54. Jake BIRD
A.K.A.: "The Tacoma Ax-Killer"
Classification: Serial killer
Characteristics: Rape - Robberies
Number of victims: 11 - 44
Date of murders: 1930's - 1947
Date of arrest: October 30, 1947
Date of birth: December 14, 1901
Victims profile: Mostly women
Method of murder: Beating with an ax - Stabbing with knife
Location: Several States, USA
Status: Executed by hanging at the Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla on July 15, 1949
Classification: Serial killer
Characteristics: Rape - Robberies
Number of victims: 11 - 44
Date of murders: 1930's - 1947
Date of arrest: October 30, 1947
Date of birth: December 14, 1901
Victims profile: Mostly women
Method of murder: Beating with an ax - Stabbing with knife
Location: Several States, USA
Status: Executed by hanging at the Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla on July 15, 1949
Police capture serial killer Jake Bird after he murders
two Tacoma women on October 30, 1947
By Daryl C. McClary, October 05, 2006
HistoryLink.org
On October 30, 1949, Jake Bird (1901-1949), a 45-year-old
transient, breaks into the home of Bertha Kludt and her daughter, Beverly June
Kludt, and hacks them to death with an ax.
Two police officers, sent to the Tacoma residence to
investigate reports of screams from inside the residence, see a man run out the
back door and give chase. Bird is captured and taken to the Tacoma City Jail
where he confesses to the killings, claiming it was a burglary gone bad.
On November 26, 1947, after a three-day trial, a Pierce
County Jury convicts Bird of first-degree murder and recommends the death
penalty. While on death row, Bird confesses to committing or being involved in
at least 44 murders during his travels across the country.
He is hanged at the Washington State Penitentiary in
Walla Walla on July 15, 1949. Although the case fails to capture the attention
of the national press, history marks Bird as one the nation’s most prolific
serial killers.
Screams and a Chase
At 2:30 a.m. on Thursday, October 30, 1947, Tacoma Police
Officers Andrew P. Sabutis and Evan “Skip” Davies were dispatched to 1007 S
21st Street to investigate reports of screams emanating from inside the
residence. As they approached, a barefoot man ran out of the back door into the
back yard and crashed through a picket fence. The two patrolmen immediately
gave chase.
After scaling several more back yard fences, the fugitive
was finally stopped by a high fence and cornered in an alley behind 2122 S
"J" Street. He pulled out a jackknife and then attacked the officers,
cutting Davies’ hand and stabbing Sabutis in the shoulder. Officer Sabutis, a
former prizefighter known as “Tiny” LaMarr, subdued the assailant with a left
hook to the jaw and a kick in the groin.
After the fight, the prisoner was taken to the Tacoma
General Hospital by Officer John Hickey in a patrol wagon, where he received
treatment for head and face lacerations. Sabutis was admitted to St. Joseph
Hospital with a severe back wound and Davies had the cuts on his hand stitched
and bandaged there.
When police officers entered the residence, they found
Bertha Kludt, age 52, dead in her bedroom, adjacent to the kitchen, and the
body of her daughter, Beverly June Kludt, age 17, on the kitchen floor. Both
women had been bludgeoned to death with an ax, which had been left at the crime
scene.
Detective Lieutenant Earl Cornelison determined that an
attempt had been made to sexually assault Bertha Kludt before she was
intentionally slain. Beverly June, hearing her mother’s screams, apparently
dashed from her upstairs bedroom into the kitchen where she encountered the
assailant and was murdered.
Jake Bird's History
The man captured by Officers Sabutis and Davies was
identified as Jake Bird, a 45-year-old, black transient who had a lengthy
criminal record including burglaries, assaults, attempted murder, and murder.
Bird estimated he had served about 15 years in various prisons for committing
crimes.
He was born in Louisiana and left home when he was 19
years old. Over the ensuing years, Bird never stayed in one place for long,
preferring the life of an itinerant worker. Often he found employment with the
railroad as a section-gang laborer, which allowed him to earn money and keep
moving from town to town. It was an occupation that lent itself quite well to
his avocation: stalking and murdering women in the towns he visited.
Bird was interrogated by Detective Lieutenant Sherman W.
