indulged in; that
the smoking had occurred; and that the brutality of the murder was accounted for
by the narcotic, though the defendant's intellect had not been totally
prostrate. --
Murder victim = Tomas Crook. see
picture
[incident]-
Atlantic City.--Federal,
State, and city detectives had received reports that marihuana cigarettes in
varying quantities were being peddled in this vicinity.
On
Sep. 5, 1936
,
they watched an informer make contact with Floyd Peters,
Atlantic City
, and purchase two marihuana cigarettes which the
informer turned over to .them. The
officers then raided the premises and found Harry Smith, Joseph Morgano,
Elizabeth Bailey, and Clarence Henry smoking a Turkish water pipe, the bowl of
which was filled with marihuana, John Harper had two marihuana cigarettes on his
person and Floyd Peters attempted to conceal a match box containing marihuana
cigarettes. The officers continued
their search of the premises and found a trunk in which was a bag containing
bulk marihuana. There was also
discovered a glass tube containing pantopon.
One of the officers reported that he had received reports of opium
smoking at this address and was pressing his search for Opium when the marihuana
and pantopon were found. The
defendants were immediately given a hearing in the State court.
Elizabeth Bailey, Clarence Henry, Joseph Morgano, and Harry Smith were
held on $500 bond. Peters was held
without bond and later was sentence to State prison from
4
to 7 years on one count.
Peters stated late that he had been addicted to the use of marihuana for
more than a year and that he had purchased 2 pounds of the dried marihuana for
$35 from a resident of
New York City
.
[incident]-
Jersey City.-Oct.
14, 1936, pursuant to information received by the police department of
Jersey City
, N. J., narcotic agents discovered a patch of
growing marihuana in
Newark
extending from a few feet to a city block in
width and running a distance of about 1 mile.
This patch contained about 65 tons of the marihuana plant, all of which
were destroyed.
==
New
Mexico
==
[incident]-
Santa Fe
, N. Mex., an investigator for the
New Mexico
State
police seized 15 pounds of dried marihuana on
Feb 10, 1936
. addicted
shots, etc.
[incident]-
1955
Albuquerque
,
New Mexico
- M
With companion J. I. created disturbance in rooming house; they shot and
killed policeman F. Sjo lander who killed
him at same time.
I.
escaped but caught; tried, guilty.
[incident]-
The, district attorney of Santa Fe, N. Mex., and an investigator for the New Mexico State
police seized 1.5 pounds of dried marihuana on February 10, 1936. On February
9 a murder was committed by two men addicted to the use of marihuana.
One of these assaulted the arresting officers with a gain at the time of
arrest. From this source of supply
represented by the foregoing seizure it was believed that the perpetrators of
these crimes secured the illicit marihuana.
Seven arrests resulted from the murder and marihuana cases, and five
convictions were obtained, the other two being released on bail of $1,500 each.
==
WISCONSIN
==
1939
So.
Milwaukee
,
Wisconsin
- M
Drank brandy and smoked 2 marihuana cigarettes; arrested for reckless
driving, speeding, injuring 4 persons before driving into a ditch. Mind blank at
time of arrest.
==
MINNEAPOLIS
1938
Winona
,
Minn.
- M
Smoked marihuana for years; held up 3 taxi-cabs.
Sentenced, 10 years
==
Pennsylvania
==
[incident]-
Malvern and Howelville, Pa -
On July 1 and 16, 1935, respectively, State enforcement officers
visited certain farms situated near Malvern and Howelville, Pa., and discovered
2 1/2 acres of cannabis under cultivation concealed by fields of growing corn.
The fields were destroyed. Although
it was not possible to estimate correctly the amount of cannabis which might
have been harvested if the plants had been allowed to mature, the
opinion was expressed that the fields would have yielded approximately 27 pounds
of the drug. The defendants,
Luis Manon and Michael Ruiz, were held for prosecution.
[incident]-
COATESVILLEI
,
PA.
--
1937 Acting
on information that Joe Gracia was selling marihuana in Coatesville, Pa.,
narcotic officers assisted by local officers made purchases from him totalling
approximately 2 pounds, then arrested Gracia and seized from the basement of his
home one large trunk containing 487 ounces of marihuana and one small wooden
drum containing 328 ounces of marihuana.
[incident]-
1936
Philadelphia
,
Pennsylvania
- M
Arrested for driving auto in reckless fashion; also possession marihuana.
[incident]-
1936
Pittsburgh
- Robbery
and possession marihuana.
[incident]-
PHILADELPHIA
,
PA.
- On
Oct. 22 and 23, 1937, two plots of
marihuana were found in the heart of the city of
Philadelphia
. The
marihuana---about 3,000 plants on one plot and 3,500 plants on the other---was
cut and burned by Federal and State officers.
==
NEW ORLEANS
[incident]-
A seizure of 115 marihuana cigarettes was made in
New
Orleans
,
La.
,
at which time the owner, foiled by officers in an attempt to shoot himself,
grabbed a butcher knife and stabbed himself three times above the heart.
He escaped, and was later found, and had in his possession an ice pick,
with which he attempted to destroy himself when placed under arrest.
He made a second escape.
[incident]-
New Orleans.-During Feb.
1936 Federal narcotic agent and local police officers raided the premises of
Ampton Stanno an found their entrance to a rear downstairs door obstructed by
strongly reinforced door, in the center of which was a small slot through which
purchasers of marihuana cigarettes would insert the money and in turn receive
cigarettes. When the officers gained
admission through the barred door they found 400 marihuana cigarette contained
in a tin box lying on a table, and near to the cigarette box small case
containing a sum of money and marihuana ready for cigarette wrapping.
Ampton Stanno and Jane Williams, who were found in this house, were
placed under arrest. Robert
Williams, alias Jimmie Smith, was sought as another member of this illicit
marihuana ring but could not be found. A
warrant was issued for his arrest. In
a house to the rear of Stanno's, the police officers found a large pasteboard
box enclosing one bundle which contained about 3 pounds of marihuana, 25 pounds
of marihuana seed and dried marihuana leaves.
[incident]-
1935
New Orleans, La. -
M Violently attacked
officers with knife and revolver while being arrested for possession of
marihuana.
[incident]-
Sept. 27, 1935, police at New
Orleans, La., raided a cannabis cigarette "factory" in that city
and arrested Anthony Fazzio, Alice Fazzio, and Henry Denapolis.
Only a small quantity of loose cannabis was discovered, but one person,
subsequently ascertained to be one Mary Rodriguez, escaped with a package, which
one of the defendants stated contained 4,000 marihuana cigarettes.
On November 24, 1935, the same
police raided the premises occupied by Robert Williams and William Cayce, Jr.,
and seized 10 tin bread boxes containing 10,000 cannabis cigarettes.
The defendants were held for prosecution.
[incident]-
LOUISIANA -
William L. Rousseau was arrested by local officers under the provisions of the
Louisiana State narcotic act on August
22, 1936, for growing and possessing marihuana.
Reports had been received that marihuana cigarettes were being sold at
Rousseau's home. While officers
waited outside in automobiles, they observed several addicts approach Rousseau's
door to purchase marihuana cigarettes. Police
found in the kitchen two 1-pound coffee cans full of marihuana cigarettes and
two packages of the narcotic in drying form.
