Leopold and Loeb's Criminal Minds
In 1924, Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb kidnapped and murdered a 14-year-old boy. An outraged nation cried for vengeance, but the famed attorney Clarence Darrow had a trick up his sleeve
- By Simon Baatz
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2008, Subscribe
Nathan Leopold (left) and his lover Richard Loeb confessed that they had kidnapped and murdered Bobby Franks solely for the thrill of the experience. (Underwood & Underwood/ Corbis)
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Crowe boasted to the press that it would be "the most complete case ever presented to a grand or petit jury" and that the defendants would certainly hang. Leopold and Loeb had confessed and shown the police crucial evidence—the typewriter used for the ransom letter—that linked them to the crime.
The trial, Crowe quickly realized, would be a sensation. Nathan Leopold admitted they had murdered Bobby solely for the thrill of the experience. ("A thirst for knowledge is highly commendable, no matter what extreme pain or injury it may inflict upon others," Leopold had told a newspaper reporter. "A 6-year-old-boy is justified in pulling the wings from a fly, if by so doing he learns that without wings the fly is helpless.") The defendants' wealth, their intellectual ability, the high regard within Chicago for their families and the capricious nature of the homicide—everything combined to make the crime one of the most intriguing murders in the history of Cook County.
Crowe also realized that he could turn the case to his own advantage. He was 45 years old, yet already he had had an illustrious career as chief justice of the criminal court and, since 1920, as state's attorney of Cook County. Crowe was a leading figure in the Republican Party with a realistic chance of winning election as Chicago's next mayor. To send Leopold and Loeb to the gallows for their murder of a child would, no doubt, find favor with the public.
Indeed, the public's interest in the trial was driven by more than lurid fascination with the grisly details of the case. Sometime within the past few years the country had experienced a shift in public morality. Women now bobbed their hair, smoked cigarettes, drank gin and wore short skirts; sexuality was everywhere and young people were eagerly taking advantage of their new freedoms. The traditional ideals—centered on work, discipline and self-denial—had been replaced by a culture of self-indulgence. And what single event could better illustrate the dangers of such a transformation than the heinous murder of Bobby Franks? The evangelical preacher Billy Sunday, passing through Chicago on his way to Indiana, warned that the killing could be "traced to the moral miasma which contaminates some of our ‘young intellectuals.' It is now considered fashionable for higher education to scoff at God....Precocious brains, salacious books, infidel minds—all these helped to produce this murder."
But while Crowe could count on the support of an outraged public, he faced a daunting adversary in the courtroom. The families of the confessed murderers had hired Clarence Darrow as defense attorney. By 1894, Darrow had achieved notoriety within Cook County as a clever speaker, an astute lawyer and a champion of the weak and defenseless. One year later, he would become the most famous lawyer in the country, when he successfully defended Socialist labor leader Eugene Debs against conspiracy charges that grew out of a strike against the Pullman Palace Car Company. Crowe could attest firsthand to Darrow's skills. In 1923, Darrow had humiliated him in the corruption trial of Fred Lundin, a prominent Republican politician.
Like Crowe, Darrow knew that he might be able to play the trial of Leopold and Loeb to his advantage. Darrow was passionately opposed to the death penalty; he saw it as a barbaric and vengeful punishment that served no purpose except to satisfy the mob. The trial would provide him with the means to persuade the American public that the death penalty had no place in the modern judicial system.
Darrow's opposition to capital punishment found its greatest source of inspiration in the new scientific disciplines of the early 20th century. "Science and evolution teach us that man is an animal, a little higher than the other orders of animals; that he is governed by the same natural laws that govern the rest of the universe," he wrote in the magazine Everyman in 1915. Darrow saw confirmation of these views in the field of dynamic psychiatry, which emphasized infantile sexuality and unconscious impulses and denied that human actions were freely chosen and rationally arranged. Individuals acted less on the basis of free will and more as a consequence of childhood experiences that found their expression in adult life. How, therefore, Darrow reasoned, could any individual be responsible for his or her actions if they were predetermined?
Endocrinology—the study of the glandular system—was another emerging science that seemed to deny the existence of individual responsibility. Several recent scientific studies had demonstrated that an excess or deficiency of certain hormones produced mental and physical alterations in the afflicted person. Mental illness was closely correlated with physical symptoms that were a consequence of glandular action. Crime, Darrow believed, was a medical problem. The courts, guided by psychiatry, should abandon punishment as futile and in its place should determine the proper course of medical treatment for the prisoner.