Lyons at the Tacoma City Jail where he dictated and signed a confession in the
presence of four police officers. His confession stated that he entered the
Kludt residence through the unlocked back door to commit “an easy burglary.”
He brought along an ax that he found in a nearby shed,
“to bluff off anyone who tried to bother me.” Removing his shoes, Bird sneaked
into Bertha Kludt’s bedroom and stole $1.50 from her purse. When he returned to
the kitchen, he turned around and found Bertha standing behind him.
Bird told her that he only wanted her money and his
shoes, and then he would leave. But then suddenly Beverly June grabbed him from
behind and a fierce struggle ensued, resulting in the deaths of the two women.
Bird added that he thought the policemen would shoot him when they had him
cornered in the bushes, so he attacked them with his knife.
Legal Proceedings
On Friday, October 31, 1947, Deputy Prosecutor Earl D.
Mann charged Jake Bird in Pierce County Superior Court with first-degree
murder, but only in the death of Bertha Kludt. It was customary to file only
one charge in multiple homicides where failure to obtain a conviction on the
first offense would allow the filing of additional murder charges.
Judge Edward D. Hodge (1878-1948) appointed James W.
Selden, a former Pierce County prosecutor, as his defense counsel. At his
arraignment, Bird pleaded not guilty and the trial was set for Monday, November
24, 1947.
At a motion hearing on November 14, 1957, Defense
Attorney Selden requested a change of venue, stating Bird could not get a fair
trial in Pierce County. He also asked to be relieved as Bird’s attorney,
informing the court that Bird wanted to represent himself. Judge Hodge denied
both requests.
Trial began on schedule in the Pierce County Courthouse
before Judge Hodge but was slowed by jury selection. Questioning of the
prospective jurors revolved around their impressions of the crime gained from
the news media and whether Jake Bird, a black man, could get a fair trial.
Four jurors were excused when it was learned they had
recently served on another first-degree murder trial in which the defendant was
convicted and sentenced to hang. By the end of the day, a jury of nine men and
three women was selected and court was recessed until 9:00 a.m. the next
morning.
The Trial
Trial proceeded at a rapid pace and was concluded in just
one-and-a-half days of testimony. Prosecuting Attorney Patrick M. Steele’s
strategy was to prove that the death of Bertha Kludt was premeditated, thereby
qualifying the defendant for the death penalty.
Weighing heavily in the trial was evidence regarding the
wanton murder of 17-year-old Beverly June Kludt, who was bludgeoned to death in
the kitchen when she came to her mother’s defense. Blood and brain tissue from
both victims were found on Bird’s clothing, his bloody fingerprints were found
in the house and on the ax and his shoes were found at the murder scene.
The state introduced a surprise witness, Tacoma Police
Officer John Hickey, who testified that he and Officer Russell Skattum gave
Bird a beating while he was in their custody. Hickey said: “I regret to say
that I lost my temper after returning from the Kludt home and viewing the
terribly hacked bodies of the two women. I had asked Bird as we sat in the
patrol wagon why he murdered the two women. He said he didn’t do it. I asked
him who did it then, and he said, ‘It was LeRoy.’ ‘Who’s LeRoy?’ I asked him.
‘Oh, another Negro around town,’ Bird replied. ‘You’re lying,’ I replied, and
he looked at me with a smug and insolent look. I know I shouldn’t have done it,
but I hit him in the jaw with my fist, knocking him to the front of the patrol
wagon. Then I struck him a number of times with my night stick until he said,
‘Don’t kill me.’ That brought me to my senses and we took him to the hospital where
a nurse said he wasn’t badly hurt” (Seattle Post-Intelligencer).
Later, when Prosecutor Steele moved to enter Bird’s
signed confession into evidence, Defense Attorney Selden strenuously objected,
declaring it had been obtained under duress and therefore inadmissible. But
Judge Hodge disagreed, ruling there was no relationship between the beating and
Bird’s voluntary confessions, and admitted it into evidence.
Despite continued strenuous objections by the Selden, the
confession was read into the record, then the prosecution rested its case.
Defense Attorney Selden rested the defense without calling Bird or any other
witnesses to the stand.
