Preview

Alvin Dewey's Involvement In The Clutter Case

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
183 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Alvin Dewey's Involvement In The Clutter Case
The two primary suspects of the Clutter case, Richard Eugene Hitchcock and Perry Edward Smith, were arrested on December 30, 1959 for driving a stolen vehicle in Las Vegas, Nevada. Alvin Dewey, the detective assigned to the Clutter case, was informed by a colleague that the suspects were arrested. Fearing that he would lose his only opportunity to interrogate Hitchcock and Smith, Dewey drove to the Las Vegas police station. When first questioned about their involvement in the quadruple homicide, both suspects recounted a phony story they had conceived and notably rehearsed. Perry is the first of the suspects, to succumb to the detective's scrupulous questioning, he then began to recount what really occurred on the evening of November 14,1959.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    anita cobby case

    • 1873 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Recently, an interesting case of murder involving a young married woman was unravelled by the crime scene team. The collection of evidence and laboratory examination of exhibits provided the corroborative evidence necessary to prove the victim’s in-laws were trying to mislead the Investigating Officer by fabricating a story of looting and murder…

    • 1873 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    I will briefly outline the circumstances of the case and how the perpetrator – Coulston, was eventually captured and the evidence that flowed to convict him for the triple murders in Summit Road, Burwood.…

    • 1606 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    On October 23, 1990, James Driskell was convicted of first degree murder against his friend Perry Harder. Earlier in the year of November 1989, James had been running a “chop shop” with Perry Harder, and apparently the police had searched through the place and found stolen parts of vehicles and they were both arrested for possession of stolen property. Furthermore, on June 21, 1990, Perry and Harder were to attend court and plead guilty of the “chop shop” charges, but Perry did not attend. September 30, Perry’s body was found with two shots in the chest. The police believed that James was the one who shot Perry because it was so that he could not testify against James in the “chop shop” case and had three hair samples that matched up to Perry…

    • 237 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The two primary suspects of the Clutter case, Richard Eugene Hitchcock and Perry Edward Smith, were arrested on December 30, 1959 for driving a stolen vehicle in Las Vegas, Nevada. Alvin Dewey, the KBI detective assigned to the case, was informed by a colleague that the suspects were arrested, fearing that he would lose his chance to interrogate them, he decided to drive to Las Vegas. When first questioned about their involvement in the quadruple homicide, both suspects deny having anything to do with the horrific crime and recount a phony story they had conceived and thoroughly rehearsed. Perry is the first to succumb to the detective's scrupulous questioning, and proceeded to recount what really occurred on the evening in question. Hitchcock…

    • 211 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Detective Pepperon Case

    • 596 Words
    • 3 Pages

    March,27,1999, a serial killer is on the loose in New York City, NY. The first victim they killed was 20 year old Tonald Drump, by being strangled to death. Detective Pepperoni was sent to find who made the crime. Tonald was targeted and harassed by many people for using testimonial evidence on people in the court for things they didn't do. Tonald did not help or be nice to any people besides his family, and he had a bad personality trait of being rude, selfish, and lying, so it makes sense why people would want to kill him. Detective Pepperoni found some evidence from Tomald, it wasn't much only carpet fibers and shoeprints leading to a small town in Time Square. 3 days later another victim, 25 year old Anita Pea was killed by being stabbed in the arm twice and bleeding out the Medical Examiner stated. Anita Pea was a very…

    • 596 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    After detective Townsend decided that that Roussells current address was the Magnolia apts he decided to conduct a probation search. While searching the apartment they found a hand gun. After searching the residents detective Townsend found out from Kima Downey that Roussell had moved out about three months earlier, The detective also found out that Downey was a convicted felon, they arrested him for possession of the gun. Downey motioned to suppress the weapon but it was denied and he pled guilty.…

    • 496 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    No Heros No Villians

    • 1477 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Throughout this book there are many important details leading up to the trial of James Richardson. James Richardson was the accused in the case of the deceased NY Police Officer John Skagen. John Skagen was shot to death in a NY subway station on June 28, 1972. The Facts in this case are clear; Officer Skagen was coming home from court that day, he was in plain clothes at the time of the incident in question. He was off duty. As he went into the subway he had noticed a tall black male, with short hair, a dark complexion and a round face. Richardson was wearing dark pants and a waist-length green dashiki. Tucked in his waist was a nickel-plated, snub-nosed, .32 caliber revolver.…

    • 1477 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    [Introduction] Television crime and courtroom dramas have advanced in many aspects from the 1960’s through present day; visually and verbally. According to The Fifties Web, “Top ratings in the 1960’s,” Raymond Burr’s Perry Mason was one of the top ranked crime dramas in 1961 and 62. In today’s era Law and Order SVU is among the favorites. Law and Order SVU and Perry Mason are both hour long crime dramas that investigate crimes in one segment of the program and shed light on the courtroom drama in the remaining part of the show. The major difference in each is how the suspects are apprehended. Perry Mason exercises high dialogue and Law and Order SVU is more visual and action packed. As noted in “Excessive Style,” “American mass-market television underwent an uneven shift in the conceptual and ideological paradigms that governed its look and presentational demeanor in the 1980s.” “By the 1990’s television in the later years, became more ideological than just a form of escapism.” (Caldwell, p. 651) The way in which criminals are apprehended in these crime dramas depicts a closer relation to the evolution of real life. From the video tape of Rodney King to the fall of the Rampart Division, police officers over time have advanced more toward violence and major manipulation, i.e. corruption. [Thesis] The evolution of change within the structure of crime-courtroom dramas with the comparison of Perry Mason in the 60’s and Law and Order SVU in the present day can be a result of the real life changes in society. Perry Mason is a crime drama with high dialogue, less violence and minor manipulation, while Law and Order entangles a web of violence and police coercion that sometimes crosses the line to apprehend their suspects.…

