Showing posts with label Wineville Murders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wineville Murders. Show all posts

Monday, December 27, 2010

Wineville Chicken Murders Part II











I posted about the Wineville murders last November. There were a lot of you that didn't know much about the case. I am still fascinated by this case and the great corruption that occurred within the LAPD. I watched "Changeling" (based on the murders) again tonight, and can't seem to get the case off my mind. It is so devastating to think of what Christine Collins had to go through when police told her that another boy was her child. It is also horrible to consider what terrible abuse the boys who were missing and eventually tortured had to endure.

I found some new information and pictures from the case.

"Canadian born in 1908, Northcott would later claim that his father sodomized him at age ten. The old man finished his life in a lunatic asylum, and one of Northcott's paternal uncles died years later, in San Quentin, while serving a life term for murder. A homosexual sadist in the mold of Dean Corll and John Gacy, by age 21, Northcott was living on a poultry ranch near Riverside, California, sharing quarters with his mother and a 15-year-old nephew, Sanford Clark.

For years, Northcott mixed business with pleasure in Riverside, abducting boys and hiding them out on his ranch, renting his victims to wealthy Southern California pedophiles. When he tired of the boys, they were shot or brained with an ax, their flesh dissolved with quick lime and their bones transported to the desert for disposal. Only one was ever found - a headless, teenage Mexican, discovered near La Puente during February 1928 - but homicide detectives identified three other victims. Walter Collins disappeared from home on March 10, 1928, and Northcott's mother was convicted of his death, but evidence suggests that she was acting under orders from her son. Twelve-year-old Lewis Winslow and his brother Nelson, 10, vanished from Pomona on May 16, 1928, and Northcott was later condemned for their murders, despite the absence of bodies. Gordon might have gone on raping and killing indefinitely, but in the summer of 1928, he visited the district attorney's office, complaining about a neighbor's "profane and violent" behavior. The outbursts reportedly upset his nephew, who was "training for the priesthood" by tending chickens at age 15. Under investigation, the neighbor recalled seeing Gordon beat Clark on occasion, and he urged detectives to "find out what goes on" at Northcott's ranch. Immigration officials struck first, taking Clark into custody on a complaint from his Canadian parents, and the boy regaled authorities with tales of murder, pointing out newly-excavated "grave sites" on the ranch. Detectives dug up blood-soaked earth, unearthing human ankle bones and fingers on September 17. They also found a bloodstained ax and hatchet on the premises, that Clark said had been used on human prey, as well as chickens. Northcott fled to Canada, but he was captured there and extradited back to Riverside. His mother claimed responsibility for slaying Walter Collins, but Clark fingered Gordon as the actual killer.

Convicted on three counts of murder, including the Winslow brothers and the anonymous Mexican, Northcott was sentenced to death. Spared by her sex, his mother received a life sentence in the Collins case. Marking time at San Quentin, Northcott alternated between protestations of innocence and detailed confessions to the murder of "18 or 19, maybe 20" victims. A pathological liar who cherished the spotlight, he several times offered to point out remains of more victims, always reneging at the last moment. (Northcott also named several of his wealthy "customers" at the ranch, but their identities were never published.) Warden Duffy recalled his conversations with Northcott as "a lurid account of mass murder, sodomy, oral copulation, and torture so vivid it made my flesh creep." Northcott mounted the gallows on October 2, 1930, finally quailing in the face of death. Before the trap was sprung, he screamed, "A prayer! Please, say a prayer for me!" His mother subsequently died in prison, of old age."

Photobucket

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Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Wineville Murders



Court scene where Christine Collins is having to defend herself against the city of Los Angeles.



Scene in the film where Christine realizes this is not her son.



Marked photo of where bodies were found on the Wineville ranch.



The Changeling, featuring actor who played Gordon Northcott.



Actual chicken coop in Wineville where Northcott kept his victims.



Christine Collins.



Gordon Northcott. Many people said they could see "evil" in him.



Gordon Northcott in court in Los Angeles during his trial.



Walter Collins, victim of Gordon Northcott. Note the description by his mother Christine Collins.



Gordon Northcott in shackles showing authorities where some of his victims bodies are buried.
Many of you might have seen The Changeling with Angelina Jolie last year. It was on HBO last night, and reminded me that I read a book about Gordon Northcott, the killer in the story. Here is some information about the murders, in case you aren't familiar with them.

In 1928, Gordon Northcott kidnapped and tortured several boys at his parents chicken ranch in Wineville, (now Mira Loma) CA. Northcott used the boys as sex slaves, then murdered them and buried their bodies in the chicken coops.

Northcott kidnapped his own cousin, Sanford Clark and forced him to help take place in the murders. Northcott kidnapped a boy, Walter Collins from his home in Pasadena, CA and took him to the ranch. Christine Collins, Walter's mother came home to find her child missing and filed reports with the police. There was a lot of corruption going on in the L.A.P.D. at that time, so they tried to smooth over the case by returning a child who wasn't Walter to her. They expected her to be so distraught with guilt and pain that she would simply accept the child as her own. She didn't. She continued to fight, stating that the child wasn't Walter. They put her through many trials and tribulations, including throwing her in a mental institution. Christine never gave up looking for her son, but of course, he never returned home.

In August 1928, authorities were tipped off by a family member to what was going on at the so-called "murder farm" in Riverside County, and they took Clark into custody. Sanford began to tell the police of the gruesome tales of murder and what his cousin was up to at the ranch. Investigators dispatched to dig up the farm found no bodies. Clark said quicklime and fires had been used to get rid of the remains and the bones had been dumped in the desert. Searchers did find a finger, hand and foot bones, and personal items belonging to the boys. They also found axes soaked with human blood.

Northcott's mother was suspected of having some involvement in the murders. It is still unclear whether she simply knew about them and did nothing, or participated in the murders in some way. When Clark was taken into custody, Northcott and his mother, Louise Northcott, fled to their native Canada, where they were arrested and extradited back to the United States.

Northcott was executed in 1930, the same year that Wineville residents, concerned with the stigma now attached to their community, changed the town's name to Mira Loma. While on Death Row, Northcott estimated he had killed "maybe 20" boys, but later retracted that statement. He was ultimately hanged for his crimes at San Quentin.

Sad post, but part of our history of Southern California. If you haven't seen the movie, you have to check it out. Wonderful film directed by Clint Eastwood. Have a great Tuesday, friends!