Closing arguments were begun on Wednesday morning,
November 26, 1947 and the case went to the jury at noon. After deliberating for
only 35 minutes, the jury returned its verdict. Bird was found guilty of
first-degree murder and the jury voted to impose the death penalty. Bird, who
had been impassive throughout the trial, sat unmoved as the Judge Hodge read
the verdict. On his way back to the Pierce County jail, Bird asked the five
deputy sheriffs guarding him: “What’s all the excitement about?” (The Tacoma
News Tribune).
Remarks Upon Sentencing
On Saturday, December 6, 1947, Judge Hodge sentenced Bird
to be hanged on the gallows at the Washington State Penitentiary on January 16,
1948. After a motion for a new trial was denied by Judge Hodge, Defense
Attorney Selden told the court he had done everything in his power to defend
Bird and that no further appeals would be made on Bird’s behalf. Then Selden
declared: “I feel whenever any man 45-years-old gets an idea that no lives are
safe to anyone, except his own, that man is a detriment to society and should
be obliterated” (The Tacoma News Tribune).
When Judge Hodge asked Bird for comment, he declared, “I
was given no chance to defend myself. My own lawyers just asked you to hang me.
They apologized for defending me. If they were so reluctant to defend me, why
did they contest the prosecutor’s proof of murder, and now say that everything
is proven?” (The Tacoma News Tribune). At the end of his 20-minute impassioned
speech, Bird declared: “All you guys who had anything to do with this case are
going to die before I do” (The Seattle Times). It became known as the “Jake
Bird Hex.” Within a year, five men connected with Bird’s trial died.
Bird's Past
On Sunday, December 7, 1947, Pierce County Under-sheriff
Joseph E. Karpatch and Deputy Michael Waverek took Bird in a patrol wagon to
the Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla to await his execution.
Shortly after his arrival, Bird began confessing to his involvement in a dozen
murders that took place over a span of 20 years.
On January 6, 1948, at the request of Governor Monrad
Charles Wallgren (1891-1961), Pierce County Prosecutor Patrick Steele and
Tacoma Police Detective Lieutenant Sherman Lyons went to the penitentiary to
listen the confessions. In an obvious bid for a reprieve, Bird offered to tell
them more, to “clear his conscience.” Steele told the press: “We want to give him
a chance to tell it, but we don’t intend to permit him to use what he might
have withheld as a means to add a few days to his life" (The Tacoma News
Tribune).
Over the next several days, Steele and Lyons took
voluminous notes on Bird’s statements, which they compiled into a 174-page
report for the Governor’s office.
On January 15, 1948, Bird finally won a 60-day reprieve
from Governor Wallgren by claiming that, given time, he could “clear up” at
least 44 murders that he either committed or participated in during his travels
throughout the country. His confessions brought a throng of investigators from
across the nation to interview him at the state penitentiary.
Of these 44 confessed murders, only 11 were
substantiated, but Bird had more than enough knowledge about the others to be
the prime suspect. Police from several states took the opportunity to close the
books on many of their unsolved murders. In his travels, Bird had murdered
people, mostly women, in Illinois, Kentucky, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Kansas, South
Dakota, Ohio, Florida, Wisconsin, Michigan, Iowa, and Washington.
Meantime, Bird appealed his conviction to the Washington
State Supreme Court. He personally argued his case before the Supreme Court
Justices, stating that Judge Hodge had made several judicial errors and
demanded a new trail. On November 30, 1948, his final petition to the state for
a retrial was denied and on December 3, 1948, Judge Hugh J. Rosellini
(1909-1984) signed another death warrant, ordering Bird to be hanged on January
14, 1949.
Bird’s attorney, Murray Taggart of Walla Walla,
immediately moved for a stay of execution to permit the filing of an appeal to
the U.S. Court of Appeals. The motion was granted on the condition the court
agreed to review the case.
When the U.S. Court of Appeals refused to review the
case, Judge Rosellini set Bird’s execution date for July 15, 1949. Attorney
Taggart requested another stay of execution to permit the filing of an appeal
with the U.S. Supreme Court, but the motion was denied.
Undeterred, Taggart filed three more petitions on Bird’s
behalf, but the U.S. Supreme Court refused to review the case; the last time on
July 14, 1949. Bird’s last hope was an act of executive clemency from Governor
Arthur B. Langlie (1900-1966), but Langlie chose not to interfere with the
execution.
