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Frank Carter (murderer)

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Frank Carter
Born
Patrick Murphy

Unknown date, c. 1881
County Mayo, Ireland
Died (aged 46)
Conviction(s)First degree murder
Details
Killed2 convicted; 43 claimed
Weapons.22 pistol

Frank Carter (1881 – June 24, 1927) was a notorious murderer in Omaha, Nebraska. Tried for two murders, Carter claimed to have murdered 43 people.

Crimes

Carter was born in County Mayo, Ireland, as Patrick Murphy. The crimes for which he is known began in Omaha, Nebraska, where he worked as a laborer. At the beginning of February 1926, a mechanic was murdered with a .22 caliber pistol with a silencer attached. Soon after, a doctor was murdered, and then a railroad detective was shot six times in neighboring Council Bluffs, Iowa.[1] On February 15, Omaha's newspapers recommended the city black out all lights after an exposé on previous murders showed that the victims had been standing in their windows at home when they were shot.[2] During daylight hours, the sniper shot another in the face and fired through more than a dozen lighted windows. Businesses in Omaha came to a standstill, streets cleared and the city's entertainment venues emptied for more than a week.[3] Other crimes included shooting indiscriminately into a Downtown Omaha drugstore.[4][5]

More than two weeks after his first murder, Carter was captured in Iowa, 30 miles south of Council Bluffs at Bartlett in Fremont County, Iowa. Carter readily admitted his crimes.[6] After a month-long trial where Carter's lawyers pleaded insanity,[7] Carter was convicted on two charges of murder: one for killing mechanic William McDevitt and the other for killing Dr. A.D. Searles.[8] After his conviction, Carter further admitted to being a parole breaker. (He had been released from the Iowa State Penitentiary in 1925, after serving time for killing cattle.)[9] Frank Carter's Nebraska Prison Number was #9277.[10] He was executed by electrocution on June 24, 1927 at the Nebraska State Penitentiary in Lincoln, Nebraska. Carter was quoted as saying "Let the juice flow" just before he died.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Sniper Shoots Council Bluffs Detective; Terror of People Hits Omaha's Business", The New York Times. February 20, 1926. Retrieved 5/30/08.
  2. ^ "Omaha Darkens Houses in Fear of Sniper Who Fires Through Windows; Has Slain Two", The New York Times. February 18, 2008. Retrieved 5/30/08.
  3. ^ "Terror of sniper wears Omaha folk", The New York Times. February 20, 1926. Retrieved 5/30/08.
  4. ^ (2007) "History at a glance"[permanent dead link]. Douglas County Historical Society. p 85. Retrieved 5/30/08.
  5. ^ "In Omaha", Time magazine. December 3, 1928. Retrieved 5/30/08.
  6. ^ "Omaha gets sniper", The New York Times. February 23, 1926. Retrieved 5/30/08.
  7. ^ "Omaha's sniper bandit is sentenced to death", The New York Times. March 21, 1926. Retrieved 5/30/08.
  8. ^ "'Sniper' to be tried in Omaha Monday", The New York Times. February 26, 1926. Retrieved 5/30/08.
  9. ^ "Omaha 'sniper' a parole breaker", The New York Times. February 25, 1926. Retrieved 5/30/08.
  10. ^ Nebraska history Frank Carter