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{{Short description|New York judge who disappeared in 1930}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2012}}
{{Use American English|date=August 2023}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}
{{Infobox person {{Infobox person
|name=Joseph Force Crater |name=Joseph Force Crater
|image=JudgeCrater.jpg |image=JudgeCrater.jpg
|birth_date={{Birth date|1889|1|5}} |birth_date={{Birth date|1889|01|5}}
|birth_place=], United States |birth_place=], U.S.
|disappeared_date={{Disappeared date and age|1930|8|6|1889|1|5}} |disappeared_date={{Disappeared date and age|1930|08|06|1889|01|05}}
|disappeared_place=New York, New York, United States |disappeared_place=], New York, U.S.
|disappeared_status=Declared ]<br />{{Death date|1939|6|6}} |disappeared_status=]<br />{{Death date|1939|6|6}}
|citizenship=American
|known_for=Unexplained disappearance |known_for=Unexplained disappearance
|alma_mater=]<br />] |alma_mater={{ubl|]|]}}
|occupation=] of the ] |occupation=Justice of ] for ]
|spouse=Stella Mance Wheeler
}} }}


'''Joseph Force Crater'''<ref name="flashbak/PA-8536330">{{cite web |title=PA-8536330.jpg |url=https://flashbak.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/PA-8536330.jpg |website=flashbak.com |access-date=April 6, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210712025959if_/https://flashbak.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/PA-8536330.jpg |archive-date=July 12, 2021}}</ref> (January 5, 1889 – disappeared August 6, 1930; ] June 6, 1939) was an American lawyer who served as a ] Justice and mysteriously vanished shortly after the state began an investigation into corruption in ]. Despite massive publicity, the ]s case was never solved and was officially closed forty years after Crater was declared dead.
'''Joseph Force Crater''' (January 5, 1889 – after August 6, 1930) was a judge in New York City who disappeared on the night of August 6, 1930. He was last seen leaving a restaurant on 45th Street. He had stated earlier that he was planning to attend a Broadway show. His disappearance became one of the most famous in ] and ], and earned him the title of "The Missingest Man in New York".


==Early life and legal career== ==Early life and education==
Crater was born on January 5, 1889, in ], the eldest of four children born to Frank Ellsworth Crater and the former Leila Virginia Montague.<ref>records of the members of the First Methodist Church, Easton, PA</ref><ref>]</ref><ref>] in the ]; ]</ref><ref>Harold Leslie Crater, Jr., ''The descendents of Moritz Creeter (1703–1772), who arrived at the Port of Philadelphia on the ship Mortonhouse on August 19, 1729'' (privately published, 2003), p. 160.</ref> He was ] at ] (Class of 1910) and ]. Joseph Crater was born in ], the eldest of four children of the former Leila Virginia Montague and Frank Ellsworth Crater, a produce market operator<ref name="Pabook">{{cite web |last1=Warren |first1=Alexandra |title=Joseph Force Crater |url=https://www.pabook.libraries.psu.edu/literary-cultural-heritage-map-pa/bios/Crater__Joseph |website=] |access-date=April 6, 2023 |date=Spring 2010}}</ref> and orchard owner.<ref>records of the members of the First Methodist Church, Easton, Pennsylvania</ref><ref></ref><ref> in the ]; ]</ref><ref>Harold Leslie Crater, Jr., ''The descendents of Moritz Creeter (1703–1772), who arrived at the Port of Philadelphia on the ship Mortonhouse on August 19, 1729'' (privately published, 2003), p. 160.</ref> Both parents had immigrated from Ireland.<ref name="nypress/missingest"/> Crater was educated at ] (class of 1910) and ], where he was a member of the ] fraternity.<ref>''The Sigma Chi Quarterly: The Official Organ of the Sigma Chi Fraternity'', Volume 26, p. 122</ref> During his time at Columbia, he met Stella Mance Wheeler,<ref name="TOM MEEHAN 1960">{{cite news |last1=Meehan |first1=Tom |title=Case No. 13595; It's thirty years later, there's plenty of data -- but still no Judge Crater |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1960/08/07/archives/case-no-13595-its-thirty-years-later-theres-plenty-of-data-but.html |work=] |date=August 7, 1960}}
</ref><ref name="flashbak/john-crater-august-6-1930">{{cite web |title=Judge John Crater: On August 6 1930 Supreme Court judge became The Missingest Man in New York |url=https://flashbak.com/judge-john-crater-on-august-6-1930-supreme-court-judge-became-the-missingest-man-in-new-york-11458/ |website=Flashbak |access-date=April 6, 2023 |date=August 6, 2013}}</ref> who was at the time married, and helped her get a divorce. They married seven days after her divorce was finalized, in spring 1917.<ref name="TOM MEEHAN 1960"/><ref name="Pabook" />


==Career==
He was an ] of the ] for New York County.<ref name="supreme court">In New York, the “Supreme Court” is a trial-level court, not the state's highest court. The highest court in New York is the ], whose members are titled “Judge” instead of “Justice”.</ref> He had been appointed to the state bench by ] ] just four months before disappearing on August 6, 1930. He issued two published opinions; the first, Rotkowitz v. Sonn, involved fraudulent conveyances and mortgage foreclosure fraud<ref> 239 N.Y.S. 639, N.Y.Sup., February 8, 1930</ref>. The second, Henderson v. Park Central Motors Service, dealt with a garage company's liability for an expensive car stolen and wrecked by an ex-convict<ref>244 N.Y.S. 409, N.Y.Sup., July 11, 1930</ref>.
Crater opened an office at the ] in ], joined ] district leader ]{{'}}s Cayuga Democratic Club, and spent time<!-- thousands of hours --> organizing election workers and representing the club in election law cases.<ref name="nypress/missingest">{{cite web |title=The Missingest Man in New York |url=https://www.nypress.com/news/the-missingest-man-in-new-york-LBNP1020020625306259995 |website=] |date=February 16, 2015 |access-date=April 6, 2023}}</ref>

Four months before his disappearance, on April 8, 1930, ], then ], appointed Crater as Justice of the ] for ],<ref name="nypress/missingest"/> which is a ], despite the designation "supreme" (]'s ] is the ]). He issued two published opinions: ''Rotkowitz v. Sohn'', February 8, 1930<ref>{{cite web |url = https://casetext.com/case/rotkowitz-v-sohn |title = ROTKOWITZ v. SOHN, 136 Misc. 265 &#124; Casetext }}</ref> involving ]s and ];<ref>239 N.Y.S. 639, N.Y.Sup., February 8, 1930.</ref> and ''Henderson v. Park Central Motors Service'', July 11, 1930<ref>{{cite web |url = https://casetext.com/case/henderson-v-park-central-motors-service |title = Henderson v. Park Central Motors Service, 138 Misc. 183 &#124; Casetext }}</ref> dealing with a garage company's liability for an expensive car stolen and wrecked by an ex-convict.<ref>244 N.Y.S. 409, N.Y.Sup., July 11, 1930.</ref>