The Hanging
On Thursday night, July 14, 1949, Jake Bird ate his last
meal on death row, and then talked with his attorney for two hours. Bird told
Taggart he could be a good looser as long as he felt everything possible had
been done to save his life. Later that night, he was moved to a holding cell
near the gallows, where he was shaved and dressed in new clothes.
Just after midnight, Bird walked 10 feet from the cell to
the gallows accompanied by Warden Tom Smith and two prison guards. He said
nothing to the 125 witnesses who had gathered in the room, but muttered some
comment to one of the guards.
A volunteer prison chaplain, Reverend Arvid C. Ohrnell,
started to read a note from Bird, declaring he bore no malice toward anyone and
sought forgiveness. But before he finished, the trapdoor was sprung, dropping
Bird five feet to his death.
Jake Bird was hanged at 12:20 a.m. on July 15, 1949. His
body was taken down 14 minutes later and prison physician Dr. Elmer Hill pronounced
him dead. He was buried in an unmarked grave in the prison cemetery, identified
only as convict No. 21520. Bird willed his personal fortune, $6.15, to his
appeals attorney, Murray Taggart.
Although not formally educated, Bird gained a modicum of
fame as a “jailhouse lawyer,” often arguing his own case before the court. His
knowledge of the law, together with the help of people against the death
penalty, enabled him to delay his execution a year and a half.
Bird’s case failed to capture the attention of the
national press, even though he confessed to committing or being involved in at
least 44 murders throughout the country. But history marks him as one the
nation’s most prolific serial killers.
The Jake Bird Hex:
The five men connected with Bird’s trial who died within
a year of the “Jake Bird Hex.”
Edward D. Hodge, Pierce County Superior Court Judge, age
69, died January 1, 1948.
Joseph E. Karpach, Pierce County Under-sheriff, age 46,
died April 5, 1948.
George L. Harrigan, Pierce County court reporter, age 69,
died June 11, 1948.
Sherman W. Lyons, Tacoma Police Detective Lieutenant, age
46, died October 28, 1948.
James W. Selden, Bird’s defense attorney, age 76, died on
November 26, 1948.
According to The Tacoma News Tribune, all of the men died
from heart attacks. A sixth man, a Washington State Penitentiary guard assigned
to death-row, died of pneumonia two months before Bird’s execution.
Jake Bird is hanged for the murder of two Tacoma women on
July 15, 1949
By Daryl C. McClary, October 31, 2006
HistoryLink.org
On July 15, 1949 at 12:20 a.m., Jake Bird (1901-1949) is
hanged at the Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla for the ax murders
of Bertha Kludt, age 52, and her daughter Beverly June, age 17, in Tacoma on
October 30, 1947.
While on death row, Bird, a transient for most of his
adult life, confesses to committing or being involved in at least 44 murders
during his travels across the country. Although the newspapers label Bird, the
“Tacoma Ax-Killer,” his case fails to capture the attention of the national
press. But history marks Bird as one of the country’s most prolific serial
killers.
Early on the morning of October 30, 1947, two Tacoma
Police Officers were dispatched to 1007 S. 21st Street to investigate reports
of screams emanating from inside the residence. As they approached, a man ran
out of the back door into the back yard and crashed through a picket fence. The
police officers gave chase.
The fugitive scaled several more backyard fences, but was
finally stopped by a high wire fence and cornered in some nearby bushes. He
pulled out a switchblade knife and then attacked the officers, cutting the hand
of one and stabbing the other in the back. One of the officers, a former
prizefighter, subdued the assailant with a left hook to the jaw and a kick in
the groin.
When police officers entered the residence, they found
Mrs. Bertha Kludt, age 53, and her daughter, Beverly June Kludt, age 17, dead.
Both women had been dealt several blows to the head with an ax. The murder
weapon was found on the kitchen floor.
The man captured by the Tacoma Police Officers was
identified as Jake Bird, a black, 45-year-old, transient, who had a lengthy
criminal record including burglaries, assaults, and attempted murder.
At the city jail, Bird confessed to the murders, but
claimed that burglary was his sole motive for entering the Kludt residence. He
was caught in the act by Bertha Kludt and tried to escape from the house. When
she tried to stop him, Bird panicked and hit her in the head with an ax. Beverly
June, awakened by the screaming and noise, was hacked to death when she came to
her mother’s defense. But homicide detectives determined that an attempt had
been made to sexually assault Bertha Kludt in her bedroom before she was
intentionally slain. Beverly June’s murder was likely incidental to Bird’s
escape.
