FULL TEXT (Article 1 of 4): Selma, Ala. – A “murder for profit” scheme has been laid by police to Mrs. Mary Perkins, 36, following a probe of the death of her husband’s body and her attempted suicide.
The probe of the son’s death, which police at first thought
resulted under mysterious circumstances after the mother had sought to increase
insurance on his life from $250 to $1,500 revealed that he died of natural
causes.
Even after elimination of the son as one of her murder for
profit victims, Mrs. Perkins still stands charged in the poison deaths of four
persons on whom she carried life insurance policies.
The five known dead among 150 persons on whose lives Mrs.
Perkins allegedly carried insurance policies ranged in age from 10 months to 70
years, according to Marengo County Sheriff Wilmer Shields.
They were:
Gloria Jean Montgomery, 10-month old daughter of a neighbor;
Betty Jean Williams of Wilcox County, a grandniece of Mrs. Perkins; Mrs. Della
Davis, a 70-year-old acquaintance; her husband, Charles Perkins Sr., and son,
Charlie Jr., 7.
Circuit Solicitor Blanchard McCleod says Mrs. Perkins
confessed feeding rat poison to the Montgomery child and Mrs. Davis to raise
money to pay the premiums on policies she carried on other persons.
Mr. McCleod said that Mrs. Perkins denied having poisoned
her husband, but said that “there was rat poison in the house and he got into
it.”
The bodies of all of the victims except the son, revealed
the presence of “appreciable quantities of arsenic,” authorities said.
When police began questioning Mrs. Perkins after an
investigation was set under way, following her son’s death, police said that
she shot herself in the chest with a .32 calibre revolver.
Following treatment at Burwell infirmary, Mrs. Perkins was
held without bail in the Dallas County Jail in Selma.
According to Solicitor McCleod and Police Capt. Wilson
Baker, the same gun was used by Mrs. Perkins in the shooting of the Rev. Menzo
Brown, a 55-year-old neighbor, in 1955.
The Rev. Mr. Brown, who recovered from the gunshot wound in
the abdomen, told police that he had been shot by an unidentified white man.
Police found a detailed account of the shooting in a stack
of insurance policies at Mrs. Perkins’ home. She had written it, she said, to
insure Brown’s arrest and conviction if he killed her in revenge.
Tom Hall, a state insurance investigator from Montgomery,
said that Mrs. Perkins’ payments to the Independent Life Insurance Co., alone
totaled more than $50 a week.
Other policies, he said, were held with the Life Insurance
Co., of Georgia, Southern Life and Accident Co., and the Booker T. Washington
Life Insurance Co.
In here confession to the poisoning of the Montgomery child,
who died July 9 after a policy had been taken out on her life on July 1, Mrs.
Perkins said that she had mixed rat poison with soda which she gave the child
after its mother had said it was sickly.
A checkup is now being conducted, authorities said, among the other persons upon whom Mrs. Perkins carried insurance policies.
[“Officers Dig Up Bodies – Say Wife Poisoned Husband, 3
Others,” Washington Afro-American (D. C.), Nov. 5, 1957, p. 19]
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FULL TEXT (Article 2 of 4): Selma, Ala., Nov. 23. –
Insurance agent Rufus J. Hogue, 27, today was under $6,000 bond on four charges
of forgery in connection with an alleged murder-for-profit scheme of Negro
scamstress Mary Perkins, 36.
The Dallas County grand jury returned the indictments Friday
against Hogue, local superintendent of the Independent Life and Accident Co. of
Jacksonville, Fla.
After meeting with officials of the Florida firm, State
Insurance Commissioner Jas. H. Horn cleared the company of any complicity in
the case.
“We have determined that the actions at Selma are not part
and parcel of any company policy and that they are in violation of previously
filed rules and regulations of the company,” Horn said.
Solicitor Blanchard McLeod said Hogue wrote all 84 life
insurance policies for the Negro woman, who has been charged with feeding rat
poison to collect death benefits to finance premiums on other policies. Hogue
was charged with forging the names of the insured persons on the policies.
Hogue was jailed in lieu of $1,500 bond on each of the four
counts.
[“4 Charges Of Forgery For Agent - Insurance Case Involving
Alleged Murder For Profit,” The Times-News (Hendersonville, N. C.), Nov. 23,
1957, p. 4]
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FULL TEXT (Article 3 of 4): Selma, Ala. – A 36-year-old woman, accused of seeking wealth through arsenic and insurance, was given a life term in prison, Wednesday, for the poison death of a neighbor’s 10-month-old child.
FULL TEXT (Article 3 of 4): Selma, Ala. – A 36-year-old woman, accused of seeking wealth through arsenic and insurance, was given a life term in prison, Wednesday, for the poison death of a neighbor’s 10-month-old child.
At the end of a two-day trial, a Circuit Court jury found
Mrs. Mary Perkins guilty in connection with the death of an infant, Gloria Jean
Montgomery.