In the yard among four branching trees and growing vegetables were 100
growing marihuana plants about 12 feet tall.
The police destroyed the plants. William
L. Rousseau, father of William A. Rousseau, said that the marihuana had been
planted by his son for the purpose of obtaining seed to feed a pet redbird
belonging to the younger Rousseau.
[incident]-
Bourg and Houma.-On April 24, 1936, 2,500 marihuana plants growing on an area of about 3
acres, 12 pounds in bulk marihuana, and 67 marihuana cigarettes were seized and
confiscated on a farm near Bourg, La.,
and five persons were arrested on charges of violation of the marihuana law.
Ralph Savoise, Mrs. Ralph Savoise, Felix Blanchard, "Cookie"
Lanaud, and David North were growing and selling marihuana cigarettes to
oil-field workers and to school children.
Complaints were made by parents of some of the children to Federal
narcotic and local officers. Extensive
investigations were made until all participants in this illicit traffic at Houma
and Bourg were arrested. A
prosecution was instituted in the parish district court.
Conviction, which is expected, would carry a mandatory penalty of from 20
months to 5 years each.
[incident]-
LOUISIANA
La Fitte.--May 23, 1936, one Machesto Pazini was
arrested for possession of a large quantity of cannabis cigarettes and for
owning 3,000 cannabis plants. Pazini
had been permitting his children to smoke these cigarettes, and their consequent
delusions of grandeur led to the discovery of the cannabis cache.
[incident]-
LOUISIANA
English Turn, Plaquemines Parish.---Officers of the Louisiana State
police seized and destroyed large quantities of harvested and dried marihuana on
two adjoining farms at English Turn, Plaquemines Parish, on September
19, 1936. At the first farm they
raided they found about 5,000 stalks lying in a field and stored in a barn, and
also 300 pounds of dried marihuana ready for smoking.
Later, while continuing their investigations of the farm, the officers
discovered 800 pounds of marihuana stalks which had been harvested from an
adjacent tract of land about 7 acres in area.
Felix Caserta, about 30 years old, was the owner and occupant of the
second farm, which consisted of about 40 acres.
Caserta resided on the farm with his wife and children.
He admitted that he knew that the plants were marihuana and that he had
cut them down the day previous to the officers raid on his place.
He was arrested on charges of violation of the State uniform narcotic
law. Later Luke Cutrera, farmer, and
Dominic Richarda, who lived on and operated adjacent farms, were arrested for
possession of illicit marihuana. Cutrera
was reported to have been hired by marihuana peddlers to drive quantities of the
narcotic into New Orleans. Stalks,
seeds, and dried marihuana were found in a truck on Cutrera's farm.
Officers destroyed all of the plants in the area in which the marihuana
crop had been harvested.
[incident]-
NEW ORIEANS, LA.
Investigations conducted in New Orleans during the months of April to July 1938, resulted in a series of purchases of marihuana
cigarettes from 13 members of the Albano gang and the securing of evidence
against another member of the gang. On
August 18, 1938, the grand jury returned indictments against 14 of these
individuals, 12 of whom either were convicted or pleaded guilty, and received
sentences ranging from 17 months to 3 years.
Two of the defendants have not been apprehended.
-- After having made
purchases of marihuana cigarettes from all four members of a ring of marihuana
traffickers during the period from May 10 to July 7, 1938, narcotic officers
arrested Russel Saia, Anthony Cangimilla, and Ralph LaCoste.
Saia and Canogimilla were tried, convicted, and each sentenced to 30
months in the penitentiary. LaCoste
pleaded guilty and received a sentence of 17 months.
Roy Saia, the fourth member of the ring, is under indictment but has not
yet been apprehended.
==
NEW YORK ==
[incident ]- Arthur
Friedman, twenty-one, was one of five youths charged with the fatal shooting
of Detective Michael J. Foley in a restaurant holdup.
On April 7, 1938, Much journeyed down from temple and repeated his
fantastic story, this time for the Big Apple jurors.
[incident]-
In another major marihuana case Henley SELLERS and Neil SCHAU were arrested in New
York, N. Y., in July 1944 and
charged with importation and possession of 47 pounds (21 kilograms, 351 grams)
of marihuana. These men, with John
W. SIMMONS of Texarkana, Tex., had smuggled the marihuana into the United States
from Mexico.
Barren
Island, Brooklyn.-On September
2, 1936, police uprooted a large number of marihuana plants growing on a
5-acre field on which milk goats belonging to squatters in the vicinity were
grazing.. The members of the New
York narcotic squad in charge of workers from the department of health destroyed
the plants which appeared to thrive on the sandy soil.
This was said to have been the largest area, of the growing plant ever
found in Brooklyn. On the same date
there were destroyed by local officers 35 pounds of the dried plant which had
been found in a vacant building in Brooklyn.
[incident]-
On September 20, 1939, customs
officers at New York City found
concealed on the person of Eustico Rios, Puerto Rican seaman on the steamship
Monterey, coming from Veracruz, via Havana, one cheese cloth sack holding 255.6
gm., net, of marihuana. Rios refused
to divulge the source of the marihuana. On
November 13, 1939, Rios was sentenced to serve 1 year and 1 day in prison.
[incident]-
Three seizures of marihuana were made by customs officers at New
York City on the steamship Mexico, coming from Veracruz, via Havana.
The first seizure, on May 9, 1939, consisted of two packages of
marihuana, weighing 452 gm., net. Ownership
was not established. The second
seizure, on July 11, 1939, was one package of marihuana, weighing 4 gm., net,
with ownership undetermined, while the third seizure was two bags of marihuana,
weighing 1 kg. 327 gm., net, on August 22, 1939, with ownership not ascertained.
[incident]-
A seizure of 1 kg. 816 gm., net, of marihuana, was made by customs officers at New
York City on April 2, 1939, on
the steamship Orizaba, coming from Progreso, Veracruz, and Havana.
Ownership of the marihuana was not determined.
[incident]-
On Oct. 3, 1939, customs officers at New
York found one package of marihuana, weighing 2 gm., net, concealed under a
coil of rope on the steamship Santa Paula, arrived in port from Curacao,
Netherlands West Indies. On October
4, they found five glazed paper packages, containing 5 gm., net, of prepared
opium, and two metal "toys," containing 8 gin., net, of prepared
opium, concealed in spice tins in the main galley of the vessel.
The first cook of the ship, So You, admitted ownership of the opium;
claiming he drank a solution made from the opium; further, that he had purchased
the opium in Curacao, Netherlands West Indies.
He was subsequently released. Ownership
of the marihuana was not established. This
case was called to the attention of the Netherlands authorities.
[incident]-
Customs officers at New York City on October 11,
1939, arrested Jose Rodriguez, Puerto Rican fireman on the steamship Santa
Elena, coming from La Guayra, Puerto Cabello, Barranquilla, Cartagena, Colon,
and Curagao, when he attempted to bring ashore 7 marihuana cigarettes.
