The only viable explaination is that the killer remained in the home between the two murders, because the killer was Lizzie herself.
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The story of the Borden murders was so horrifying that it was, in its time, given the media equivalent of modern trials like the OJ Simpson case, and the Rosenberg spy trial. It has gone down in history thanks to the children's rhyme that was invented at the time of the case. Virtually every child has heard of Lizzie Borden and knows what she did - she murdered her mother and father by hitting them 40 and 41 times with an axe. But did she?
The Myth: Lizzie Did the Deed
Lizzie Borden took an axe and gave her mother forty whacks. When she saw what she had done she gave her father forty-one. - Popular Rhyme
The short answer to the question posed in the introduction is "no" - Lizzie Borden did not kill her father (Andrew) and step-mother (Abby). Also untrue is the number of blows each received from the famous axe used to kill them. Her father was hit 11 times and her stepmother 18 or 19 times. Lizzie was seen minutes after the murders and had no blood on her at all. Furthermore, a month previous, a man had committed axe murders very similar in style to the Borden killings. He claimed to have been outside of the country when Andrew and Abby were killed but it seems too much a coincidence to make his story believable.
The Trial
Lizzie was put on trial for the murder but after only one hour of jury deliberations she was found innocent. No one else was ever tried for the murders and Lizzie went on to live a relatively peaceful life and died 35 years after the famous case. She left $30,000 to an animal welfare league and the remainder of her estate (which was quite large for the time) was left to a friend and cousin. You can stay in the house where the Bordens were killed as it is now a bed and breakfast and the home that Lizzie lived in after the murders until her death offers tours (by appointment only).
Some circumstantial evidence does seem to suggest that Lizzie may have killed her parents, but no evidence was ever given to prove it. While her clothing had no blood on it, she did burn a dress after the killings because she said it had paint on it. She also tried to purchase poison a week before the murders and the entire household became very sick the day before - this was put down to food poisoning. At the time, forensics were not as trusted as today and so the axe was not fingerprinted even though the technology to do so existed at the time and could have given proof that Lizzie was innocent (or guilty)
Interesting Fact: Lizzie Borden and actress Elizabeth Montgomery (of Bewitched fame), who coincidentally portrayed Lizzie in a television movie about the murders and trial, were sixth cousins once removed. Both women descended from 17th century Massachusetts resident John Luther. Rhonda McClure, the genealogist who documented the Montgomery-Borden connection, said, "I wonder how Elizabeth would have felt if she knew she was playing her own cousin."
by Jamie Frater
Serial murders involve multiple killings that occur over a period of time, with a "cooling-off" period between each murder. In contrast, mass murders involve multiple killings that occur in a single location during a single event.
Time is distance between two events, just as space is the distance between 2 points...
The term generally used is spree killing.
There is no specific day of the week that has the most murders. The frequency of murders can vary and is influenced by numerous factors such as location, time of year, and other circumstances.
Killing time murders success.
No, there is no connection between an umbrella indoors and drowning.
It varied depending on who you asked. Berkowitz initially claimed to be following orders from a neighbor's dog. The plan was to make him look delusional, which he was not. Later Berkowitz claimed to be part of a Satan-worshipping cult, which was true. In Maury Terry's exhaustively researched bestseller The Ultimate Evil, Maury uncovers the real reason for the Son of Sam murders. According to Terry, which the evidence backs up, Berkowitz was responsible for only three of the murders but was present at almost all of them. With the publication of Terry's book at least two New York buroughs reopened their investigations into the Son Of Sam murders. Whether others will be indicted for their participation in the murders is an unknown at this time.
Delirium is a medical state of confusion that happens over a short time period. Dementia is memory loss that evolves over a longer time period.
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.
No, there is no correlation between opening an umbrella indoors and drowning.
The types of mass murderers can include spree killers, who commit multiple murders in different locations within a short period of time, and serial killers, who commit multiple murders with a "cooling-off" period in between. Mass shooters specifically target multiple victims in one location in a single incident.
Wayne Williams was charged with the murders of two young men in Atlanta in 1981, which were part of a series of killings known as the Atlanta child murders. He was convicted in 1982 for these two murders and is widely considered to be responsible for many of the other child murders that occurred in the city during that time. His conviction was largely based on fiber evidence linking him to the victims.