Why are you here and why am I doing this?

Why are you here and why am I doing this?

If you're like me, THIS is as close to crime as you want to get.

You want to maintain a safe distance and delve into it when it's convenient for you; not when some lunatic knocks on your door in the middle of the night, runs you off the road or approaches you in a parking lot.

Maybe you are a Murderino?

I'm someone who resolves every New Year's Eve to NOT be the victim of a crime.

Some of the crimes I'll describe here aren't horrific or even result in death, but they're still situations to be avoided. Who wants the drama or the paperwork associated with a non-violent crime? Not me.

I know I'm not the only one who's interested in reading about crime & criminals. I hope to use this blog to share that interest with others.

My process is to find something in an old newspaper, news broadcast or my own memory that grabs my attention and delve deep. I research the cases and people using newspaper and magazine archives, genealogy sites plus court or prison documents (when I can afford them). Lately the way I write the stories has changed. I'm starting to show the effort I've made to track down specific details. I also seem to be posting less frequently. This can be attributed to the fact that I'm now concerned with the As Close to Crime YouTube channel as well as my habit of falling deeper and deeper into rabbit holes with each new entry. I'd rather have quality than quantity, so I've come to terms with the lessening output.

I try not rely too heavily on other websites or books but I credit people when it's appropriate. In fact, if my main source of information is someone else's book, I'll just recommend the book. This was the case with "The Bobbed Haired Bandit."

Don't expect too many Top 10 lists from me. I instead prefer to select the more obscure crimes that some visitors to this blog have either never heard of or haven't thought about in awhile.

I also like to give attention to not just those who break the law but those who uphold the law. So you can expect to see some of that here.

There's a companion YouTube Channel for this blog, called As Close to Crime, where I occasionally post clips related to particular blog entries or just random clips concerning criminal activity. I'm never going to post an entire commercially available film.

Be sure to subscribe to the channel or this blog.

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Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Good At Her Job

Mary Agnes Shanley's career in law enforcement began on July 1, 1931 when she was 35-years-old and she was grateful. She wasn't without a job but she wasn't satisfied.


The New York City Police Department offered Mary job security, a very decent salary, the promise of a pension, plus she truly enjoyed the work. Being a police officer was much more exciting than anything she'd done before and she was good at it.

Once she began, there was no going back.

Things got even better in 1934 when policewomen were permitted to carry guns. On average, Mary hit the target 89 out of a possible 100.

Mary spent her early years arresting nudists at Coney Island and assisting in undercover sting operations designed to crack down on gypsy fortune tellers. On one occasion Mary was instructed by Judge Louis Brodsky to make sure 60-year-old gypsy Marie Katherina took a bath and fined the woman $10 for soap but it was still dangerous work.

Mary, 1937
On March 8, 1935, Mary tried to arrest a masher at the Savoy Theatre on 34th Street and was shoved down a flight of stairs. The damage was a sprained left ankle, abrasions of the left knee and a possible fracture of the left arm.


On October 1, 1950 while arresting a man who Mary said was molesting women at Radio City Music Hall, she was punched in the mouth and she grappled with the suspect until 2 ushers jumped in to assist.

Mary really came into her own when, in September of 1935, she was one of four women assigned to The Pickpocket Squad. In addition to Mary Shanley, the squad welcomed Bertha Recht, Anna Orr and Helen Faulheiber.

As that department's Captain William J. Raftis explained, "Detecting pickpockets is an art. There are only a few types of persons capable of doing it successfully. The detective must be on the alert every minute yet act naturally enough not to attract attention."

Mary had a photographic memory, patience, determination and a keen eye for suspicious behavior so she truly excelled. She could quickly spot colorful repeated offenders such as Chinatown Charlie, Tillie Light-Fingers and Greenhorn Clara.

Mary spent her days patrolling the department stores all along Fifth Avenue, subway stations, churches and movie theaters. Basically, any place were people would be so absorbed in what was going on around them that they became prime targets for pickpockets aka "dips" and "seat-tippers." Seat-tippers are thieves who ply their trade at movie houses. The thief sits a row behind seats containing unattended pocketbooks and they use their feet to tip back the seats, causing the pocketbooks to drop down to the floor.

