FULL
TEXT (Article 1 of 2): Keene, N. H. – Mrs. Florence Stoddard, 20-year-old wife
of a Chester farmer, pleaded guilty today in district court to torturing two
small step-children with a hot stove-lifter and was sentenced to 22 months in
the house of correction.
Retracting
a plea of not guilty made last week, Mrs. Stoddard, through her counsel, Ernest
L. Bell, Jr., admitted she had burned the children, Irene, 10, and Perley, six,
but said it was not deliberate; that it had been done in a fit of temper.
Perley
was in court with his father, Elton, 35. County Solicitor Arthur Olson told
Judge Charles A. Madden in a crowded courtroom that Perley had been burned 21
limes and Irene 36 times.
He
said Mrs. Stoddard had taken a file, used as a stove-lifter, to burn the
children because “they wouldn’t mind.” All burns were superficial Olson charged
the woman had pushed the hot implement down the backs and up their legs.
[“Mother
Jailed for Torturing Children,” The Lowell Sun (Ma.), Jan. 22, 1935, p. 1]
***
FULL
TEXT (Article 2 of 2): At Keene, New Hampshire, yesterday Mrs. Florence
Stoddard, aged 20 years, was sentenced to imprisonment for twenty-two months in
the house of correction upon an admission that she had used a hot poker to
brand the bodies of her two small stepchildren.
The
husband originally lodged the complaint and when the police made an
investigation they found thirty-six scars on the body of the 10-year-old
stepdaughter and twenty-six scars on the person of the 6-year-old stepson. When
brought into court she at first denied the charges, but later withdrew the plea
and entered one of guilt.
The
attorney for Mrs. Stoddard asked clemency, stating that she had lost her
temper,
but
the court said he could not accept any such a plea.
There
might be a possible justification if there were only one or two burns upon the
body, but the frail little girl bore evidence of thirty-six scars, some recent,
others of several months’ standing, indicating that the stepmother had utilized
this method of torture repeatedly. There was not even the instinct of mother
evidenced at any time. She was in- human in her treatment when she should have
been a guardian of these two children who had been placed in her custody to
mother when she married their father.
With
a mental attitude such as she has the court is confronted with a problem, that
of seeing that these children are placed in the custody of someone other than
Mrs. Stoddard should a reconciliation take place with the husband after her
sentence has expired. Cruel at heart she will seek revenge for every month of
that imprisonment.
[“Inadequate
Punishment,” The Sheboygen Press (Wi.), Jan. 29, 1935, p. 16]
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