Attention was later drawn to Crater's liquidating investments worth $16,000 and withdrawing $7,000 from his bank account that spring (together equivalent to about US ${{Inflation|US|23000|1930|r=-1|fmt=c}} in {{Inflation-year|US}}), a possible pay-off for his judgeship. He had also given the congratulatory speech at the dinner celebrating George Ewald's judgeship in 1927; accusations of Tammany Hall corruption in that appointment were an initial impetus in the opening of what would become the ] in mid-1930.<ref name=Mass/>


==Disappearance== ==Disappearance==
Crater and his wife were vacationing at their summer cabin in ], in the summer of 1930, shortly after the anti-corruption inquiry began. In late July, Crater received a telephone call. He told his wife nothing about the call other than to say that he had to return to ] "to straighten those fellows out".<ref name=Mass/> The next day, he arrived at his apartment at 40 ] in ], but instead of dealing with business, he went to ], with showgirl Sally Lou Ritz.<ref>{{cite book |last = Gibson |first = John Winslow |title = Judge Crater, the Missingest Person: How He Disappeared and Why They Couldn't Find Him |publisher = Dog Ear Publishing |year = 2010 |page = 30 |location = Indianapolis, Indiana |isbn = 978-1-60844-712-1 }}</ref>
===Receiving a phone call while on vacation===
In the summer of 1930, Judge Crater and his wife, Stella Mance Wheeler, were vacationing at their summer cabin at ]. In late July, he received a telephone call. He offered no information to his wife about the content of the call, other than to say that he had to return to the city "to straighten those fellows out".


The next day, he arrived at his 40 ] apartment but instead of dealing with business, he made a trip to ] with his mistress, a ] named Sally Lou Ritz. He returned to Maine on August 1, and traveled back to New York on August 3. Before making this final trip, he promised his wife he would return by her birthday, on August 9. Crater's wife stated that he was in good spirits and behaving normally when he departed for New York City. On the morning of August 6, Crater spent two hours going through his files in his courthouse chambers. He then had his assistant, Joseph Mara, cash two checks for him that amounted to US$ $5,150 (equivalent to about ${{formatnum:{{Inflation|US|5150|1930|r=0}}}} in today's funds{{inflation-fn|US}}). At noon, he and Mara carried two locked briefcases to his apartment and he let Mara take the rest of the day off. Crater returned to Maine on August 1, then traveled back to New York City on August 3, promising his wife that he would return by her birthday on August 9. She stated that he was in good spirits and behaving normally when he left. On the morning of August 6, Crater spent two hours going through his files in his chambers, reportedly destroying several documents. He then had law clerk Joseph Mara cash two checks for him that amounted to US $5,150 (equivalent to about ${{Inflation|US|5150|1930|r=-1|fmt=c}} in {{Inflation-year|US}}). At noon, Crater and Mara carried two locked briefcases to Crater's apartment, where Crater told Mara to take the rest of the day off.<ref name="New York Times">{{cite news |title = Aide denies Crater destroyed papers; hunt is pressed |work = The New York Times |date = September 5, 1930 |page = 1 }}</ref>


That evening, Crater went to a Broadway ticket agency run by friend Joseph Gransky and reserved one seat for a comedy called ''Dancing Partner''<ref>{{IBDB show|2910|Dancing Partner}}</ref> at the ]; Gransky was surprised because he and Crater had already seen a preview of the show. Crater then ate dinner at Billy Haas's Chophouse at 332 West 45th&nbsp;Street with Ritz and William Klein, a lawyer friend.<ref name=Mass/><ref name="New York Magazine">{{cite magazine |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=5-UCAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA11 |title = Good Night, Judge Crater, Wherever You Are |journal = New York Magazine |date = August 11, 1980 |author = Garrett, Robert |pages = 11–12 }}</ref> Crater's dinner companions gave differing accounts of his departure from the restaurant. Klein initially testified that "the judge got into a taxicab outside the restaurant about 9:30&nbsp;p.m. and drove west on Forty-fifth Street."<ref>{{cite news |url = https://www.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/nyregion/crater-ransom.pdf |title = Ransom of $20,000 Asked for Crater |date = September 16, 1930 |page = 1 |work = The New York Times |access-date = July 22, 2014 }}</ref> This account was initially confirmed by Ritz: "At the sidewalk Judge Crater took a taxicab."<ref>{{cite news |url = https://www.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/nyregion/crater-cuba.pdf |title = Search for Crater Swings to Havana |date = September 24, 1930 |page = 4 |work = The New York Times |access-date = July 22, 2014 }}</ref> Klein and Ritz later changed their story and said that they had entered a taxi outside the restaurant, but Crater had walked down the street.<ref name="CNN Transcripts">{{cite web |url = http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0508/22/ltm.02.html |title = CNN Transcript: Interview with Richard Tofel |date = August 22, 2005 |publisher = CNN |access-date = August 4, 2010 }}</ref>
===A ticket to see ''Dancing Partner''===
Later that evening, Crater went to a Broadway ticket agency and bought one seat for a comedy called ''Dancing Partner'' that was playing that night at the ]. He then went to Billy Haas’s Chophouse at 332 West 45th Street for dinner. There, he ate dinner with Sally Lou Ritz and William Klein, a lawyer friend of Crater<ref name="New York Magazine">{{cite web|url= http://books.google.com.au/books?id=5-UCAAAAMBAJ&lpg=PA11&dq=joseph%20force%20crater&pg=PA10#v=onepage&q&f=true|title=Robert Garrett, "Good Night, Judge Crater, Wherever You Are, August 11, 1980|publisher=CNN|accessdate=March 25, 2012}}</ref>. Klein later told investigators that Crater was in a good mood that evening and gave no indication that anything was bothering him. The dinner ended a little after 9&nbsp;pm, a short time after the curtain rose on the show for which Crater bought a ticket, and the small group went outside.


Crater's disappearance did not elicit any immediate reaction. When he did not return to Maine after ten days, his wife began making calls to their friends in New York, asking whether anyone had seen him. His fellow justices became alarmed when Crater failed to appear for the opening of the courts on August&nbsp;25; they started a private investigation but failed to find any trace of him. The police were notified on September&nbsp;3, and after that the missing judge was front-page news.<ref>{{cite news|department=Times Wide World Photo|date=September 4, 1930|title=Wide Hunt Is Begun for Justice Crater, Missing Four Weeks|work=The New York Times|page=1|id={{ProQuest|112687780}}}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=City to Offer $5,000 in Hunt for Crater; Crain Seeks Inquiry|date=September 11, 1930|work=The New York Times|page=1|id={{ProQuest|11838224}}}}</ref>
===Last known sighting===
Crater's two dinner companions entered a taxi outside the restaurant. Both later testified before a grand jury that they last saw Crater walking down the street (this differs from the popular story that Crater entered a taxi and waved to his companions before speeding away).<ref name="CNN Transcripts">{{cite web|url= http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0508/22/ltm.02.html|title=CNN Transcript: Interview with Richard Tofel, August 22, 2005|publisher=CNN|accessdate=August 4, 2010}}</ref> What happened to him after that remains a mystery. Theories about his disappearance have suggested that he was murdered, that he ran off with another woman, or that he had been involved in corrupt practices which were about to be revealed.{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}}


