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Eva COO
A.K.A.: "The
Mallet Murderer"
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
To collect insurance money
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
June 14, 1934
Date of birth: 1894
Victim profile:
Harry “Gimpy” Wright, 52
Method of murder: Hitting
with a mallet and running over with a car
Location: Oneonta, Otsego County, New York, USA
Status:
Executed
by electric chair at Sing Sing Prison on June 27, 1935
Eva Coo
(17 June 1889 – 27 June 1935)
was an American murderer, who was executed by electric chair at
Sing Sing Prison on June 27, 1935.
Born Eva Curry in
Haliburton, Ontario, Canada, she moved to Toronto while a
teenager. There, she met and married William Coo, and together
they moved to upstate New York in 1921.
Coo was entrusted with the care
of one of her employees, a slow-witted handiman named Henry
Wright, after the death of Wright's mother. Coo embezzled Wright's
inheritance and burned down his house for insurance money. After
purchasing several life insurance policies on Wright, Coo then
conspired to murder him with another of her employees, a woman
named Martha Clift.
On
June 14, 1934, the two women drove Wright to an isolated location
outside Oneonta, New York. There, Eva allegedly hit him with a
mallet and Martha ran over him with a car, specifically a
Willys-Knight. They then dumped his body beside a road to simulate
a hit-and-run accident. Though little evidence has been provided
to corroborate the bludgeoning with the mallet, it remains the
symbol of the murder and the trial to this day.
Police suspected
homicide, and Clift confessed after an interrogation. She was
convicted of second-degree murder and served thirteen years in
prison, while Coo received a death sentence.
Wikipedia.org
Eva Coo
She worked
through the Great Depression, managed to buy property, ran a
successful business (even if it was a brothel), fed herself and a
large staff, and even paid for her employee’s insurance policies.
Of course, it was later determined that her motives for paying
those premiums were other than charity.
She was born Eva Currie in
Haliburton, Ontario in 1894. While she was still in her teens, she
moved to Toronto where she met a rail worker named William Coo.
They ran away together to Canada’s western frontier and got
married. The marriage lasted only a few years and Eva Coo migrated
to upstate Nueva York en 1921.
As a result of
Prohibition Age, which began with the Volstead Act at precisely
midnight January 16, 1920, “speak easys” began to appear all over
America.
Eva opened her
own bar in Oneonta, a small city midway between Albany and
Binghamton in Otsego County, New York. During that era, Oneonta
was a bustling railroad town through which many transients passed
every day to points east and west.
Eva’s clientele
consisted of truck drivers, railroad employees, college students
and construction workers. Eva’s Place, as it was called, was a
popular stopover known throughout the region.
Eva herself was a
boisterous, outgoing woman with a quick sense of humor who could
always be counted on for a good time. She was 5’ 7” and weighed a
muscular 170 pounds. Everyone knew Eva and she knew everyone else,
including politicians and police.
Eva employed a
staff that consisted of several local people who worked as
bartenders and kept the bar, called Little Eva’s Place, stocked
with booze and supplies.
One of the
employees, Harry “Gimpy” Wright, 52, was a farmer whose mother had
passed away in 1931. He was unable to care for himself and came to
live with Eva that summer in exchange for $2,000 of his mother’s
inheritance money. Harry often drank at the bar to excess and took
to walking down the highway, Route 7, in an inebriated state,
sometimes falling alongside the road where he had to be rescued by
other patrons.
In 1933, a girl
named Martha Clift, originally from Pennsylvania, went to work at
Little Eva’s Place. She became a familiar sight at the bar and
people noticed that she also became very friendly with Eva Coo.
During the
following summer, in June, 1934, Eva reported to the police that
“Gimpy” was missing. He had wandered out of the bar after a bout
with the bottle and hadn’t been seen or heard from since.
The police
conducted a search and quickly found the body of Harry Wright,
smashed up in a bad way, laying in a roadside ditch off Route 7.
He was less than
a half-mile from Eva’s place and it was immediately surmised that
he was struck and killed by a hit and run driver who didn’t see
the unlucky victim until it was too late.
