TX TX - Hazel, 46, & Nancy Frome, 23, El Paso, 30 March 1938

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http://markgribben.com/?p=379#comments

Weston G. Frome probably thought good luck was responsible for his winning a shiny new 1938 Packard in a Community Chest raffle. How else could he explain spending 50 cents on a ticket and driving away with a luxury car?
There was luck attached to the Packard, but it wasn’t the kind Frome expected, and he probably went to his grave cursing the day he won the auto. Frome was a well-to-do Berkeley manufacturing executive with a loving wife and family when he won the Packard in a Delaware raffle. Because he didn’t need the car, he gave it to his 23-year-old daughter, Nancy, who had recently graduated from college.
When Nancy decided to take a cross-country trip to visit a sister who lived back east in Parris Island, S.C., she had first planned to make the trip by herself by train.* Her mother, Hazel, however, was concerned that Nancy would not be safe on the long trip. Instead, they decided to travel together taking the new Packard. Hazel and Nancy were experienced travelers who enjoyed taking long motor trips and seeing the sights along the way.
Bidding Weston goodbye in Berkeley in late March 1938, the women first headed south along the California coastline until they reached San Diego. Then they took the road then known as “The Broadway of America,” U.S. 80, which ran (and still runs in parts) across the southern United States from California to Georgia.
The trip was uneventful until they reached El Paso, Texas where the Packard apparently developed some sort of trouble. It would take a couple of days to repair the car, so Nancy and Hazel decided to take a jaunt south of the border to Juarez, Mexico.
One day turned into five as the Packard underwent repairs and the ladies went back-and-forth across the border to kill time.
Finally, on March 30, the Packard was ready and the Fromes headed east from El Paso toward Dallas. The two women never made it.
The next day the 50-cent Packard was found abandoned about 60 miles outside Van Horn, Texas,** the sleepy county seat of Culberson County. The women were nowhere to be found and the only clue left behind in the car was a slashed spare tire that was missing its inner tube.
Searchers combed the sparse region near the Big Bend area of the Rio Grande on foot, horseback, and plane for three days without luck. Then a long-distance trucker heard about the missing women and contacted the Texas Rangers. He thought that he had seen the Packard and a smaller car on the side of the road back a bit closer to Van Horn.
The Rangers eventually found tire tracks matching the tires on the Packard running off into the brush. It wasn’t long before they uncovered the bodies of the two women about a half-mile off U.S. 80.
“This cruel country is the perfect place for cruel murder,” wrote AP reporter Robert Johnson, Jr. 15 years after the crime. “It is a land where only the Mexican eagle and the coyote feel at home.”
It was a cruel murder. The women both died from a gunshot wound to the temple fired from a Spanish-made .32, but each had been tortured before they were slain. Both mother and daughter were clothed only in their underwear, but neither had been raped.
Nancy had been burned on each knuckle of her right hand by either cigarettes or cigars and a couple of additional burns were seared into the back of her hand for good measure. She had apparently put up a good fight because black hair complete with roots was found clutched between her fingers, and skin and blood were caked beneath her nails. The bones and muscles in her abdomen were broken and torn as if someone had jumped hard on her stomach. In the hand with the hairs, Nancy also held a man’s handkerchief embroidered with the letter “F” and a matchbook.
Hazel was also brutalized. She had been beaten and a chunk of flesh was torn from her arm.
At first it appeared that robbery was the motive for the murders because some jewelry and cash had been stolen from each woman. However, the killer or killers left equally valuable jewelry that was in plain sight.
The Rangers believed that the Fromes were killed by more than one person based on several accounts given by witnesses. The best lead came from the truck driver who was able to describe both the other car seen with the Packard and the couple who it apparently belonged to.
The sighting stuck in his mind because he had been passed by the Packard and a blue coupe that appeared to be traveling together. The cars pulled ahead of him and several miles later apparently doubled-back, passing the trucker a second time.
He told investigators that one woman was driving the Packard and a man and two women were riding in the blue coupe.
The Frome murder hit the news wires and was prominently reported across the country. A $10,000 reward for information leading to arrests prompted hundreds of tipsters to contact the Texas Rangers, who dutifully ran down each and every fruitless lead. Eventually the case file filled three drawers of a filing cabinet.
Only one tip really helped the case, and it was only good enough to give authorities another theory for the motive.
Around the same time that the Frome Packard was being repaired in El Paso, a similar Packard was seen roaming around Van Horn. The informant believed that the occupants of that car were involved in smuggling narcotics from Mexico.
Although that information never led anywhere, it did seem to make sense. Was it possible that a drug dealer was expecting a shipment smuggled inside a Packard — in the spare tire, perhaps?
Perhaps that dealer thought Nancy and her mother were trying some kind of double-cross and tortured them to get them to tell him where the drugs were hidden. If so, the women died because they were unable to tell what they didn’t know.
Buying a raffle ticket for a chance to win a car is a risky wager, but it’s a safe bet we’ll never know who killed Hazel and Nancy Frome or why.