A search of the vessel resulted in the seizure of 65 additional marihuana
cigarettes. Rodriguez stated he had
purchased 10 marihuana cigarettes in a saloon in Panama.
[incident]-
On Aug. 22 and 23, 1939, customs
officers at New York City found 291
gm., net, of marihuana concealed on the steamship Santa Paula, arrived in port
from Curacao, Netherlands West Indies. A
member of the crew of the ship, Inocencio Rodriguez, was subsequently sentenced
to imprisonment for 1 month in connection with this seizure.
[incident]-
On Sept. 6, 1939, Customs officers at
New York City found 1 ½ marihuana
cigarettes, weighing 0.88 gm., net, in the possession of Pedro Velazquez, member
of the crew of the steamship Santa Rosa. Velazquez
stated he had purchased the cigarettes in Puerto Cabello, Venezuela.
He was not prosecuted.
[incident]-
On April 11, 1939, customs officers
at New York City, during a routine
search of the steamship Exiria, just arrived in port from Tunis, via Piraeus,
Salonika, Istanbul, Constanta, Gibraltar and Lisbon, found concealed thereon
three packages, containing 911 gm., net, of hashish (cannabis).
This hashish was in the form generally encountered in the Near East,
consisting of reddish colored powder which had been steamed or moistened in
sacks and allowed to dry, forming a hard dry brick-like substance.
Investigation disclosed a wiper on the ship, Nicholas Voupoukos, to be
the owner of the hashish, but this Greek seaman had signed off the ship that
morning. He was finally apprehended
in New York City on April 17, 1939. In
the meantime, an anonymous letter was received by customs officers, stating that
Nicholas Voupoukos had brought some hashish into the United States.
When Voupoukos was questioned on April 17, he admitted having purchased
the hashish at Istanbul from an unnamed Turkish citizen.
When informed concerning the anonymous letter, he stated this must have
been written by Socrates Argyros, a New York resident, from whom he had
previously purchased marihuana cigarettes on several occasions.
This information was given to Now York narcotic agents, who proceeded to
the premises occupied by Argyros and arrested this person.
A search of his residence disclosed the presence of 541 marihuana
cigarettes, weighing approximately 254 gm., net, and 401 gm., net, of bulk
marihuana. The marihuana in this
second seizure consisted of the dried, flowering tops and leaves of the cannabis
plant, in the form most frequently encountered in the United States.
On May 17, 1939, Argyros was sentenced to 6 months imprisonment, and
ordered placed on parole for 3 years after serving this sentence.
On June 20, 1939, Nicholas Voupoukos received sentence of 1 year and 1
day.
[incident]-
NEW YORK, N. Y.
- On September
27, 1938, customs officers at New York City discovered five bags containing
I kg. 765 gm., net, of marihuana concealed on the steamship Orizaba coming from
Veracruz. Enrique Almestica, fireman
on the vessel, was arrested and was subsequently sentenced to 6 months
imprisonment.
[incident]-
New York A second marihuana seizure,
amounting to 1 kg. 644 gm., was made on the steamship Orizaba by customs
officers at New York City on October 19,
1938. The case is still pending.
[incident]-
On December 28, 1938, a customs guard
at New York found in a ventilator in
the steward's washroom of the steamship Brazil, coming from Buenos Aires, via
Santos, Rio de Janeiro, and Trinidad, a package of marihuana, weighing 280 gm.,
net. Customs agents investigating
the seizure were informed by certain crew members of the vessel that the
marihuana belonged to Miguel Aponte, steward. A
search of this person revealed one marihuana cigarette.
Another marihuana cigarette was found in his looker.
The prisoner stated that he was a marihuana smoker and that the
cigarettes were for his own use. However,
he claimed that he knew nothing about the marihuana found in the ventilator, nor
would he divulge its origin. The
defendant is being held for prosecution.
[incident]-
1938 NEW YORK, N. Y.
Among important cases developed during the year concerning interstate
distribution was that against one Jose Samaniego and others.
The principals were residents of New York City.
They learned that large supplies of marihuana were available in southern
Minnesota and sent to that territory. Marihuana
prepared for smoking was subsequently shipped from Minnesota to New York and to
Chicago, ILL., where it was distributed in the illicit traffic.
Records obtained in the investigation indicated that approximately 294
kg. 835 gm. of marihuana prepared for smoking had been distributed in New York
by this organization. As a result of
the investigation, two persons were convicted in Minnesota, two in Chicago, and
six were convicted at New York City.
[incident]-
1948
New York -
M 36
Puerto Rican choked and stabbed Mrs. V. Lotito, while under influence
marihuana. A frequent user, he
was married without his knowledge while under influence. He was violent,
desperate criminal and habitual user.
[incident]-
1937
New York -
M 39
While both smoking marihuana cigarettes, shot and killed room-mate G.
Senical, who wanted to borrow $20 to buy heroin. Put body in trunk, to get rid
of it. Arrested that night, had 20 marihuana cigarettes; had been selling in
Miami restaurant before crime. Previous
criminal record, " I was fearless after smoking marihuana cigarettes but
would not have done this
without marihuana."
Michigan
[incident]-
In October 1943 in Detroit,
Mich., Prison sentence given for claiming use of marihuana to evade military
service Gad Sam Holland was sentenced in Federal Court to 5 years' imprisonment
on a charge of attempting to evade induction into the Armed Services by smoking
marihuana cigarettes to make him physically unfit before appearing for his
examination, and by giving false statements that he was addicted to the use of
marihuana. -
After Holland was rejected by his Selective Service Board because he
informed them of his use of marihuana, narcotic agents investigated his case
which resulted in the conviction.
[incident]-
March 1952, four youths, the youngest
sixteen, robbed and murdered a filling station attendant at Detroit,
Mich. When three of the youths
were later arrested at Kirkwood, Mo.,
23 marihuana cigarettes were found in their possession.
They admitted having smoked marihuana just prior to committing this
atrocious crime. During the trial for murder in December 1952, a defense effort
was made to show that they should not be found guilty because they were so
strongly under the influence of marihuana that they didn't know what they were
doing. The jury refused to accept
this as a defense found them all guilty of murder in the first degree.
[incident]-
MICHIGAN -
Detroit.- On September 17 1936, 2,500 pounds of marihuana found growing
in the backyards of various houses were confiscated under the Michigan State
narcotic law. The marihuana was
burned on an order from the prosecuting attorney of Flint County.
[incident]-
DETROIT, MICH. -
Between July 15 and August 9, 1937, the Detroit Police Department destroyed
several tons of marihuana found growing partly wild and partly under cultivation
in various vacant lots and back yards in the city of Detroit, the amounts in the
several plots ranging from 20 to 3,360 pounds.
[incident]-
CHELSEA, MICH. -
On August 26, 1937, a
narcotic officer and State officers destroyed approximately 25,000 marihuana
plants from 6 to 12 feet in height growing on a farm near Chelsea.
Mich. There was no evidence
that any of the tenants of the farm recognized the weed until a guest identified
it as marihuana. From the appearance
of the patches the marihuana had evidently been planted by a former tenant.