===Investigation===
==Delayed responses to disappearance==
Detectives discovered that the judge's safe deposit box had been emptied and the two briefcases that Crater and Mara had taken to his apartment were missing. These promising leads were quickly lost amid thousands of false reports from people claiming to have seen the missing judge.<ref name="New York Times"/><ref>{{cite news |title = Federal men scan Crater bank books |work = The New York Times |date = September 6, 1930 |page = 1 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title = Family asks hunt for Judge Crater |work = The New York Times |date = September 7, 1930 |page = 3 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title = Search for Crater near a standstill |work = The New York Times |date = September 8, 1930 |page = 5 }}</ref> A ] convened in October 1930 called 95 witnesses and amassed 975 pages of testimony. Mrs. Crater refused to appear.<ref name=Mass/><ref name="proquest.com">{{cite news |title = Stella Crater Kunz, Once Wed to Judge Who Vanished, Dead |work = The New York Times |date = September 24, 1969 |via = ProQuest }}</ref> The jury concluded that "the evidence is insufficient to warrant any expression of opinion as to whether Crater is alive or dead, or as to whether he has absented himself voluntarily, or is the sufferer from disease in the nature of amnesia, or is the victim of crime."<ref>{{cite web |url = http://www.prairieghosts.com/crater.html |title = What Happened to Judge Crater? |work = Prairie Ghosts |access-date = August 4, 2010 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120204050316/http://www.prairieghosts.com/crater.html |archive-date = February 4, 2012 |url-status = dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last = Cohen |first = Daniel |title = Mysterious Disappearances |location=New York |publisher=Dodd Mead |year=1976 |pages=18–19 }}</ref>
There was no immediate reaction to Judge Crater's disappearance. When he did not return to Maine for 10&nbsp;days, his wife began making calls to their friends in New York, asking if anyone had seen him. Only when he failed to appear for the opening of the courts on August 25 did his fellow justices become alarmed. They started a private search but failed to find any trace. The police were finally notified on September 3 and after that, the missing judge was front-page news.<ref>Times Wide World Photo.. (September 4, 1930). WIDE HUNT IS BEGUN FOR JUSTICE CRATER, MISSING FOUR WEEKS :Drew $5,100 From Banks When Last Seen, Two Days After Tuttle Made Ewald Charges. SECRETLY SOUGHT SINCE Police Take Up the Search as Friends Express Fear He Met Foul Play. TODD TO SIFT EWALD CASE Named by Ward as Taft Asks Broader Inquiry and Socialists Accuse Walker to Roosevelt. Absent From Bench Duties. WIDE HUNT IS BEGUN FOR JUSTICE CRATER Penney Sifting Disappearance. Former Associate Appeals to Police. Reported on Business Trip.. New York Times (1923–Current file),p. 1. Retrieved August 9, 2011, from ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851–2007). (Document ID: 112687780).</ref><ref>CITY TO OFFER $5,000 IN HUNT FOR CRATER; CRAIN SEEKS INQUIRY :Mayor Asks Aldermen to Vote Bonds to Provide Reward for Clue to Missing Justice. HE ACTS AFTER RUMORS Unprecedented Move Is Laid to Hints That Tammany Feared Jurist's Return. CORRIGAN ASKED TO ACT He Doubts Legality of John Doe Hearing Sought by Prosecutor-- Hunt Spreads to Chicago. Mara Admits Cashing Two Checks. Mayor's Action Unprecedented. CITY PLANS REWARD IN HUNT FOR CRATER Legality of Inquiry Doubted. Mara Tells of Checks. Early Return Doubted. CRATER HUNTED IN CHICAGO. Search of Hotels Fails to Reveal Clue to Missing Justice.. (September 11, 1930). New York Times (1923–Current file),p. 1. Retrieved August 9, 2011, from ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851–2007). (Document ID: 11838224</ref>


Crater enjoyed the city's nightlife; he socialized with many showgirls in addition to his long-term mistress Connie Marcus.<ref name=Mass/> Two of these women left town abruptly after his disappearance. Sally Lou Ritz (real name Sarah Ritzi; 1907/1908–2000) had dined with Crater the evening that he vanished and was also rumored to be his mistress; she left New York in August or September 1930.<ref>{{cite web |first=Arielle |last=Lawhon |url=http://www.ariellawhon.com/2015/01/08/case-closed-the-true-story-of-a-happy-ending/ |title=Case closed: The true story of a happy ending |website=ariellawhon.com |date=January 8, 2015 |access-date=August 12, 2023 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url = http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/r/ritz_sally.html |title = Sally Lou Ritz |publisher = The Charley Project |access-date = August 4, 2010 |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100613070713/http://charleyproject.org/cases/r/ritz_sally.html |archive-date = June 13, 2010 }}</ref> She was found in late September 1930 living in ] with her parents; she said that she had left New York because she had received word that her father was ill. She was still being subjected to interviews by police investigating the Crater case in 1937, by which time she was living in ].<ref>{{cite news |title = Mystery to Sally |work = The Daily Times |location = Beaver, Pennsylvania |date = September 25, 1930 |page = 6 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Check on Bodies in Crater Search|date=September 28, 1930|work=Daily Boston Globe|page=B2|id={{ProQuest|1999524842}}}}</ref> June Brice, another showgirl, had been seen talking to Crater the day before he disappeared. A lawyer acting for Crater's wife argued that Brice had been at the center of a scheme to blackmail Crater (the reason for the bank withdrawals on the day of his disappearance) and that a gangster boyfriend of Brice had killed the judge. Brice disappeared the day that a grand jury was to convene on the case. In 1948, she was discovered in a mental hospital.<ref name="nypress/missingest" />
==Nationwide investigation==
The story captivated the nation and a massive investigation was launched.<ref>"Wide Hunt is begun for Justice Crater, missing four weeks," New York Times, Sep, 4, 1930, pg.1</ref> The official investigations started vigorously, but quickly slowed. Detectives discovered that the judge's ] had been emptied and the two briefcases that Crater and his assistant had taken to his apartment were missing. These promising leads were also quickly bogged down by the thousands of false reports coming from people claiming to have seen the missing man.<ref>"Aide denies Crater destroyed papers; hunt is pressed," New York Times, Sep. 5, 1930, p.1</ref><ref>"Federal men scan Crater bank books," New York Times, Sep. 6, 1930, pg. 1</ref><ref>"Family asks hunt for Judge Crater," New York Times, Sep. 7, 1930, p.3</ref><ref>"Search for Crater near a standstill," New York Times, Sep. 8, 1930, p. 5</ref> Crater's wife later found the missing money in a dresser drawer in her home, along with a note from the judge.<ref name="CNN Transcripts" />


