The Unfortunate Wives of George Sack
Who is JB Fisher, you ask. He is my writing partner on the new book Portland Into the Vice Age 1934-1953 (please follow that link and support our campaign). He is also a talented writer and researcher with a strong interest in Portland crime during the mid-Twentieth Century, as he proves with this latest post.
I know you will enjoy his writing and want more from him. I'll do my best to bring it to you. Now over to you, JB...
Meanwhile,
evidence had been mounting to connect George to the death of his third wife
Goldie. Witness George Cary described to police how he had been walking along
SE Stark Street around 9:30 pm on Tuesday February 16th. He was on
his way to get stove oil at the Richfield service station on the corner of 162nd
and SE Stark when he noticed a car parked on Stark near Jack and Jill’s. It was
running with its lights on. As Cary walked, he watched a man get out of the car
and walk to the trunk with a slight limp. Raising the trunk, the man was
starting to remove something when a car turned onto the street and headed
toward him. He closed the trunk and returned to the driver’s seat. After the
vehicle passed by, the man got out again and returned to the trunk. Again,
several passing vehicles interrupted his efforts and he returned to the
driver’s seat. Cary walked slowly and watched carefully. On the third attempt,
the man lifted something out of the trunk and brought it to the curb. Cary
couldn’t identify what it was but explained to police that "you could tell
it was something rather heavy the way the man acted when he took it out."
The man disappeared from the curb with whatever it was he was carrying. As
witness Cary walked past the parked vehicle, he noted the license number and
repeated it in his head until he arrived at the service station. He then asked
the station operator to write down 827-107.
Within a few minutes, both Cary and the service station operator watched the
vehicle drive past with “the motor racing.”
I know you will enjoy his writing and want more from him. I'll do my best to bring it to you. Now over to you, JB...
Near the corner of 162nd avenue and SE Stark was
Jack and Jill’s Tavern. The building still stands today (Papa’s Casual Dining)
but the scotch broom bushes that lined the nearby sidewalk in 1954 are long
gone. At about 5 pm on February 18th of that year, Clyde Loughrey
was walking past the tavern to a nearby grocery store when he noticed something
yellow in the tangle of bare scotch broom branches. He took a closer look and
found that it was the body of a woman, covered with a yellow coat. He hurried
to the store and showed the grocer what he had found. Authorities soon arrived
and eventually determined that this was the body of Goldie Sack.
Jack & Jill's Tavern about 1940. Photo courtesy of Roxanne Cummings, VintagePortland.com |
In 1952, Goldie Goodrich had come to Portland from Great
Falls, Montana where she had been a schoolteacher. The 52 year-old Dayton,
Oregon native soon met and married George F. Sack (53). Some years earlier,
Sack himself had settled in Portland and became the owner/manager of the Gordon
Court Apartments on SW Montgomery St.
When Sack went
to the morgue on the 18th to identify his wife’s body after she had
been missing for two days, he was frantic: "That is my wife Goldie. Where did you
find her? Where's her rings, where's her watch, where's her purse? Why don't
you find them?" Immediately, police became suspicious and held Sack at the
station for questioning.
Within a day,
George Sack found himself arrested by police and held on $10,000 bail. Further
suspicions had been raised when residents of the area where the body was found
came forward to report “strange goings-on” during the evening of February 16th
and when two pictures were sent by wirephoto to the Oregonian by the Chicago
Tribune. The pictures dated from 1925 and portrayed George Sack on trial
for the 1924 murder of his second wife Edna, shot in the head while seated in
the back seat of a cab with him during an apparent holdup. Upon seeing the
first photo (a standing portrait), Sack confirmed his identity. However, when a
second photo showed him at the murder trial of his second wife, he quickly
reneged saying “It doesn’t look like me.”
George and Goldie Sack in 1952. The neighbors heard lots of fighting and George Sack's actions brought suspicion on him right away. |
In the 1925
trial, Sack had been defended by famed Chicago lawyer Clarence Darrow who
around the same time was gaining prominence for his work in the Scopes “Monkey”
trial and the Robert “Bobby” Franks murder. Darrow convinced the jury that Sack
may have indeed murdered his second wife but that he suffered from insanity at
the time. He spent a short time in an asylum and then walked free, but a
peculiar aspect of the case was that no police records were found when the Chicago Tribune attempted to locate
these at the request of Oregon authorities in 1954. While officials had little
to work with on that case, they also learned that Sack’s first wife, Julia, had
died under mysterious circumstances when she burned to
death at the couple’s Chicago home in 1923.
