The final sentence of the final text here tells the
salient part of this convoluted tale.
***
Article 1 of 3 – July 12, 1933 - Angusville farmer Fred
Stawycznyj, 45, is hanged in Headingly for murdering his illegitimate child.
The widower farmer and his neighbour Mrs. Pauline Yatchuk began an affair in
1927 after her husband left to work in the U.S.. The two produced four children
together, the first three were born dead, (at least that's what Stawycznyj
claimed Mrs. Yatchuk told him.) In the case of the fourth child, the one at the
centre of the murder trial, Yatchuk said that Stawycznyj was present at the
birth. The child was born alive but he strangled and buried the girl in the
back yard to keep the affair a secret. Stawycznyj insisted that he was not
present and that she told him that the child was born dead. It took the jury an
hour and a half to reach a guilty verdict against Stawycznyj. Yatchuk received
a two-year sentence. [Source: This Was Monitoba]
***
Article 2 of 3 – FULL TEXT: Minnertosa, Man., April 4. – Accused by his
common-law wife, Mrs. Pauline Yatchuk, of slaying four of their five infant
children by strangulation, Fred Stawycznyj, of Angusville, Man., will stand
trial for his life, charged with murder, at the spring assizes for the northern
judicial district of Manitoba, opening in the Minnedosa court house, Tuesday
afternoon. One count of concealment of birth will also be laid against him,
while Mrs Yatchuk will be tried on four counts of concealment of birth, to
complete the assize docket, which is the smallest in years.
Discovery
of the murders was made following investigation by the B.C.M. police of an
anonymous letter received by the justice of the peace at Angusville, which Mrs
Yatchuk later admitted having instructed a friend to write, and which
subsequently led to the arrest of both Mrs. Yatchuk and Stawycznyj, when they
were charged with murder. The bodies of the infants were found near the Yatchuk
home, rude shack, about a half-mile west of Angusville, buried in coffins of
apple boxes.
Mrs.
Yatchuk aided the police in finding the tiny graves, which were no deeper than
two feet below the surface. She claimed that she had borne five children
between September 1, 1929, and June, 1932, four of which had been strangled by
Stawycznyj shortly after birth, the fifth being stillborn. She also stated that
no one but herself and Stawycznyj were present the births. The bodies of the
infants were in a badly decomposed state and inspection by medical authorities
failed to determine the cause of death.
Stawycznyj
was committed was committed for trial at a preliminary hearing held In Russell
last December, when Mrs. Yatchuk definitely accused him of putting the children
to death by strangling them, while relating her illicit relations with the
accused. The charge of murder against Mrs. Yatchuk was reduced to charges of
concealment of births, when the court ruled that there was not sufficient
evidence to commit her on the more serious count.
[“Angusville
Man Faces Charge Of Murdering Four,” Winnipeg Free Press (Manitoba, Canada),
Apr. 4, 1933, p. 5]
***
Article 3 of 3 – EXCERPT: As soon as the police discovered the remains of
five infants, they took Stawycznyk and Yatchuk into custody and charged them
with murder. Yatchuk had already confessed her part in the deaths of the
babies, but Stawycznyk denied murdering anyone. He told investigators that he
knew where the body of the fifth was buried only because he put it there, after
he was told to do so by Yatchuk. Besides, he said, he was not the only man with
whom she was carrying on.
Less
than two weeks later preliminary hearings were held to determine if there was
sufficient evidence to commit the pair to trial. Stawycznyk want first. The
story Yatchuk told at his hearing was identical to the statement she gave
police, and Stawycznyk was bound over for trial. At the end of Yatchuk’s own
preliminary, the presiding magistrate decided there was evidence that the
fifth child was stillborn and not murdered, and he directed that the murder
charges laid against Yatchuk be replaced with charges of concealing a birth.
There is some doubt whether that was an appropriate decision. Sixteen days
after her preliminary hearing ended, Yatchuk was overheard confessing that she
killed her babies by herself.
[Dale Brawn, Chap. 1 “Fred Stawycznyk and Pauline Yatchuk:
Babies in Boxes,” Practically Perfect:
Killers Who Got Way With Murder … For a While, Dundurn, Toronto, 2013]
***
***
***
For more cases of this type, see Serial Baby-Killer Moms.
***
If this woman had 5 children between 1 Sept 1929 and June 1932, she would have been pregnant literally every day of that time, wouldn't she? That is if she carried the 4 conceived after 1 Sept 1929 to term.
ReplyDeleteIn other words, what a mess of a case.
Great site by the way, I just discovered it and look forward to reading more!
ReplyDelete