[incident]-
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. -
On September 23, 1937,
narcotic and police officers destroyed about 2,000 marihuana plants growing, on
a vacant lot. It was alleged that a
person whose name was unknown was obtaining the drug from this lot and selling
cigarettes, but since the lot was being used as a playground by children of the neighborhood it was deemed
advisable to destroy the plants immediately rather than leave them and attempt
to apprehend the person responsible for their growth.
[incident]-
1937 -
M and 6 others, M. and F., age 21-23, arrested Detroit, Michigan for rape, theft, grand larceny.
Texas
[incident]-
In Dallas, Tex., on Dec.15,
1940, Johnny Andrew Butler, 21, who had just completed a prison sentence for
violations of the Federal marihuana law, and Molly Suger, 38, were charged with
the slaying of Mrs. Rose Suger, her mother-in-law.
Mrs. Suger was shot to death at her home in Dallas on July 2, 1945, by a
person who fired a pistol bullet through a window in her home.
Butler is alleged to have admitted firing the shot, and said he was hired
by Molly Suger to kill her mother-in-law for about $500.
The murder case is pending. In
1941 Butler was convicted for violations of the Federal marihuana law and
sentenced to 18 months' imprisonment. He
was again arrested on similar charges in 1943, and sentenced on January 26,
1944, to 6 months and placed on 3 years' probation.
Probation was revoked on August 8, 1944, and unconditional sentence of 6
months imposed.
On
Nov. 9, 1939, customs inspectors at El
Paso, Tex., searched the person of R. A. Redmond, American, when he entered
the United States from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, seizing several marihuana
cigarettes. Redmond recovered 1
cigarettes and swallowed them, together with the paper covering.
The inspectors regained one cigarette, but not until they had been
attacked by Redmond. Redmond stated
he had been smoking marihuana for approximately 8 months.
The circumstances illustrate the effect that the marihuana had upon him,
as it is reported that he possessed almost superhuman strength, it requiring the
combined efforts of two officers to subdue him.
Redmond is being held for prosecution.
Mexican authorities were informed of this seizure.
[incident]-
On July 13, 1941, one Apodaca,
allegedly under the influence of marihuana and while drinking at the bar of a
cafe in El Paso, Tex., suddenly went
berserk, took a knife from his pocket and started cutting the man standing next
to him. This man seized the knife
while his assailant attempted to cut two other persons.
Apodaca was in possession of two marihuana cigarettes at the time he
committed these crimes. He pleaded
guilty and was sentenced on October 24, 1941, to serve 4 months in a
correctional institution, and sentence was suspended for 1 year.
The
following additional marihuana seizures were effected at points on or near the
Mexican border: -
April
8, 1939, Hidalgo, Tex., I kg. 332 gm., net, of marihuana,.
May
12, 1939, El Paso, Tex., 40 gm., not, of marihuana.
July
2, 1939, Mercedes, Tex., 71 gm., net, of marihuana.
August
27, 1939, Pearsall, Tex., 266 gm., net, of marihuana.
September
23, 1939, El Paso, Tex., 12 gm., net, of marihuana.
September
27, 1939, El Paso, Tex., fifty marihuana cigarettes, weighing 52 gm., net.
October
12, 1939) El Paso, Tex., nine marihuana cigarettes, weighing 6 gm., net.
October
29, 1939, Browmville, Tex., nineteen rolls of marihuana, weighing 62 gm., net.
October
30, 1939, El Paso, Tex., one sack of marihuana, weighing 311 gm., net.
November
1, 1939, Brownsville, Tex., ten marihuana cigarettes, weighing 4 gm., net.
November
7, 1939, Harlingen, Tex., fifteen rolls of marihuana, weighing 67 gm., net.
November
22, 1939, Douglas, Ariz., twenty-one marihuana cigarettes, weighing 12 gm., net.
November
23, 1939, Harlingen, Tex., twelve marihuana cigarettes, weighing 9 gm., net.
November
24, 1939, Del Rio, Tex., 22 gm., net, of marihuana.
November
25, 1939, El Paso, Tex., 21 gm., net, of marihuana.
November
28, 1939, Nogales, Ariz., twenty-seven marihuana cigarettes, weighing 26 gm.,
net.
November
28, 1939, Nogales, Ariz., three marihuana cigarettes, weighing 0.97 gm., net,
and 16 gm., net, of bulk marihuana.
December
8, 1939, El Paso, Tex., eight marihuana cigarettes, weighing 0.52 gm., net.
December
10, 1939, Patagonia, Ariz., one marihuana cigarette, weighing 0.19 gm., net.
December
14, 1939, El Paso, Tex., two marihuana cigarettes, weighing 3 gm., net.
December
14, 1939, Mercedes, Tex., eight marihuana cigarettes, weighing 0.52 gm., net.
In
each of the marihuana cases listed above, the defendants admitted that the
marihuana had been obtained in Mexico and smuggled into the United States.
Mexican authorities have been informed of these seizures.
[incident]-
On October 3, 1939, customs patrol
officers arrested Juan Guerrero and Alejos Ramirez in possession of bulk
marihuana and marihuana cigarettes, weighing 113 gm., net.
They stated that they had purchased the marihuana from Jesus DeLeon of Eagle
Pass, Tex., and they accompanied the officers to Eagle Pass in order to
identify this person. DeLeon was
then arrested and approximately 4 kg. 82 gm. of marihuana were seized from him.
He admitted that the marihuana had been smuggled from Mexico.
He was subsequently sentenced to 13 months' imprisonment.
[incident]-
Dec.
8, 1943 life imprisonment was decreed
for Pablo Rodriguez of Laredo, Tex., when he was convicted of whipping to death his
10-year-old niece, Guadalupe Flores. She
and another niece had been kept in the back yard of the Rodriguez residence in a
doghouse-like shack where they were sometimes chained.
When Rodriguez was arrested, marihuana cigarettes were found on his
person. It was the opinion of
officials that lie had been a marihuana smoker.
[incident]- Corpus
Christi - An oil worker, of good character smoked a cigarette, raped his
six-year old daughter. When his wife
returned home in the evening, she found him lying across the bed in a stupor and
the little child torn and bleeding. He
couldn’t remember. Was sentenced
to death. before Jan 1937
[incident]-
1964 Houston, Texas - M
45 Negro shot and killed E.
Sampson, Negro, in argument over dice game. Both were marihuana users.
[incident]-
1964 Houston, Texas - M
Negro, stabbed negro A. Grimes, 30, to death; motive unknown; marihuana
used.
[incident]-
- DEL Rio, TEXAS. September
1940. One Eleutero Gonzales, allegedly while under the influence of marihuana,
shot to death two women and then committed suicide by literally slicing himself
to bits about the abdomen, around the heart and throat, in a manner which
indicated that he was bereft of all reasoning.
Law enforcement officers believed that Gonzales was under the influence
of marihuana at the time of the double murder and suicide, and that he had
previously used marihuana. It was
the opinion of the doctor who saw Gonzales just before he died that no one could
so mutilate himself unless he was unable to feel "shock" and the only
thing he knew that would produce such a condition, to such a degree, is
marihuana. Gonzales had wandered
around in the fields for hours after the killing and after his self-mutilation.