Crater's jacket was reportedly found in the apartment of Vivian Gordon.<ref name=Mass>{{cite magazine |first=R. Marc |last=Kantrowitz |url=https://masslawyersweekly.com/2023/04/21/judge-crater-call-your-office/ |title=Judge Crater, call your office |magazine=Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly |date=April 21, 2023 }}</ref> She was involved in high-end prostitution and linked to madam ]. Gordon had liaisons with a large number of influential businessmen and was the owner, on paper at least, of a number of properties believed to be fronts for illegal activity.<ref name="blogs.smithsonianmag.com">{{cite magazine |first=Rachel |last=Shteir |magazine = Smithsonian Magazine |date = February 25, 2013 |url = https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-dead-woman-who-brought-down-the-mayor-27003776/ |title = The Dead Woman Who Brought Down the Mayor }}</ref> She was also seen around town with gangster ], with whom Crater was rumored to socialize. Crater had known Diamond's former boss, organized crime figure ], and had been extremely upset at Rothstein's murder.<ref name="CNN Transcripts" /> Gordon was angry about a conviction that had resulted in her losing custody of her 16 year-old daughter. On February 20, 1931, she met with a lawyer for the Seabury Commission and offered to testify about police graft. She was murdered five days later. The publicity surrounding Gordon's killing led to the resignation of a policeman whom she had accused of framing her, and the suicide of her daughter.<ref name="blogs.smithsonianmag.com"/> The scandal also refocused attention on the corruption investigation, which ultimately led to the resignation of Mayor ] and largely eliminated ]'s hold on the city, previously weakened by Rothstein and the conflict over his former empire.<ref name="CNN Transcripts" /><ref name="blogs.smithsonianmag.com"/>
In October, a ] began examining the case, calling 95 witnesses and amassing 975 pages of testimony. Interestingly, Mrs. Crater refused to appear before the grand jury.<ref name="proquest.com">"Stella Crater Kunz, Once Wed To Judge Who Vanished, Dead." New York Times (1923–Current file), September 24, 1969, http://www.proquest.com/ (Retrieved August 9, 2011).</ref> The conclusion was that "The evidence is insufficient to warrant any expression of opinion as to whether Crater is alive or dead, or as to whether he has absented himself voluntarily, or is the sufferer from disease in the nature of amnesia, or is the victim of crime."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.prairieghosts.com/crater.html|title=What Happened To Judge Crater?|publisher= Prairieghosts.com|accessdate=August 4, 2010}}</ref>


Crater's wife found envelopes containing checks, stocks, bonds, and a note from the justice on January 20, 1931, six months after his disappearance. They were in a dresser drawer that had been empty when searched by police. The discovery led to new but ultimately inconclusive leads, and no further trace of Crater was ever found.<ref name="CNN Transcripts" /> The case was officially closed in 1979.<ref name="Janet Cawley 1980">{{cite news |first = Janet |last = Cawley |title = Column 1 :Judge Crater case slips into history Police file is closed on 'missingest' person |work = Chicago Tribune |date = August 5, 1980 |via = ProQuest }}</ref>
None of the investigations succeeded in discovering the judge's fate or possible whereabouts.
His case—Missing Persons File No. 13595—was officially closed in 1979.<ref name="Janet Cawley 1980">Janet Cawley. "Column 1 :Judge Crater case slips into history Police file is closed on 'missingest' person." Chicago Tribune (1963–Current file), August 5, 1980, http://www.proquest.com/ (Retrieved August 9, 2011).</ref>


===Subsequent events===
It is sometimes claimed that Sally Lou Ritz disappeared in August or September 1930,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/r/ritz_sally.html|title=Sally Lou Ritz|publisher=The Charley Project|accessdate=August 4, 2010}}</ref> but this is not the case. Ritz was interviewed in late September 1930 in Youngstown, Ohio, where she had gone "to be with her sick father."<ref>"Mystery to Sally," The Daily Times (Beaver, PA), Sept. 25, 1930, p. 6</ref><ref>CHECK ON BODIES IN CRATER SEARCH. (September 28, 1930). Daily Boston Globe (1928–1960),B2. Retrieved August 9, 2011, from ProQuest Historical Newspapers Boston Globe (1872–1979). (Document ID: 1999524842).</ref> As late as July 1937, Ritz was interviewed by police in Beverly Hills.<ref>"Crater Probe Has Shifted to West" (INS story), Chester (PA) Times, July 26, 1937, p. 1</ref>
Mrs. Crater remained at their vacation home in Maine during the search for her husband, until her discovery of the hidden envelopes.<ref name="TOM MEEHAN 1960"/> She was evicted from the ] apartment for non-payment of rent.<ref name="proquest.com"/> In July 1937, when she was reportedly living on $12 per week ({{Inflation|US|12|1937|r=-1|fmt=eq}}) working as a telephone operator in Maine, she petitioned to have the justice ].<ref>{{cite news |title = Exclusive. 'Judge Crater's Wife Ends Hope: Asks Missing Jurist Declared Legally Dead' |work = Los Angeles Times |date = July 21, 1937 |via = ProQuest }}</ref> She married Carl Kunz, a New York City electrical contractor, in ], on April 23, 1938.<ref>{{cite news |title = Crater's Widow Wed at Elkton; Husband Gave D.C. Address: Ceremony Took Place on April 23; Jurist Held Legally Dead. Judge Crater's Widow Married In Elkton Rites Crater |newspaper = The Washington Post |date = July 14, 1938 |via = ProQuest }}</ref> Kunz's first wife had hanged herself eight days before the wedding.<ref name="Janet Cawley 1980"/> Crater was declared legally dead in 1939;<ref name="TOM MEEHAN 1960" /><ref>{{cite news |title = Crater Will Case Up May 26 |work = The New York Times |date = April 28, 1939 |via = ProQuest }}</ref> his widow received $20,561 in ] ({{Inflation|US|20561|1939|r=-1|fmt=eq}}). She ] from Kunz in 1950 and died in 1969 at age 70.<ref name="proquest.com"/>