A local coroner
examined the remains and ruled that Wright was probably killed by
a hit and run driver while strolling drunk along Route 7,
something that he was known to do in the past. His body was
dispatched over to a local funeral parlor and prepared for burial.
In the meantime,
Eva, not known for her intelligence, showed up at a Met Life
Insurance Company office in Oneonta with an insurance policy on
“Gimpy’s” life. The beneficiary named in the policy was Eva Coo.
The claim was
processed but the insurance company became suspicious and took
their suspicions to the police. An autopsy was conducted on Wright
and the coroner ruled the death suspicious. It was later
discovered that on the night of Wright’s death, Coo and Clift were
reported to be trespassing on an old farm near Crumhorn Mountain.
That was enough for the sheriff’s office. Both women were
arrested. While they were held at the local jail, sheriff’s
deputies went to Eva’s home and, without a warrant, broke in and
searched the place.
Officers found dozens of insurance
polices on Eva’s friends, acquaintances and employees, all naming
her as the beneficiary. When confronted with the evidence, both
women soon confessed. Coo said they took Wright to an old
farmhouse near Crumhorn Mountain outside Oneonta and smashed his
head in with a hammer. They ran over his body using a friend’s car
and then threw Wright into a highway ditch where he was found.
However, each woman named the other as the one who actually did
the killing and would not relent.
The sheriff then
took Eva and Martha to Crumhorn Mountain to clarify their
statements and it was there that one of the most grotesque
interrogations in the history of criminal justice began.
The Sheriff exhumed the body of
Harry Wright and brought it to the site where he removed it from
the coffin. For the next few hours, while the women argued back
and forth about who did what to whom, sheriff’s deputies carted
around Wright’s corpse, placing it in various spots in front of
the terrified suspects who nearly collapsed from the stench and
the summer heat.
On August 1934,
begin the trial in Cooperstown, New York. It attracted the usual
media gang y entrepreneurs who sold souvenirs and memorabilia
outside the county courthouse. Incredibly, Wright’s body was again
exhumed during proceedings so police could check on his wounds.
The trial lasted almost three weeks and quickly turned into a
circus. But in the end, it took just one hour for the jury to
bring in a verdict. Eva Coo was found guilty of Murder 1st degree
and the trial court sentenced Coo to death. Martha Clift was found
guilty of Murder 2st degree and sentenced 20 years prison.
That same day,
outside the Otsego County Courthouse, a caravan of cars carrying
Eva Coo, Martha Clift and a platoon of police and state troopers
left for Sing Sing, about 90 miles south. Later, at the doors to
the prison, the two women were allowed to say goodbye to each
other. Martha was then taken to Bedford Reformatory, about thirty
miles away, where she would serve out her sentence.
Meanwhile, at Sing Sing, Eva was
processed in the front office. After being issued a prison
uniform, Eva was ushered into the same cell where Anna Antonio had
spent her last days, and before her, Ruth Snyder. Eva asked the
guards about Sing Sing. The matrons said it was a fair place and
the warden was a fine man.
One matron said,
“Do you know what they did for Mrs. Antonio?”
“Yeah,” said Eva,
“burned her!” (Eggleston, p. 93). During her time on Death Row,
few people visited her. Since her conviction, Eva fell out of
favor with her old friends from Oneonta. Gone were the
politicians, business people, judges and cops that once frequented
her place. “I don’t know why my friends can’t get in to see me at
Sing Sing,” she said, “I had no problem getting in!”
On June 27, 1935, after half-hearted
appeals were filed by her attorneys, who often fought with each
other and tried to make money from her story, Eva Coo ate her last
meal. A last-second request was made to Governor Herbert Lehman to
spare her life, but he refused. At 11:00 p.m. that night, she was
brought into the death chamber. Two matrons, one on each side of
Eva, escorted her to the chair. Her posture was erect and her
shoulders pushed back. She appeared resigned but with a trace of
the old bravado. She sat unassisted, her white hands gripping the
ends of the chair.