Often, as a way to better blend in with the crowds, Mary would bring her young niece with her. While this kind of move would be frowned upon today, back then it was considered ingenious. Mary looked like a mother shopping with her young daughter.
Mary made several high profile arrests throughout her career and the press couldn't get enough, which makes her an easier person to research.

Mary - New York World-Telegram, 1937

In no particular order, here are a few of the highlights -

On April 12, 1936 (Easter Sunday), Mary saw two suspicious characters walking around the theatre district. She trailed them for 6 hours and watched as they purchased two toy guns.

Finally, Mary approached the two men and announced they were under arrest. Neither of them took Mary seriously until she brandished her badge and weapon.

They went without a struggle and allowed themselves to be transported by cab to the stationhouse. Mary's instincts proved right. John Finegold and Stanley Warzyusky had formed a friendship while inmates together in West Virginia and they admitted that they had been planning to commit robbery but hadn't decided on a target. The newspapers and police department praised Mary for her courage, intuition and determination.

At their arraignment, the charges against Finegold and Warzyusky were dropped from carrying concealed weapons to loitering in crowds, an act forbidden to known criminals. They were sentenced to 100 days in the Workhouse.

Once West Virginia authorities were notified of Finegold's NY arrest, Finegold's parole was revoked and he was ordered to serve out the remaining three years of the 8 year sentence he had received in 1930 for breaking and entering.
Conti, Shanley and Greenberg
on their way to court -
Library of Congress photo

One of Mary's most celebrated arrests happened when she was off-duty.

On June 8, 1937, Mary noticed two suspicious characters, James Conti and Jack Greenberg, in a subway station and decided to follow them to the street level. According to Mary, "I just didn't like their looks."

At the corner of 8th Ave and 45th St, Mary announced she was a police officer and told them they were under arrest.

Conti surrendered without a struggle but Greenberg made a run for it so Mary fired two shots over his head. A passing fireman escorted Greenberg back to Mary. The charge for both was attempted grand larceny. Mary was right to think they were worth keeping an eye on. Between them, Conti and Greenberg had 81 arrests and 43 convictions.

Mary with Mayor LaGuardia
There was no rebuke for discharging her firearm on a crowded street. In fact, 9 days after the incident, Mary received a commendation from Mayor LaGuardia and was promoted from Third Grade Detective to Second Grade.
This promotion increased her annual salary by $180.00.

Conti and Greenberg were sentenced to 60 days in the Workhouse, fined $50.00 each and Judge William A. Farrell advised them to leave the state once they were released. "You may go west young men, to the dust bowls, where there are few crowds and no pockets worth picking."

By 1939, Mary Shanley was one of the department most respected female officers and in January of that year she was assigned to travel to London to assist in what she referred to as a diamond-switch case. As Mary explained to a reporter, "That's when a dealer shows a woman good diamonds and delivers bad ones. This was a four thousand dollar job." It was the first time a female detective had been sent to Europe on a case.

Mary made the most of the opportunity too. She told Associated Press reporter Joan Durham, "I gained 25 pounds on my trip to Europe. Did I take any time off in Europe? Sure. Two days. I went up from London to see the house where my mother was born in Ireland."

Mary in Southampton, preparing to board the liner Europe
and return to NY - Getty Images

The experience and whatever knowledge Mary gained on that assignment served her well because just months later Mary was instrumental in recovering a portion of gems stolen during a Philadelphia abduction and robbery.

On February 28, 1939, in Philadelphia, Margaret Breyer, the wife of  William J. Breyer, Jr. and her mother-in-law Edith Breyer (of the ice cream Breyers) were on their way home from a night at the opera when their car was set upon at a stoplight by three masked men.

The Breyer's chauffeur Emil Konrad was knocked unconscious by blows to the head. One of the assailants took over the wheel and drove the Breyer's car to a remote location. The women were robbed at gunpoint of their jewelry and ermine furs. The value of these items range from $88,000 to $250,000, depending upon with report you read. The thieves apparently expressed their disappointment at not find a celebrated $75,000 pearl necklace on the neck of the older Mrs. Breyer.

The three men were picked up by a fourth man driving a getaway car.