    • 1682 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    On October 31, 1963, while on a downtown beat which he had patrolled many times over a period of several years, Cleveland Police Department detective Martin McFadden spotted two men, standing on a street corner at 1276 Euclid Avenue. Detective McFadden thought that the men, John W. Terry and Richard Chilton were behaving in a suspicious manner. Detective McFadden noticed that the two men walking back and forth and stopping to stare at a particular store window. After each trip back to the window, the men stopped on the corner to talk. This ritual was performed by the men about five or six times apiece. McFadden observed that after one of the trips, they were joined by a third man. After speaking with Terry and Chilton briefly, the man left. Detective McFadden suspected that the men were planning a robbery. Therefore, he followed them. As a result, he witnessed them rejoin the third man in from of a store a few blocks away (Cole and Smith, 2007, p. 268).…

    • 2183 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Due to the fact that true crime involves real people who have suffered horrible tragedies, writing about it is a delicate undertaking--even more so when the crime is unsolved; a situation which prevents the victims or their families from obtaining closure and propagates fear throughout the local community. At the same time, however; the very mystery which causes so much harm to those close to the tragedy in question, is what draws outsiders to it. People immerse themselves in the puzzle of it all, becoming both fascinated and frustrated by the case. It is no wonder then, that personal narratives of people immersing themselves in unsolved cases are so popular. The shared experience between the author and reader, makes for a story which is doubly captivating. A captivated audience is one easily influenced however, and the author’s persona and own attitude toward the case, influencing so many, may have far reaching…

    • 1180 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    John Dewey Research Paper

    • 464 Words
    • 2 Pages

    John Dewey, a philosopher known for his strong stance on education, believed that to truly learn something you must experience it. Dewey created an elementary school that thrived off the principal of learning by doing. His students participated in cooking, sewing, textiles, gardening, and shop work so that they could understand the process, how it worked, and to appreciate its importance in daily life. His school of thought is referred to as pragmatism, which states humans learn best through applying experiences and thoughts to problems as they arise (Cohen, 1999). I believe in this approach and think that it is the best way to deliver information to students. I think that to truly understand something you must see it and experience it for yourself, you cannot just go off of what others have experienced. My educational plan is developed around this philosophy so that it will be the most effective in relaying the lesson. Agriculture is very important to me, and our society, and I believe that the public has a right to be educated on what is currently being produced around them.…

    • 464 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Short Story On The Boardwalk

    • 2601 Words
    • 11 Pages

    Detective Warren Gallagher arrived at the Santa Monica pier a little after eight that morning. He was feeling rather lively because last night his girlfriend Amanda had agreed to become his fiancé, and because the barista at Cultivar Coffee Bar had given him an extra shot of espresso on the house. It’s wasn’t every day that he got to report to his job as a crime scene detective looking forward to the day that lay ahead of him. As he stepped out of his Subaru and began to walk up the boardwalk his partner Detective Nix joined him at his side.…

    • 2601 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    I think it's a great idea to have students as stakeholders. In Democracy and Education, John Dewey calls active student engagement an essential factor of learning and education. "Making the individual a sharer or partner in the associated activity so that he feels its success as his success, its failure as his failure, is the completing step," Dewey writes (1916, p. 14). Though Dewey comments on the social environment, his philosophies can naturally extend to the school environment, which he calls the "chief agency" for social progress (p. 20). In this way of thinking, students are partners in the educational process, particularly in K-12 education reform in the U.S.…

    • 296 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Suddenly, he received a phone call from his assistant. One of the victims had been found, dead, near railway tracks. Clark was excited. He burst with joy, energized at the thought that there was still hope. Frantically, he jabbed at the elevator’s button, his eyes twitching in anticipation. But he couldn’t wait. He ran down the emergency stairs and exited the building, buttoning his black trench-coat as he bracingly inhaled the chilled London air. He had never felt so refreshed. A black Austin taxi loitered at the Primrose Street kerb. Clark, sparing no thought, ordered the driver to the Malcolm Road railway intersection. The cab sped through Cheshire Street; hustling past the momentous buildings and statues, as ramblers shifted along with their own agendas - it was like…

    • 819 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Terry v. Ohio

    • 755 Words
    • 4 Pages

    On October 31, 1963, Detective Martin McFadden was in plain clothes, patrolling his downtown beat in Cleveland, Ohio, an area that he had been patrolling for shoplifters and pick-pocketing the last 30 years. At 2:30 PM, he noticed two unknown individuals, John Terry and Richard Chilton acting suspiciously, standing on a street corner. One of the men walked away and stopped to look in a nearby store window, continued walking, and on the way back stopped to look in the same store window before rejoining the other man.…

    • 755 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays