Читать книгу Lizzie Didn't Do It; Emma Did! - E. Elaine Watson - Страница 3
Introduction
ОглавлениеOn a warm summer morning, August 4, 1892, in the town of Fall River, Massachusetts, Mrs. Abby Borden of 92 Second Street was dusting in the upstairs guest bedroom. Some time between 9:30 and 10:00 a.m., a person or persons unknown crept up behind her and struck her in the head 19 times with a hatchet-type implement, killing her.
At about 11:00 a.m., almost one hour and a half later, that same person or persons attacked her husband, Andrew Borden, as he lay resting on the couch in the downstairs sitting room. He was struck about 11 times in the head with the same hatchet-type implement. Only known individuals present in the house, or about the property, during the times of the attacks were Lizzie Borden, daughter of Andrew Borden and step-daughter of Abby; and the family maid, Bridget Sullivan. Circumstantial evidence led to the arrest of Lizzie Borden, who was eventually found not guilty of the crime. As of today, the case is still open and the crime unsolved. But this is not the whole story of the Lizzie Borden case. It began long before the murders happened, almost 30 years before in fact. It began the day a mother lay dying and asked her daughter to promise her something.
The daughter made that promise, and no matter the circumstances that came her way throughout her life, she kept that promise. It was her passion; it was her reason for living. She determined that nothing would keep her from the fulfillment of that promise, not even if it meant someone had to die. Using actual court testimony from the trial transcripts, some newspaper accounts of the double murder, and research into other theories set forth, I present the following solution to the Lizzie Borden case.