Ultimately charged with the robbery were Dominic Accobacco, James Cummings, Charles Kligerman and John Sharpe.

NY Daily News photo - December 23, 1945

The stolen jewelry was tracked to New York and Mary spent 42 days working undercover as a buyer. Mary was so convincing that a suspicious and law-abiding vendor reported her inquisitiveness to the police at the Old Slip Station (now home to the New York Police Museum). Officers were assigned to trail Mary, not realizing she was an NYPD detective.

On May 12, 1939, Mary arrested five New Yorkers involved in fencing the stolen gems.

Her investigation finally lead to Robert "Chicago Bob" Nelson aka "The Walking Pawnshop" and she found $3,500.00 worth of stolen gems in Nelson's possession. Mary was credited with having recovered $73,500,00 worth of property from this robbery.

Mary and Robert Nelson, 1939 -
photo from the Akron Beacon
Journal - July 2, 1939


Mary, who wore a double silver fox stole to the arraignment, told reporters "The worst part of the job was wearing those old clothes but I was posing as an installment saleswoman in the gem trade, down in the Bowery and Maiden Lane, and I had to look the part. I couldn't get cleaned up. I was away from home for six weeks, every minute of the time."

Daily News -
May 14, 1939
Mary's efforts were rewards; she earned herself another promotion.

Mary Shanley was now a Detective First Grade and her annual salary was $4,000.00. In today's money (because who doesn't love that), that would be roughly $72,000.

Mary's "stop or I'll shoot" method of making an arrest was the stuff of legend. As she said, "You have the gun to use, and you may just as well use it."

Mary - New York World-Telegram, 1937
On at least 4 occasions, when her suspects ran, Mary fired a few warning shots from her .32 caliber handgun and it didn't make much difference where she was at the time -
Times Square (1937), Jamaica Avenue in Queens (1950), on the steps of St. Patrick's Cathedral (1953) or the Capitol Theatre at Broadway and 51st (1955).

She never actually shot anyone but you have to wonder where those bullets ended up.

The only time Mary got in trouble for using her weapon was at the Spanish Rail bar in Jackson Height, Queens on March 24, 1941.

Mary and Jiggs,
photo capture
from
"Sleuthing
Mary Shanley"
Mary was living in the neighborhood at the time and had stopped in at the tavern with her pet dog Jiggs around 3 AM. The bartender refused to serve her despite Mary showing her badge and asking "Don't you know who I am?" Then another patron, John Hoejus, said something disparaging about the Irish so Mary pulled her gun and fired a shot into the lower part of the bar. She would later testify that Hoejus had made a move towards his pocket and she that thought he was reaching for a weapon.

Mary was immediately demoted from detective to policewoman and headlines proclaimed "Lady Sleuth Shoots $1,000 Off Her Own Pay."

Mary was assigned to work as a police matron, fined five days pay and placed on a year's probation.

In April 1942, Police Commissioner Valentine restored Mary to her former position and she was back patrolling department stores, movie theaters and St. Patrick's Cathedral, which apparently was a hotbed of criminal activity because Mary made multiple arrest there over the years. Some of the criminals were easy to spot because they were repeat offenders.

A favorite arrest of mine is one Mary made on April 13, 1954 while working with fellow detective Margaret Kearney. Mary and Margaret were assigned to St. Patrick's Cathedral, they were working 10 hours shifts, keeping an eye open for pickpockets and along came 31-year-old Audry Dryer. Audry had an arrest record dating back to 1944. As Mary hustled her out of the church she asked, "Where ya been Audry? I've been expecting you since Lent started."

Audry replied "I've been sick. I had an operation at Wickerhsam Hospital and just got out."

The police verified this with the hospital and while it was true Audry had been a patient there, it was under an assumed name. She had used a stolen Blue Cross medical card to pay for the hospitalization. 

Things didn't go quite so smoothly for Mary the year before.

It was September 20, 1953. Mary had been assigned to St. Patrick's Cathedral after six churchgoers reported thefts totaling over $1000.00. 

