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Winnie Ruth JUDD

 
 
 

 

Dr. William C. Judd, husband of Winnie Ruth Judd, in court at his arraignment immediately
after he surrendered on a warrant charging him with practicing medicine without a
license in California.

 

 

A woman throws her arm across Winnie Ruth Judd and holds her back in her chair at her sanity
hearing in Florence, Arizona. When psychologists testified that she is sane, she hurled
herself in the woman's arms.

 

 

Arthur Anderson, a baggage agent with Southern Pacific Railroad, kneels next to the trunks where
Winnie Ruth Judd hid her murder victims. Here he shows how his suspicions were aroused when
he discovered a strange odor emanating from two trunks in the baggage room and found
blood oozing from one of them. Inside, the bodies of Agnes LeRoi and Hedvig Samuelson
were discovered.

 

 

The hands of Winnie Ruth Judd. The left hand is bandaged where she says Hedvig Samuelson
shot her. Several witnesses say there was no bandage on the hand when they saw Mrs. Judd
after the time of the killings.

 

 

Dr. Kenneth Williams, a noted psychiatrist, studies Winnie Ruth Judd intently. He was retained by
police to question her mind, and he found that she is sane, and lacks sufficient "temper" for a
killing rage, and possesses enough strength to kill two women and pack their bodies in trunks.

 

 

Frank Dewar, Eugene Biscailuz, and Sheriff McFadden flank Winnie Ruth Judd as she
 is taken for booking in Arizona.

 

 

This closeup photo shows the changing eyes of Mrs. Winnie Ruth Judd, the "windows of her soul."
Her eyes, lazy with sedatives, large, hazel-colored and set far apart, are described as pools of
mystery. Sometimes they are wide with appealing sweetness that arouses the protective instinct
in men and women alike, character students say. Sometimes they are half-lidded with curling
lashes that hide secrets. And sometimes they dart fires of anger or passion. Then they appear
to be a cold forbidding steely color. Photo dated: October 28, 1931.

 

 

Hedvig Samuelson in costume as Madame Butterfly.

 

 

Photo of Agnes Ann LeRoi and Hedvig Samuelson. LeRoi was an X-ray technician at a Phoenix clinic.
Samuelson was a schoolteacher, and one-time patient at that clinic. A man named Halloran
attended parties with them, and the prosecution contended that Judd's jealousy over Halloran
 furnished a motive for their murders.

 

 

An investigator examines the refrigerator from which Winnie Ruth Judd sneaked milk and food
while she hid out for three days and nights in a room in the La Vina Sanitarium
in Pasadena, California.

 

 

 
 
 
 
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