Such views were anathema to Crowe. Could any philosophy be more destructive of social harmony than Darrow's? The murder rate in Chicago was higher than ever, yet Darrow would do away with punishment. Crime, Crowe believed, would decline only through the more rigorous application of the law. Criminals were fully responsible for their actions and should be treated as such. The stage was set for an epic courtroom battle.
Still, in terms of legal strategy, the burden fell heaviest on Darrow. How would he plead his clients? He could not plead them innocent, since both had confessed. There had been no indication that the state's attorney had obtained their statements under duress. Would Darrow plead them not guilty by reason of insanity? Here too was a dilemma, since both Leopold and Loeb appeared entirely lucid and coherent. The accepted test of insanity in the Illinois courts was the inability to distinguish right from wrong and, by this criterion, both boys were sane.
On July 21, 1924, the opening day of court, Judge John Caverly indicated that the attorneys for each side could present their motions. Darrow could ask the judge to appoint a special commission to determine if the defendants were insane. The results of an insanity hearing might abrogate the need for a trial; if the commission decided that Leopold and Loeb were insane, Caverly could, on his own initiative, send them to an asylum.
It was also possible that the defense would ask the court to try each defendant separately. Darrow, however, already had expressed his belief that the killing was a consequence of each defendant influencing the other. There was no indication, therefore, that the defense would argue for a severance.
Nor was it likely that Darrow would ask the judge to delay the start of the trial beyond August 4, its assigned date. Caverly's term as chief justice of the criminal court would expire at the end of August. If the defense requested a continuance, the new chief justice, Jacob Hopkins, might assign a different judge to hear the case. But Caverly was one of the more liberal justices on the court; he had never voluntarily sentenced a defendant to death; and it would be foolish for the defense to request a delay that might remove him from the case.
Darrow might also present a motion to remove the case from the Cook County Criminal Court. Almost immediately after the kidnapping, Leopold had driven the rental car across the state line into Indiana. Perhaps Bobby had died outside Illinois and therefore the murder did not fall within the jurisdiction of the Cook County court. But Darrow had already declared that he would not ask for a change of venue and Crowe, in any case, could still charge Leopold and Loeb with kidnapping, a capital offense in Illinois, and hope to obtain a hanging verdict.
Darrow chose none of these options. Nine years earlier, in an otherwise obscure case, Darrow had pleaded Russell Pethick guilty of the murder of a 27-year-old housewife and her infant son but had asked the court to mitigate the punishment on account of the defendant's mental illness. Now he would attempt the same strategy in the defense of Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb. His clients were guilty of murdering Bobby Franks, he told Caverly. Nevertheless he wished the judge to consider three mitigating factors in determining their punishment: their age, their guilty plea and their mental condition.
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Related topics: American History Crime 20th Century 1920s
Additional Sources
Life Plus 99 Years by Nathan F. Leopold Jr., Doubleday, 1958









Comments (19)
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This is great story thanks for telling about this leopold and loeb story.
Posted by jennifer on May 7,2013 | 08:08 PM
Was there ever an examination of Nathan Leopold's brain after his death?
Posted by ALICE GAYNER on March 21,2013 | 09:07 PM
Good story but I'm afraid some of your information may be misleading or downright wrong, in particular, your notation of who was actually driving the car when Bobby Franks was picked up and subsequently murdered. This is important in determining who actually wielded the fatal blow, as the driver of the car likely would not be in a position to do so. Check your facts, please: according to court transcripts (and this is reflected in Wikipedia) there is a credible eyewitness account of seeing the car being driven by Loeb, not Leopold, shortly before Bobby Franks was abducted.And this clearly indicates who was the murderer and who the accomplice, which is kind of a big deal, methinks... ;)
Posted by Shelley Medjesky on April 29,2012 | 05:39 PM
hi this was a very bad crime
Posted by micheal jacksan on April 27,2012 | 06:36 PM
Clarence Darrow was brilliant why? Because he convinced a judge who opposed the death penalty not to impose it? Because he chose to limit the case to the sentencing portion before a liberal judge instead of trying it before an inflamed jury? This is hagiography, not biography.
Posted by Todd Adams on December 9,2011 | 07:49 PM
My father, Luther Tatge, was a lawyer in Chicago during the 1920s and 1930s. Before he died in 1942, he used to tell me stories about Leopold and Loeb, in particular, one where Leopold and Loeb typed the ransom note and threw the typewriter off the bridge into the water that separates Jackson Park inner harbor and outer harbor. It was recovered and used as evidence to convict Leopold and Loeb.
Posted by Bob Tatge on October 1,2011 | 10:52 PM
You all miss the point of Baatz's book. He is not interested in what happened after Leopold was released from prison. If you want that part of the story read Hal Higdon's book, get hold of Leopold's (revoltingly boring) book.
As for the Franks family, they gave me the impression, from the extensive reading I have done of this case, that they did not want to talk to anyone. Perhaps at some future date a member of the Franks family will write about his or her family and what they felt at the time. Until that happens I believe the family will remain in seclusion. they may never forget about Bobby, and probably will never forgive "Dickie" and "Babe."
Posted by andy grossman on June 30,2011 | 07:08 AM
Nothing is ever said or written about the Frank's family. What their thoughts and feelings were in the years that followed this horrendous crime. Could you imagine what it must have been like to get on the witness stand and be questioned in regard to your son's death and see the two murderers sitting there in front of you. It's hard to fathom.
Posted by Bill Sieg on June 26,2009 | 05:12 PM
Leopold wrote his own book after his release. Baatz cites it in his own writing. This article is a truncated version of "For the Thrill of It". If you care to, it is a very good read.
Posted by elle dio on February 25,2009 | 11:50 AM
Exactly how can an author quote a conversation no one heard except Bobby Franks, Loeb and Leopold? The defendants told the story differently. The author also assumes that all the facts are known, whereas much was in dispute. What alway interested me most was that Clarence Darrow believed the death penalty would be gone in his lifetime. With 130 freed by DNA evidence already, the death penalty continues to be imposed at an increasing rate, and our recently elected president believes in the death penalty even for non-murderers. This is an interesting article and very timely, even if it is slightly imaginative.
Posted by Jack Huntingdon on January 22,2009 | 06:28 PM
The rest of the story is missing. Simon Baatz needs to tell the rest of the story about Nathan Leopold's release on probation and the Church of the Brethren's role in the release and his public and church service in Puerto Rico. There is a time span from 1958 to 1971 during which Leopoid did work to try to keep others from thinking the way he did at the time of the murder. I had met students from Juniata College that spent time with him in Puerto Rico. Dr.Vice'ns- Rodriguez maybe able to help Simon out with the rest of the story. Repentance and attempts to repair the wrongs he he had done as a youth. Had he been put to death for his crime who would have benefitted from his efforts to redeem himself if that is possible.
Posted by William Wehr on October 5,2008 | 07:48 PM
Thanks for a fascinating article! It is history that, after establishing himself in Puerto Rico, Nathan Leopold moved to the coffee-growing region of Puerto Rico, specifically to Castañer, then a very small hamlet where, many years ago, the Church of the Brethen established a hospital that served that community and still does. Leopold was instrumental in establishing and/or improving the clinical laboratory of the Castañer Hospital, where his memory still remains. Of importance as well is that he donated his body, for the benefit of many, to the University of Puerto Rico School of Medicine Department of Anatomy, assisting young medical students in their first year of learning. It is up to history to connect Leopold's last will to his teen years' experience and discover the true value of a man's repentance and determination for repair.
Posted by Dr. Rafael E. Vicéns-Rodríguez on September 7,2008 | 09:37 AM
The Death penalty ends the criminal's life and removes any possiblity of contrition or act of remorse. Imprisonment is an hour by hour reminder of an atrocity the he may have commited. Mental torture is far worse than death. The criminal must relive his act against society and humanity every waking moment. The judge in this case, must have intellectualized the situation and also as a moral responsibility to himself when he came to his conclusion in sentensing both men. While teen agers are not fully developed mentally they are still very adept in creative thinking and cannot be excused for misconductof any kind. I am almost 90 and my conscience makes it impossible for me to hurt or kill anything of anyone.
Posted by Leo Nebel on September 1,2008 | 12:41 PM
The article was absolutely fascinating. I cannot fathom committing such a horrible act for the sole purpose of the experience of power. Wealth was certainly a determining factor. Having Clarence Darrow as their defense attorney certainly changed the dynamics. Would the judge been as willing to sentence to life in prison as opposed to the death penalty if Darrow had not presented such an enlightened defense.
Posted by Antonina Munz on August 27,2008 | 12:28 PM
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