The child was one of 84 persons upon whom Mrs. Perkins is
said to have carried life insurance policies.
The Selma housewife’s elaborate scheme of insurance and
murder for profit was brought to light by an investigation which followed the
death of her own seven-year-old son, Charley Perkins, Jr.
The previous day she had increased insurance on his life
from $250 to $1,000.
Ironically, no traces of poison nor evidence of foul play
were uncovered in the death of the boy.
A Dallas County grand jury, however, later indicted on three
counts of murder.
Exhumation and autopsy revealed traces of arsenic in the
remains of her husband, Charley Perkins, Sr.; Mrs. Della Davis, a 70-year-old
friend, and little Gloria Jean.
At the start of the probe, Mrs. Perkins shot herself in the
chest in a suicide attempt, but was hospitalized and recovered.
Circuit solicitor Blanch McLeod stated that 10 bodies of
persons insured by Mrs. Perkins were exhumed in the course of the
investigation.
He stated also that Mrs. Perkins admitted that she poisoned
Mrs. Davis and Gloria Jean because she needed the money from their policies to
keep up the payments on other policies which were due.
The other two indictments against Mrs. Perkins remained on
the court docket for possible future trial.
[“It’s End of the line for Mary Perkins,” Washington
Afro-American (Washington, D.C.), Mar 4, 1958, p. 14]
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FULL TEXT: For gentle, loving Mary Perkins last week, came a
time to reflect on the fact that at 36, she may be the first colored woman to
try out Alabama’s electric chair. It was her loving, in fact, that was the
cause of it all. For with a penchant for rat poison, and an agreement with a white
insurance agent, she had sewed up an estimated 150 persons in policies (without
their consent) and was killing them off with arsenic at a rate yet
undetermined.
That many of the insured were still living was pure accident.
For had not Mary’s son died suspiciously close to the day she increased his
insurance, and had not the gentle soul shot herself in a faulty suicide try,
more of the living might well have been dead, and resting in East Selma
Cemetery.
Even before the investigation
was ended, they were blaming Mary for at least three deaths, and suspecting her
of perhaps a dozen more. Seven graves had been reopened, traces of arsenic found
in six bodies, with enough to kill in four. Indeed, the evidence showed,
lovable Mary Perkins had been nudging her friends and relatives gently toward
the grave, mourning at most of their funerals, then drying the tears from herr
eyes before the bodies were cold.
Nor was this all. While she
lay bedridden from a suicide bullet that missed her heart by half an inch,
police found 84 policies, and the charred remains of others which threatened to
send the total to 150. For a clincher, they unearthed a six-page red-inked
confession that in 1955 she had shot her neighbor, Rev. Menzo Brown.
But it was more what could
have happened (had not Mary’s luck and rat poison run out) that staggered Selma’s
imagination.
Mary Perkins
cooked some of the best food around, was not stingy about feeding the neighbor
kids, or carrying plates of goodies to the Ebenezer church suppers. She nursed
the sick with the passion of a Florence nightingale, was a typical minister’s
wife. Then (at least from all outward experiences) life turned sour for Mrs.
Perkins.
Two of her children died in the early 1950’s. Her
husband, Rev. Charlie Perkins Sr., went to his reward in 1955. At his funeral,
Mary was the picture of grief, “screaming to roof off” during services, passing
out prostate, and being carried in collapse from the church. In October, 1957,
her son, Albert [sic], 7, got sick. The next day he worsened; then died.
Living alone in her grief (she was genuinely moved by
her son’s death), Mary was visited by solicitous neighbors. But among the
callers was Capt. Wilson Baker, spurred by evidence that the woman had upped
her son’s insurance from $250 to $1,250 just before he died. He talked with her
at home, released her after a grilling at headquarters. This was Friday,
October 25. On Saturday morning, she was found near death, on the living room
floor of her home after attempting suicide with a gun.
Suspecting the worst, police rushed to the hospital; heard her confess that she had given 10-month-old Gloria Montgomery a double dose of rat poison in July, 1957. I”I didn’t actually give her the poison,” she says, “I gave it to her mother to give to her.”) She collected $489 on four $1,000 policies.In addition, said Mary, she had poured an arsenic solution into the bedside water jug of 70-year-old Della Davis, then collected $250 on a $1,000 policy. Beyond this, she would confess nothing.
Suspecting the worst, police rushed to the hospital; heard her confess that she had given 10-month-old Gloria Montgomery a double dose of rat poison in July, 1957. I”I didn’t actually give her the poison,” she says, “I gave it to her mother to give to her.”) She collected $489 on four $1,000 policies.In addition, said Mary, she had poured an arsenic solution into the bedside water jug of 70-year-old Della Davis, then collected $250 on a $1,000 policy. Beyond this, she would confess nothing.