[incident]-
- 1940
Del Rio, Texas - Male 30
Shot and murdered his 34-year old sweetheart, A. Antonia, also M. Gomez,
nurse. Then inflicted stab wounds his throat, stomach, intestines, heart,
genitalia. He had previously committed rape on 12-year old girl, and was free on
bail awaiting new trial.
[incident]-
- 1944 Houston, Texas -
F Slashed Miss M. Jolly, 18, in
quarrel - over sales and boys; 3 girls and 6 boys in gang smoked marihuana to
get " hopped up " before committing various crimes.
[incident]-
1936 San Antonio, Texas - F
Two young women arrested for possession marihuana violently attacked
Officer C. Cullen.
[incident]-
- The only evidence that there might be large-scale, smuggling of
cannabis into the United States occurred in the seizure of 220 pounds of the
drug at Brownsville, Tex., on July
5, 1935. Customs officers
discovered this illicit shipment concealed in a carload of fresh pineapples
which had been shipped to Brownsville from Tampico, Mexico.
[incident]-
1964 Houston, Texas - M
Stabbed and killed J. Ward, 24, in bar room fight; was marihuana user.
[incident]-
HOUSTON, TEXAS. March
1937. Hitch-hiker under the
influence of marihuana murdered motorist.
Missouri
1938
St. Joseph, Missouri -
M
37 Smoked 2 marihuana
cigarettes, then raped his 7-year old daughter.
== WEST VA. ==
[Incident]- Negro raped a
girl eight years of age. Two Negros
took a girl fourteen years old and kept her for two days in a hut under the
influence of marihuana. Upon
recovery she was found to be suffering from syphilis.
Before Jan 1937
1937
Clarksburg,
West Virginia -
M 26
Negro arrested charge raping 9-year old girl. True bill by Grand Jury.
- CLARKSBURG W. VA.
October 1937.
Lewis Harris, 26 years of age, at arrested for rape of 9-year-old girl
while under the influence of marihuana.
[incident]-
EVERETTVILLE, W. VA. - 1937 -
Acting on information that Pete Lopez, alias Mexican Pete, was
growing and selling marihuana in Everettville, W. Va., narcotic officers
assisted by local officers made four purchases totaling 7 ounces 309 grains of
marihuana from him and from a colored woman, Lucy Vaughn, then arrested Lopez
and upon searching his house found and seized 15 pounds 8 ounces 120 grains of
marihuana. It was found that he was
growing the marihuana in a corn field near his cabin and 345 stalks, bare of
leaves and seeds, were cut and burned. -
Lopez, 37 years old, claimed to have smoked marihuana since he was about
10 years old. Investigation
disclosed that he was engaged in illicit traffic in marihuana on a large scale
solely for monetary gain. He was
tried, convicted, and sentenced to 10 years in a Federal, prison.
Lucy Vaughn was sentenced to 1 year in a county jail.
1953
Bluefield, West Virginia
M
40 Attempted armed robbery
Mrs. H. Poole; after seeing newspaper account, vaguely remembered it.
== OREGON ==
1960
Portland, Oregon - M
19 Raped 16-year old high
school girl; beat, broke jaw, knocked out upper teeth, in wooded area after
beatnick party.
Chattanooga
News: == TENNESSEE ==
[incident ]- (Conducted
a publicity drive against Marihuana abuse) -<'37
Ohio
[incident ]- Finley Ohio,
“This took place in a community playground in Finley, Ohio.
The playground supervisors were the men who were selling the stuff.
It all developed from the case of this youngster who was evidently going
crazy. before Jan 14, 1937
[incident ]- Cleveland news
- Editorial (exact date unknown) 1952
[incident]-
1937
Cleveland, Ohio -
M With R. B. robbery and
assault; guilty.
[incident]-
Columbus Ohio - pre 1937
- In Columbus, Ohio, a
35-year-old man was sentenced to the electric chair for robbery and first-degree
murder of a hotel clerk. His
plea of not guilty was based on insanity due to smoking marihuana cigarettes and
the fact that he was under the influence of marihuana when the crime was
committed.
[incident]-
1937
Ohio -
A gang of seven young men, all under 20 years of age, who for more
than 2 months terrorized central Ohio
with a series of about 38 stick-ups, were arrested in Columbus, Ohio, on robbery
charges. They confessed that they
operated while "high" on marihuana.
One of the youths admitted that he had smoked "reefers" on and
off for at least 2 years, and said that when he went with the others on
stick-ups he was "ready to tear anybody apart" who opposed him.
He claimed the practice of smoking marihuana first started among his
friends about 4 or 5 years previously, while most of them were still in high
school. In describing his crimes he
said: "If I had killed somebody on a job, I'd never have known it."
This was verified by the officer obtaining the confessions, who explained that
the hardest problem was to get these youths to remember who committed the
stick-ups, or when or where they, happened.
When police told them how a filling-station attendant reported a robber
threatened to beat his brains out with a revolved butt, one admitted he was the
robber, but had forgotten his own words. It
was almost impossible for them to break off the habit when they could still get
"tea" so easily, they claimed. "When
you try to break off you get jumpy, your hands shake, and you hear the least
little noise. A dopey feeling comes
when you're going down, and you get mopey. You
get so you smoke a 'stick' a day, and you can't stop.
- [incident ]- A gang of seven young men, all under 20 years of age, who for more than
two months terrorized central Ohio with a series of about thirty-eight
stick-ups, were arrested in March 1937
in Columbus, Ohio, on robbery charges. They
confessed that they operated while “high” on Marihuana.
Could be 1936 -
[incident]-
Columbus - Ohio
- Police in Columbus,
Ohio were called upon to investigate a disturbance on a public street, where a
young man, Howard Horn,
was menacing citizens with a pistol. The
officer, while attempting to subdue Horn, was attacked by him and wounded three
times. He was obliged to return the
fire to save his own life 7 and Horn was killed instantly.
Investigation by the vice squad showed that Horn, who was 19 years of
age, was a marihuana addict and at the time of his attack on the officer was
under the influence of this narcotic.
[incident]-
1957
Cincinnati, Ohio -
M 28
Negro waiter, with C. J. 30; S. R. and G. G. all smoked marihuana
cigarettes over 2 years; 5 counts armed robbery Cincinnati grocery stores.
[incident]-
1937
Ohio --
M First degree murder,
blamed on smoking marihuana.
[incident]-
COLUMBUS, 0hio. October
1936. A young man was sentenced
to the electric chair for the robbing and unprovoked killing of a hotel clerk.
He maintained that he was a marihuana addict and was under the influence
of the drug when he committed the crimes. The
judge of the Court in which he was tried refused to accept this plea as an
extenuating circumstance and served notice on smokers' of marihuana cigarettes
that they cannot escape punishment for crimes committed while under the
influence of this narcotic. -
[incident]- 1936 - In Columbus,
Ohio, a 35-year-old man was sentenced to the electric chair for robbery and
first-degree murder of a hotel clerk. His
plea of not guilty was based on insanity due to smoking marihuana cigarettes and
the fact that he was under the influence of marihuana when the crime was
committed.