Sure
enough, the license plate number matched George Sack’s 1950 Chrysler. That
vehicle had been parked at the Gordon Court Apartments on February 16th,
1954 and Sack explained to officials questioning him on the 18th
that he had not driven the car since the morning of the 16th when he
had driven to Safeway on an errand. Yet there was convincing evidence that he
had driven the car later in the day on the 16th. Several residents
of the apartment complex told police how Sack’s car was parked outside the
furnace room (just below his own apartment) around 6 pm. Witness Vera Craig, a
former manager of the apartment complex who had come to dine with a another
resident, explained how Sack was always kind to park his vehicle away from the
complex so that residents could park there. This was an unusual exception.
Craig further described how she and the friend left the complex around 8 pm and
when they returned at about 9, Sack’s vehicle was no longer parked outside the
furnace room.
Information soon surfaced that two previous wives had met bad ends. In this photo George Sack is on trial for the murder of his second wife in 1925. |
In addition
to testimony about the vehicle, residents were also willing to tell police (and
later the jury) about the status of George and Goldie’s marriage. Maralyn K.
Billie, a former tenant of the apartment complex, reported that she frequently
heard the couple quarreling from her nearby unit. Once during a particularly
heated exchange, she heard Goldie scream “Don’t hit me again!” Several other
tenants told of similar episodes and investigators learned that Goldie had
attempted to file for divorce from George in March 1953. Her efforts were
unsuccessful because, according to the courts, she had not resided in Portland
long enough to separate from her husband.
When George
Sack stood trial for the murder of his third wife in September of 1954,
witnesses testified about seeing the car on the night of February 18th
and many described the troubled relationship between the couple. Much visual
evidence was exhibited including a life size photograph of the deceased
victim’s back showing a large circular shaped bruise. Along side this was a
life-size picture of the trunk of George Sack’s car, showing a spare tire in
shape and curvature identical to the bruise on Goldie’s back. Another image
showed a man confined in the same position in a similar trunk and it was
revealed that one would have to be unconscious to assume such as tight and
awkward position. That Goldie was put in the trunk, that she died of
asphyxiation, and that moderate levels of a “hypnotic depressant drug” that
could induce a deep sleep were found in her body all corroborated with the
visual evidence.
Prosecutors also provided
meticulous details of the numerous savings bonds that Goldie purchased
(sometimes using her maiden name) during the time that she was married to
George Sack. Strikingly, these were cashed by the defendant just days after his
wife’s death. Even though the trial rarely touched on the question of Sack’s
previous two wives, newspaper reports had already revealed that he had profited
from insurance policies taken out by both of them.
Despite his persistent plea of
innocence throughout the trial (and his unsuccessful effort to appeal the case
in the state Supreme Court), George Sack was found guilty of first-degree
murder in the death of Goldie Goodrich Sack and he was sentenced September 30,
1954 to die in the Oregon lethal gas chamber. Slowed up by the appeal process
and still awaiting his decided fate on September 24, 1963, George F. Sack
killed himself in the Oregon penitentiary by looping a shoestring around his
neck and tightening it with a toothbrush. He left a note and here is what it
said:
“Let it be known that I forgive and
forget all my accusers and I ask for the same forgiveness for me. Please bury
me in Salem. Charge burial expenses to my account.”
Years earlier, two funeral services had been held for
Goldie. One was organized and paid for by George Sack in Portland. Organ music
filled the Holman mortuary as George Sack sat alone to hear the pastor,
accompanied in the room only by county police detectives George Minielly and Ed
Fuller. The other service, arranged by her brothers and sisters and attended by
over 120 friends and family members, was held in Macy and Sons Mortuary in
McMinnville. Goldie Rosa Goodrich was interred beside her mother and father in the
family plot at the nearby Yamhill-Carlton Pioneer Memorial cemetery.
--JB Fisher
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