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  1. On March 16, Condon received a toddler's sleeping suit by mail, and a seventh ransom note. [23] After Lindbergh identified the sleeping suit, Condon placed a new ad in the Home News: "Money is ready. No cops. No secret service. I come alone, like last time." On April 1 Condon received a letter saying it was time for the ransom to be delivered.

  2. Dec 1, 2021 · The somewhat eccentric Dr. Condon had publicly offered himself as a gobetween; promising “to go anywhere, alone, to give the kidnappers the extra money.” 4 The next day, Condon received a letter from the kidnapper directing him “After you gets the money from Mr. Lindbergh put them words in the New York American: money is ready.

  3. At the time of the Lindbergh abduction, Dr. John Francis Condon was a 72 year-old semi-retired educator and resident of the Bronx a New York City borough he dubbed the most beautiful . . . in the world. Dr. Condon was educated at the College of the City of New York and Fordham University. He taught in New York City schools for over forty years ...

  4. The Court: Yes. Mr. Wilentz (Reading to the jury): This envelope is addressed to Dr. John F. Condon, 2974 Decatur Ave., NY. [S-42]. "Dear Sir: If you are willing to act as go-between in Lindbergh case, follow strictly instructions. Handle enclosed letter personally to Mr. Lindbergh.

  5. The attendant, finding the $10 gold certificate suspicious, wrote the man’s license number on the bill. This led the police to Richard Hauptmann, a German born carpenter. A search of Hauptmann’s home uncovered $14,000 of the Lindbergh ransom money, wood identical to that used to make the makeshift ladder, and John Condon’s phone number.

  6. A self-styled civic advocate, Dr. Condon frequently penned letters to the editor of the local newspaper, the Bronx Home News. Deeply troubled by the plight of the Lindberghs, Dr. Condon wrote an open letter to the kidnappers in which he offered to act as an intermediary. His letter was published in the Bronx Home News on March 8, 1932.

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  8. The trial featured America's greatest hero, a good mystery involving ransom notes and voices in dark cemeteries, a crime that is every parent's worst nightmare, and a German-born defendant who fought against U. S. forces in World War I. On the cold, rainy night of March 1, 1932, sometime between 8:00 and 10:00 o'clock, Charles Lindbergh, Jr ...

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