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Bonnie Emily HEADY

 
 
 

 

Carl Austin Hall's prison mug shots.
(Post-Dispatch)

 

 

Carl Hall, 34, in the old 11th District St. Louis Police station, at 14 North Newstead Avenue, on Oct. 7,
in the early morning after his arrest and shortly after he confessed to having taken part in
kidnapping Bobby. Hall denied committing the murder, blaming a man named Tom.
(Post-Dispatch)

 

 

 

 

Carl Austin Hall

 

 

Heady and Hall arrive at the federal courthouse on Oct. 9, guarded by federal marshals
James Kearns (left foreground) and Roy Kirgan.
(Post-Dispatch)

 

 

Hall and Heady leaving the Jackson County Jail in Kansas City on Nov. 19 for the last day of their trial
in federal court in Kansas City. Because they had confessed, U.S. District Albert L. Reeves convened
a jury to recommend punishment. The jury needed only 68 minutes to recommend execution, and
Reeves took 15 more minutes to impose the sentence and set the executions for Dec. 18.
(Post-Dispatch)

 

 

A hearse brings Heady's body out of the prison one hour after the execution. Her burial was to be held the
next day in Clearmont, a small town near Maryville in far northwestern Missouri, where she had grown
up. On that morning, Hall's funeral arrangements were secret.
(Post-Dispatch)

 

 

The murder weapon, steel suitcases in which the remainder of the ransom money was found,
and other items Shoulders and Dolan confiscated when they arrested Hall. They were on
display at the police station.
(Post-Dispatch)

 

 

The Greenlease Home on Verona Road in Mission Hills, Kansas, as it appeared in September of 1953.
The Poodle canine shown was one of Bobby’s favorite dogs.

 

 

Robert C. Greenlease Sr.
(Post-Dispatch)

 

 

Robert C. Greenlease Sr. with his son, Robert C. Greenlease Jr., in 1953.
(Associated Press file photo)

 

 

Virginia Pollock Greenlease, Bobby's mother.
(Post-Dispatch)

 

 

The victim

 

Bobby Greenlease in Sion school. September, 1953.

 

 

Robert C. "Bobby" Greenlease Jr., 6, of Mission Hills, Kan., whose kidnapping and murder in 1953
would become arguably the most sensational crime in Missouri in the 20th Century.

He was taken from his Catholic school in Kansas City on Sept. 29, 1953, by Bonnie Brown Heady,
 who posed as an aunt with news that Bobby's mother had been stricken by a heart attack.

He was murdered in a field in Kansas and buried in the woman's back yard in St. Joseph, Mo.
Heady and her boy-friend accomplice, Carl Austin Hall, fled with the $600,000 ransom to St.
Louis, where they were captured and confessed. They were executed 81 days after the crime,
but two St. Louis police officers went to prison over the mysterious disappearance
of half of the ransom money.

 

 

 
 
 
 
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