Does this podcast guy have any documentation, evidence or links to back up his claims about what witnesses and neighbors did and said?
People who have reviewed police files extensively, including a man who recently researched and wrote a book about the case, found none of the claims about neighbors interfering with the crime scene, etc.
According to police files, per the book "A Kitchen Painted in Blood", police extensively used scent dogs to track Mrs. Risch. They tracked her scent near to the end of her driveway, where it ended, indicating she probably was put into a car and driven away. Extensive searching with the same scent dogs at the locations where witnesses claimed to have seen Mrs. Risch walking along roads and highways turned up no scent from her. They also used the scent dogs to check behind her house, around the yard and up and down the roads near the Risch's home with no results.
It would also be helpful to see some documentation of lab tests showing that the blood found in the Risch home was menstrual blood.
TIA
Also, hairs pulled from a man's head is another indicator of a struggle by the victim, along with the rest of the evidence at the crime scene.
JMO, but the old rumors and falsehoods about abortions and planned escapes, etc. remind me of the old, sexist attitudes about women back then.
Michael C Bouchard is one of the authors who had access to the police files on the case and wrote a book about it. As commenter Watson3379 wrote on this thread on 12 May 2021:
"I've recently written a book about Joan's disappearance, but I don't think that Websleuths is the place for pushing book sales. So, I'll just say that there are three recent books written about Joan's case: Jessi Gomes,
The Disappearance of Joan Risch;
Masquerade: The Joan Risch Cold Case - A Cops Perspective by Michael C. Bouchard; and
A Kitchen Painted in Blood: The Unsolved Disappearance of Joan Risch by Stephen H. Ahern. Two or more of these books were written after the Middlesex DA made the investigative file available."
Bouchard and Ahern drew very different conclusions. The former believes the "abduction" was staged, whereas the latter, in his comment as Watson 3379, says " I wasn't convinced that Joan engineered her own disappearance." Unfortunately I haven't read either book. Also, as I'm in the UK, not the US, I wouldn't know how to get access to the investigative file and at 5,000+ pages I'm not sure I want to! Life's too short.
With ref to the neighbours "tampering" with the crime scene, Ahern does confirm that Barbara Barker moved the table as I discovered on the Google Books preview (p 13):
"Finally, with a great deal of hesitation, jane [Butler] and Barbara moved the table that was, apparently, tossed into the hallway near the cellar door, and with great trepidation they went downstairs into the cellar, looking for Joan."
On October 24, 1961, Massachusetts wife and mother Joan Risch vanished seemingly into thin air. Even with her children home and neighbors nearby, Joan disappeared from her upscale suburban house, never to be heard from again. The search that followed was one of the most intensive investigations...
books.google.co.uk
Bouchard is a Dragnet sort of cop - "Just the facts ma'am" - and seems unconcerned with motives or psychological analyses. His conclusions seem to be heavily based on his examination of the photos of the blood splatter which he thinks are "artificial". But I have to agree with Ahern that it seems unlikely that Joan just disappeared to start a new life and swan off leaving her kids to discover the bloody scene. My own thoughts are similar to the police theory as detailed below.
From the Boston Globe October 29 1961:
"Authorities think the kidnapper knew of the house's emptiness during the day and might have secreted himself in the garage last week to watch Mrs. Risch. He returned Monday to continue his surveillance.
They theorized the man left the garage, stole across the lawn and over a scrub brush fence onto the Risch property. Then he hid behind the Risch car, parked on the drive, where Mrs. Risch, who was gardening in the back yard, came upon him. The man lashed out, police believe, striking her in the face, probably on the nose, stunning her and causing blood to flow. She reeled across the car trunk, leaving on it a bloodstain the size of a silver dollar, and onto the right rear fender guard, where more bloodstains were found.
If she made any outcry, it was probable that the heavy tree cover nearby muffled her scream. According to the new police theory, Mrs. Risch ran into the kitchen through backdoor, and reached the wall telephone. As she started to dial (accounting for more blood traces in the finger holes and on the phone handle) her assailant came into the room and pulled the cord from the wall He struck her again and knocked her to the floor. This time she lost consciousness.