Mrs. Crater expressed her belief that her husband had been murdered in her own account of the case, ''The Empty Robe'', which was written with freelance writer and journalist ] and published by ] in 1961.<ref>{{cite book |last = Crater |first = Stella (Wheeler) |title = The Empty Robe |location = Garden City, New York |publisher = Doubleday |year = 1961 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |first = Emanuel |last = Perlmutter |title = A Missing Person: THE EMPTY ROBE. By Stella Crater With Oscar Fraley |work = The New York Times |department = Book Review Section |date = April 9, 1961 |via = ProQuest }}</ref>
==Mrs. Crater==
Judge Crater married Stella Mance Wheeler in 1917. Crater was her lawyer in her divorce action against her first husband; they married seven days after the divorce was finalized.<ref name="TOM MEEHAN 1960">By TOM MEEHAN. "Case No. 13595 :It's thirty years later, there's plenty of data – but still no Judge Crater.." New York Times (1923–Current file), August 7, 1960, http://www.proquest.com/ (Retrieved August 9, 2011).</ref> During the initial phase of the private search and even after police were notified and began their nationwide search, Mrs. Crater remained at their vacation home in Belgrade Lakes, Maine, until January 20, 1931. It was then that she allegedly discovered checks, stocks and bonds and a note written by the Judge in a drawer that had been empty when police checked earlier.<ref name="TOM MEEHAN 1960"/> Without Crater's income, Mrs. Crater was unable to maintain residence at their fashionable Fifth Avenue apartment and was evicted.<ref name="proquest.com"/> By July 1937 when she petitioned to have the Judge declared officially dead, the judge's apparent widow was impoverished and reportedly living on $12 per week (equivalent to approximately ${{formatnum:{{Inflation|US|12|1937|r=0}}}} in today's funds{{inflation-fn|US}}) she earned as a telephone operator in Belgrade Lakes, Maine.<ref>Exclusive. "JUDGE CRATER'S WIFE ENDS HOPE :Asks Missing Jurist Declared Legally Dead." Los Angeles Times (1923–Current File), July 21, 1937, http://www.proquest.com/ (Retrieved August 9, 2011).</ref>


On August 19, 2005, authorities revealed that after ] resident Stella Ferrucci-Good's death at age 91, they had received notes she wrote in which she claimed that her husband, ] detective Robert Good, had learned that Crater was killed by Charles Burns, an NYPD officer who also worked as a bodyguard of ] enforcer ], and by Burns' brother, Frank. According to the letter, Crater was buried near West Eighth Street in ], Brooklyn, at the current site of the ].<ref name="nytimes/2005/08/20/20crater" /><ref name="nydailynews/2005/08/19/1930-crater">{{cite web |last = Gendar |first = Alison |url = http://articles.nydailynews.com/2005-08-19/news/18321667_1_judge-joseph-crater-showgirl-mistress-tammany-hall |title = Judge Crater Found? Dead gal's secret letter may solve 1930 mystery |location = New York |work = Daily News |date = August 19, 2005 |access-date = June 6, 2012 }}{{dead link|date=September 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref><ref name="abcnews/WNT/1050195">{{cite web |last1=Esposito |first1=Rich |title=Long-Concealed Letter May Be Key to N.Y. Judge Mystery |url=http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/LegalCenter/story?id=1050195&page=1 |website=] |access-date=April 6, 2023 |date=August 18, 2005}}</ref> Police reported that no records had been found to indicate that skeletal remains had been discovered at that site when it was excavated in the 1950s.<ref name="nytimes/2005/08/20/20crater">{{cite news |url = https://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/20/nyregion/20crater.html |title = Judge Crater Abruptly Appears, at Least in Public Consciousness |work = The New York Times |date = August 20, 2005 |access-date = June 6, 2012 |author = Rashbaum, William }}</ref> ], the author of a 2004 book on the Crater case, ''Vanishing Point'', expressed skepticism of Ferrucci-Good's account.<ref name="nytimes/2005/08/20/20crater" />
It would seem that before the Judge was declared legally dead, Mrs. Crater remarried in Elkton, Maryland, on April 23, 1938 to Carl Kunz, electrical engineer, of New York.<ref>Special Dispatch to The Post.. "Crater's Widow Wed at Elkton; Husband Gave D.C. Address :Ceremony Took Place on April 23; Jurist Held Legally Dead. Judge Crater's Widow Married In Elkton Rites Crater." The Washington Post (1923–1954), July 14, 1938, http://www.proquest.com/ (Retrieved August 9, 2011).</ref> Kunz's first wife had hanged herself only eight days before the wedding.<ref name="Janet Cawley 1980"/> The Judge was declared legally dead in absentia in 1939<ref>Tom Meehan, "Case No. 13595," New York Times, Aug. 7, 1960, p. SM27</ref><ref>"Crater Will Case Up May 26." New York Times (1923–Current file), April 28, 1939, http://www.proquest.com/ (Retrieved August 9, 2011).</ref> and Mrs. Crater then received $20,561 in life insurance (worth approximately ${{formatnum:{{Inflation|US|20561|1939|r=0}}}} in today's funds{{inflation-fn|US}}). Mrs. Crater separated from Kunz in 1950, and died in 1969 aged 70.<ref name="proquest.com"/> Her own account of the Crater case, in which she expressed her belief that Crater had been murdered, was written with Oscar Fraley, newspaperman and freelancer and published by Doubleday in 1961.<ref>Crater, Stella (Wheeler). The Empty Robe. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1961.</ref><ref>By EMANUEL PERLMUTTER. "A Missing Person :THE EMPTY ROBE. By Stella Crater With Oscar Fraley. 210 pp. New York: Doubleday & Co. $4.50.." Review of A Missing person: the Empty Robe. New York Times (1923–Current file), Book Review Section, April 9, 1961, http://www.proquest.com/ (Retrieved August 9, 2011).</ref>


==Recent information== ==Popular culture==
The phrase "to pull a Judge Crater", or simply "to pull a Crater", means to disappear.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Gulick |first1=Aubrey |title=Judge Crater Pulls a Crater |url=https://spectator.org/judge-crater-pulls-a-crater/ |website=] |access-date=10 January 2024}}</ref> It is no longer widely used. For many years following Crater's disappearance, "Judge Crater, call your office" was a standard gag of nightclub comedians.<ref>{{cite web |title=Joseph Force Crater becomes the missingest man in New York |url=https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/joseph-force-crater-becomes-the-missingest-man-in-new-york |website=] |access-date=10 January 2024}}</ref> As a publicity stunt for their 1933 film '']'', ] promised in advertisements to pay Crater $10,000 ({{Inflation|US|10000|1933|r=-4|fmt=eq}}) if he claimed it in person at the box office.<ref>{{cite magazine |title = Cinema: The New Pictures |date = September 18, 1933 |url = https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,746087-3,00.html |magazine = Time |url-access = subscription |access-date = April 22, 2016 }}</ref> Crater's last letter, possibly written on the day of his disappearance, was sold at auction on June 22, 1981, for $700.<ref>Sotheby Parke Bernet, Sale No. 4652E on June 22, 1981, "Printed and Manuscript Americana", Lot 174.</ref> The letter was marked "confidential" and began: "The following money is due me from the persons named. Get in touch with them for they will surely pay their debts." It was incorrectly reported that this letter was Crater's will.<ref>{{cite news | newspaper=Times-Advocate |location=Escondido, California | date=June 23, 1981 | page=3 | title=Churchill, FDR suckered Stalin for autograph | url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/102898310/crater-letter-auction/ |via=Newspapers.com |url-status=live |archive-url=https://archive.today/20240605220155/https://www.newspapers.com/article/times-advocate-crater-letter-auction/102898310/ |archive-date= 5 June 2024 }}</ref>
On August 19, 2005, authorities revealed that they had received notes left by Stella Ferrucci-Good after her death at age 91. The writings identified a location near West Eighth Street in ], ], at the current site of the ], where the woman claimed the judge was buried under the boardwalk. Moreover, the notes identified Crater's killers as ] officers Robert Good (her husband) and Charles Burns, also bodyguard of ] of ] and Burns's brother Frank, a cab driver.<ref>{{cite web|last=Gendar|first=Alison|url=http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/news/2005/08/19/2005-08-19_judge_crater_found___dead_ga.html|title=JUDGE CRATER FOUND? Dead gal's secret letter may solve 1930 mystery|work=New York Daily News|date=August 19, 2005|accessdate=August 4, 2010}}</ref>