Mary tried to take down a two person team of pickpockets as they exited the building following the 10 AM High Mass. All three were on the steps of the church when Mary grabbed ahold of 26-year-old Estella Diaz Gonzalez with one hand and aimed her gun at the male accomplice. "If he runs I'll shoot him" was the warning. Estella threw herself at Mary to protect her boyfriend and a struggle ensued. Mary squeezed off two shots at the man as he ducked back into the church and made his getaway.

Mary with Estella -
1953 AP Wire photo

On February 5, 1955, Mary Shanley was looking for seat-tippers inside the Capitol Theatre when she saw a familiar face. It was Henry Orlando Martin, a man she'd arrested twice before and he didn't let her down. Mary caught Henry in the act and told him "You're under arrest Henry. Kneel down, I'm going to put on the cuffs." 

John Duffy -
Daily News - Feb 5, 1955

Henry was a little less compliant this time. He punched Mary in the chest with both his fists, she staggered backwards and Henry ran towards the lobby. She fired a warning shot which got everyone's attention. Mary caught up with Henry and they grappled but when
he got away from her a second time, retired cop John Duffy who was just there to see the movie, "Vera Cruz," stuck his foot out as Henry ran up the aisle. Henry landed on his ear and Duffy assisted with the arrest. 

Mary and John Duffy both escorted Henry to the 47th Street Station - Duffy's old stationhouse.

Mary escorting Henry Orlando Martin to the stationhouse -
Daily News - January 3, 1995

On November 18, 1950, Mary had clocked some suspicious behavior from three men who were ducking in and out of stores along Jamaica Avenue in Queens. It was in Bonds that she saw what they were up to - shoplifting size 39 men's suits and concealing them inside a box one of them were carrying.

When they exited the store, Mary announced herself and told them they were under arrest. Two of the three men ran and Mary squeezed off an ineffectual shot. She ran after and managed to snag one of the two fleeing thieves and reunited him with his partner who had stood outside the store. Apparently, he was too afraid to move.

She escorted Shee Yazemery and Carlos Villasenor down to the stationhouse and they were charged with grand larceny and possession of burglar tools.

Daily News - November 19, 1950
As quick as Mary Shanley was to use her gun on fleeing suspects, a harsh tone and an imposing presence was all she needed to disarm 22-year-old William Specchio.

Specchio was mentally disturbed young man and frequent Creedmoor patient. He had been released into his father's care on January 28th of that year but ended up in Macy's Dept. Store in Jamaica on March 6, 1950 waving a gun and frightening the customers. Mary came up behind him and yelled "Drop that gun boy!" And he did.

photo from Brooklyn Daily Eagle -
March 7, 950


On September 12, 1957, Mary announced her plans to retire - effective October 12, 1957. Mary told reporters, "I'm getting out because I'm tired. I need a rest. I'm looking forward to being a country girl."

She was 61 years old and had made over 1000 arrests in her 26 year career. Mary had even been named "Woman of the Month" by True Detective Magazine in 1954. When asked if she would do it all again, if given the chance, Mary replied "I would indeed. I have no regrets whatever."

Mary was either never married, as some websites report, or according to her niece Mary, had a short-lived union that produced no children.

Mary moved to Miller Place on Long Island following her retirement but 2 years later she was living in a trailer park in Florida and enjoying the sunshine. "I love it here but there are times when I long to be back in the middle of all that excitement."

Ultimately, Florida was not for Mary and at some point she moved back to New York.

Mary Shanley, 2 years
into her retirement - photo
from Fort Lauderdale
News, March 14, 1960
Mary Shanley died July 3, 1989 at the age of 93 and is buried St. Charles Cemetery in Farmingdale, NY.

I highly recommend the documentary "Sleuthing Mary Shanley" by Patrick Mullins who had unlimited access to family photos, home movies and the now adult niece that would often accompany Mary Shanley on her department store stakeouts since Patrick is her son.

My only complaint is that, at 24 minutes, it's too short. I've uploaded the trailer to the As Close To Crime YouTube Channel. Here's the link - https://youtu.be/wSuPJwm1yMg

The DVD can be purchased thru www.cherrylaneproductions.com

Also of interest - In 2016, a one woman show about Mary Shanley called "Dead-Shot Mary" had a limited (6 weeks) run in NYC.

