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The evidence says she was guilty. Sometimes the guilty go free. Though she was quitted by a jury of her peers, public opinion condemed her, she was shunned for the rest of her life by the citizens of Fall River.

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12y ago
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12y ago

Lizzie Borden was released from jail after her aquittal for the murders of her father and step-mother on June 20, 1893. She died on June 1, 1927 following gall bladder surgery. The only time Lizzie spent in jail was awaiting trial from her arrest on August 11, 1892 to her aquittal on June 20, 1893.

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6y ago

The jury found Lizzie not guilty of the double murder and the court let her go.
The court had little to do with it. A jury of Borden's peers found her 'not guilty'. She was released after aquittal.

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12y ago

If modern criminal behaviour and forensics are applied to evidence from the Borden case, it points to one person only. Motive and opportunity are key in this case. An understanding of the dynamics within the Borden family is also an important factor. All these components, when assembled, tell the story of resentments that simmered for years, and on August 4, 1892, finally boiled over in the double ax murder of Fall River's finest.

Just hours prior to the murders Lizzie tried to buy prussic acid (cyanide). Andrew, Abbey and Bridget Sullivan (Borden's maid) were very sick the day before the murders. Oddly, Lizzie claimed to feel ill but showed no obvious signs of illness.

Abbey Borden was killed in the guest room on the second floor of the home. She received over a dozen blows to the head and neck with a small hatchet or axe. She died 90 minutes before Andrew, who received 11 blows with what looked like the same weapon. This fact is not consistant with an intruder. The risk of discovery would have been too great to take a chance. Lizzie and Bridget were busy with chores earlier, there were few places to safely hide while people walked from room to room.

Lizzie's behaviour was inconsistant for a grieving daughter. Lizzie changed her story several times. She finally settled on one, she was in the barn loft looking for lead to make fishing sinkers. Police checked the loft, thick dust on the floor proved she was not there. Since Emma was away visiting friends in another town the only people that had the opportunity was Lizzie and Bridget. Bridget had nothing to gain by her employer's deaths. Her behaviour was appropriate. Lizzie resented her stepmother, referring to her as 'Mrs. Borden'. Lizzie greatly resented her father for his penny-pinching lifestyle he inflicted on his family. And Andrew was making adjustments to his will, giving Abbey's family real estate that the younger Borden's felt should remain with blood relatives. Trouble had been brewing for years, resentments simmered to the point of gross dysfunction.

Shortly after the murders Lizzie and Emma's friend Alice Russell witnessed Lizzie burning a dress in the woodstove, her story being she brushed against wet paint. This point alone is a huge red flag. In the 19th century, even for wealthier families, a ruined dress would have been used for rags. And Andrew ran a tight ship. He would not even permit Bridget to throw out the suspect mutton stew. Nothing was wasted.

In conclusion, Lizzie was the only person with the motive, opportunity, personality to commit this crime. She gave herself away numerous times in small and large ways. She lied, destroyed evidence, and benefited to the tune of $500,000 with the death of her father and stepmother, whom she would share equally with Emma. This of course is not a complete list of the points in the Borden case. Lizzie's crimes have filled many books and been the subject of movies but there really is no mystery to this double murder. An intruder would not have been able to come into the house that morning, it was locked from the inside. Bridget had trouble letting Andrew back in after he had forgotten his key. So nobody went in or out. Nobody was home but Lizzie and Bridget, the maid napping on her bed in the attic. That leaves Lizzie. After her aquittal, she took full advantage of her inheiritence, buying a big home in a more fashionable neighborhood, and changing her name to 'Lizbeth'. At the time of her death she had spent a great portion of her share of the money, Emma had most of her share, unspent, sitting in a bank account. Lizbeth died following complications of gall bladder surgery on June 1, 1927. Nine days later Emma Borden died also. The sisters had been estranged for years, which is such a sad footnote to this case. Although Lizzie was aquitted of criminal charges, she was found guilty by the citizens of Fall River, MA. She never achieved the social status she felt was her right. She is buried in the family plot with her father, mother, Emma, and a sister that died before Lizzie was born.

*The Borden case has abundant material available. I recommend 'The Cases That Haunt Us' by former FBI profiler John Douglas and Mark Olashaker. They sum up the case very well and their facts can be trusted as true, not part of the myth that surrounds this old case.

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10y ago

Borden was charged and tried for the hatchet murders of her father Andrew and stepmother Abby. She was aquitted in 1893. Although it is doubtful that anyone but Lizzie could have been the killer there were several flaws in the prosecution's case. The most damaging was the fact that the coroner's inquest testimony was not allowed at the later trial due to the fact that Lizzie did not have legal councel at that time. It would have been deemed inadmissable on appeal. This greatly hurt the case and allowed Lizzie's high-priced attorneys to work around the other evidence, basically taking all the 'bite' out of the prosecution. Although there were contributing factors, such as an all-male jury that could not fathom a well-brought up young lady such as Borden could hack her parents to death, and another unrelated axe murder in the immediate vicinity of Fall River, Lizzie was found not guilty.