On October 31, 1947, Bird was charged in Pierce County
Superior Court with first-degree murder, but only in the death of Bertha Kludt.
The prosecuting attorney needed to prove that her death was premeditated in
order to qualify the defendant for the death penalty. Bird pleaded not guilty
at his arraignment and was held in the Tacoma City Jail without bail.
The trial began on November 24, 1947 in Pierce County
Superior Court and lasted two and a half days. Weighing heavily in the trial
was the wanton murder of Beverly June Kludt, who was bludgeoned to death when
she came to her mother’s defense. Blood and brain tissue from both victims were
found on Bird’s clothing, and his bloody fingerprints were found in the house
and on the ax.
Bird’s attorney, James W. Selden, maintained that his
signed confession had been obtained under duress and therefore inadmissible.
But Judge Edward D. Hodge disagreed, admitting the confession into evidence. On
November 26, 1947, after deliberating for only 35 minutes, the jury found Jake
Bird guilty of first degree-murder and recommended the death penalty. Judge
Hodge sentenced him to be hanged at the Washington State Penitentiary on
January 16, 1948.
Bird won a 60-day reprieve from Governor Monrad C.
Wallgren (1891-1961) by claiming that he could clear up at least 44 other
murders that he either committed or participated in during his travels across
the country. His confession brought a throng of investigators from across the
nation to interview him at the state penitentiary.
Of these 44 murders, only 11 were substantiated, but he
had enough knowledge about the others to be the prime suspect. Police in
several states took the opportunity to close the books on many of their unsolved
murders. In his travels, Bird murdered people, mostly women, in Illinois,
Kentucky, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Kansas, South Dakota, Ohio, Florida, Wisconsin,
Michigan, Iowa, and Washington.
Meantime, Bird appealed his conviction to the Washington
State Supreme Court, but his petition for a retrial was denied. The U.S. Court
of Appeals and the U.S. Supreme Court also rejected his petitions for a new
trial. After the appeal process had run its course, Bird was scheduled for
execution on July 15, 1949
On July 14, 1947, the U.S. Supreme declined to review
Bird’s conviction for the third time and Governor Arthur B. Langlie (1900-1966)
chose not to interfere with the execution.
Finally, early Friday morning, July 15, 1949, Bird was
taken from his gallows-level cell to the noose. At 12:20 a.m., witnessed by 125
spectators, the gallows’ trapdoor was released and Jake Bird dropped five feet
to his death. After 14 minutes, his body was taken down and prison physician
Dr. Elmer Hill pronounced him dead.
He was buried in an unmarked grave in the prison
cemetery, identified only as convict No. 21520. Bird willed his “personal
fortune” of $6.15 to Murray Taggart, the Walla Walla attorney who filed his
appeals.
Jake Bird was the 63rd prisoner and the seventh African
American to be executed in Washington State since the death penalty was
established in 1904.
Jake Bird
Jake Bird was born "somewhere out in Louisiana where
there ain't no post office." He lived in this place until he was 19 when
he seemed to decide that he might like to try a town with a post office.
Over the following years of his life he never really
settled down anywhere for long. he worked as everything from a manual laborer
to a "gandy dancer" on railroads. it was this type of work that built
Jake's strength, and also allowed him to keep moving from town to town, always
finding something to do for money.
Birds travels ended on October 30, 1947, when he was
arrested in Tacoma, Washington. It seems Jake was passing through a street when
he decided to have a little fun. He chose the house of Bertha Kludt, 52. Also
in the house was her teenage daughter, Beverly. Well Jake went around the back
of the house and found an ax.
He then stripped off all his clothes and took the ax with
him into the house. I guess that poor Mrs. Kludt and her daughter were a little
surprised by a naked black man running through there house swinging an ax, and
the showed there fear by screaming, which alerted neighbors who called police.