Police said it would have been easy for the attacker to have wrapped her in a gray charcoal topcoat and carry her through the woods onto Virginia rd. Or, he could have driven his own car into the Risch driveway and carried her out. The latter would substantiate the story of 14-year-old neighbor, Ginnie Keane. Ginnie reported seeing an old blue car in back of Mrs. Risch's in the driveway when she returned home from school at 3:30 p.m."
Get this The Boston Globe page for free from Sunday, October 29, 1961 THE BOSTON SUNDAY GLOBE-OCTOBER 29, 1961 Fifty-Nine Officials Have Their Work Cut Out in Lincoln RIS.... Edition of The Boston Globe
www.newspapers.com
The question is whether Joan was physically forced to go, "persuaded" via a threat to her kids or some such, or went voluntarily - with a (violent) lover perhaps - after which something bad may have happened to her. On the other hand perhaps the "kidnapper" did the "staging". Hard to believe that Joan never got in touch with her family again.
I am very sceptical about the Route 128 sightings, especially the first one (3.15-3.30 pm). If Joan left by the car that was seen in her drive the timings simply don't work. Why, if a dazed woman was walking on the median strip of a busy highway with bloody legs didn't anyone else report seeing her, or indeed contact the cops at the time? Of course they would have had to wait until they could make a phone call but not only would the woman have been in obvious need of help but she could have likely caused a serious accident if she wandered onto the road. As Watson3379 put it in another comment (20 May 2021):
"The other two sightings occurred later and both were on Route 128, one of the busiest highways in New England. One, in fact, was in the median strip of the highway, six miles away from Joan’s home. I’m much more suspicious of those two sightings. I, personally, wouldn’t want to try to cross 128 at any time."
The woman who made the sighting, Eleanor Leary (spelling? - I heard the name on a podcast) was the wife of an FBI agent. From the Boston Globe article quoted from above:
"State Police Det Joseph Ryan and Lincoln Sgt Daniel McInnes led a search of heavy woodlands off Rte. 128 near the Cambridge Reservoir yesterday without success. It stemmed from a report of a Quincy FBI agent's wife that she saw a bleeding woman wandering in a dazed condition Tuesday along the Rte. 128 median between the Lincoln and Trapelo rd. cut-offs. The woman said the person was wearing a charcoal gray coat, but she didn't connect her with the missing wife because early reports stated Mrs. Risch was wearing a tan trench coat. Search to Resume Investigators determined Friday that only a charcoal gray coat was missing."
The mystery car seen on Joan's drive was apparently located but provided no clues, according to Watson3379 on 22 May 2021:
"State Detective Lieutenant George Harnois, who led the Risch investigation in 1961, was quoted in a (@) December 10, 1961 Boston Globe article saying that the police had found the car that had been at the end of Joan's driveway on October 24th. Unfortunately, they didn't find any worthwhile forensic evidence from the car.
Interestingly, the car had been stolen from a Medford MA man, although the date of the theft was not provided. Five witnesses had previously told police that they had seen the car in the Risch driveway on October 24th. The Risch's regular milkman (1 of the 5) said that he had seen the same car in the Risch driveway on October 19, 1961, but that none of the Risch cars were in the driveway at the time (garage?).
Another witness actually gave the police a partial license plate for the mystery car. They used it to eventually find the car after weeks of searching. I think it's interesting that the witness who provided the partial number, gave it to a Boston Record American reporter, who, in turn, gave it to the police. As far as I can tell, the identity of that particular eyewitness never surfaced in the investigation (although I'd need to doublecheck that)."
I don't give any real credence to the abortion theory. If Joan wanted to have one, which seems unlikely from what we know about her, I can't believe it would have happened at her house when anyone could have turned up and her kid was upstairs. The dentist theory also seems ludicrous - why take her daughter with her for a start?
Who knows why Martin Risch changed his mind and said that he thought Joan was still alive? Did he hear from her or from someone who told him what had happened? Was it because he was tired of all the publicity and decided that if he said he thought she was alive the press would stop pestering him? Was he convinced by DA John Droney who came himself to believe the amnesia theory?
I still question the timeline provided in the 3 January 1962 Boston Record American article.
