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A new theory gaining ground about the notorious 1930s Lindbergh kidnapping suggests aviator Charles Lindbergh volunteered his child for medical research and staged the crime to cover up the baby's ...
Norman Schwarzkopf, willingly ceded major responsibility for the investigation to Charles Lindbergh. But running a kidnapping investigation was no job for an amateur. Lindbergh's inexperience ...
WASHINGTON, Sept. 21, 1934 (UP) - If the United States hadn't gone off the gold standard, the Lindbergh ransom mystery might have remained unsolved. Suspect charged with murder of kidnaped ...
WASHINGTON, Sept. 21, 1934 (UP) - If the United States hadn't gone off the gold standard, the Lindbergh ransom mystery might have remained unsolved. Suspect charged with murder of kidnaped ...
On June 17, 1932, Congress passed the Lindbergh Law making kidnapping across state lines a Federal felony. This act pitted the U. S. Government directly against the virulent “snatch” racket ...
In 1932, after the toddler son of pioneering aviator Charles Lindbergh was snatched from his crib at his parents’ Hopewell, New Jersey, home, the media coverage of the crime quickly became nothing ...
Lindbergh, III. His 1932 kidnapping and murder would forever alter her life. Much time during the early years of the Anne Morrow Lindbergh's marriage to Charles Lindbergh was spent flying.