“Goodbye,
darlings!” she said to the matrons. Several minutes later she was
dead, the 3rd woman to die at Sing Sing in the 20th century. In
his journal, executioner Robert G. Elliot wrote a simple notation:
“New York June 27-1935-11 P.M. 9 Amp. Eva Coo #89508-42 years”
(Elliot, p. 279).
There were many people though, who
were upset at the way her defense was handled. Eva’s journey
through the criminal justice system was not one to be proud of
according to some. Warden Lewis E. Lawes, always outspoken on
death penalty issues, later said this to the press: “I don’t know
if she was innocent or guilty. But I do know that she got a rotten
deal all around, rotten…And I’m not defending her-she may be
guilty as well, but she got a raw deal. Her trial attorneys-do you
know what they did to help her lately? Know what? One of them
wrote to me, saying he’d like four invitations to her execution.
That’s the kind of defense she had” (Nash, 1981, p. 96).
In Haliburton,
Ontario, Eva’s hometown, when her sister, Mrs. William Baker, was
asked for a reaction to the execution, she told reporters that Eva
“has been dead to her family for seventeen years” (New York
Times, june 28, 1935). She was buried in a potter’s field
whose exact location is unknown and her grave has never been
found.
Little Eva,
The Mallet Murderer
“Little Eva” Coo
will forever be known as “The Mallet Murderer” because she
reportedly bashed in the skull of her victim, Harry “Gimpy”
Wright. But the wooden mallet she used to cosh Harry only rendered
him unconscious and it was Eva’s accomplice, Martha Clift, who
finished the job by running over Harry several times with her car.
The women planned
to make Harry’s death look like a hit-and-run accident to collect
several thousand dollars in insurance money. In typical Jazz
Journalism style where reporters never let the facts get in the
way of a good story, the tabloids that covered the crime each
reported different amounts of insurance Eva had taken out on her
victim. The amounts ranged from $1,000 to $10,000.
Little Eva, 43,
died in Sing Sing’s electric chair in 1935 while Martha, a
27-year-old mother of a six-year-old girl and 3-year-old boy,
turned state’s evidence and pleaded guilty to second-degree
murder. She drew a 20-year-to-life term.
"Mrs. Coo was
given to real estate swapping and the result on one deal was to
find her operating a gasoline filling station and roadhouse," a
United Press account reported in 1935. "Here her friend Martha
Clift...was a hostess and here were staged nightly bootleg liquor
parties attended not only by railroad workers and farm laborers,
but by younger sons of wealthy families."
"Hostesses" in
the roadhouse performed other services such as dancing with
patrons, but there was no indication that they served as
prostitutes.
Little Eva
prospered during the last years of Prohibition and owned at least
three automobiles when she was arrested, an almost unheard-of
accomplishment in the Depression. But Eva was greedy and when
Harry Wright came along, she soon decided that he was a perfect
target.
Harry was, as his
nickname implies, handicapped (the papers repeatedly described him
as a “cripple”), but not so disabled that he couldn’t work as a
handyman around the roadhouse in return for room and board. He was
reportedly a philandering “man about town” whose wife had thrown
him out because of his roving eye when he showed up at Little
Eva’s roadhouse.
Over the next
several years, Eva began taking a dislike to her handyman and made
no secret of her distaste. Coincidentally, Eva’s displeasure with
Harry increased after he burned through $1,500 he had saved in a
bank account.
Eva soon put in
motion her plan to profit by Harry’s death. She got her lover,
Harry Nabinger, to help her take out several life insurance
policies on Harry. At one point, she went to the cemetery where
Harry owned a plot and chiseled off his birthdate to prevent her
falsified age information from being uncovered.
Eva also began to
include Martha in her plot. At one point Eva considered putting
Harry in “a runaway automobile” after asphyxiating him with carbon
monoxide.
“She wanted to
get Harry Wright in her garage, get him working on her car, leave
the gas on, lock the garage, then go to Sidney or some other
place,” Martha would later testify in court.