According to that Joan walked Lillian and Douglas across the street at 1.55 pm without telling Barbara. But according to Barbara's first statement to the police:
"My four year old son Douglas went over to the Rlsch home to play with Lillian. When Doug came back he said that they played outside. Joan was cutting the grass in the back. That afternoon her four old daughter came over after saying that she had permission from her mother to come to my
house."
There are always inconsistencies and contradiction within and between witness reports and so it is important not to take any one account or timetable as definitive or set in stone.
I came across this case and the 'clue of the library books' quite some time ago. Having worked in libraries, I investigated the theory for myself. I kept my notes, so may as well share them here:
Firstly, the family borrowed books from the Lincoln Library on one family card (as stated in the Boston Globe). So, for all we know, these could have included her husbands books. We know she had a strong interest in 'serious' literature, however she likely had little time to read while caring for small children.
The Lincoln library was, still is, a local library, serving a suburban/rural area. It would stock books that would appeal to general interests. The books would be shelved and catalogued according to genre, typically including romance, westerns, mysteries, best sellers, fiction, non-fiction.
The modern True Crime genre didn't yet exist - Truman Capote's shocker In Cold Blood was published in 1965. Murder in movies was abstract - the bloody realism of Bonnie and Clyde came in 1967.
Pre-computers, there would be no way for someone to research 'mystery woman disappeared' etc. You could only browse the shelves.
Most importantly, IMO, the descriptions of the plot of the books, written in the Globe newspaper article after her disappearance, are laughably distorted to fit the theory that she was researching how to disappear. Note: I have checked all the book titles against the Library of Congress, which has publisher data about every book ever published in the US.
For example, the first one in the Globe article: "The Legacy - a novel about a boy who leaves a military academy and hides in the woods." The only book by that name published before 1961 in the US is the 1950 novel by Neville Shute, now known as 'A Town Called Alice', but initially published by a different title in the US. It's about a woman who was a prisoner of war during WWII.
Then we have, in sequence of the borrowing:
- The Hollow (1946) an Agatha Christie novel
- A biography of Mary, Queen of Scots
- The Age of Innocence (1920), a literary novel by Edith Wharton
- The Hunt for Richard Thorpe, a 1960 mystery novel by Jerrard Ticknel, reviewed as a 'thoroughly agreeable diversion,'
Book Reviews, Sites, Romance, Fantasy, Fiction | Kirkus Reviews
- Into Thin Air (1957) one of 80 mystery novels written by Harry Carmichael, and part of a series about a pair of unlikely detectives.
- The Third Rose, a biography of famous literary influencer Gertrude Stein.
- The Hollow - Agatha Christie again
- Gifts of Passage (1961), a literary memoir by Samantha Ramu Rau
- Run Rabbit Run (1960) by John Updike. An 'important' American literary novel about male angst.
- Breathe of Air (1951), a British literary novel by Rumer Godden, retelling Shakespeare's The Tempest
- Death of the Heart (1938), by Elizabeth Bowen. An 'important' British literary novel in which a 16 year old girl runs away to try to find love, but doesn't 'disappear'.
- Japanese Inn (1961), by Oliver Statler. A 400 year social history of Japan.
- Mostly Murder (1959), by Sydney Smith. The Globe article states "Autobiography of a leading authority concerning murders and disappearances" but note the author was a British pioneer in 'medical' forensic science ie autopsies.
- Field Guide to Trees
- A Week on the Concord (1849), literary memoir by Henry David Thoreau.
- Shadows on the Grass (1960) by Isaak Dineson. "Fiction with African setting" says the Boston Globe. Actually it is a continuation of Dineson's best-selling memoir 'Out of Africa'.
- Poetry and Experience (1961) by poet Archibald MacLeish. Contrasts 4 major poets: Yeats, Dickinson, Keats and Rimbaud.
- The Screaming Rabbit (1955). Another mystery novel by Harry Carmichael (see Into Thin Air). Where the Boston Globe article describes the plot as "mystery novel in which a man disappears", the plot description I found was "recurrent deaths...take place at the home of Edith Ellerby, an attractive novelist."
Book Reviews, Sites, Romance, Fantasy, Fiction | Kirkus Reviews
- World Enough and Time (1955). Literary novel by Robert Penn Warren, based on a true story of a murder of a politician by a lawyer in 1826.
