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Life & Events > Relationships > The Strange Case of Mary Mcelroy
 

The Strange Case of Mary Mcelroy


 
Mary McElroy (c. 1907 - January 21, 1940) was an American kidnapping victim. She was the daughter of Henry F. 'Judge' McElroy, City Manager of Kansas City, Missouri. The 1996 Robert Altman film Kansas City was based loosely on the kidnapping.[1]
Kidnapping
Twenty-five-year-old McElroy was kidnapped while taking a bubble bath in her father's home on the evening of May 27, 1933.[2][3] Her abductors were brothers George and Walter McGee, Clarence Click, and Clarence Stevens. Walter McGee, a divorced ex-con from Oregon, was the gang leader. McGee and Stevens donned masks, forced their way into the house with a sawed-off shotgun, and allowed McElroy time to dry herself and get dressed. She apparently did not take them very seriously; when told that $60,000 was going to be demanded in exchange for her release, she joked "I'm worth more than that!"[4]
McElroy was taken to a farmhouse in Shawnee, Kansas owned by Click,[5] where she was chained to a wall in the basement. After demanding the original sum of $60,000, the kidnappers settled for $30,000, which Judge McElroy paid on May 29.[6] Mary McElroy was released unharmed near the Millburn Golf Course[7] after twenty-nine hours in captivity. George McGee and Clarence Click were apprehended some time before June 21.[8][9] Walter McGee was arrested in Amarillo, Texas on June 2 after trying to purchase a car with some of the ransom money.[10][11] Of the original sum, about $9,000 was recovered from McGee's person.[12] About $16,000 of the original ransom was recovered.[13]

Trial


The kidnapping and subsequent trial were a media sensation. The trial took place in Jefferson City. According to reports, McElroy evinced crippling shame and embarrassment when questioned. She related that Walter McGee had ordered her to strip naked before releasing her so that they could be sure she was not smuggling evidence; she refused and they did not force her. She also displayed difficulty in identifying her abductors in court when called to do so.[14] She insisted that she had been well treated and had even been given flowers by Walter before her release.[15] During the trial, McElroy met with relatives of her kidnappers and publicly expressed sympathy for them.[16] She apparently suffered a nervous breakdown on February 10, when she disappeared from her father's home, surfacing a day later in Illinois after sending her father a telegram from Springfield which read: "Sorry but I am so frighteded. I don't know what I'm doing."[17] She was found in Normal and brought back to Missouri where she explained her irrational departure to the authorities: "I felt like a murderer... I wanted to get away. I couldn't stand sitting still."[18]
Because he had masterminded the kidnapping, Walter McGee was given the harshest sentence. On March 30, 1935, his sentence, death by hanging, was announced; had it occurred, McGee would have been the first person to be executed for kidnapping in the United States.[19] After an execution date was set for May 10, Mary McElroy shocked everyone by contesting the penalty. In April 1935, she wrote to Governor Guy Park: "Walter McGee's sentence has hung as heavily over me as over him. Through punishing a guilty man, his victim will be made to suffer equally... In pleading for Walter McGee's life I am pleading for my own peace of mind."[20] McGee was granted a stay of execution by Park on May 7,[21] and his sentence was eventually commuted to life.

Life after the kidnapping


The abduction and the subsequent fallout proved to be extremely traumatic for Mary McElroy, and she suffered several 'nervous collapses' in her years after the case.[22] She remained on good terms with the McGee brothers, visiting them in prison and bringing them gifts. She never married and is known to have been addicted to opium.[23] She lived with her father, Judge McElroy for most of her adult life. His death in 1939 devastated her, and she became increasingly reclusive.[24]
On January 21, 1940, her maid discovered McElroy's body in her bedroom; she had committed suicide, shooting herself in the head with a small pistol. She left a suicide note which read: "My four kidnappers are probably the four people on earth who don't consider me an utter fool. You have your death penalty now - so - please  - give them a chance. Mary."[25] McElroy was 32. At the time of her death, Walter and George McGee (34 and 29 respectively) were still in prison, Clarence Click had been released in 1938, and Clarence Stevens was still at large.[26]
To access references, go to:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_McElroy_(kidnapping_victim)


posted on July 3, 2011 6:42 AM ()

Comments:

This is an interesting story. She looks as if she could have been
beautiful.
comment by elderjane on July 7, 2011 5:52 AM ()
Just thought I would comment on your reply to tealstar- about how strange it is that she was so severely traumatized when she said she was treated well. The abduction was so traumatic because it stripped her of any sense of safety and security and her nakedness violated her sense of self. (If you are not safe in your own home, then where are you safe?) Then, the whole Stockholm Syndrome thing comes into play. She was likely an extremely dependent personality before this happened.
Let me give you a personal example that you might be able to relate to better: my father loved me and treated me kindly, yet he violated me sexually time and again because (he said) he loved me so much. His love for me or mine for him did not lessen the trauma. If anything, it made it worse because we need desperately to believe that people who would do such things are monsters. It removes all boundaries between good and evil.
comment by dragonflyby on July 4, 2011 11:52 AM ()
So extremely valid points. Thank you for your personal experience as a point of reference. I agree. I think she was completely dependent on her father. She quickly formed a dependency on her kidnappers and then sympathized with them, which is certainly typical of the Stockholm Syndrome.
reply by redimpala on July 5, 2011 1:56 PM ()
Too bad psychiatry did not yet understand what happened to her. We barely understood by the time of the Patty Hearst abduction and even today, far too many people refuse mental health treatment- or recognize that they need it. What will it take to remove the stigma? How sad for this poor girl.
comment by dragonflyby on July 4, 2011 11:37 AM ()
She certainly had no help in terms of the traumatic effect it had on her.
reply by redimpala on July 5, 2011 1:54 PM ()
I like to take things in stride. Don't think I would have shot myself. Suck it up, go on, is my motto.
comment by tealstar on July 3, 2011 7:35 PM ()
Strange that it so traumatized her after her saying she was well treated.
reply by redimpala on July 4, 2011 5:24 AM ()
Were you just randomly browsing through the Wikipedia and came across this, or did you have a reason to look it up?
comment by troutbend on July 3, 2011 2:31 PM ()
I was actually thinking of doing a post on the Stockholm Syndrome when I came across this.
reply by redimpala on July 3, 2011 5:38 PM ()
But did the McGees ever get out or did they die in prison?
comment by greatmartin on July 3, 2011 10:04 AM ()
I don't know. I'll see if I can find any info on that.
reply by redimpala on July 3, 2011 5:39 PM ()

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