There is more here:
http://kidnappingmurderandmayhem.blogspot.com/2008_05_01_archive.html
http://books.google.com/books?id=kO...wAA#v=onepage&q=nancy and hazel frome&f=false
 
Great new piece on this case:

http://www.contracostatimes.com/ci_22950077/berkeley-look-back-city-shocked-by-sensational-double

Berkeley, A Look Back: City shocked by sensational double murder
By Steven Finacom
Berkeley Historical Society

POSTED: 04/04/2013 10:07:57 AM PDT0 COMMENTS| UPDATED: 12 MONTHS AGO

Seventy-five years ago the April 4, 1938, Berkeley Daily Gazette was full of news about a double murder that occurred halfway across the country but directly touched Berkeley.

Mrs. Hazel Frome, "prominent Berkeley matron and her attractive daughter," Miss Nancy Frome, had been found dead March 30 near Van Horn, Texas while driving cross-country.

"Mother and daughter were slain by two sadistic highwaymen, according to word from Texas. There was evidence found that possibly the two women were cruelly tortured and finally killed by a man while his woman companion looked on. Both Berkeleyans had been shot by pistols of different calibers and their belongings, money and car were stolen."

The local district attorney initially theorized that the Fromes suffered a flat tire, another car stopped and its occupants helped change the tire, then pulled a gun on the two women and drove both cars into the brush. There they were killed -- possibly after Miss Frome tried to fight back -- and their attackers drove off with both cars, abandoning the stolen vehicle 50 miles away. "Police officers and scores of cowboys and other citizens who have left everything to join in the search were stirred by the extreme brutality of the crime."

The car itself, a new Packard, had been won by Mr. Frome of 2560 Cedar St. in a raffle and given to his daughter when she graduated from the University of California.

Nancy Frome and her mother were making a sightseeing trip across the country to visit another daughter on the East Coast. They were experienced travelers, having previously driven to Mexico City.

The Frome family had moved to Berkeley in 1932, and both daughters had attended the Anna Head School as well as UC. The bodies were identified, in part, with fingerprints brought from Berkeley. The Frome family had participated in Berkeley's universal fingerprinting campaign a few years before.

Arrests reported in subsequent days apparently proved to be false leads, since this seems to remain an unsolved crime, at least according to recent Internet accounts. Some accounts speculate that the Frome car may have been mistaken for a similar vehicle used to smuggle drugs and the damaged tire and apparent torture indicate that someone had assumed the two women were transporting hidden drugs.
 
I'm currently reading "Fetch the Devil" about the Frome murders. The autopsy descriptions are quite graphic and disturbing. I'm not halfway through yet but it sure seems that there are already a couple of suspects from El Paso I would be interested to know about. Are there any police files that have been released about this case? Other than what is in the book?
 
Weston Frome was not interested in helping Sheriff Fox look into the murders of his wife and daughter. Also, the main files on this case have been either lost or destroyed. Does anyone have other thoughts on how to go about researching this case? I'm not sure that I buy into the Nazi espionage angle but definitely feel Weston knew more than he was willing to share.
 
This guy is a good suspect but apparently LE couldn't connect him conclusively to the Frome killings.

John Deering - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For a school project we go assigned this Cold Case. The suspects we have received are Dr. Ebell Wolfgang who was a doctor at a hotel they stayed at but was also a spy for Hitler at the time. He also drove the vehicle described when chasing the victims. Jim Milam who was the finder of the bodies adnt the witness of the Road Rage incident. Romano Trotsky who was at the club the two females were at the day before the murder. Pancho Flores & Manuel Garcia who were Cattle Rancher in the area. Adelonda who was a German Showgirl who had an affair with the Father/Husband, however he cut off paments of a blackmail. The last one was Allie Gillespie who the two females seen for a fortune teller. She described what the two females were wearing when it was not released to the public.

Ebell's firearm cartridge was on the scene which was a German Luger, his bullet was also found there. However there is anoter bullet there which is too damaged to identify and the other cartridge was nowhere to be found.

Footprints there were only 2 differnt footprints of suspects, Ebells and Jims as well as one of the Cattle Ranchers horse.

There were no fingerprints to suspects as well as blood.

There were cigarettes of the two cattle ranchers found by the bodies.

Tire Impressions there were Ebells vehicle and Jim Milams Delivery Truck

Since hair is not credible I will not bother going over that unless requested
 
For a school project we go assigned this Cold Case. The suspects we have received are Dr. Ebell Wolfgang who was a doctor at a hotel they stayed at but was also a spy for Hitler at the time. He also drove the vehicle described when chasing the victims. Jim Milam who was the finder of the bodies adnt the witness of the Road Rage incident. Romano Trotsky who was at the club the two females were at the day before the murder. Pancho Flores & Manuel Garcia who were Cattle Rancher in the area. Adelonda who was a German Showgirl who had an affair with the Father/Husband, however he cut off paments of a blackmail. The last one was Allie Gillespie who the two females seen for a fortune teller. She described what the two females were wearing when it was not released to the public.

Ebell's firearm cartridge was on the scene which was a German Luger, his bullet was also found there. However there is anoter bullet there which is too damaged to identify and the other cartridge was nowhere to be found.

So, if the cartridge was found at the scene, did it match the wounds in the victims? And has your class connected any evidence?

I saw this cold case assignment available online. I think you get a mock crime scene, too? How do you like it?
 

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