Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Jeffrey MacDonald
Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald was convicted in 1979 for the murder of his pregnant wife and two daughters.
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The murders
The murders took place at Fort Bragg, North Carolina in 1970 while MacDonald was a Green Beret Army Captain.
Conviction
MacDonald claimed that on the night of the murders, he was attacked on his living room couch by four intruders who also murdered his family. Despite the massive injuries to the rest of his family, MacDonald himself suffered almost no injuries at all, and said that when washed his hands and checked himself in the bathroom mirror (before making sure that help was on the way), that "there wasn't even a cut or anything." After studying the Article 32 transcripts, his father-in-law, Alfred Kassab, became convinced of his guilt and began a successful campaign to have him brought to trial. A grand jury in North Carolina indicted him in 1975 and after four years he was brought to trial and convicted.
Analysis of the case
Publications
Fatal Vision
A best selling book was written about the case called Fatal Vision by Joe McGinnis . The book is made up almost entirely of direct quotations from trial and grand jury transcripts, the signed statements of witnesses, and Jeffrey MacDonald's own words. In Fatal Vision, the author suggested that MacDonald killed his family in a fit of psychotic rage due to taking amphetamines. Although this was only a theory, there are items of evidence to support it, including but not limited to MacDonald's own admission that he was using amphetemines, and his telling Dr. Sadoff that it was a "weird coincidence" that his brother, Jay, had also suffered a psychotic break with reality after abusing amphetemines.
Fatal Justice
In 1993, another book about the MacDonald case entitled Fatal Justice appeared. The authors claimed that psychiatrists, both military and civilian, had examined MacDonald before the Army's Article 32 hearing in 1970 and said he was sane and normal. However, examination of the facts shows that all of the doctors at Walter Reed Hospital concluded that MacDonald indeed was completely capable of committing these horrific crimes, and only one doctor - who was hired by the defense - disagreed. The authors also told of eyewitnesses who claimed to have seen one of the intruders MacDonald had described. The "Fire Island Four," a group whom MacDonald had previously come in contact with in an innocent way long before the murders, were most likely the persons MacDonald drew upon when making up his descriptions of the so-called "intruders." It was implied that no bloodstains were put on MacDonald's pajama top before it was torn, yet Stombaugh's (FBI) testimony at trial proved that despite MacDonald's story of waking in the hallway after the attack, with his pajama top still wrapped around his wrists, the pajama top was stained with Colette's blood before it was torn.
Potter and Bost also make some mention of gloves found in the apartment, implying that these were worn by "intruders." These gloves were, in fact, oven mitts.
Details
The authors also mentioned that the military police and Criminal Investigation Division (CID) at Fort Bragg had made a few small errors while investigating the case. A second reinvestigation occurred. Despite meticulous investigation, no evidence was found to support MacDonald's account of intruders, and the evidence that was studied by the CID and FBI pointed directly to Jeffrey MacDonald as the sole murderer. As described and proven at trial, during which over 1,100 pieces of evidence were presented, Jeffrey MacDonald himself, without meaning to, admitted that he murdered his family, via his many statements and actions showing consciousness of his own guilt.
MacDonald lost all of his appeals, and the courts ruled that the judge at the original trial, Judge Franklin Dupree, had acted correctly when he refused to let the jury see a transcript of the Army hearing that had originally cleared MacDonald, and, because this was not an insanity trial, had also acted properly in not allowing the jurors to hear any of the psychiatric testimony. Had he done so, the jurors would have learned that all of the doctors at Walter Reed, with the sole exception of Sadoff who was hired by the defense, concluded that MacDonald most certainly could have committed these crimes.
MacDonald had said that one of the intruders was a woman who was carrying a burning candle and chanting "Acid is groovy, kill the pigs". Three candle wax drippings, which were different from one another in chemical composition, were found in the apartment. Colette was known to be fond of burning candles. Some of the wax was found to be consistent with birthday-candle wax; other wax drippings were studied and found to be old and filled with household debris. Helena Stoeckley, a heavy user of drugs whom the defense fastened upon as one of the possible "intruders," confessed and recanted many times, and at one point said that MacDonald himself committed the murders. Most interesting with regard to the wax drippings were that Stoeckley claimed that her candle dripped blood, not wax.
One of the most damaging pieces of evidence against MacDonald was the fact that, despite his story of using his pajama top to fend off frenzied, icepick-and-knife wielding "intruders," the punctures in MacDonald's pajama top were found to be perfectly round, with no tearing, indicating that they were placed in the top while the top was stationary. Moreover, MacDonald claimed that he was wearing his pajama top when he went to sleep and woke to find it still on his body, wrapped around his wrists, yet holes in the pajama top matched holes in Colette's chest. MacDonald also claimed that he had wakened to the sounds of his wife and one daughter screaming, and that at that exact time, he was attacked with a club, ice pick and knife. Yet it was shown at trial that the weapons with which he claimed to have been attacked were, at the same point in time, being against his family in other rooms. Additionally, a bloody hair of Colette's was found entwined with a fiber from MacDonald's pajama top, and another fiber from his pajama top was found under his youngest daughter's fingernail.
MacDonald supporters have claimed that the prosecution illegally "suppressed" evidence in this case, but the courts ruled that no suppression had taken place. Unidentified fingerprints and fibers found in the apartment amounted to nothing, since prints and hair samples of the children were never taken, and since every home has many fibers, hairs and fingerprints that belong to no one and no item in the house. Moreover, Stoeckley's fingerprints and hair samples were obtained, matched to the prints and hairs found in the house, and were found not to match.
MacDonald was convicted in 1979 of the brutal bludgeoning and stabbings of his wife, Colette, and his two small daughters, Kimberly and Kristen. He is currently imprisoned in Maryland.
External link
- The Jeffrey MacDonald Information Site This website presents factual documents pertaining to the case.
- Jeffrey MacDonald This website presents MacDonald's view of the case.
- Crime & Justice / Jeffrey MacDonald This site is an open message board for discussion about the case.
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