The judge was popularly known amongst friends as "Good Time Joe", from his fun times with showgirls and his love for dancing. After his disappearance, the press would use this nickname as one of the common ways to refer to him; in addition to calling him the "Missingest Man in America".<ref>{{cite episode |title= Judge Crater "Good Time Joe" |series= Vanished |season= 3 |number= 3 |year= 2022 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url= https://nypost.com/2005/08/19/1930-crater-vanish-solved-dead-womans-note-my-hubby-cop-pal-killed-judge/ |title= 1930 Crater Vanish 'Solved' – Dead Woman's Note: My Hubby & Cop Pal Killed Judge |author= Larry Celona |date= 19 August 2005 |newspaper= New York Post }}</ref><ref>{{cite episode |title= The "Missingest" Man in America |series= History's Greatest Mysteries |year= 2023 |season= 4 |number= 7 |network= History |publisher= A&E Netowrks }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url= https://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/letter-may-solve-1930-mystery-of-missing-judge/ |title= Letter may solve 1930 mystery of missing judge |date= 20 August 2005 |author1= Alison Gendar |author2= Leo Standora |newspaper= The Seattle Times }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/joseph-force-crater-becomes-the-missingest-man-in-new-york |title= Judge Joseph Force Crater becomes the "missingest man" in New York |date= 28 January 2011 |publisher= A&E Television Networks |work= History }}</ref>
Police reported that no records had been found to indicate that ] ] were discovered at that site when it was excavated in the 1950s.<ref name="Rashbaum"></ref> Richard J. Tofel, the author of ''Vanishing Point: The Disappearance of Judge Crater and the New York He Left Behind'', expressed skepticism of Ferrucci-Good's account.<ref name="Rashbaum" />


In ]'s 1964 science-fiction novel 'Instant Gold', one unexpected result of a national ] is that "for a brief, glorious moment, CIA agents investigating the Lake Superior copper town of Houghton, Michigan, reported the discovery of Judge Crater".
==Legacy==
Though no longer in wide use, the phrase "to pull a Crater" means to disappear.<ref name="Kelly">{{cite web|url=http://www.americanheritage.com/articles/web/20060805-joseph-force-crater-new-york-tammany-hall-supreme-court.shtml|title=Kelly, Jack, 'Judge Crater Vanishes Forever|publisher=Americanheritage.com|accessdate=August 4, 2010}}</ref>
For many years following Crater's disappearance, "Judge Crater, call your office" was a standard gag of nightclub comedians<ref name="Kelly" /> and was often heard on public address systems.


A 1972 episode of '']'' titled "Rare Objects" features a character who has kidnapped a number of well-known historical figures who either disappeared or supposedly died without leaving a body, including Crater, ], and ].
In order to promote the 1933 film '']'', ] advertised they would pay $10,000 (equivalent to about ${{formatnum:{{Inflation|US|10000|1933|r=0}}}} in today's{{inflation-fn|US}} funds) to Crater if he claimed it in person at the box office.<ref>{{cite news|title=The New Pictures| date=September 18, 1933|work=]|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,746087-3,00.html|accessdate=August 9, 2008}}</ref> In the third season episode of '']'', "Very Old Shoes, Very Old Rice", the character of Rob Petrie mistakes a judge named Judge Krata for the missing judge. A 2010 novel, ''The Man Who Never Returned'' by Peter Quinn, investigates the Crater case through the lens of a 1955 fictional detective.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://newyorkpaddy.com/|title=The official website of Author Peter Quinn|publisher=New York Paddy|date=August 6, 1930|accessdate=August 4, 2010}}</ref>


The characters on '']'' make jokes about Crater in several episodes, including ''12 to the Moon'' and ''I Was a Teenage Werewolf''.
Judge Crater's will, marked confidential and addressed to his wife, possibly written on the day of his disappearance, was sold at auction in 1981 for $700.<ref>Los Angeles Times, June 23, 1981</ref>


==See also== ==See also==
{{Portal|Biography}} {{Portal|Biography}}
* ]
*]

*]
==Further reading==
*]
*{{cite book |last = Crater |first = Stella (Wheeler) |title = The Empty Robe |year = 1961 |publisher = Doubleday |location = Garden City, N.Y. |lccn = 61-8880 |page = 210 |author2 = Oscar Fraley }}
*{{cite book |last = Tofel |first = Richard J. |title = Vanishing Point: The Disappearance of Judge Crater and the New York He Left Behind |publisher = Ivan R. Dee |year = 2004 |location = Chicago, Illinois |isbn = 978-1-56663-605-6 |lccn = 2004052669 |url-access = registration |url = https://archive.org/details/vanishingpointdi00rich }}
*{{cite book |last = Gibson |first = John Winslow |title = Judge Crater, the Missingest Person: How He Disappeared and Why They Couldn't Find Him |publisher = Dog Ear Publishing |year = 2010 |location = Indianapolis, Indiana |isbn = 978-1-60844-712-1 }}
*{{cite journal |last1=Keene |first1=Ann T. |title=Crater, Joseph Force (1889–1930), jurist |journal=] |date=June 2000 |doi=10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.1101196 |url=https://www.anb.org/display/10.1093/anb/9780198606697.001.0001/anb-9780198606697-e-1101196 |publisher=] |language=en}}
*{{cite book |last = Riegel |first = Stephen J. |title = Finding Judge Crater: A Life and Phenomenal Disappearance In Jazz Age New York |publisher = Syracuse University Press |year = 2022 |location = Syracuse, N.Y. |isbn = 978-0-8156-3719-6 }}


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}} {{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}

==Further reading==

*{{cite book|last=Crater|first=Stella (Wheeler)|title=The Empty Robe|year=1961|publisher=Doubleday|location=Garden City, N.Y.|lccn= 61-8880|pages=210|coauthors=Oscar Fraley}}
*{{cite book|last=Tofel|first=Richard J.|title=Vanishing Point: The Disappearance of Judge Crater and the New York He Left Behind|publisher=Ivan R. Dee|year=2004| location=Chicago, Illinois|isbn=1-56663-605-1|lccn=2004052669}}
*{{cite book|last=Gibson|first=John Winslow|title=Judge Crater, the Missingest Person: How He Disappeared and Why They Couldn't Find Him|publisher=Dog Ear Publishing| year=2010|location=Indianapolis, Indiana|isbn=978-1-60844-712-1}}