In May 1934, Eva,
Harry Nabinger, Martha, and a former boarder, Gladys Shumway, took
a pleasure trip up Crumhorn Mountain and stopped near the spot
where Eva and Martha would eventually kill Harry. There, Eva
picked up a wooden mallet and hefted it, saying (according to
Gladys’s testimony) “wouldn’t that be something to hit somebody
with?”
About two weeks
after that incident, Eva and Martha invited Harry to accompany
them on a trip to dig up some shrubs at a “haunted house” on
Crumhorn Mountain. The haunted house was actually an abandoned
farm house on property owned by the Fink family.
On June 14 using
a borrowed car, Eva, Martha, and Harry Wright headed up the
mountain toward the “haunted house.” There, Eva and Harry got out
and while Martha waited in the car, they walked about 20 yards
away down a two-track dirt road. As Harry stood examining the
shrubbery, Eva took out a wooden mallet and struck him on the
head, Martha testified.
On the stand at
Eva’s trial, Martha admitted that she intended to run down Harry.
“He heard me
start the motor up and started to step out of the road and Eva Coo
hit him,” she testified.
“Did you make any
effort to put the brakes on?” asked prosecutor Donald Grant.
“No, I didn’t,”
Martha replied. “I was nervous and just kept going.”
By the time the
car traveled the 15 feet or so, Harry was on the ground. Martha
drove over his body then backed up and over it a second time.
She and Eva were
planning to leave the body beside the dirt road to make the crime
look like an accident, but they were surprised by members of the
Fink family — who did not see the killers — and were forced to
load Harry’s body into the backseat of their rented car (Martha
had to borrow 50 cents to rent the car the day before), and leave.
“That was the
hardest work I ever did,” Eva said. “I wonder if he’s dead.”
Martha claimed
that she asked Eva to take Harry to a hospital, but Eva refused.
“No hospital,”
she said.
The killers ended
up dumping Harry’s body about 100 yards from Eva’s roadhouse,
where it was discovered shortly after.
Because they had
no reason to suspect Harry was a murder target and he was known to
be a “wandering drinker,” police at first wrote off his death as a
tragic accident. The chief of police however, considered the
incident “weird” and began to look closer. First, he would later
testify, no hat was found at the scene when Harry’s body was
discovered. However, a green cap known to belong to Harry
subsequently turned up there in a conspicuous location. It would
have been impossible for them to have missed it, the chief
testified.
A New York State
Trooper, also investigating the death, found out that Harry had
been heavily insured and that Eva was his beneficiary. When Harry
was buried, police noticed that his family tombstone had been
vandalized. They surmised that this was done to make it easier to
insure Harry by using a more recent birthdate.
On the night
Harry’s body was discovered, Eva told another boarder to “keep
still about the insurance policies.” She also told the woman that
she would have to serve as an alibi.
“Edna, there’s
going to be a lot of trouble over this, and I may need you to
prove I was home on the 14th,” the witness, Edna Hanover, told the
court. “You were there when I was there.”
Harry Nabinger
realized his lover had followed through on her plan and he
immediately left the roadhouse. Edna and Eva caught up with him
and Edna testified that Eva threatened the drunken Nabinger.
“Walking and
staggering all over the place, you’ll get hit with a car,” shes
said ominously.
“If I get hit
with a car you won’t have to hire someone to kill me,” Nabinger
replied.
Eva and Martha
were arrested shortly afterward and Martha, in return for an
agreement to not seek the death penalty, admitted that Eva paid
her $200 to help kill Harry Wright.
Martha and Harry
Nibinger were the chief witnesses against Eva at her trial, and in
August 1934 Eva was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced
to die in Sing Sing’s electric chair.
Proclaiming her
innocence to the end, she died there on June 27, 1935. Her family
declined to claim her body, with one sister saying “she’s been
dead to us for 17 years,” and she was buried in Sing Sing potter’s
field.
Martha was
apparently paroled after serving 13 years behind bars.