Mary's exploits are covered briefly by James Lardner and Thomas Reppetto in their 2001 book "NYPD: A City and Its Police." Here's an anecdote taken directly from the book - "Near the end of he career, while patrolling Fifth Avenue, she saw a beautiful blond shopper being followed by a crowd. Mary moved in and attached herself to the woman, and for the next two hours Grace Kelly shopped in safety."

Thursday, January 10, 2019

A Question of Morality

True Detective Magazine -
January 2015 
There was never any doubt about who killed 39-year-old George Hochfeld; it was his 32-year-old wife Martha Hochfeld.

True Detective Magazine -
January 2015 
The NYPD knew this because in the early hours of April 23, 1950, shortly after bashing in George's head with a heavy mahogany end table, Martha walked down to an all-night garage to use the pay phone and turn herself in.

Martha then walked back home to 839 Midwood Street in Brooklyn to wait for the police and to bring the two oldest of their five children, Loretta (aged 13) and Morton (aged 12), up to speed. Their father was dying, she was responsible and she had phoned the police. The three youngest children, Robert (aged 11), Phyllis (aged 7), and Jean (aged 5), were still asleep. George was transported to Kings County Hospital and died an hour later. Official cause of death was fractured skull and lacerated brain.

Again, there was no doubt as to who. The question before the court and the public was why had Mrs. Hochfeld killed her husband of 16 years?

Newspapers were quick to print what Martha had told police regarding her motivation and in no time headlines proclaiming George to be an abusive, "stingy husband" provided fodder for water cooler and dinner table debates about household finances and division of family funds.

At a time when the victim's family should have been mourning their loss, George's older brother Louis was writing a letter to the Daily News to defend his brother's character.

Louis wanted to respond to a letter published in the April 27, 1950 edition.

A "Mrs. M.D. of Manhattan" was writing to salute Martha Hochfeld - "God bless her! I wish more women had the courage to kill their lousy husbands that only give them a miserable allowance for themselves and the children, though they always have plenty of money for themselves. They should realize their duty to their families but they are mean, low and without principal, and all of them should have their skulls broken."

Louis Hochfeld's letter, appearing on May 4, 1950, implored Mrs. M.D. and others to wait for the evidence. Louis wrote "I would like to acquaint you with the true facts surrounding this brutal slaying. George Hochfeld was a fine and energetic man, always trying to keep his family well fed, well housed and well clothed. In due time the character of the dead man will be brought out. Until then, Mrs. M.D., please use your common sense, think of both sides, and suspend judgment."

What were the true facts?

Martha told police that she and George, an often-abusive prosperous junk dealer, were constantly quarreling about money and specifically the mere $20 a week George gave her. "The kids are filthy and he did not give me any money for food and clothing. I couldn't stand it anymore." The Hochfelds had 5 children, ranging in age from 5 years to 13 years, and another on the way. Their son, Joseph, had died in infancy on December 30, 1946.

Daily News,
April 24, 1950
George and Martha's last argument on the subject of money was the evening of Saturday April 22nd and it was all one-sided. George had been out of town for several days on a business trip and didn't want to discuss the matter with her when he got home. According to Martha, George was surly. He ate his dinner and went to bed. Martha lay beside George for a bit, brooding. Around 2:30 AM she rose, went into the living room and grabbed an end table. Martha came back into the bedroom and brought the table down on her sleeping husband's head three times. He never stirred. She dressed and walked to a pay phone.

When the police arrived she told them "I intended to kill him. It was him or me." George was 5 foot 8 inches and weighed roughly 200 pounds. Martha was 5 foot 4 inches and weighed 120 pounds.

True Detective Magazine - January 2015
Martha was interviewed at length by the police before being brought before Magistrate Albert Schanzer at the Brooklyn Felony Court. She told the court she had no money for a lawyer. Charles Schinitsky from the Legal Aid Society represented Martha at her April 26, 1950 arraignment. No plea was entered but Mr. Schinitsky told the court and the press that there were unexplained circumstances surrounding the slaying and that Martha would be "vindicated by a jury." He was half right. Martha was held without bail and her children sent to various shelters. 

