Want this question answered?
Bruno Hauptmann
Bruno Richard Hauptmann was found guilty and sentenced to death by electric chair.
The kidnapper of Charles Lindbergh's baby was Bruno Hauptmann, a German immigrant living in the United States. Hauptmann was eventually captured, tried, and convicted for the kidnapping and murder of the baby.
The man who was convicted of the kidnapping and murder of Charles Lindbergh's baby son was Bruno Hauptmann.
Bruno Hauptmann was convicted for it.
Bruno Hauptmann was convicted and executed for that crime.
The man who was convicted of the kidnapping and murder of Charles Lindbergh's baby son was "Bruno" Richard Hauptmann, a German carpenter who had luved in America for over a decade.
The man who was convicted of the kidnapping and murder of Charles Lindbergh's baby son was Bruno Hauptmann.
The ransom for the Lindbergh baby was $50,000, which was paid by the family in the hopes of securing the baby's safe return.
The LindberghKidnapping Case (1976)Fact-based story of the kidnapping of Charles Lindbergh Jr., son and namesake of the famed pilot, and ensuing trial of accused and convicted killer, Bruno Hauptmann.
Bruno Hauptmann was convicted for the kidnapping and murder of Charles Lindbergh Jr. based on evidence such as ransom money found in his possession and handwriting analysis that matched his to ransom notes. However, some scholars believe there may have been problems with the evidence and investigation in the case.
Charles Augustus Lindbergh junior was the son of the aviator Charles Lindbergh and his wife Ann Morrow Lindbergh. He was aged around 20 months when he was kidnapped on 1 March 1932. The child's body was found in May 1932 and, after a long investigation, Bruno Richard Hauptmann was arrested in September 1934 and convicted of the murder in February 1935. Hauptmann was executed on 3 April 1936 although he always claimed that he was innocent.