MarkGribben.com
COO, Eva (USA)
One
day in 1935 Mr Lawes, Warden of Sing Sing Prison, authorised the
dispatch of invitations for Eva Coo’s execution to the official
guests, observers, medical specialists, newspaper journalists, and
to those of the victim’s relatives who wished to attend. The
printed forms read:
In
accordance with Section 507 of the Code of Criminal Procedure you
are hereby invited to be present as a witness at the execution by
electricity of Eva Coo which will occur at this prison on 27 June
1935. The hour of 11 p.m. has been designated by me for such
execution and you will arrange to be at my office in this prison
not later than 10 p.m. I would thank you to treat this
communication as confidential and advise me immediately upon its
receipt of your acceptance or otherwise, so that I can make
arrangements accordingly. Under no circumstances is this
invitation transferable.
Very respectfully,
Lewis E. Lawes, Warden
Following any horrendous and consequently well-publicised crime,
there were always hundreds, sometimes thousands of applications
from those who wished to watch the condemned criminal die, and
there is no reason to think that the auditorium was anything other
than full when Eva, deservedly or not, went to meet her Maker.
Born in Canada, Eva moved south and lived in the States where she
became a prostitute before running her own brothel, the notorious
‘Little Eva’s Place’, in a town on the outskirts of New York.
There she prospered, but trade suffered badly when Prohibition
ceased, and she became desperate for money. She had a close
friend, Martha Clift, who acted as a hostess in Eva’s
establishment, and from all accounts the two women discussed
different ways of overcoming their financial difficulties. Which
lady suggested murdering Harry Wright, the brothel’s handyman, and
claiming his life insurance of several thousand dollars, is not
clear, but one night in June 1934 Harry, having been plied with
drink, was lured out of the building and killed.
Which of the women struck him and with what type of implement is
unclear; it depended on which local paper one read.
One
of the murderous conspirators hit him with a claw hammer or a
mallet; the other then got into the car and ran over him several
times. One thing that was clear, however, was that no matter how
close a friend Martha had been to Eva, it ended abruptly when the
pair were arrested. Martha, to save her own skin, turned state’s
witness and gave damning evidence, admitting that she had driven
the car over the handyman, having been promised a considerable
part of the insurance money, but that it was Eva who had actually
struck the fatal blows. Acting on her statement the police exhumed
Wright’s body on no fewer than two occasions but could not
substantiate Martha’s accusations.
Eva
was sent for trial, journalists reporting how the judge had
encouraged the all-male jury to play their part in the proceedings
by saying, in a somewhat unorthodox way: ‘Don’t think we are
locking you up; enjoy yourselves, laugh and talk among yourselves,
get lots of exercise. You are good sports and citizens, and I
appreciate what you are doing.’
When Eva entered the crowded courtroom she must have realised with
horror that she would face the death sentence on learning that her
‘friend’, in order to face a lesser charge of second-degree
murder, was prepared to testify against her. And so it proved, for
after a short deliberation, the jury brought in a verdict of
guilty. Eva Coo was sentenced to death; Martha Clift to twenty
years’ imprisonment.
In
Sing Sing’s condemned cell, Eva complained bitterly that all her
personal belongings, expensive clothes and other valuables had
been sold to defray the lawyers’ expenses. The Warden, noted for
his humane treatment of his prisoners, deplored the fact that one
of her attorneys had even applied for four invitations so that he
and colleagues could come and watch the death of the client he had
defended. Mr Lawes did not justify Eva’s crime in any way, but
praised her fortitude and equable behaviour as appeal after appeal
was dismissed. Albert R. Beatty, the executioner, described in his
memoirs how the Warden visited Eva prior to the designated hour,
just as one of the wardresses was attaching the electrode to one
of the victim’s legs. Still insisting that she
was
innocent, nevertheless she walked calmly and composedly into the
execution chamber where she seated herself in the chair.
Looking around, she bade farewell to the wardresses, saying,
‘Goodbye, darlings!’, then allowed the guards to strap her arms
and legs securely. Her only reaction, an instinctive gasp, came
when Beatty put the head electrode in position and threw the
switch, sending the current surging through her body, her life
ending in a matter of seconds.