On April 24, 1950, George Hochfeld was buried at new Montefiore Cemetery in West Babylon NY.
Daily News - April 25, 1950


On April 25, 1950, newspapers were revealing what they'd learned from Lt. Arthur Giddings of the Brooklyn Homicide Squad. The headlines read "Reveal Mrs. Hochfeld Was a Mental Patient." The reality was Martha had spent a week at Bellevue's Psychiatric Ward in February of 1943 before being released into her husband's custody. I believe this might have coincided with the birth of her daughter Phyllis. Perhaps Martha was suffering from some postpartum depression?

A Grand Jury handed down an indictment on May 18, 1950. Martha's trial before Judge Samuel Leibowitz was scheduled to begin Monday, June 26, 1950. Martha now had two court-appointed attorneys fighting for her. The charge was second-degree murder.


Daily News -
Nov. 27, 1950
Samuel Leibowitz was a tough but respected judge and a bit of a celebrity stemming from his days as a criminal defense attorney and most notably the years he spent (1931-1937) working to overturn the Scottsboro Boys convictions.


Daily News,
Sept. 26, 1933

Chief counsel for the defense of Martha Hochfeld was Leo Healy. Healy was a former magistrate who had resigned from the bench on March 21, 1933 following some minor personal and professional scandals including accusations of habitual drunkenness, questionable rulings and battery of his sister-in-law Estelle Cummings (which she denied).



Charlotte Rachlin,
Brooklyn Eagle
Feb 20, 1939
Charlotte Rachlin, a strong believer in the Public Defender System and a sympathetic soul, was also on board. For years, before becoming a lawyer, Charlotte had supported herself by playing in an all-girl band. Charlotte knew the importance of earning her own money and she knew what it was like to argue with a husband over the household expenses, as she and her husband Dr. Bernard Pines often found themselves doing just that. 


Daily News -
Nov. 27, 1950
Before the trail began, Leo Healy announced his intention to proceed with a defense of temporary insanity. Healy and Rachlin even pooled their own money to have Martha examined by a psychiatrist. Martha was claiming she blacked out before striking the first blow.
From the witness stand Martha told the all-male jury of the abuse she'd suffered at George's hands and of his miserly ways.
District Attorney John E. Cone readied his rebuttal and character witnesses. Martha recognized four of these witnesses on her way out of court on Tuesday the 27th and immediately told her attorneys that she needed to speak with them.

It would seem that investigators for the District Attorney office had discovered those unexplained circumstances Charles Schinitsky referenced but rather then vindicate Martha, these revelations would be her undoing.

The four men Martha had spotted in the courthouse were prepared to testify that they knew her as Martha Kulick and that they had all made her acquaintance at the Arcadia Ballroom on 53rd and Broadway in Manhattan were she worked as a taxi-dancer. Kulick was Martha's maiden name.

Arcadia Ballroom in 1933 -
NY Public Library Digital Collection

1930s postcard showing the interior of
the Arcadia Ballroom, 53rd & Broadway, NYC
The most damaging statement would come from Santo Ciapponi, a 26-year-old restaurant worker living in the Bronx, who claimed he had met Martha in November of 1949 at the Arcadia Ballroom and that she had introduced herself as a childless widow..

According to Santo, he and Martha had, on 4 separate occasions, spent the evening together at a Manhattan hotel. Additionally, one week before George's murder, Martha told Santo she was pregnant with his child at which point he proposed marriage.

Martha denied having relations with Santo Ciapponi. "I've never been in a hotel in my life," she asserted but Martha did admit to her attorneys that she was working as a dancer and that she had been intimate with men other than her husband.

Sensing these admission would irreparably damage his client's defense, Leo Healy felt it was in Martha's best interest to plead guilty to manslaughter.

The following day, June 28, 1950, Judge Leibowitz accepted Martha's plea of guilty of first-degree manslaughter.

Daily News - April 24, 1950
Determined to put a sympathetic spin on the situation, Leo Healy told the court that Martha revealed to him that "she so loved her children that she was willing to sell her body and her soul to provide for them."

"To some, this argument would appear specious and such persons would argue that this woman has no moral sense. Now, your honor, a woman's mind is beyond the ken of men. I do not know whether it is true, but she has said that what she did she did for her children."