The police though were not quick enough as by the time
they had arrived at the scene Jake had bludgeoned both the Kludt ladies to
death with the ax. As they walked through the house they spotted Bird walking
in the back yard carrying his shoes. When he seen the police officers he came
charging at the cops with a knife. He managed to slash two of them but was
overpowered and was beaten into unconsciousness. He spent the next few days in
hospital.
When he was ready to speak Bird denied the charges. But
his stance soon changed when it came out that police had found brain tissue in
his trousers, and it would be hard to explain how that got there, so he
admitted to the crime.
Being a black man accused of killing whites didn't really
help his cause much and Bird was sentence to die. It would seem that Jake
wasn't ready to go just yet though. He made a few deals and somehow ended up
putting the execution back two years, during which time he told of his many
crimes throughout his life.
From these stories it became fair to assume that Bird was
involved in at least 44 murders. Well he at least showed enough knowledge to be
consider prime suspect in that many murders. Of these 44 only eleven were
proven beyond doubt. Bird had certainly gotten around over the years, he had
committed a murder in Illinois, Kentucky, Nebraska, Kansas, South Dakota, Ohio,
Florida and Wisconsin.
In addition to the 44 murders police believed he was
involved in many more but these could be just written off as cops trying to
clean up there books of unsolved murders (like with Henry Lee Lucas).
It seems that Bird like one particular type of victim -
white women. He particularly like white women cowering in fear of him. Most
were killed with an ax or hatchet also.
Jake Birds luck, and confessions, ran out on July 15,
1949. He was hung at Walla Walla in Washington State.
An Interesting Bit:
While in prison it was reported that Jake Bird put a few
'Hexes' on fellow prisoners. A local paper printed stories on these Hexes being
very feared by prisoners as a few of those Bird cursed ended up dying. Obviously
this is all bullshit, but it is kind of interesting.
The Wacky World of Murder
Bird, Jake
A rootless drifter, big Jake Bird would tell authorities
that he was born December 14, 1901, "somewhere out in Louisiana where they
ain't no post office."
He started roaming in his nineteenth year and never
settled anywhere for long, spending much of his time as a manual laborer and
"gandy dancer" on various railroads. It was backbreaking work, but it
built up Jake's strength and kept him in motion, trolling for human targets.
By the time of his arrest in 1947, he would claim a
body-count approaching one victim for each year of his life.
On October 30, 1947, Bird was prowling through Tacoma,
Washington, when he stopped at the home occupied by Bertha Kludt, 52, and her
teenage daughter Beverly. Finding an ax in the woodshed, Bird reportedly
stripped off his clothes before breaking into the house and hacking both
victims to death. Their dying screams alerted neighbors, and police were just
arriving on the scene as Bird emerged from the backyard, shoes in hand.
Violently resisting arrest, he slashed two officers with a knife before he was
finally beaten into submission and dragged off to the county hospital for
treatment of various injuries.
In custody, Bird first pled innocence, then dropped his
pose when blood and brain tissue were found on his trousers. Sentenced to die
for the slayings, he stalled execution for nearly two years, regaling police
with his intimate knowledge of 44 deaths nationwide.
At least eleven crimes were solved through Bird's
confessions, starting with the ax murders of two women at Evanston, Illinois,
in 1942.
Other victims were confirmed in Louisville, Kentucky;
Omaha, Nebraska; Kansas City, Kansas; Sioux Falls, South Dakota; Cleveland,
Ohio; Orlando, Florida; and Portage, Wisconsin.
Police in Houston suspected Bird of murdering Mrs. Harry
Richardson there, and Chicago authorities were curious about a weighted body
retrieved from Lake Michigan, five miles south of Kenosha. Los Angeles detectives
had their eyes on Jake for murdering a black youth and a Jewish grocer, while
in New York City he was tentatively linked to the robbery and murder of a
delicatessen owner. Psychiatrists examined Bird in jail and labeled him a
psychopath, deriving satisfaction from the sight of women cowering in terror.
In the verified cases, most of his victims were female,
most were white, and the majority had been killed with hatchets or axes in
their homes. (Bird also put a "hex" on several enemies from prison,
journalists reporting that some half a dozen of them subsequently died.)
Inevitably, Jake ran out of stories, and he climbed the
gallows on July 15, 1949, in the Washington state prison at Walla Walla.
Michael Newton - An Encyclopedia of Modern Serial Killers
- Hunting Humans
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