FULL TEXT: A murder charge was filed against Concepcion
Gonzalez, 38 years old, 909 East Jefferson street, yesterday a few minutes
after Richard F. Harless, county attorney, said he was told her sheep- herder-husband,
Tiburcio, 57, died Wednesday in their home from poison.
The complaint was issued by Elbert R. Thurman, deputy county
attorney and signed in East Phoenix Precinct Justice Court by Alex Maldonado, a
sheriff’s deputy. Mrs. Gonzalez is held in the county jail.
Mr. Harless said an autopsy surgeon told him she found a
mercuric poison in Gonzalez' stomach and that tests showed two small pill boxes
seized by investigators in a search of the home also contained such poison.
The surgeon attributed Gonzalez’ death to such poisoning,
Mr. Harless said. The boxes, their labels torn off, were found buried in the
contents of an oatmeal carton in the Gonzalez kitchen.
Mrs. Gonzalez maintained her innocence in the death.
She told investigators she Is the beneficiary in two
policies insuring her husband's life for a total of $4,000 and that she
regularly had paid on them more than $11 of their $50 monthly income.
Mr. Harless assigned James H. Garcia, another deputy
prosecutor, to the case and ordered him and Mr. Thurman to open an
investigation into the death of Mrs. Gonzalez' previous husband, Antonio
Gutierrez.
Mrs. Gonzalez told authorities she collected 52,900
insurance when Gutierrez died, reportedly August 10, 1937.
Investigation of Gonzalez' death was started Wednesday by Mr.
Thurman and Deputies Maldonado and Oscar Roberts at request o: D. W. Henderson,
Chandler district sheepman and employer of Gonzalez 20 years.
An autopsy was ordered when a physician who had been
treating Gonzalez reported he suspected poisoning and Mr. Henderson declared
Mrs. Gonzalez had refused to permit her husband to be taken to a hospital while
he was alive.
Mrs. Gonzalez insisted she only had refused to permit her
husband to be taken to the county hospital because she didn't believe he would
be treated right there. She said she had money to have physicians to go to
their home.
Besides the insurance, she said that a Glendale house and
lot in which Gonzalez owned a half interest is recorded in her name.
Speaking through an interpreter, she said Gonzalez came to
her home "for a vacation" from his sheepherding March 13 and hat he
became ill the following night after eating some "crackings."
Thereafter, until his death, he sometimes got out of bed but
never left the house, she said.
Only she prepared her husband's food while he was ill, she
said, although Jose Garcia, another sheepherder and friend of Gonzalez since
1924, occasionally helped her feed him.
They were married three years ago this month, it was
learned.
She first denied the cornmeal carton was found in her home,
then admitted she purchased it some time ago, but insisted she knew nothing of
the boxes containing the powder which assertedly proved to be poison.
[“Poison Found in Oats Box,” Arizona Republic (Phoenix,
Az.), Apr. 5, 1941, p. 6]
***
***
FULL TEXT: Mrs. Concepcion Gonzalez yesterday was held without
bond on a first-degree murder charge in connection with the poison slaying of
her sheepherder-husband, Tiburcio, 57, in their home at 909 East Jefferson
street recently.
Her attorney, Greg Garcia, offered no evidence to refute the
state's contention she poisoned her husband to collect $1,782 insurance. The
hearing was before Justice Harry E. West fall in East Phoenix precinct court.
The 38-year-old Mrs. Gonzalez was returned to the county
jail.
~Doctor Finds Poison ~
Recalled to the stand by Elbert R. Thurman, and James H.
Garcia, deputy county attorney, Dr. Tressa R. Moran, an autopsy surgeon and
toxicologist, testified she found sufficient poison in the body of a former
husband of Mrs. Gonzalez to kill him.
She previously has said only that she found in the body of
Antonio Paublino Gutierrez, 44, a shoemaker, the same kind of poison she found
in the body of Mr. Gonzalez, who died April 2.
Gutierrez died August 10, 1938, and Mrs. Gonzalez said she
collected $2,000 insurance at his death.
~ Symptoms Were similar. ~
Dr. A. H. Alvarez described symptoms just prior to the death
of Mr. Gutierrez and prosecutors said they were the same as those shown by Mr.
Gonzalez immediately before his death.
Alfred F. Hanson and Marv Lou Sanchez, employees of the First
National Benefit Society, testified that Mrs. Gonzalez reinstated three life
insurance policies her husband had permitted to lapse and doubled the death
benefits.
C. N. Boynton of the
pathological laboratory testified that two small pill boxes delivered to him by
Alex Maldonado. sheriff's deputy, contained mercurous chloride, the same poison
found in the bodies of both dead men.
Maldonado found the boxes buried in an oatmeal carton of the
Gonzalez home and Mrs. Gonzalez denied knowledge of them.