- The Twenty-Seventh Wife (1961) by best-selling author Irving Wallace. The Boston Globe claims it is a "biography of a wife of Brigham Young who disappears". The original book jacket states: "The story of the last wife of the prophet, who divorced her husband to lead in the fight against the American harem"
- The Proud Possessors (1960) by Sylvia Ashton Warner. About collectors of fine art.
I do think the list gives some insight into who Joan was, but not in the way the sleuths maintain.
Firstly, if you notice the dates of publication, most of these were recently published. Most libraries prominently display recently published books.
Secondly, most of them concern women, either as authors or subjects.
Thirdly, they reflect her interest in 'higher' literature and art. She seems to have been a cultured woman, not into bodice-rippers or spy novels, etc.
She was interested, in a mild way, with mystery novels, probably as light reading. However, she was by no means obsessed. Her primary interest was what some might call 'high' culture.
JMO
I agree with you about the probable irrelevance of the books that Joan borrowed from the library. They probably reflected the stock the library held at that time as much as Joan's own tastes, although the author of 'Into Thin Air' had his own theory.
"One of Britain's most successful mystery authors believes he has solved Joan Risch's mysterious disappearance. He is Leopold Ognall, who lives in Leeds, Yorkshire, and writes under the pseudonyms of Harry Carmichael and Hartley Howard....
"Mrs. Risch is known to have read my thrillers 'Into Thin Air' [aka 'Put Out That Star'] and 'The Screaming Rabbit' [aka 'Death Counts Three'*] the plots of which are uncannily similar to her own disappearance", Ognall said. "At first I was chilled by the link between the mystery and my books. "I spent night after night lying awake, trying to tie the myriad of loose ends together. Whose fingerprints were on the phone? Whose blood was it? Was the woman walking beside the highway Mrs. Risch? And, if so, how does this tie in with the strange car seen backing out of her driveway?...
"Mr. Risch has insisted that his wife is alive," Ognall told me. "I also believe that is true", I believe Mrs. Risch is living alone, incognito somewhere between Boston and New York, or in New York, itself. I believe she a desperately wants to see her children, but is afraid to come into the open.
Why? "She harbors a terrible secret," said Ognall."
* 'The Screaming Rabbit' is summarised on Goodreads as "John Piper visits novelist Edith Ellerby's home on an insurance matter, and while there, he hears gun shots and screaming. Edith tells him that her secretary, Walter Parr, enjoys hunting rabbits. After some time elapsed, it is noted that Parr has disappeared."
Get this The Boston Globe page for free from Sunday, March 1, 1964 i The Boston Sunday Globe-March 1, 1964 59 Author Has Bizarre Theory in Joan Risch Case HARRY CARMIC.... Edition of The Boston Globe
www.newspapers.com
Researching all this I found out that Ognall, as Harry Carmichael, wrote a novel
Flashback based on the Risch case. It has blood spatters on the cover and a dedication "There is only one person to whom this book could be dedicated". From page 4:
"
Flashback is the story of an ordinary family who become involved in a mystery which proves to be complete and inexplicable. Gossip provides many answers but none of them is the right one.
Then John Piper is commissioned to find out what really happened on that October day in the home of the Kilmuir family in a quiet suburban street. Assisted by Quinn of the
Morning Post he goes back in time, step by step, to reveal that the life of Mrs Janet Kilmuir was neither simple nor placid".
See:
flashback : harry carmichael : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
I can only access the first few pages so don't know what Carmichael's "solution" is!
It would also be interesting to know the provenance of the card that Michael C Bouchard has uploaded on Pinterest. Maybe he explains it in his book.
It appears to read "Joan Risch Still loves her children Living Sweetie [boy says] I've got a big [?] [girl says] I can't She does not like him".
Compare to the Nattrass-Schenck "humor" card "Oh you nasty man!" linked by an earlier contributor, digitective, on 12 January this year:
Up for auction is an antique humor print Oh You Nasty Man! from Nattrass-Schenck, Inc. NYC. It measures approximately 10 wide and 7 1/4 high in frame. The imperfections are as follows:Some scuffin
www.worthpoint.com
Frank E Nattrass of Nattrass-Schenck was of course Joan's (supposedly abusive) uncle/adoptive father.
Was the card sent by "crackpot" Stanley Toy: