Such an intriguing case!Bumping this 1964 unsolved triple murder case up. It will soon be 60 years old.
Such an intriguing case!
The fact that William Parsons had just been released from prison for providing abortions could very well be related to the murders. And, his sister also worked at the 'chiropractic clinic'. Was someone angry with them for the type of services they provided?
I recently read the book, "Looking for Jane". It's excellent. It's fictional history about motherhood, adoption, unwed mothers' homes and the abortion movement back in the early 1960s (and subsequent). I highly recommend it.
Other possible motives:
- as others mentioned, revenge by the blackmailers from 15 years prior.
- searching medical records (an angry 'partner' of a woman who had an abortion looking for evidence?)
- robbery (drugs?)
- disgruntled family member who either disagrees with the nature of the family business or who is impatiently waiting for an inheritance.
It is possible that he knew the killer or killers and that they were allowed into the house after the dog was put in the basement. Ransacking the house might mean they were searching for something. The sisters might have been killed first as a way to get William Parsons to talk or give up something.
Where was Peter Jacobs at the time of this triple murder?![]()
Peter Jacobs, body builder from a 1947 magazine cover.
Peter Jacobs, 32, of Detroit, Michigan, had been arrested and charged (in January 1949) with extorting money from Dr. William Parsons in 1948 and 1949. The scheme involved forged documents alleging that Dr. Parsons had treated Jacobs' wife with medical procedures or practices which caused her to be hospitalized.
Jacobs was charged in a separate 1949 blackmailing scheme along with three other men:
Robert Markland, 21, of Laurenceburg, Indiana
Ernest Betke, 21, of Fessenden, North Dakota
Eddie Hill, 28, of Detroit, Michigan
In serving arrest warrants on Jacobs, police discovered $20,000 in stolen auto parts at Jacobs' home. Presumably, this led to further legal charges against him.
According to Eddie Hill, Jacobs was the ring leader of the 1949 extortion attempt, and he told police that Jacobs had ordered him (Hill) to beat Dr. Parsons when they got the money from him. Jacobs therefore included physical force and injury in his plans.
In July 1964, Peter Jacobs certainly may have felt that Dr. Parsons had set him up in the past. Might he have been trying, again, to extort money from Parsons? Or might he have been looking for revenge of some sort?
To subdue and suffocate three people, would indicate a person - or persons - of considerable strength.
LINKS:
Clipping from Detroit Free Press - Newspapers.com
more extortion - Newspapers.com
Peter Jacobs was never publicly named by police as a suspect in the Parsons' triple strangulation murders. It isn't even known if they were able to locate and question him in 1964.Where was Peter Jacobs at the time of this triple murder?