Any
prize for sheer composure prior to being executed would surely
have been won by serial killer Louise Peete, sentenced to death in
the gas chamber in 1947. When informed that she was prepared to be
interviewed by the press, the reporters who expected to see a
broken-spirited or possibly panicstricken woman, were taken aback
at the charm offensive which greeted them, for Louise not only
flattered them outrageously but even opened a gold-wrapped box of
chocolates and, as if at a party, invited them all to partake of
the delicacies!
Amazing True Stories of Female Executions by Geoffrey Abbott
"A Rotten Deal, All Around Rotten!"
It could be said that up until 1935,
Eva Coo was a survivor. She worked through the Great Depression,
managed to buy property, ran a successful business (even if it was
a brothel), fed herself and a large staff, and even paid for her
employee’s insurance policies. Of course, it was later determined
that her motives for paying those premiums were other than
charity.
She was born Eva Currie in
Haliburton, Ontario in 1894. While she was still in her teens, she
moved to Toronto where she met a rail worker named William Coo.
They ran away together to Canada’s western frontier and got
married. The marriage lasted only a few years and Eva Coo migrated
to upstate New York in 1921.
As a result of Prohibition Age,
which began with the Volstead Act at precisely midnight January
16, 1920, “speak easys” began to appear all over America. Eva
opened her own bar in Oneonta, a small city midway between Albany
and Binghamton in Otsego County, New York.
During that era, Oneonta was a
bustling railroad town through which many transients passed every
day to points east and west. Eva’s clientele consisted of truck
drivers, railroad employees, college students and construction
workers. Eva’s Place, as it was called, was a popular stopover
known throughout the region. Eva herself was a boisterous,
outgoing woman with a quick sense of humor who could always be
counted on for a good time. She was 5’ 7” and weighed a muscular
170 pounds. Everyone knew Eva and she knew everyone else,
including politicians and police.
Eva employed a staff that consisted
of several local people who worked as bartenders and kept the bar,
called Little Eva’s Place, stocked with booze and supplies. One of
the employees, Harry “Gimpy” Wright, 52, was a farmer whose mother
had passed away in 1931. He was unable to care for himself and
came to live with Eva that summer in exchange for $2,000 of his
mother’s inheritance money. Harry often drank at the bar to excess
and took to walking down the highway, Route 7, in an inebriated
state, sometimes falling alongside the road where he had to be
rescued by other patrons.
In 1933, a girl named Martha Clift,
originally from Pennsylvania, went to work at Little Eva’s Place.
She became a familiar sight at the bar and people noticed that she
also became very friendly with Eva Coo. During the following
summer, in June, 1934, Eva reported to the police that “Gimpy” was
missing. He had wandered out of the bar after a bout with the
bottle and hadn’t been seen or heard from since.
The police conducted a search and
quickly found the body of Harry Wright, smashed up in a bad way,
laying in a roadside ditch off Route 7. He was less than a
half-mile from Eva’s place and it was immediately surmised that he
was struck and killed by a hit and run driver who didn’t see the
unlucky victim until it was too late. A local coroner examined the
remains and ruled that Wright was probably killed by a hit and run
driver while strolling drunk along Route 7, something that he was
known to do in the past. His body was dispatched over to a local
funeral parlor and prepared for burial.
In the meantime, Eva, not known for
her intelligence, showed up at a Met Life Insurance Company office
in Oneonta with an insurance policy on “Gimpy’s” life. The
beneficiary named in the policy was Eva Coo. The claim was
processed but the insurance company became suspicious and took
their suspicions to the police.
An autopsy was conducted on Wright
and the coroner ruled the death suspicious. It was later
discovered that on the night of Wright’s death, Coo and Clift were
reported to be trespassing on an old farm near Crumhorn Mountain.
That was enough for the sheriff’s office. Both women were
arrested.
While they were held at the local
jail, sheriff’s deputies went to Eva’s home and, without a
warrant, broke in and searched the place. Officers found dozens of
insurance polices on Eva’s friends, acquaintances and employees,
all naming her as the beneficiary. When confronted with the
evidence, both women soon confessed. Coo said they took Wright to
an old farmhouse near Crumhorn Mountain outside Oneonta and
smashed his head in with a hammer. They ran over his body using a
friend’s car and then threw Wright into a highway ditch where he
was found. However, each woman named the other as the one who
actually did the killing and would not relent.
