Description
An American Crime, a 2007 film, is a disturbingly accurate adaptation of the horrific real-life murder of Sylvia Likens in 1965. The movie depicts the brutal torture inflicted upon Likens by Gertrude Baniszewski and others, but even the film toned down the true extent of the abuse. The true story reveals a shocking failure of intervention by numerous adults and children, who either participated, witnessed the abuse without acting, or remained silent due to fear or a code of silence. The trial that followed resulted in various convictions and sentences, though some perpetrators received relatively lenient punishments, and Gertrude Baniszewski was eventually paroled before her death. The sources explore both the film's depiction and the harrowing details of the actual crime, highlighting the devastating consequences of systemic abuse and the failure to protect a vulnerable child.
Camilla Frazier-Tidrow and her husband, Kory Tidrow, were convicted of murdering Camilla's father, Joel Frazier, after discovering he planned to remove her from his will. A dispute over inheritance, fueled by Camilla's drug use and strained relationship with her father, led to the crime. They...
Published 11/26/24
Forty-five years after 17-year-old Esther Gonzalez was murdered in California, authorities used advanced DNA technology and forensic genealogy to identify her killer, Lewis Randolph "Randy" Williamson, who had initially been a person of interest but was cleared in 1979 due to limitations in...
Published 11/25/24