[incident]-
1949
Cleveland, Ohio -
M Negro, long criminal
record Kentucky, narcotics and manslaughter, murdered barracks mate J. MacElroth
at marihuana-cocaine party.
[incident]-
Sept.18, 1935, State enforcement
officers arrested Teofilo Chavez. Fred Chavez, Frank Chavez, Marjorie Chavez, Emmez
Guzman, and Joe Garza at a farm
near Cooney, Ohio, and approximately
3 acres of cannabis were seized and destroyed.
Eighty-five pounds of cannabis ready for smoking, 300 pounds (gross
weight) of the flowering tops, and 75 pounds of cannabis seeds were seized.
While investigating the above-mentioned case, the officers learned that
one Sylvestro Gonzales was growing and cultivating cannabis on a farm near Fremont, Ohio. There
they discovered a field of cannabis surrounded by growing corn.
Part of the field had already been cut for the purpose of curing.
The officers seized and destroyed 2 acres of growing plants, 3 tons of
cannabis racked for curing, and 16 bushels of flowering tops from which the
resin had not yet been extracted.
[incident]-
Sept. 17, 19, and 20, and October
2, 1935, State officers arrested Pedro Mandez, Pedro Nieto, Salvador
Capetilla, Harry Horlendez and Rafael Tolento at Elgin, Paulding, and Fremont, Ohio, and seized approximately 2,500 pounds of growing
cannabis and 810 pounds of cured tops.
[incident]-
Oct. 1 and 10, 1935, Toledo police
officers searched the premises occupied by Louis
Gonzales and Antonio Navarro and found approximately 740 pounds of cannabis
concealed therein. Both persons were
arrested. On October 10, 1935,
police made a further search of the premises and discovered 200 pounds of
cannabis concealed beneath the floor boards.
The defendants were each sentenced to I year in prison.
[incident]-
Oct. 18, 1935, police officers at Lorain,
Ohio, arrested Florentino Garcia and
Jesus Fierro and seized two truck loads of cannabis plants, stalks, and
leaves, weighing approximately 1 1/2 tons, net.
The defendants were committed to the county jail until fines.
[incident]-
1936 Police in Columbus,
Ohio were called upon to investigate a disturbance on a public street, where
a young man, Howard Horn, was menacing citizens with a pistol.
The officer, while attempting to subdue Horn, was attacked by him and
wounded three times. He was obliged
to return the fire to save his own life 7 and Horn was killed instantly.
Investigation by the vice squad showed that Horn, who was 19 years of
age, was a marihuana addict and at the time of his attack on the officer was
under the influence of this narcotic.
[incident]-
1936 After a 15-year-old boy was
found mentally deranged from smoking marihuana cigarettes be furnished
information that led to the arrest of three men who admitted making sales of the
cigarettes. Fifteen to eighteen
pounds of marihuana were seized from their garage.
At the time officers stated that there were 20 known addicts of high
school age, in the Ohio town. The men
arrested allegedly told the officer that they had become alarmed several months
previous to their arrest when the youths appeared abnormal and began annoying
them for heavier supplies. The
apprehension of this gang cleared up a serious situation.
·
[incident]- COLUMBUS, OHIO
- On April 24, 1938, William
Bronston was observed by narcotic and police officers as he was about to
make a sale of marihuana from his automobile parked at the rear of 387 Charles
Street, Columbus. Seeing the
officers he leaped from the car, ran down the alley and escaped.
The marihuana concealed in his car, consisting of about 227 gm. was
seized. Officers entered the
premises and arrested Thomas Claridy who was in possession of marihuana
cigarettes. William
Bronston was subsequently arrested after a hard fight and gun battle, he
being under the influence of marihuana at the time.
He was tried and convicted on June 7, 1938, and received a sentence of 5
years and $1,000 fine.
[incident]-
June 30, 1948 at Cleveland,
Ohio, James Buchanan was arrested
by police of that city for the murder of a 60-year-old East Cleveland widow.
After questioning by Police detectives he admitted his participation in
the crime and also accused an accomplice. Buchanan
admitted having participated, during the previous 6 montlis7 in the brutal
attack of 16 women for the purpose of robbing them of their money.
He stated further he wanted the money to buy wine and reefers (marihuana
cigarettes) which he would consume at the same time.
Before venturing out to commit their atrocious crimes, Buchanan and his
partner would fortify themselves with wine and marihuana.
Buchanan was 24 years of age at the time of his arrest, married and the
father of three children.
[incident]-
OHIO. April
1937. Henry
Barnes, on the witness stand for first degree murder, testified that before
he and a companion killed a man in a holdup, the pair had smoked three marihuana
cigarettes each, and therefore did not know what they were doing.
They were both sentenced to life imprisonment.
[incident]-
OHIO. Investigating a disturbance in
a cafe in a southern Ohio city, police officers saw Anthony E. pointing a loaded
revolver at patrons. E. resisted
arrest, and after a severe struggle the officers subdued him.
Earlier, E., with the use of his revolver, had robbed Abe L., driver for
the W. Bakery Co., of $5.00. At the time of the arrest, the defendant was
completely under the influence of marihuana and a quantity of marihuana was
found in his possession.
==
IOWA == SOUTHERLAND COURIER: (Iowa)
STATE HIGHWAYS,.
Iowa -
Between August 1 and August. 17, 1937, the Iowa Highway Commission
destroyed approximately 1,000 acres of marihuana growing wild along highways in
the State.
Oklahoma
-
[incident]-
While allegedly under the influence of marihuana, 27-year-old Carl J. Murphy,
hotel bellboy, on Sept. 30, 1943, shot and killed J. Stayton Smith, guard in the
Federal Building at Oklahoma City, Okla.
He was convicted for the crime and sentenced to serve 10 years.
---Another bellboy who was arrested in the case confessed that he and
Murphy had smoked marihuana in a hotel room before the crime was committed.
Murphy then left the hotel and walked to the Federal Building.
On the street he met three sailors, one of whom he bit on the neck.
He struck a small boy whom he met on the sidewalk.
Murphy then went to the Federal Building and took charge of an Army
Recruiting Office. When Mr. Smith,
the building guard, was called to remove Murphy, a fight ensued.
Murphy seized a gun from the guard and shot and killed him instantly.
Murphy then placed the gun on a chair and walked down the hall singing.
He engaged in another fight but was finally subdued and placed in the
city jail. Two days later Murphy was
still unable to think or talk coherently. He
talked about trying to get on the top of an automobile where he could reach a
telephone wire and swing himself to the top of the hotel and from there he could
get to heaven. Later, at a hearing,
Murphy stated that he had smoked marihuana several times; that he did not
remember leaving the hotel, nor the fights nor the shooting of Mr. Smith; he did
not remember his arraignment and stated the first he knew about the matter was
after he came out of the stupor when someone told him he had shot and killed a
guard at the Federal Building. -
Murphy's employers stated he had always been quiet and sober, and had
never caused trouble of any kind. -
The effects he experienced are characteristic, particularly with regard
to the distortion of space and lack of restraint or memory by individuals of
their own actions while under the influence of marihuana.