For the next few days, more
bodies were being dug up than buried. The results were shocking. The good Rev.
was loaded with poison (“I didn’t give it to him. There was some around and he
might have gotten hold of it.”). Ed Johnson’s body showed faint traces. Della
Davis had arsenic in her, as did Gloria Jean Montgomery, Betty Jean Williams
and Beula Moultrie.
For Mary Perkins, however,
there seemed to be little remorse over her tactics as a lady Bluebeard. She blamed
her troubles on the fact that her parents (who had 22 kids) had given her “no
foundation to build on.” As for the shooting of the minister, she said, he had
no one to blame but himself. “We started going together (in 1954) before my
husband died,” she confessed. Menzo Brown lived next door, would take her
husband out on his calls, then double back for a little love-making before his
brother cleric could return. Said Mary of her cheating, “My husband was a smart
man, but he was no cheer or consolation. If I went downtown at nine, he would
want me to come back at ten, or explain where I had been.”
After his death, (“I could
window shop as long as I wanted”), Rev. Brown ruled the roost. “Every day at 11
o’clock,” Mary sighed, “there he would be to get what he wanted – and you know
what that was. He would take me in the woods, or in the house. No matter what I
was doing, or whether I had somewhere to go, every day at 11 o’clock, there he
would be.”
They argued once. He slapped
her, she shot him in the stomach. (He later told police he weas shot by unknown
parties.)
But even this did not end
Mary’s troubles. After her chastened lover recovered his nerve (and his
strength) he came back for another go at it, was relieved of his pistol by
Mary, who had him jailed and fined.
With her family dead, insurance
premiums costing her nearly $300 a month, police asking questions, and Rev.
Brown demanding that she continue their love affair, Mary finally gave up. “I
thought I’d just kill myself since I didn’t have anything to live for.” So
following a party on the night before her son’s burial, she packed her dishes,
cleaned the house, took a bath and dressed in her blue rayon nightgown. “I
couldn’t kill myself lying down,” she said, “so I sat up in a chair, took the
pistol (the same one with which she shot Rev. Brown) and that’s the last thing
I remember.”
Was she sorry about the dead?
“I don’t know why I did it. I just got troubled and something had to happen.” Why
had she taken out all the insurance policies? “This white man, (R. G. Hogue of
Independent Life Insurance Company) came to me with this stack of cards and
told me he didn’t want the policies to lapse. I only had $1.05 worth of
insurance on myself and my son at the time. When I couldn’t pay, I’d borrow.
But I didn’t kill anybody for the money,” Mrs. Perkins lamented.
Was she repentant about
trying to take her own life? “Was nothing else to do,” said the woman, “I guess
I’m only sorry that it (the suicide) didn’t work.”
Said Rev. Brown, still pastoring
three AME churches, but probably unluckiest among the living: “You never know
who you’re going out with when you start slipping around. (His wife has
deserted him.) I should have told the truth about getting shot.” Then, smiling
brightly, and hustling off to a church conference with an eye on the future, he
added: “Don’t make it too bad about me. I may want to run for the general convention
one of these days.”
[“The Woman Who Plotted to
Kill 150: Career of Ala. Lady Bluebird,” Jet (Chicago, Il.), Nov. 21,
1957 (Vol. 13, No. 3), pp. 48-43]
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VICTIMS
Rev. Menzo Brown, shot; attempted murder, survived.
Rev. Menzo Brown, shot; attempted murder, survived.
Early 1950s – Two children died.
1955 – Rev. Charlie Perkins Sr. died; arsenic found in
corpse.
Oct. 23/24, 1957 – son Charlie Perkins Jr. (7), dies. (“Albert”)
Oct. 26, 1957 – attempted suicide, gunshot.
Nov. 2, 1957 – confesses poisoning Montgomery baby and Della
Davis (70).
Dec. 1957 – Mary Lanier (70), died. $1,000 insurance.
Dec. 18, 1957 – sues for insurance benefits on son.
Feb. 26, 1958 – sentenced to life in prison for Montgomery
murder.
Mar. 4, 1958 – sentenced to life in prison.
May 1, 1958 – arraigned for 2
murders, Davis & Perkins; pled guilty insanity.
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Della Davis (70), $300,000 insurance.
Charlie Perkins, Jr. (36), husband, died.
Gloria Jean Montgomery (10 mo), died.
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EXCERPT (Article 4 of 4): Mary Perkins, 37, 37-year-old
seamstress from Selma, Ala., is now an inmate at the Julia Tutwiler prison,
Wetumpka, Ala. She was given three life sentences for three poisonings.
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More cases, see: Female Serial Killers of Africa & the African Diaspora
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[6900-2/5/20; 7832-3/9/21]
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[6900-2/5/20; 7832-3/9/21]
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I get chill bumps reading this. I remember this incident like the back of my hand. I was about 8-9 years old and lived on Lawrence Street. Mrs. Perkins and her son use to visit my neighbor. I remember the police coming to my neighbor's house to interview her.
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