==External links== ==External links==
* August 19, 2005; Fox News via ]
*{{Find a Grave|6984692}}
*; August 19, 2005; ] (includes video)
*

*
{{Authority control}}
*


{{Persondata
|NAME= Crater, Joseph Force
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
|SHORT DESCRIPTION= ] of the ]
|DATE OF BIRTH= 1889-01-05
|PLACE OF BIRTH= ], United States
|DATE OF DEATH=1930-08-06
|PLACE OF DEATH= New York City, United States
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crater, Joseph Force}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Crater, Joseph Force}}
]
]
]
]
]
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] ]
] ]
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Latest revision as of 17:50, 5 January 2025

New York judge who disappeared in 1930

Joseph Force Crater
Born(1889-01-05)January 5, 1889
Easton, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DisappearedAugust 6, 1930 (aged 41)
New York, New York, U.S.
StatusDeclared dead in absentia
(1939-06-06)June 6, 1939
Alma mater
OccupationJustice of New York Supreme Court for New York County
Known forUnexplained disappearance

Joseph Force Crater (January 5, 1889 – disappeared August 6, 1930; declared legally dead June 6, 1939) was an American lawyer who served as a New York State Supreme Court Justice and mysteriously vanished shortly after the state began an investigation into corruption in New York City. Despite massive publicity, the missing persons case was never solved and was officially closed forty years after Crater was declared dead.

Early life and education

Joseph Crater was born in Easton, Pennsylvania, the eldest of four children of the former Leila Virginia Montague and Frank Ellsworth Crater, a produce market operator and orchard owner. Both parents had immigrated from Ireland. Crater was educated at Lafayette College (class of 1910) and Columbia University, where he was a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity. During his time at Columbia, he met Stella Mance Wheeler, who was at the time married, and helped her get a divorce. They married seven days after her divorce was finalized, in spring 1917.

Career

Crater opened an office at the Equitable Building in Manhattan, joined Tammany Hall district leader Martin J. Healy's Cayuga Democratic Club, and spent time organizing election workers and representing the club in election law cases.

Four months before his disappearance, on April 8, 1930, Franklin D. Roosevelt, then New York governor, appointed Crater as Justice of the New York Supreme Court for New York County, which is a trial court, despite the designation "supreme" (New York State's highest court is the Court of Appeals). He issued two published opinions: Rotkowitz v. Sohn, February 8, 1930 involving fraudulent conveyances and mortgage foreclosure fraud; and Henderson v. Park Central Motors Service, July 11, 1930 dealing with a garage company's liability for an expensive car stolen and wrecked by an ex-convict.

Attention was later drawn to Crater's liquidating investments worth $16,000 and withdrawing $7,000 from his bank account that spring (together equivalent to about US $419,500 in 2023), a possible pay-off for his judgeship. He had also given the congratulatory speech at the dinner celebrating George Ewald's judgeship in 1927; accusations of Tammany Hall corruption in that appointment were an initial impetus in the opening of what would become the Seabury Commission in mid-1930.

Disappearance

Crater and his wife were vacationing at their summer cabin in Belgrade, Maine, in the summer of 1930, shortly after the anti-corruption inquiry began. In late July, Crater received a telephone call. He told his wife nothing about the call other than to say that he had to return to New York City "to straighten those fellows out". The next day, he arrived at his apartment at 40 Fifth Avenue in Greenwich Village, but instead of dealing with business, he went to Atlantic City, New Jersey, with showgirl Sally Lou Ritz.

Crater returned to Maine on August 1, then traveled back to New York City on August 3, promising his wife that he would return by her birthday on August 9. She stated that he was in good spirits and behaving normally when he left. On the morning of August 6, Crater spent two hours going through his files in his chambers, reportedly destroying several documents. He then had law clerk Joseph Mara cash two checks for him that amounted to US $5,150 (equivalent to about $93,930 in 2023). At noon, Crater and Mara carried two locked briefcases to Crater's apartment, where Crater told Mara to take the rest of the day off.

That evening, Crater went to a Broadway ticket agency run by friend Joseph Gransky and reserved one seat for a comedy called Dancing Partner at the Belasco Theatre; Gransky was surprised because he and Crater had already seen a preview of the show. Crater then ate dinner at Billy Haas's Chophouse at 332 West 45th Street with Ritz and William Klein, a lawyer friend. Crater's dinner companions gave differing accounts of his departure from the restaurant. Klein initially testified that "the judge got into a taxicab outside the restaurant about 9:30 p.m. and drove west on Forty-fifth Street." This account was initially confirmed by Ritz: "At the sidewalk Judge Crater took a taxicab." Klein and Ritz later changed their story and said that they had entered a taxi outside the restaurant, but Crater had walked down the street.

Crater's disappearance did not elicit any immediate reaction. When he did not return to Maine after ten days, his wife began making calls to their friends in New York, asking whether anyone had seen him. His fellow justices became alarmed when Crater failed to appear for the opening of the courts on August 25; they started a private investigation but failed to find any trace of him. The police were notified on September 3, and after that the missing judge was front-page news.

Investigation

Detectives discovered that the judge's safe deposit box had been emptied and the two briefcases that Crater and Mara had taken to his apartment were missing. These promising leads were quickly lost amid thousands of false reports from people claiming to have seen the missing judge. A grand jury convened in October 1930 called 95 witnesses and amassed 975 pages of testimony. Mrs. Crater refused to appear. The jury concluded that "the evidence is insufficient to warrant any expression of opinion as to whether Crater is alive or dead, or as to whether he has absented himself voluntarily, or is the sufferer from disease in the nature of amnesia, or is the victim of crime."

Crater enjoyed the city's nightlife; he socialized with many showgirls in addition to his long-term mistress Connie Marcus. Two of these women left town abruptly after his disappearance. Sally Lou Ritz (real name Sarah Ritzi; 1907/1908–2000) had dined with Crater the evening that he vanished and was also rumored to be his mistress; she left New York in August or September 1930. She was found in late September 1930 living in Youngstown, Ohio with her parents; she said that she had left New York because she had received word that her father was ill. She was still being subjected to interviews by police investigating the Crater case in 1937, by which time she was living in Beverly Hills, California. June Brice, another showgirl, had been seen talking to Crater the day before he disappeared. A lawyer acting for Crater's wife argued that Brice had been at the center of a scheme to blackmail Crater (the reason for the bank withdrawals on the day of his disappearance) and that a gangster boyfriend of Brice had killed the judge. Brice disappeared the day that a grand jury was to convene on the case. In 1948, she was discovered in a mental hospital.

