The Case of Judge
Crater
Perhaps no disappearance in American history has
created as much speculation as that of New York Supreme Court Associate Justice
Joseph F. Crater. For many years, he was known simply as “the most missingest
man in New York.” He was last seen on the evening of August 6, 1930, walking
out of a New York restaurant. Crater was a tall, heavyset man and an avowed
clothes horse. He was especially dapper that evening as he stepped out of the
restaurant, waved goodbye to a couple of friends and then climbed into a
taxicab. His friends would remember his double-breasted brown suit, gray spats
and a straw Panama hat over his smoothed-down iron grey hair for it was the last
outfit they ever saw him wear. After that final glimpse, Crater was never seen
again. But how was it possible for a man as powerful and prominent as a Supreme
Court judge to disappear forever?
Judge Crater’s career was unquestionably
successful. He was born and raised in Easton, Pennsylvania, and later graduated
from Lafayette College and Columbia University Law School. In 1913, he began
practicing law in New York and got involved in local politics. He soon became
president of the Democratic Party Club in Manhattan and saw his law practice
flourish thanks to his connections to the corrupt Democratic leadership at
Tammany Hall. In April 1930, he was appointed to the New York Supreme Court. He
had withdrawn $20,000 from the bank just days before his appointment. The sum
was close to a year’s salary but that was the standard Tammany payoff for the
lucrative post. It was not a poor investment either, according to investigators
who later looked into his role as a receiver of a bankrupt hotel. Crater sold
it to a bond and mortgage firm for $75,000 and two months later, the city
agreed to buy it back for a planned street widening at a condemned property
price of almost three million dollars.
Crater did just as well in his private life. In
1916, a woman named Stella Wheeler retained him in a divorce trial and the next
year, right after her divorce became final, Crater married her. By all
accounts, they appeared to be a happy and devoted couple.
Vanished Judge
Joseph F. Crater
In the summer of 1930, forty-one-year-old Crater
and his wife were vacationing at their summer cabin at Belgrade Lakes, Maine.
In late July, he received a telephone call and he offered no information to his
wife about the content of the call, other than to say that he had to return to
the city “to straighten those fellows out.” The following day, he arrived at
his Fifth Avenue apartment. Instead of dealing with business, though, he made a
trip to Atlantic City in the company of a showgirl. On August 3, he was back in
New York and on the morning of August 6, he spent two hours going through his
files in his courthouse chambers. He then had his assistant, Joseph Mara, cash
two checks for him that amounted to $5,150. At noon, he and Mara carried two
locked briefcases to his apartment and he let Mara take the rest of the day
off.
Later that evening, Crater went to a Broadway
ticket agency and purchased one seat for a comedy that was playing that night
called Dancing Partners at the Belasco Theater. He then went to Billy Haas’
chophouse on West 45th Street for dinner. There, he ran into two friends, a
fellow attorney and his showgirl date, and he joined them for dinner. The
lawyer later told investigators that Crater was in a good mood that evening and
gave no indication that anything was bothering him. The dinner ended a little
after 9:00 p.m., a short time after the curtain had opened for the show that
Crater had a ticket for. The group went outside and as Crater stepped into the
taxi that he hailed down, he waved goodbye to his friends. His next, and likely
final destination, remains a mystery.
Strangely, there was no immediate reaction to Judge
Crater’s disappearance. When he did not return to Maine as scheduled on August
9, Mrs. Crater grew concerned. Nevertheless, she waited six days before
dispatching Kohler, the family driver, to New York to see if he could learn
anything. When Kohler arrived at the Fifth Avenue apartment, the maid told him
that Judge Crater’s bed had not been slept in since August 8. Kohler next began
telephoning Crater’s friends. They were all excessively reassuring about the
welfare of the judge, believing that no harm could have come to him. All of his
friends were acutely aware that any hint of a mysterious disappearance might
hurt Crater’s chances for re-election in November. They were anxious that any
odd behavior on Crater’s part be kept hidden from the voting public.
In addition, they wanted to make sure his
extramarital sex life was carefully hidden, as well. Crater had always confined
his interest to night club parties, one-night stands and prostitutes, but
suppose the middle-aged man had come across a young woman that he had fallen
for and he had taken her off on an extended trip? If that was the case, his cronies
were anxious to soft-pedal his disappearance.
So Kohler returned to Maine on August 20, relieved
that no harm had come to the judge. He informed Mrs. Crater that her husband
must surely be safe, though no one seemed to have any idea where he might be. He
was sure that he would return on August 28, when he was scheduled to preside
over the first session of the special term.
But when Crater didn’t make an appearance for this
important session, word began to circulate that something was amiss. Stella
Crater, her worst fears apparently justified, hurried to New York. She began
calling her husband’s friends, including Martin J. Healy, who was summering on
Long Island. Healy later stated that Mrs. Crater became hysterical when he
could not tell her anything. Healy, along with others, strongly advised her to
return to Maine. Against her better judgment, she did.
