"Time
flies over us, but leaves its shadow behind." -- Nathaniel Hawthorne
In
August, 1946, 17-year-old University of Chicago student William
George Heirens confessed to three brutal murders and closed a case
that had enwrapped the full-time attention of the states attorney
and the Chicago Police Force over many months. It had kept city
readers glued to the front pages of their newspapers. Reports were
lurid and tawdry, for they rang of depravity and reminisced of the
darkest prose of Edgar Allen Poe. After one murder, the killer had
left a note to the police, written on the wall with the victim's
lipstick – thus the name "Lipstick Killer"
According to his confession, he had, in the course
of six months, murdered two women and dismembered a six-year-old
child. When he confessed, relieved Chicagoans read in any one of
their five dailies that walking the streets at night was now a bit
safer, now that (as one circulation put it) "the werewolf was
in chains".
Heirens
(pronounced High-rens) had been a central suspect since he had been
arrested some fifty days prior to his confession. An admitted petty
burglar, he was apprehended, in fact, during one of his
house-breakings. While in custody, he was targeted by authorities as
the butcher of the three victims. Harshly interrogated, interviewed
under the effects of a truth serum and brutally treated by law
officers (it was the age before the Miranda Act), Heirens finally
admitted to the murders in answer to a plea bargain that promised
him immunity from death row. ("I confessed to live," he
later said.) He was sentenced to prison for three life terms.
He
lives today, still in prison, 53 years later. He continues to assert
his innocence.
Opinions
concerning his guilt differ. Both sides are equally headstrong. The
official records uphold his conviction and the authorities, then and
now, contend that Justice was adequately served. Social journalist
Lucy Freeman has reported their side in her book, Before
I Kill More..., and studies the synapses of his childhood that
turned what should have been a normal college kid into a
savage-destructive.
 |
| Bill Heirens 1953 |
"To
explain the method in Bill's killings," she writes, "two
things must be considered – what psychiatrists call 'the
predisposition toward' the deed and the 'precipitating factor'...If
the foundation of a life is one of excessive fear and anger which
then pervades the whole life, a person may be said to have a
'predisposition toward' murder. The 'precipitating factor' is
the straw that broke Bill's psychic back, allowing the anger to
erupt into violence."
But,
others, such as activist Dolores Kennedy, author of the
investigative Bill Heirens:
His Day in Court,
alleges that the boy in custody was a scapegoat, that he was shaped
to look like what she calls "a Jekyll-Hyde freak" to cover
the inadequacies of a botched and ineffective manhunt by
authorities. Kennedy, who heads a corps of lawyers, psychiatrists,
handwriting experts and other professionals working for Heirens'
release, says, "(He) was convicted by a sensation-seeking press
(because) he had no legal protection from media excesses. There was
to be no trial for Bill Heirens, no testing of state's evidence, no
introduction of state's witnesses." While there is much
damaging evidence against Heirens, Kennedy claims it was all created
or "fixed," just as a particular damaging eyewitness
testimony was altered to lean negatively on the boy.
The
following report looks objectively at the major events in the Bill
Heirens case: the murders, the background of Heirens himself, and
the subsequent arrest, investigation, confession and conviction.
For
this article, I referred to a number of sources (see Bibliography).
As well, I was afforded a rare interview with Dolores Kennedy, who
clarified some of the points she makes in her book. I would like to
thank her for her time, the result of which makes this a more
up-to-date and more thorough examination of Bill Heirens for the
benefit of Crime Library readers.
The
photos in this story, where not sourced, have come from various
Chicago newspapers of the day.
|