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11y ago

No, Lizzie was aquitted of all charges against her. But the citizens of Fall River were not as open minded as her jury. She was shunned for the rest of her life.

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16y ago

She was acquitted.

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12y ago

She was aquitted of all charges.

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12y ago

The evidence says she was guilty.

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Q: Was Lizzie Borden in jail at the time of her death?
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Related questions

Did Lizzie Borden ever live in Connecticut?

Unless I'm mistaken , Lizzie Borden was a life-time resident of Fall River, MA.


Was Alice Esther Borden related to Lizzie Borden?

Lizzie Borden and Elizabeth Montgomery are 6th cousins 1 time removed through their common ancestors of Samuel and Sarah Luther.


Where does Lizzie Borden live?

Until her death in 1927, Lizzie Borden lived her entire life in Fall River Massachusetts. At the time of the murders the Bordens lived at 92 2nd St. After her aquittal Lizzie and her older sister Emma moved to 306 French St., a more fashionable neighborhood and a much larger house. As of June 1, 1927 Lizzie has resided at Oak Grove Cemetery along side her father Andrew, real mother Sarah, and sisters Emma and Alice Ester*. *Alice Ester Borden died before Lizzie was born, she was about two years old at the time of her death.


How many counts of murder was Lizzie Borden charged with?

Oddly enough, Lizzie was charged with three counts of first degree murder. One count each for Andrew and Abbey Borden's death and an additional count for Andrew and Abbey together. I'm not exactly sure why the prosecutor filed the additional charge or what the laws in MA were at the time of the murders, which was 1892.


Who were three people that lived at the same time as Annie Oakley?

Also born in 1860 were Lizzie Borden, Pistol Pete Eaton and Tom Horn. Lizzie Borden outlived Annie Oakley by a year. Tom Horn was hanged in 1903, 23 years before Annie Oakley died. Frank Eaton died in 1958, 38 years after Aninie's death.


Was Lizzie Borden's trial filmed?

That would have been great but Lizzie Borden's trial was held in 1893, a time when although it was possible, it was just not practical. In fact the day to day proceedings of the actual trial as reported by the press you will find mostly sketches of the key players.


Who did Lizzie Borden kill first?

Abbey Borden's estimated time of death was 9:30am from 19 blows with a small axe or hatchett. Andrew Borden's body was discovered at 11:10am (same morning) in the downstairs parlor. While taking a nap he was hit 11 times with the same type weapon that had killed his wife lesss than 2 hours before him.


How long did the Lizzie Borden trial last?

Here is the time line begining with the double murders of Andrew and Abbey Borden: Murder August 4, 1892. Lizzie Borden arrested on August 11, 1892. Grand Jury hearing on November 7, 1892. Grand Jury hands down indictment of Lizzie Borden on December 2, 1892. Murder trial begins June 5, 1893. Jury retires to deliberate on June 19, 1893. Verdict returned on June 20, 1893. Aquittal, Borden released. *The trial lasted from June 5, 1893 to June 20, 1893.


Who was Lizzie Borden?

Was born July 19, 1860 in Fall River, Massachussetts. lizzy borden is most famous for killing her parents with a hacket. yet we r still not sure if she really did this crime. she was never taken 2 jail 4 it.


Who is the most likely suspect in the Lizzie Borden double murders?

Former FBI agent John Douglas of the Behavioural Science Unit in his book The Crimes That Haunt Us, says that Fall River police got it right. After a thorough analysis of the crime Douglas narrows the suspect list to two, Lizzie and the Borden's maid, Bridget Sullivan. The only two people that had physical access to the crime scene, victims, and alleged murder weapon were those two people. But only one of those two had a motive for the killings, and only one, Lizzie, who would benefit financially from the death of Andrew and Abbey Borden. The intruder theory didn't mesh with the evidence. Emma Borden, Lizzie's older sister may have had the same motivation as Lizzie but Emma had an airtight aliby as did John Morse, a houseguest of the Borden's at the time of the murders and Andrew's brother-in-law from his first marriage to John's sister Sarah. In conclusion, the prosecutor Hosea Knowlton had a strong circumstantial case. The verdict had more to do with a biased jury with antiquated ideas pertaining to women and their place in society in the 19th century.


Did Lizzie borden ever go to jail?

Lizzie never married. A couple of biographys written about her life proclaim that she was gay. There is some evidence that supports this theory. The fact that Lizzie had a relationship with a New York stage actress named Nance O'Neil is well documented. Harder to prove is that it was a sexual relationship. It was at this time though that Emma, Lizzie's older sister, moved out of the house they shared, after some kind of disagreement. It was serious enough that the sisters never reconciled.


How old was Lizzie borden when her parents were killed?

Lizzie Borden was born on July 19, 1860