1937
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma -
M
Smoked marihuana 12 years. Arrested for raping his 13-year old daughter.
Previous criminal record- assault with
knife; sale marihuana; assault with knife; vagrancy.
Virginia
[incident]-
On March 21, 1939, customs officers
at Norfolk, Va., when searching the
steamship Black Condor, arrived in port from Philadelphia Chester, Rotterdam,
Antwerp, New York, and Baltimore, found tobacco tin, containing 32 gm., net, of
marihuana concealed in a rope locker.
[incident]-
After the steamship New Brooklyn arrived at Norfolk,
Va., on August 14, 1939, from
Freetown, West Africa, there were seized 56.8 gm. of marihuana.
At Brooklyn, N. Y., customs officers had found four packages of
marihuana, weighing 64 gm., net, concealed on the person of John Boe Walley,
negro crew member of the vessel. Walley
stated he had purchased the marihuana in Freetown from an unnamed woman, paying
2 pence for each package. On Sept.
25, 1939, Walley was sentenced to 6 months imprisonment.
Tennessee
[incident]-
MEMPHIS, TENN.
On Oct. 4, 1938, police officers of Memphis, Tenn., received
information that Joe Lang, Orlando Hodge, and Mary Jones were planning to rob
Mary Jones' aunt and with the proceeds therefrom to proceed to Chicago for the
purpose of selling marihuana. They
were arrested on the same date and 411 gm. of marihuana and 147 marihuana
cigarettes were seized. They
admitted that they had procured the marihuana on a plantation in Mississippi
about 50 miles from Memphis, and divided it, and they had planned after
committing the robbery to take the marihuana to Chicago and sell it.
On October 14, 1938, all three pleaded guilty.
Hodge and Lang each received a sentence of 3 years and $1,000 fine, both
having previous criminal records. Mary
Jones was placed on probation for 3 years.
Kentucky
[incident]-
NEWPORT, KY.
On Feb. 24, 1938, police officers of Newport, Ky., arrested Ralph
Bridowell for the possession of stolen property.
While searching his premises they found a total of 8 kg. 306 gm. of
marihuana, to which he acknowledged ownership and claimed to have purchased it
from a man whose name he did not know. On
February 25, 1938, his brother, Harry Bridewell, was arrested for the sale of
marihuana cigarettes. Both pleaded
guilty and each was sentenced to serve a term of 5 years in the Penitentiary.
Each had previously served a penitentiary term for violations of the
liquor laws.
Washington
State:
[incident]-
Seattle.-Charles Banks was arrested on August
30, 1936, by narcotic officers and local detectives on charges of violation
of the State narcotic law after selling 6 ounces of marihuana to an informer.
This defendant claimed that he had been buying regularly from a man whose
name or address he was unable to furnish the police.
He was arraigned on September 23, 1936, pleaded guilty, and was sentenced
on the same day to 10 years in the penitentiary.
[incident]-
1939 Seattle, Washington
- M
26 Negro, crazed by smoking
marihuana, attacked a Greek railroad pensioner, J. Karakinikas, 74, with his
bare fists; death. Plea guilty. Smoked 2 marihuana cigarettes at time.
[incident]-
SPOKANE, WASHINGTON. August
1940. Joseph
Mines, shortly after having smoked two marihuana cigarettes, brutally
murdered a 74-year-old retired railroad worker.
According to testimony brought out at his trial for manslaughter, Mines
had never before seen his victim and could assign no reason for having murdered
him other than that following the smoking of the marihuana cigarettes he had
become obsessed with an idea that he was being pursued and upon encountering the
aged man he attacked and killed him. Mines
was sentenced in October 1940 to serve 20 years in the Washington State
Penitentiary.
[incident]-
Marihuana Found in Death Car
- Thirty-four
grains of marihuana were found in an automobile driven by John B. Payne, 19,
when it collided with another car in northeast Washington on Sept.
23, 1945, resulting in the death of one woman and the injury of
eight other persons. Evidence was
presented to the coroner's jury that Payne had been associated with known
marihuana traffickers and users. Under
cross examination he admitted telling doctors at an Army induction examination
that he had used as many as three marihuana cigarettes a day.
Payne and the driver of the other car were fined $250 after pleading
guilty in municipal court to charges of reckless driving.
[incident]-
1960 Seattle, Washington
- M
Negro killed wife, then committed suicide. 76 more marihuana cigarettes
found in his service station.
?
-- M
With another Negro, M. G. arrested after committing 7 robberies under
influence marihuana.
1921
-- M
30 Beat to death with a rock
T. Bernhardt, boy, 14, while herding cattle in pasture; accused boy of pollut
ing his water supply. Boy's
head crushed, one eye gouged out, and missing. Arrested several hours later, he
screamed and tore jail furnishings. Smoking marihuana at time; claimed insane;
found to be sane. Hanged
1936
- M
Charged with murder; offered defense he was under influence marihuana at
time.
1936
- M
Raped 10-year old girl, previous arrest for possession marihuana.
1937
-- M
Assaulted police officers with dangerous weapon while under influence of
marihuana.
1938
- F
28 Prostitute stabbed Mrs. M.
O'Shannon for not cooperating Lesbian activities.
1938
- M
22 After smoking 2 marihuana
cigarettes, married waitress, altho already married and with 3-year old child. Everything went blank, and he had no
control.
1939
- M
40 Raped G. Raloff, while
under influence marihuana and bay nun and threatened to kill her children with
knife.
1939
- M
Teenage, attempted rape G. Raloff under influence marihuana and bay rum.
1939
- M
Threw glass at bartender while smoking marihuana just bought from
peddler. Arrested
1939
- M
39 Assaulted and shot another man in
controversy while both smoking marihuana.
1940
- M
33 Forced his landlady, Mrs.
M. delisle to smoke marihuana, and frequently raped her.
1940
- M
21 Auto theft, after 9 thefts
with armed robbery; robbed and shot druggist.
1940
- M
Stole gun from employer, held up, shot salesman stomach for not following
instructions; attempted rape clerk; stole $75; Police tracked him down, so he
'shot himself.
1944
- M
39 Murdered Ga. Castenada,
29; mutilated her hips and head with razor blades, then castrated self; had been
smoking marihuana for an hour before attack.
EDUCATIONAL WORK
Much
effort has been expended during the year on preventive educational work,
particularly regarding the abuse of marihuana.
In regard to education of. this type, it is felt that if the material is
not very carefully worked out there might be grave danger of creating curiosity
among the youth which would have a tendency to be harmful rather than
beneficial; in fact, it is thought that marihuana educational talks should be
confined to adults, who in turn can properly inform their own children.
It
is considered wise to guard against the danger of persons not fully conversant
with the question broadcasting lectures and information on narcotic drugs.
Too much stress cannot be laid on the importance of obtaining the
cooperation of persons who can speak with authority on the subject, and in such
manner that no element of curiosity or desire to experiment could possibly be
aroused in the minds of listeners as to the nonmedical use of drugs.
