Note: Reference to Hickman in article: William Edward Hickman, 19, kidnapped 12-year-ols Marian Parker in Los Angeles and ransomed her dismembered body to the parents. He was hanged on December 15, 1927.
***
FULL TEXT: Oakland, Calif., July 6. – “The girl Hickman” is
the title police here have bestowed on Miss Erna Janoschek, 17-year old high
school girl who is being held on charges of first degree murder.
Erna, a rather pretty, intelligent young flapper, strangled
to death a year-old baby, Diana Liliencrentz, for whose parents Erna worked as
a maid and nurse. She told about it with flip unconcern.
“I strangled the baby because I felt her mother wasn’t
supporting me in managing her other child, and because I felt they were working
me too hard —
At this point the girl interrupted her explanation to laugh.
“I have to laugh when the impulse comes over me,” she said.
“When things like this happen I have to laugh.”
Which remarks help to explain why the police call her “the
girl Hickman.”
Some criminologists here see an amazing similarity between,
Erna and the young Los Angeles murderer.
Neither in looks nor psychological makeup does either one
bear, any outward sign of abnormality or degeneracy. Both were bright students
in school, apparently desiring to do creative things. – Erna’s room contained
scraps of poetry she had scribbled. Each surrendered abruptly to the impulse to
kill, and displayed no remorse or grief afterward.
Dr. and Mrs. Guy Liliencrentz, for whom Erna worked, had
gone to San Francisco, where the young doctor, a recent medical college
graduate, is a hospital interne. While they were gone Erna calmly called up the
police to tell them she had killed the baby.
“I’d rather face the police than Mrs Liliencrentz,” she
explained.
She told how she brooded, alone in the house with baby Diana
and little Francora, aged 3, over her supposed overwork. Suddenly came the
impulse to kill. She did not harm Francora; she was fond of the child. Instead
she seized the smaller child from the crib, wrapped a towel about its neck and
killed it. Then she summoned the police.
At the police station she told of having had the impulse to
kill other children who had been left in her care. Always before, she said, she
had overcome it. She insists, however, that a desire to be revenged on Mrs.
Liliencrentz was her sole motive in this crime.
[“’Girl Hickman,’ 17, Shows No Grief After Killing Year Old Baby,” (By NEA
Service), The Havre Daily News-Promoter (Mt.), Jul. 6, 1928, p. 1]
***
FULL TEXT: Oakland, Sept. 24. – Erna Janoschek, 17-year-old strangler of Baby Diana Liliencrantz heard her crime fixed as first degree murder today and was sentenced to life imprisonment in San Quentin prison. The girl, smartly dressed and apparently unconcerned, smiled when she heard the sentence pronounced. She was tried last week to determine her sanity when she withdrew a plea of not guilty and stood on another plea of not guilty by reason of insanity.
“This was willful premediated murder,” said Superior Judge
Fred V.. Wood, “done after reflection, and I do not see how any judge could fix
it at second degree murder.
“Even though a jury found her sane,” he continued, “her cold
blooded composure while on the witness stand while telling details of the crime
showed she is abnormal.”
Baby Diana, year old daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Eric
Liliencrantz was strangled by the Janoschek girl June 26 because, she said, “I
wanted to get even with the baby’s mother for having been mean to me.”
[“Girl Strangler Sent To Prison For Life,” Santa Cruz News
(Ca.), Sep. 24, 1928, p. 1]
***
Sep. 12, 1938 – parole denied.
[1125-1/23/21]
***
She was paroled Dec 17, 1940 and changed her named
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