An unofficial search was started for Crater, led by
a city detective named Leo Lowenthal, who often acted as a bodyguard for one of
Crater’s political friends. He visited the judge’s chambers and learned of the
two briefcases believed to be filled with personal papers that the judge and
his assistant had carried out of the office. Lowenthal next went to the Fifth
Avenue apartment but found no trace of the papers, nor any charred remains to
indicate that they had been burned. He noted with interest that Crater’s vest
was in his bedroom, but found nothing else unusual.
With no trace of the judge to be found, the police
commissioner was finally notified of the disappearance on September 3.
After that, the case of the missing judge became
front page news. The story captivated the nation and a massive investigation
was launched. Had Crater been killed, or had he simply disappeared on his own?
Those were the questions that everyone wanted answers to, from police
detectives to shady business partners to the average man on the street. The
official investigations started off in a hurry, but quickly slowed down.
Detectives discovered that the judge’s safe-deposit box had been cleaned out
and the two briefcases that Crater and Mara had taken to his apartment were
missing. These promising leads were quickly bogged down by the thousands of
false reports that were coming in from people who claimed to have seen the missing
man.
The District Attorney centered his investigation on
Mrs. Crater while the police began delving into his financial and sexual
affairs. It was found that he had a safe deposit box at the Empire Trust
Company, but it turned out to be empty.
Detectives looking into Crater’s love life were far
more successful and they found that for years, Crater had been on friendly
terms with Constance Braemer Marcus, a raven-haired woman in her middle
thirties. Lovely and vivacious, she had been a worker for the Cayuga Democratic
Club in 1922, when she had met Crater during an election campaign. She liked
him and later retained him – as Mrs. Crater had done – during her divorce. They
became involved in a long-time affair.
Over the years, Crater visited Connie Marcus several
times a week and paid her rent at the Hotel Mayflower on Central Park West. In
the daytime, Connie Marcus worked as a salesgirl at Milgrim’s and other upscale
shops along Fifty-Seventh Street.
When news of Crater’s disappearance went public,
Marcus added to the chaos by disappearing herself. It seemed a logical
assumption that Crater and his mistress had run off together and the police
investigation stalled. Then Connie returned to the city alone, explaining that
she had left town merely to avoid the publicity. She was questioned closely by
investigators but they became convinced that Marcus knew nothing of the judge’s
whereabouts.
The police also learned that Crater frequented a
Broadway nightclub and speakeasy called the Club Abbey. The Abbey was owned by
gangland figure Owney Madden and was frequented by mobsters like Jack “Legs”
Diamond, Dutch Schultz, Vincent “Mad Dog” Coll and others. A number of murders
had occurred on the premises and it was definitely not the sort of spot that
should have been a favorite hangout for a New York Supreme Court Justice. But
this is where Crater went in search of a diversion, although he tried to
convince patrons that his name was “Joe Crane.” However, since so many other
politicians frequented this unsavory nightspot, false names were a waste of
time.
At the Abbey, the judge had been especially
friendly with a chorus girl named Elaine Dawn. Police questioned her, along
with Sally-Lou Ritz, who had been at Crater’s table for dinner on the night he
disappeared, and Marie Miller, his Atlantic City party girl date. None of these
lovely ladies were able to offer a clue as to his location.
The search for Judge Crater ground to a halt, even
though he had been reported in Canada, the Adirondacks, Nova Scotia, Cuba,
California, Mexico City and even Africa. Most assumed that the judge had ducked
out just one step ahead of someone who was looking for him. A 1947 movie called
“The Judge Steps Out,” starring Alexander Knox, follows the lighthearted
exploits of a judge who becomes weary of his responsibilities and leaves his
family to become a short-order cook. For decades after his disappearance, his
name was a slang term for dodging one’s responsibilities and “to pull a Crater”
was to slip away permanently.
In October, a grand jury convened to look into the
disappearance. Mrs. Crater refused to come to New York and participate in the
hearings. Nevertheless, the grand jury called ninety-five witnesses and amassed
nine hundred and seventy-five pages of testimony. After all of that, the
conclusion was: “The evidence is insufficient to warrant any expression of
opinion as to whether Crater is alive or dead, or as to whether he has absented
himself voluntarily, or is the sufferer from disease in the nature of amnesia,
or is the victim of crime.”
In late January 1931, Mrs. Crater finally returned
to New York. From the apartment on Fifth Avenue, she announced an amazing
discovery. In a bureau drawer often used by the judge, she found a large manila
envelope containing $6,690 in an assortment of denominations, along with three
small checks that had been made out to Crater and signed by him. There was also
a second envelope that contained stocks and bonds and a binder with three
insurance policies. A memo in Crater’s handwriting listed the names of men who
owed him money, along with the amounts owed by each man. The note was signed
with the words, “I am very whary, Joe.” It is believed the misspelled word was
likely meant to be “weary.”
The discovery caused an uproar. Cops had searched
the apartment four times and never would have missed the bulky envelopes and
the insurance binder. Detective Leo Lowenthal, who had made the first
unofficial search, maintained that the envelopes had not been in the drawer in
August. Had someone --- perhaps Crater himself – placed them there? Had his
killers – if he had been murdered – felt compassion for his widow and placed
there in the bureau? Or had Mrs. Crater brought them back with her from Maine?