The public response has evidenced appreciation and support of this trend,
and great assistance has been rendered by various women's organizations,
particularly by the National Woman's Christian
Temperance Union, the General Federation of Women's Clubs, and the numerous
parent-teacher organizations throughout the country in the widespread
dissemination of educational material on illicit use of narcotic drugs.
There
has been increased demand for speakers and for written information on the
narcotic and marihuana problems, manifesting an active desire on the part of
many worthy civic organizations and citizens to be of assistance.
Over
150 addresses were delivered, on request, by various supervisory officials of
the Bureau to organizations throughout the country such as the various medical
associations, various police schools and State police training schools, the
Woman's Christian Temperance Union, the American Legion, various churches,
hospital groups, and lodges, Kiwanis, Rotary, and other clubs, colleges of
pharmacy and science, parent-teacher associations, Associations of University
Women, Peace Officers' Training Schools, Peace Officers Associations, and other
interested groups.
The
Commissioner of Narcotics personally fulfilled a number of lecture engagements
before national groups on the narcotic problem.
As of interest, there is quoted below the text of an address before the
Eighth Annual Forum on Current Problem Facing America, held under the auspices
of the New York Herald-Tribune in New York City during October
1938: --
The speech by Honorable H. J. Anslinger, Federal Commissioner of
Narcotics, on
?
M Smoked his first 2
marihuana cigarettes; jumped 18 feet from hotel window onto adjacent garage roof
barefooted, burst into Mr. K.'s room, said " God told me to kill this man
", and beat him to death with fists. Then screaming he was Hitler, jumped
thru window 30 feet to pavement, breaking ribs and legs. No recollection in
court
1948
- M
Murdered widow, 60 years old, with accomplice, to obtain money to buy
more marihuana for both; confessed attacking and robbing 16 other women.
1948
- M
Negro, smoked marihuana before going out to commit various crimes including
murder Mrs. I. Koogle. " Poor man's poison. "
1950
- M
Robbed A. Litz in Weinberg Bakery of $5; resisted arrest; possession
marihuana.
1953
- M
Negro, shot and killed while attempting holdup grocer in Harlem; plea
guilty.
1953
- M
First violator Marihuana Tax Act for illegal possession, penitentiary W.
Va. 10 years; released; felonious attack with hatchet.
1953
- M
Attempted robbery diner; has 16 marihuana cigarettes plus one butt;
admitted being confirmed user.
Sacramento,
- (From mag.
Dated may 1934)
From
Sacramento, California, comes the story of a
20-year-old-girt mother who sobbed out to police a tragic story of how her
husband, crazed with narcotics, forced her to help him in a career of crime.
The girl, a former nurse, is Mrs. Ruth Sorahan, an attractive wisp of a
blonde, who was arrested as she stepped from a train in Sacramento last month.
Her husband is Philip Sorahan under arrest in San Jose for a series of
burglaries which, according to Mrs. Sorahan, encompassed the entire San
Francisco Bay region. The girl
sobbed: "Philip
was a good husband until he started to use marihuana.
We were happily married, and both looked forward eagerly to the birth of
our first child. -- "Then some
one got him smoking marihuana. Over
night he changed. From then on he
seemed like a stranger. He lost his
job, and when our savings ran out, he started to steal to get more money to buy
the dope." --
Her story, punctuated by wracking sobs, told how Philip was alternately
hysterically gay and inhumanly cruel. She
continued: "He would beat me
until I fainted from pain. He
threatened to kill me if I didn't help him dispose of the things he stole.
In fear of my life, I would take them to a pawn shop.
Philip would go into insane rages when I failed to get what he thought
was a good price for the things."
Philadelphia
- (From mag.
Dated may 1934)
From
Philadelphia recently the papers reported the following story:
An
alleged "hop joint," fitted out with cheap bunks wherein addicts could
lie and hide their troubles behind clouds of marihuana smoke was uncovered
recently by Captain Kronbar and a squad of men when they raided a place on
juniper street, below Lombard.
Approximately
$10,000 worth of marihuana was seized and two women and two men, were arrested.
The seizure of the drug, which was outlawed by Pennsylvania last
September, is the largest ever made here. More
than one hundred pounds of marihuana, some of it rolled into cigarettes, some
packaged apparently for delivery, still more in the plain weed state, were
seized. Recently a number of arrests
were made in Pittsburgh's "Hill" district, breaking up a ring of
marihuana peddlers and addicts. Three
Mexicans and one Negro were arrested in one of the raids and a quantity of
marihuana was confiscated.
Reefer Madness book
- A German firm
even marketed cannabis cigarettes for use in combating asthma pg 22
- Fitz Hugh
Ludlow - Tilden and co. 1855 -
- 1917
Department of Agriculture investigation
The Afro-American - All-Negro
Weekly around march 14, 1931
--
-- ---
-- --
Note, there seems to be nothing here.
possible only at a military tribunal did the word marihuana come out.
ag
Los Angles Times - –
[**]-
Ensign Killed by Bandit Pair" - July 10, 1945 page 12 part 2.
Note, a famous story, marihuana is not even mentioned.
not rated.
[incident]-
On July 9, 1945, at Los
Angeles, Calif., two Navy officers, Lt. Herman Haase and Ensign Norman
Bicknese, picked up an automobile ride with two 19-year-old boys, Leslie Howard
Moore and Alvin Goldson, the latter a soldier.
After the officers entered the automobile, Moore and Goldson attempted to
hold them up. Ensign Bicknese
resisted and was shot and killed by Goldson.
A few weeks later Goldson and Moore were apprehended by Los Angeles
police officers and it was ascertained that they were the leaders of a gang of
six youths preying on servicemen. In
addition to the killing of Ensign Bicknese, another member of the gang admitted
the shooting and wounding of Army Lt. Armand Beford in another "hitchhike
hold-up" on July 22, 1945. The
self-confessed trigger man of the gang, Edward Priestley, Jr., aged 16, of Los
Angeles, after his apprehension told the police he shot Lieutenant Beford at the
urging of Leslie Howard Moore, when the Army officer started to run away.
On Nov. 9, 1945, Leslie Howard
Moore appeared before Superior Court Judge Thomas L. Ambrose at Los Angeles,
Calif., and was sentenced to life imprisonment for murder and 12 counts of
robbery. He made the following
statement in court: "If I had never used marihuana
I wouldn't be in this court today."
Asked by the court what effect the, drug had on him, Moore stated it made
him, fearless and bold. When Judge
Ambrose questioned him as to how often he indulged in use of the drug, Moore
said, "Only when with the group I accompanied on
the robberies and the murder." The judge replied, "Mr. Moore, I
wish this little sermon on the consequences of using marihuana could be
broadcast to the youth of the Nation."
Judge Ambrose also added that so many
users do not realize the danger involved. Alvin
Goldson, as a result of the murder of Ensign Bicknese, was tried by a military
court martial during August 1945 and was sentenced to life imprisonment at hard
labor. This man also claimed to be a
user of marihuana.
== NATIONAL ==
American
Weekly (features) – Index exists 1924-1940
[incident ]- Earl
Wilson, nationally syndicated column Sept 29, 1948
Anslinger's
Gore Files 1of 2, Newspaper Reports on Reefer Madness Lies He Used #1
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