Much of the evidence in the Borden case was circumstantial. The broken and possibly bloody hatchet found in the cellar could not be proven to actually be the murder weapon. The story was either rust or chicken blood. Science was not advanced enough at the time to distinguish human from animal blood. No bloody clothes were found. The Borden's friend Alice Russell observed Lizzie burning a dress in the kitchen's woodstove the day after the murders.
What it came down to was, Lizzie was about the only one that had the motive and the opportunity to kill Andrew and Abbey Borden. Bridget Sullivan, the Borden's maid, was sick that day and after washing windows retired to her attic room to lay down for a much needed nap. Lizzie's uncle John Morse, a house guest at the time of the murders was away attending to business with witnesses to verify his whereabouts. Emma Borden, Lizzie's older sister was out of town visiting friends. Once the victims are eliminated, for obvious reasons, the remaining person was Lizzie.
There was plenty. Lets start in the basement of the house. There was a broken hatchet with trace amounts of blood. It looked as if it had been cleaned. Lizzy's sister Emma caught Lizzy burning a dress with reddish brown spots all over it. Lizzy was the only one there with the opportunity and motive. The coronor put the times of death at least 1 and 1/2 hours apart. It is highly unlikely that an unknown person would hide, commit such a horrible crime, wait 90 minutes in the house where the daughter and maid could have idendtified him. That would be complete stupidity.
Police found no evidence on Jack The Ripper pertaining to Mary Kelly or any of the other victims either. Jack was never caught.
There was no blood on the dress (which she burned) so there's no way of confirming that and the murder weapon was nowhere to be found.
There is absolutely no evidence that Lizzie Borden had an accomplice, and in fact, all evidence points to a single perpetrator, which of course was Lizzie herself, and only herself.
Evidence
History's Mysteries - 1998 The Strange Case of Lizzie Borden - 14.3 was released on: USA: 2005
Lizzie Borden's family was a distant relation to the Borden's of the Borden food company.
Lizzie Andrew Borden is 5' 4".
The nursery rhyme "Lizzie Borden Took an Axe" is based on the true story of Lizzie Borden, who was accused of murdering her father and stepmother with an axe in 1892. The rhyme recounts the murders and the subsequent trial where Lizzie was acquitted due to lack of evidence, but the case remains unsolved to this day.
The Legend of Lizzie Borden was created in 1975.
Lizzie Borden was born on July 19, 1860.
Lizzie Borden v. The State Of Massachusettes.
Lizzie Borden was born on July 19, 1860.
Lizzie Borden - opera - was created in 1965.
Lizzie Andrew Borden's birth name is Elizabeth Andrew Borden.