FULL TEXT: Kiowa, Colo., Jan. 22 – Mrs. Hazel Howe Spicer,
48-year-old farm wife, Sunday night confessed to Deputy District Attorney J.
Nelson Truitt that she killed her 13-month-old daughter, Doris, by smothering.
Truitt said.
At the end of a long grilling in the Elbert county jail
here, Mrs. Spicer admitted she smothered the babe and told her husband, Frank
Spicer, that the child was strangled by a piece of apple.
Truitt said she also confessed that she slashed the throat
of another child, four-year-old George Spicer, with a piece of glass. The boy
was not injured seriously.
The woman, who escaped from a woman deputy sheriff Saturday
night, was found Sunday wandering on the prairie near Elizabeth, Colo., where
she was arrested Saturday. Truitt said he and G. R. Brown, sheriff of Elbert
county, questioned the woman in the jail basement until she confessed the
child's death.
~ Freed Her Husband ~
Mrs. Spicer was quoted by Truitt as saying she smothered the
baby for fear her husband would drive her away from home and she would never be
able to see the child again. Truitt said she sobbed hysterically as she
declared she had been driven to the act because she could “never be able to go
on living with her children taken from her” as she asserted two children by a
former marriage had been.
"I felt so badly about this before little Doris was
even cold that I wished I hadn't started to do it."
Truitt quoted her. "I hoped her father could bring her
back to life. I knew that he would beat me up or try to kill me If he thought I
was to blame."
A moment later, Truitt said, she cried: "But now I'm
glad she is dead because nobody else will ever get her."
Truitt said she signed a formal confession of the slaying in
which she related how she smothered the child and then, thinking her husband
might possibly revive her, bit off a piece of apple which she pushed into the girl's
throat.
~ Boy "Fell" In Well ~
The same confession, Truitt said, related that she knew more
of the death of her 21-months-old son who was drowned in a well near Boulder,
Colo., than she had told. She told him, Truitt declared, that the boy fell into
the well and she was unable to rescue him. Fearing her husband's wrath, she
said, she placed a heavy metal covering over the well. The body was found by
the husband, Frank Spicer, several hours later.
Mrs. Spicer's explanation of the slashing of George's neck
was this, Truitt said:
"I did it, but I only wanted to hurt him enough so that
my husband would take us to town to a doctor so we wouldn't have to come
back."
The child accused his mother of the attack on him Saturday but she denied
it until after she had began her confession here Sunday night, Truitt said.
~ Thinks She’s Crazy ~
Mrs. Spicer, who Truitt said he believed was unbalanced pleaded
to be sent to a hospital instead of to jail.
"Please, mister," he said she cried, “tell them
men not to send me to jail. Send me to jail. Send me to one of them psychopathic
hospitals. I know I ain’t been right for a long time.”
Truitt said he would attempt to find means of placing her in
an insane asylum instead of trying her for murder.
Mrs. Spicer told Truitt how she spent the night before being
caught Sunday morning, he said.
“Sometimes I was discouraged when I saw those lights around
me during the night,” she said. I knew then that I couldn’t get away or that I
couldn’t get to see my boy, George. Some times when I was walking I hoped a mountain
lion would get me.
“I went to a neighbor’s house and called and knocked on the
window. I wanted to get in. I knew they were there, but people had been telling
that I killed my little children, and they were afraid to let me in.”
Two other children of Mrs. Spicer have died, supposedly
accidentally, since 1923 and Sheriff G. R. Brown said their deaths were also
under investigation.
Brown said his questioning of the woman before her escape Saturday
night revealed that a baby by a former marriage had been smothered in Los
Angeles in 1923 by bed clothing and that a son, child of Frank Spicer, had been
drowned in a well near Boulder, Colo. Both deaths were declared accidental.
[“Mother Admits Killing Baby; Caught After Night Escape – Mrs.
Hazel Howe Spicer, 48 Year Old Colorado Farm Woman, Breaks Down After Grilling –
Smothers Girl; Tries To Cut Boy's Throat – Older Child Not Badly Hurt; Officers
Suspect Her Of Murdering Two Other Children,” Albuquerque Journal (N. M.), Jan.
23, 1933, p. 1]
***
FULL TEXT: Kiowa, Colo., March 28. – Mrs. Hazel Spicer, 41,
ranchwoman charged with slaying her infant daughter, awaited removal today to
the state hospital at Pueblo after a district court jury found her insane. She
was accused of the smothering to death of her 13-months-old child, Doris, last
January. The jury decided she was insane after considering the case an hour.
[“Ranch Mother Who Smothered Baby Is Found Insane,” The
Daily Sentinel (Grand Junction, Co.), Mar. 28, 1933, P. 4]
***
***
***
***
[146-1/4/21]
***
No comments:
Post a Comment