The sheriff then took Eva and Martha
to Crumhorn Mountain to clarify their statements and it was there
that one of the most grotesque interrogations in the history of
criminal justice began. The Sheriff exhumed the body of Harry
Wright and brought it to the site where he removed it from the
coffin. For the next few hours, while the women argued back and
forth about who did what to whom, sheriff’s deputies carted around
Wright’s corpse, placing it in various spots in front of the
terrified suspects who nearly collapsed from the stench and the
summer heat.
In August, 1934, the trial began in
the baseball town of Cooperstown, New York. It attracted the usual
media gang and entrepreneurs who sold souvenirs and memorabilia
outside the county courthouse. Incredibly, Wright’s body was again
exhumed during proceedings so police could check on his wounds.
The trial lasted almost three weeks and quickly turned into a
circus. But in the end, it took just one hour for the jury to
bring in a verdict. Eva Coo was found guilty of Murder 1st degree
and sentenced to death at Sing Sing. Martha Clift was found guilty
of Murder 2nd degree and sentenced to 20 years.
That same day, outside the Otsego
County Courthouse, a caravan of cars carrying Eva Coo, Martha
Clift and a platoon of police and state troopers left for Sing
Sing, about 90 miles south. Later, at the doors to the prison, the
two women were allowed to say goodbye to each other.
Martha was then taken to Bedford
Reformatory, about thirty miles away, where she would serve out
her sentence. Meanwhile, at Sing Sing, Eva was processed in the
front office. After being issued a prison uniform, Eva was ushered
into the same cell where Anna Antonio had spent her last days, and
before her, Ruth Snyder. Eva asked the guards about Sing Sing. The
matrons said it was a fair place and the warden was a fine man.
One matron said, “Do you know what
they did for Mrs. Antonio?”
“Yeah,” said Eva, “burned her!”
(Eggleston, p. 93). During her time on Death Row, few people
visited her. Since her conviction, Eva fell out of favor with her
old friends from Oneonta. Gone were the politicians, business
people, judges and cops that once frequented her place. “I don’t
know why my friends can’t get in to see me at Sing Sing,” she
said, “I had no problem getting in!”
On June 27, 1935, after half-hearted
appeals were filed by her attorneys, who often fought with each
other and tried to make money from her story, Eva Coo ate her last
meal. A last-second request was made to Governor Herbert Lehman to
spare her life, but he refused. At 11:00 p.m. that night, she was
brought into the death chamber. Two matrons, one on each side of
Eva, escorted her to the chair. Her posture was erect and her
shoulders pushed back. She appeared resigned but with a trace of
the old bravado. She sat unassisted, her white hands gripping the
ends of the chair.
“Goodbye, darlings!” she said to the
matrons. Several minutes later she was dead, the 3rd woman to die
at Sing Sing in the 20th century. In his journal, executioner
Robert G. Elliot wrote a simple notation: “New York June
27-1935-11 P.M. 9 Amp. Eva Coo #89508-42 years” (Elliot, p. 279).
There were many people though, who
were upset at the way her defense was handled. Eva’s journey
through the criminal justice system was not one to be proud of
according to some. Warden Lewis E. Lawes, always outspoken on
death penalty issues, later said this to the press: “I don’t know
if she was innocent or guilty. But I do know that she got a rotten
deal all around, rotten… And I’m not defending her-she may be
guilty as well, but she got a raw deal. Her trial attorneys-do you
know what they did to help her lately? Know what? One of them
wrote to me, saying he’d like four invitations to her execution.
That’s the kind of defense she had” (Nash, 1981, p. 96).
In
Haliburton, Ontario, Eva’s hometown, when her sister, Mrs. William
Baker, was asked for a reaction to the execution, she told
reporters that Eva “has been dead to her family for seventeen
years” (New York Times, June 28, 1935). After her
execution, Eva’s body was not claimed. Accordingly, she was buried
in a potter’s field whose exact location is unknown and her grave
has never been found.