Judge Leibowitz did indeed find that argument specious and branded Martha Hochfeld a "prostitute at heart" who should never be allowed the custody of her five children.

District Attorney John E. Cone was equally determined to set the record straight regarding the victim. "We don't want the memory of a decent man besmirched," Cone asserted. His investigation had shown that George Hochfeld was "a good and decent man." The house at 839 Midwood Avenue was in both of their names and well-furnished. And while the neighbors thought well of George, they had a much harsher opinion of Mrs. Hochfeld. The District Attorney maintained his belief that "the child she carries belongs to one of her lovers." This was the moment Louis Hochfeld had advised "Mrs. M.D." to wait for.

Martha Hochfeld was in court again on September 5, 1950 to learn what her punishment would be. Judge Leibowitz expressed true disdain for the woman before him. "Look at her .... not even a tear," he observed. 

"She is a neglectful mother who gallivanted with the scum of the earth.


True Detective Magazine -
January 2015 
"I am thinking of those children who are now in an orphan asylum, their father murdered, their mother branded a felon. I have tried to find one shred to which I could cling that would warrant giving this woman consideration..."

Judge Leibowitz imposed the maximum sentence of 10 to 20 years. Her unborn baby was due in October.

"God help that poor little child about to be born in a cell behind prison walls."

Martha Hochfeld was pale and impassive as she heard the ruling. Martha was transferred to Westfield State Farm, or as we now know it, Bedford Hills Correctional Facility.

I see from the copy of Martha's prison intake form, which I obtained from the NYS Archives, that she was employed by the Arcadia Ballroom from September 1949 to March 1950 and her weekly salary was $65.00 a week.

On June 15, 1951, Louis Hochfeld became the administer of his brother George's estate. According to papers on file, the value of the estate was the $2,000.00 equity in the Midwood Street house.

The Hochfeld children were sent to the Pride of Judea Home.

Hopefully all of the Hochfeld children did as well as Phyllis. In 1956 she was elected Purim Queen and met Mayor Wagner.

Daily News - Feb 25, 1956

The orphanage was  good one although there was a tragic blemish on it's record stemming from an incident that occurred years before the Hochfled children came to live there.
On August 8, 1933, while on a group outing to Edgemere Beach in the Rockaways, seven children were swept away by a powerful undertow and drowned.

The Pride of Judea Home stopped accepting new admissions in 1954 and in June 1958 arrangements were made to relocate for the remaining 30 adolescents. Only Jean and possibly Phyllis would have been young enough in 1958 to have been impacted by this - if they were even still living there.

According to a memoir written by Charlotte Rachlin's son Paul Pines, entitled "My Brother's Madness," the Hochfeld case impacted his mother immensely. Charlotte was disappointed with the sentence handed down and the judgment of the public. Ten days after Martha was led away to begin her prison sentence, Charlotte left the family home and never returned. Charlotte would later divorce Dr. Pines. Charlotte married again when Paul was 12-year-old and she would become an even more outspoken advocate for her female clients. She made frequent appearances on talk radio and a December 3, 1966 listing for the Barry Gray show identifies Charlotte as "a legal expert on paternity suits usually defending the woman in the case." She died on December 28, 1975 after being diagnosed with terminal cancer.

I bought "My Brother's Madness" hoping to learn more about Charlotte Rachlin and I did. However, it's a good read even without tying it to this true crime.

True Detective Magazine -
January 2015 
Martha Hochfeld was eligible for parole in February 11, 1957, paroled on September 3, 1957 and after April 26, 1970 she was no longer required to report her whereabouts to the state parole board. I've lost track of her after her parole. If she's still alive, and it seems inconceivable, she'd be celebrating her 101st birthday next month.

If you want to see Timothy Hutton as Samuel Leibowitz, watch the 2006 movie "Heaven's Fall."

 I don't know about you but I can't see a story about taxi-dancers and not think of the Vicki Lawrence song "Dime a Dance." With that in mind, this seemed like a good opportunity for me to make a very brief (45 seconds)slideshow set to the chorus of that song. You can find it on the As Close To Crime YouTube Channel. Here's the link - https://youtu.be/R8W1d309A0Y