[”Woman Held Without Bond On Poison Slaying Charge,” Arizona
Republic (Phoenix, Az.), Apr. 13, 1941, p. 2]
***
FULL TEXT: Taking of testimony in the Concepcion Gonzalez
poison murder case, in which the state is seeking
Taking of testimony in the Conicepcion Gonzalez poison
murder case, in which the state is seeking death for-the 39-year-old mother of
a 20-year-old girl, will start this morning before Superior Judge Dudley W.
Windes.
Selection of the 12 men who will weigh the guilt or
innocence of the small, quiet Mrs. Gonzalez, accused of poisoning her
57-year-old sheepherder-husband. Tiburcio, for his S1,782 life insurance, will
start at 9 a. m.
The 32 men from which the jury will be selected were
obtained in a two-day session last week.
~ Translation Asked ~
Judge Windes must rule this morning on the request of Greg
Garcia, attorney for Mrs. Gonzalez, that all of the testimony, court orders and
instructions be translated from English to Spanish for the benefit of Mrs.
Gonzalez.
Elbert R. Thurman and James H. Garcia, deputies county
attorney, said they will ask the jury to send the woman to the gas chamber on
the contention she systematically poisoned her husband for his insurance.
~ Star Witness Missing ~
They unsuccessfully have sought delay of the trial until
recovery of their star witness, Dr. Tressa R. Moran, pathologist, from a major
operation. She previously attributed Gonzalez' death to mercury poison.
Greg Garcia, an uncle of one of the prosecutors, indicated
in questioning of prospective jurors that he may contend Gonzalez died from
improper administration of a medicine.
[“Jury Selection Slated Today,” Arizona Republic (Az.), Jun.
24, 1941, P. 4]
***
FULL TEXT: Testimony that Concepcion Gonzalez refused offers
to take her gravely ill husband to a hospital was given yesterday at her trial
on a first-degree murder charge in the poison slaying of Tiburcio Gonzalez,
assertedlv for his insurance.
Dr. Ernest Pohle, Tempe physician, said he suggested
hospitalization to Mrs. Gonzalez last March 2S - five days before the
57-year-old sheepherder died when he became convinced that Gonzalez was
suffering from mercury poisoning.
He said that the 33-year-old Mrs. Gonzalez, whom the state
seeks to send to the lethal gas chamber, only told him that her husband could
get well at home "as well as at the hospital."
~ Employer Testifies ~
Similar, more positive testimony was given by Dawson Henderson.
Chandler sheepman and employer of Gonzalez 21 years, who was the only other
witness in yesterday's slow-moving session before Superior Judge Dudley W.
Windes.
He testified he "first discovered Gonzalez ill in his
home here February 28 and that he "seemed worse" on every one of
several subsequent visits." On a visit March 31. he said, he asked
Gonzalez if he didn't want to go to a hospital.
"Mrs. Gonzalez immediately poke up and said, 'I
wouldn't take him to any hospital,' " Henderson testified. The witness
said that the sheepherder suggested to his wife that "I can't get well
here" and that she replied:
"If you can't get well here you can't get well any
place. If you're going to die anywhere, you'll die right her."
Henderson said that Jose Garcia, a long-time friend of both
Gonzalez and his wife, also tried to persuade her to let the sheepherder go to
the hospital, but that she refused.
She refused, Henderson said. even after he had taken an
ambulance to the house and offered to pay ail expenses, including for a private
nurse.
~ "Progressively Worse" ~
Dr. Pohle testified Gonzalez went to his office February 20
about seven days after he became ill and that he treated him almost entirely
through March, but that, the sheepherder "became progressively
worse."
He said he signed the death certificate, assigning the cause
as "poison by mercury."
Elbert R. Thurman and James H. Garcia, deputy county
attorney, contend that Mrs. Gonzalez systematically poisoned her husband to
collect his $1,782 life insurance. She previously admitted collecting $2,000
insurance in the death of a former husband, in whose remains similar poison was
found.
Grey Garcia, defense attorney and uncle of the prosecutor,
indicated in questioning of jurors that he will contend Gonzalez died because
of improper administration of a poisonous medicine.
The testimony was translated from English to Spanish for the
benefit of Mrs. Gonzales at request, of the defense attorney, who said she can
neither speak "nor understand English. However, the interpreter. P. N.
Estrada, sat at counsel table with Mrs. Gonzalez and the translation did not slow
proceedings materially yesterday.
[“Murder Trial Moves Slowly,” Arizona Republic (Phoenix,
Az.), Jun. 25, 1941, p. 10]
***
FULL TEXT: Mrs. Concepcion Gonzalez, mother of a 20-year-old
girl, told a jury yesterday that her husband himself took the calomel in quantities
that led to his death here April 2 and her arrest on a first-degree murder
charge.
The jury will begin tomorrow deliberating whether she should
be sent to the state’s gas chamber as a poisoner for insurance or freed from
jail as an unfortunate little woman twice widowed by mercury poisoning.
The 39-year-old defendant is accused of murdering her
57-year-old sheepherder husband, Tiburcio, for his $1,782 insurance and Elbert
R. Thurman and James H. Garcia, deputies county attorney, are asking that her life
be forfeited.
She told the jury she gave her husband only the kindest
care; that she never administered any medicine to him; and that he had been rubbing
calomel on a sore on his gums for a considerable time.
She insisted she refused only to permit him to be taken to
the county hospital.
Twice during her testimony, she complained of being so ill
that Superior Judge Dudley W. Windes recessed trial so she might leave the
courtroom. She testified through an interpreter, Don Ramirez.
Greg Garcia, an uncle of one of the prosecutors, said he
will call two or three more rebuttal witnesses when trial resumes at 9:30 a. m.
tomorrow. Judge Widnes decided to hold the trial tomorrow in spite of the fact Mondays
usually are devoted to calling of calendars.
[“Woman Tells Jury of Death,” Arizona Republic (Phoenix,
Az.), Jun. 29, 1941, sec. 2, p. 2]
***
FULL TEXT: A jury which deliberated 90 minutes yesterday,
acquitted Mrs. Concepcion Gonzalez, 39 years old, of
the charge that she murdered her husband, Tiburcio, last April in order to
collect his $1,782 insurance.
The jurors took three ballots, all favoring acquittal.
After 10 days of trial before Superior Judge Dudley W.
Windes, the verdict was read at 3:50 p. m. Mrs. Gonzalez smiles broadly for a
moment, then buried her face in her handkerchief and gave way to unrestrained
sobbing.
One of the jurors said the venireman agreed that the state
failed to prove that Mrs. Gonzalez fed her husband medicine containing mercury
poison and on the contrary they were satisfied he had been using such medicine
for years.
They believed, he said, that the large amount of mercury a
toxicologist recovered from Gonzalez’ vital organs had accumulated from lone
use of the medicine.
Gonzalez died in the family home, 909 East Jefferson street,
April 2, six weeks after he arrived here for a brief vacation from
sheepherding.
[“Murder Jury Frees Woman,” Arizona Republic (Phoenix, Az.),
Jul. 1, 1941, p. 4]
***
CALOMEL – Side effects
It became popular in the late 18th century to give calomel
in extremely high doses, as Benjamin Rush normalized the heroic dose. This
caused many patients to experience many painful and sometimes life-threatening
side effects. Calomel, in high doses, led to mercury poisoning, which had the
potential to cause permanent deformities and even death. Some patients
experienced gangrene of the mouth generated by the mercury in the medicine,
which caused the tissue on the cheeks and gums inside the mouth to break down
and die. Some patients would lose teeth, while others were left with facial
deformities. High doses of calomel would
often lead to extreme cramping, vomiting, and bloody diarrhea, however, at the
time, this was taken as a sign that the calomel was working to purge the system
and rid the disease. Calomel was often administered as a treatment for dysentery;
the effects of calomel would often worsen the severe diarrhea associated with
dysentery and acted as a catalyst in speeding up the effects of dehydration. One
victim was Alvin Smith, the eldest brother of Joseph Smith, founder of the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It was also used by Charles Darwin to
treat the severe gastrointestinal infection that presumably began the inductive
phase of his documented Crohn's disease. Eventually, it was determined that
calomel was causing more harm than good, as the side effects were often worse
than the illness it was being used to treat; because of this, calomel was
removed from medical supply shelves. [Wikipedia]
Mercury poisoning – Mercurous chloride: Safety
considerations
Mercurous chloride is toxic,
although due to its low solubility in water it is generally less dangerous than
its mercuric chloride counterpart. It was used in medicine as a diuretic and purgative
(laxative) in the United States from the late 1700s through the 1860s. Calomel
was also a common ingredient in teething powders in Britain up until 1954,
causing widespread mercury poisoning in the form of pink disease, which at the
time had a mortality rate of 1 in 10. These medicinal uses were later
discontinued when the compound's toxicity was discovered.
It has also found uses in cosmetics as soaps and skin
lightening creams, but these preparations are now illegal to manufacture or
import in many countries including the US, Canada, Japan and the European
Union. A study of workers involved in the production of these preparations
showed that the sodium salt of 2,3-dimercapto-1-propanesulfonic acid (DMPS) was
effective in lowering the body burden of mercury and in decreasing the urinary
mercury concentration to normal levels. [Wikipedia]
***
***
For links to other cases of woman who murdered 2 or more husbands (or paramours), see Black Widow Serial Killers.
***
[66-1/3/21; 117-11/1/21]
***
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