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Arthur Perry Case

A woman was found murdered in a vacant lot in New York City. Near her body was found a paid gas bill with the name of the landlord of the apartment she shared with her husband, Arthur Perry. Police questioned the landlord and Perry. Perry produced a threatening letter he said was from the landlord to his wife. However, by obtaining earlier letters Perry had written, police were able to match the handwriting and determine Perry had written the threatening letter himself. Perry was tried twice for his wife's murder and convicted both times. The Perry case showed the importance of thoroughly investigating every clue in a murder case.

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Hernando Vaydal
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4K views

Arthur Perry Case

A woman was found murdered in a vacant lot in New York City. Near her body was found a paid gas bill with the name of the landlord of the apartment she shared with her husband, Arthur Perry. Police questioned the landlord and Perry. Perry produced a threatening letter he said was from the landlord to his wife. However, by obtaining earlier letters Perry had written, police were able to match the handwriting and determine Perry had written the threatening letter himself. Perry was tried twice for his wife's murder and convicted both times. The Perry case showed the importance of thoroughly investigating every clue in a murder case.

Uploaded by

Hernando Vaydal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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People vs.

Arthur Perry
One morning, when certain busy New Yorkers were hurrying to work, they found in a vacant lot
the body of Mrs. Arthur Perry, who had been murdered some hours before. A paid gas bill found near
the body contained the name of the landlord with whom the Perrys lived. When the New York Police
interrogated the landlord about the murder, he seemed so frank and straightforward in his story that
they doubted that the incriminating evidence found near the murdered woman actually pointed toward
him as the murderer.

Arthur Perry, the husband of the murdered woman, was then interrogated. He had an alleged
alibi for the period during which the murder was committed, which tended to show that he had not
been near the scene of the crime. In addition to the alibi, he unwisely produced a letter addressed to
Mrs. Perry, purported to have been written to her by the landlord. This letter contained some improper
suggestions, combined with veiled threats of bodily harm if the contents of the letter were ever
disclosed to her husband.

The Perrys had come to New York from North Carolina about a year and a half before Mrs. Perry
was murdered. An investigation at the home of Mrs. Perry's father and mother resulted in securing two
letters that Arthur Perry had written to his wife just before they were married. Perry readily admitted
that he had written these two letters. The police suspected that Perry had murdered his wife and had
written the letter he produced and that he had planted the other evidence to cast suspicion upon the
landlord.

With the two undisputed Perry letters obtained in North Carolina for comparison, it was possible
to show conclusively that Perry himself had written the letter to his wife which was alleged to have
come from the landlord. This letter constituted very damaging proof in Perry's trial for murder. He was
tried in Queens County and convicted of first degree murder. Because of an error by the trial judge this
conviction was set aside by the Court of Appeals but when he was tried again a jury again returned a
first degree murder verdict. This verdict was affirmed by the Court of Appeals.

The Perry case illustrates the value of investigating every clue in a murder case and making the
investigation a real scientific inquiry.

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