No one knows, but this was the last dramatic
development in the case. The search continued throughout 1931 but no trace of
the judge was ever found.
There have been many theories put forward to answer
the mystery of Judge Crater. Mrs. Crater and many of his close friends believed
that he was the victim of foul play. Stella Crater stated that he was murdered
“because of something sinister connected to politics.” And she may have been
right given his involvement in bribery, back-door dealing with Tammany Hall
politics and questionable real estate deals. She also did not believe that the
judge would have voluntarily vanished, insisting, “Joe Crater would not run
away from anybody but would meet his problems directly, whatever they were.”
In 1937, Mrs. Crater sued the three insurance
companies for double indemnity on her husband’s life insurance policies. During
the trial, her attorney, Emil K. Ellis, advanced her murder theory, but left
politics out of the mix. He claimed that Judge Crater had been blackmailed by a
Broadway showgirl and he had paid her off. When she demanded more money and
Crater refused to pay, a gangster friend of the showgirl had killed him,
perhaps accidentally. The attorney’s theories did not impress the court and
they denied the double indemnity claims.
On June 6, 1939, Judge Crater was officially
declared dead but sightings continued for years, as did the theories as to what
happened to him. Possible exits of the judge have included his murder by
political cronies just before he could testify against them in a graft
investigation and a cover-up of his death in the arms of his mistress or a
prostitute. Some believe he was killed in a dispute over a payoff or that he
decided to drop out and start a new life in Quebec, Europe or the Caribbean.
Stella Crater remarried in 1939 but the marriage
didn’t last. In 1961 she wrote a book entitled, The Empty Robe: The Story of the Disappearance of Judge Crater.
Although her book concludes she didn’t know her second husband very well at
all, she seemed to retain fond memories of him; either that or she had an
ironic sense of humor. Every year on the August 6 anniversary of her husband’s
disappearance until her death in 1969, Mrs. Crater visited a Greenwich Village
bar and ordered two drinks. After downing one, she would raise the other glass
and toast, “Good luck, Joe, wherever you are.”
Crater’s case -- Missing Person’s File 13595 – was officially closed in
1979.
A possible answer to the fate of “Good-Time Joe”
Crater came to light in April 2005, when Stella Ferrucci-Good died in
Bellerose, Queens, leaving behind what may be a key to the mystery. While going
through Mrs. Ferrucci-Good’s possessions, her granddaughter, Barbara O’Brien,
discovered a metal box that contained handwritten letter in an envelope marked,
“Do not open until my death.” In the letter, Mrs. Ferrucci-Good claimed that
her late husband, Robert Good, told her that a New York City cop named Charles
Burns, and the cop’s brother, a cab driver named Frank Burns, were responsible
for Crater’s death.
Robert Good was a New York City Parks Department
supervisor and lifeguard who died in 1975.
In her account, Mrs. Ferrucci-Good wrote that her
husband told her that he learned over drinks with one of both of the Burns
brothers that they, along with several other men, killed the judge and buried
him on Coney Island, under the boardwalk at West Eighth Street. That location
is the current site of the New York Aquarium.
According to Mrs. Ferrucci-Good’s account, her
husband told her that when Crater stepped into the cab on West Forty-Second
Street that night, the driver was Frank Burns, a Syndicate hitman employed by
Jack “Legs” Diamond. Diamond was allegedly angry at Crater’s refusal to reverse
on appeal some lower court decisions that hurt the mob boss. Burns picked
Crater up in his cab and then drove a few blocks to where his two accomplices
jumped in the vehicle. They drove to Coney Island, where they were joined by
two more men. Their intent was to rough Crater up a little and scare him into
playing ball with Diamond, but in the judge’s struggles to escape the cab, he
was accidentally killed.
In her letter, Mrs. Ferrucci-Good said that officer
Burns was one of the cops guarding notorious Murder Inc. hitman Abe “Kid Twist”
Reles when the gangster and mob informant somehow plummeted to his death from a
sixth-floor Coney Island hotel window in 1941. Reles’ death came hours before
he was to testify against mob boss Albert Anastasia. Reles became immortalized
in New York tabloids as “the canary who could sing but couldn’t fly.” Also in
the box left by Mrs. Ferrucci-Good were yellowed newspaper clippings about
Crater’s disappearance with written notations in the margins.
Police sources confirmed that a man named Charles
Burns served with the NYPD from 1926 to 1946 and that he spent part of his
career assigned to the 60th Precinct in Coney Island. Police also confirmed
that several skeletal remains were found at the location named by Mrs.
Ferrucci-Good in 1956, when the foundation for the aquarium was being dug.
Decades prior to the advent of DNA technology, the remains could not be
identified. They were reburied in pine coffins made by inmates at Rikers Island
prison in an unmarked mass grave in New York City’s Potters Field on Hart
Island.
Mrs. O’Brien and her family say Mrs. Ferrucci-Good
never mentioned the Crater case to them They were baffled by the contents of
the letter and thought it was a joke but they turned it over to the police,
just to be sure. Police were unable to verify or disprove in the letter,
leaving the fate of “the missingest man in New York” an ongoing mystery.
From the book WITHOUT A TRACE by Troy Taylor
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