Crater's jacket was reportedly found in the apartment of Vivian Gordon. She was involved in high-end prostitution and linked to madam Polly Adler. Gordon had liaisons with a large number of influential businessmen and was the owner, on paper at least, of a number of properties believed to be fronts for illegal activity. She was also seen around town with gangster Jack "Legs" Diamond, with whom Crater was rumored to socialize. Crater had known Diamond's former boss, organized crime figure Arnold Rothstein, and had been extremely upset at Rothstein's murder. Gordon was angry about a conviction that had resulted in her losing custody of her 16 year-old daughter. On February 20, 1931, she met with a lawyer for the Seabury Commission and offered to testify about police graft. She was murdered five days later. The publicity surrounding Gordon's killing led to the resignation of a policeman whom she had accused of framing her, and the suicide of her daughter. The scandal also refocused attention on the corruption investigation, which ultimately led to the resignation of Mayor Jimmy Walker and largely eliminated Tammany Hall's hold on the city, previously weakened by Rothstein and the conflict over his former empire.

Crater's wife found envelopes containing checks, stocks, bonds, and a note from the justice on January 20, 1931, six months after his disappearance. They were in a dresser drawer that had been empty when searched by police. The discovery led to new but ultimately inconclusive leads, and no further trace of Crater was ever found. The case was officially closed in 1979.

Subsequent events

Mrs. Crater remained at their vacation home in Maine during the search for her husband, until her discovery of the hidden envelopes. She was evicted from the Fifth Avenue apartment for non-payment of rent. In July 1937, when she was reportedly living on $12 per week (equivalent to $250 in 2023) working as a telephone operator in Maine, she petitioned to have the justice declared officially dead. She married Carl Kunz, a New York City electrical contractor, in Elkton, on April 23, 1938. Kunz's first wife had hanged herself eight days before the wedding. Crater was declared legally dead in 1939; his widow received $20,561 in life insurance (equivalent to $450,370 in 2023). She separated from Kunz in 1950 and died in 1969 at age 70.

Mrs. Crater expressed her belief that her husband had been murdered in her own account of the case, The Empty Robe, which was written with freelance writer and journalist Oscar Fraley and published by Doubleday in 1961.

On August 19, 2005, authorities revealed that after Queens resident Stella Ferrucci-Good's death at age 91, they had received notes she wrote in which she claimed that her husband, NYPD detective Robert Good, had learned that Crater was killed by Charles Burns, an NYPD officer who also worked as a bodyguard of Murder, Inc. enforcer Abe Reles, and by Burns' brother, Frank. According to the letter, Crater was buried near West Eighth Street in Coney Island, Brooklyn, at the current site of the New York Aquarium. Police reported that no records had been found to indicate that skeletal remains had been discovered at that site when it was excavated in the 1950s. Richard J. Tofel, the author of a 2004 book on the Crater case, Vanishing Point, expressed skepticism of Ferrucci-Good's account.

Popular culture

The phrase "to pull a Judge Crater", or simply "to pull a Crater", means to disappear. It is no longer widely used. For many years following Crater's disappearance, "Judge Crater, call your office" was a standard gag of nightclub comedians. As a publicity stunt for their 1933 film Bureau of Missing Persons, First National Pictures promised in advertisements to pay Crater $10,000 (equivalent to $240,000 in 2023) if he claimed it in person at the box office. Crater's last letter, possibly written on the day of his disappearance, was sold at auction on June 22, 1981, for $700. The letter was marked "confidential" and began: "The following money is due me from the persons named. Get in touch with them for they will surely pay their debts." It was incorrectly reported that this letter was Crater's will.

The judge was popularly known amongst friends as "Good Time Joe", from his fun times with showgirls and his love for dancing. After his disappearance, the press would use this nickname as one of the common ways to refer to him; in addition to calling him the "Missingest Man in America".

In Frank O'Rourke's 1964 science-fiction novel 'Instant Gold', one unexpected result of a national dragnet is that "for a brief, glorious moment, CIA agents investigating the Lake Superior copper town of Houghton, Michigan, reported the discovery of Judge Crater".

A 1972 episode of Night Gallery titled "Rare Objects" features a character who has kidnapped a number of well-known historical figures who either disappeared or supposedly died without leaving a body, including Crater, Amelia Earhart, and Roald Amundsen.

The characters on Mystery Science Theater 3000 make jokes about Crater in several episodes, including 12 to the Moon and I Was a Teenage Werewolf.

See also

Further reading

References

  1. "PA-8536330.jpg". flashbak.com. Archived from the original on July 12, 2021. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
  2. ^ Warren, Alexandra (Spring 2010). "Joseph Force Crater". Pennsylvania Center for the Book. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
  3. records of the members of the First Methodist Church, Easton, Pennsylvania
  4. World War I draft registration
  5. Joseph Force Crater in the 1900 United States census; Easton, Pennsylvania
  6. Harold Leslie Crater, Jr., The descendents of Moritz Creeter (1703–1772), who arrived at the Port of Philadelphia on the ship Mortonhouse on August 19, 1729 (privately published, 2003), p. 160.
  7. ^ "The Missingest Man in New York". New York Press. February 16, 2015. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
  8. The Sigma Chi Quarterly: The Official Organ of the Sigma Chi Fraternity, Volume 26, p. 122
  9. ^ Meehan, Tom (August 7, 1960). "Case No. 13595; It's thirty years later, there's plenty of data -- but still no Judge Crater". The New York Times.
  10. "Judge John Crater: On August 6 1930 Supreme Court judge became The Missingest Man in New York". Flashbak. August 6, 2013. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
  11. "ROTKOWITZ v. SOHN, 136 Misc. 265 | Casetext".
  12. 239 N.Y.S. 639, N.Y.Sup., February 8, 1930.
  13. "Henderson v. Park Central Motors Service, 138 Misc. 183 | Casetext".
  14. 244 N.Y.S. 409, N.Y.Sup., July 11, 1930.
  15. ^ Kantrowitz, R. Marc (April 21, 2023). "Judge Crater, call your office". Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly.
  16. Gibson, John Winslow (2010). Judge Crater, the Missingest Person: How He Disappeared and Why They Couldn't Find Him. Indianapolis, Indiana: Dog Ear Publishing. p. 30. ISBN 978-1-60844-712-1.
  17. ^ "Aide denies Crater destroyed papers; hunt is pressed". The New York Times. September 5, 1930. p. 1.
  18. ​Dancing Partner​ at the Internet Broadway Database
  19. Garrett, Robert (August 11, 1980). "Good Night, Judge Crater, Wherever You Are". New York Magazine. pp. 11–12.
  20. "Ransom of $20,000 Asked for Crater" (PDF). The New York Times. September 16, 1930. p. 1. Retrieved July 22, 2014.
  21. "Search for Crater Swings to Havana" (PDF). The New York Times. September 24, 1930. p. 4. Retrieved July 22, 2014.
  22. ^ "CNN Transcript: Interview with Richard Tofel". CNN. August 22, 2005. Retrieved August 4, 2010.
  23. "Wide Hunt Is Begun for Justice Crater, Missing Four Weeks". Times Wide World Photo. The New York Times. September 4, 1930. p. 1. ProQuest 112687780.
  24. "City to Offer $5,000 in Hunt for Crater; Crain Seeks Inquiry". The New York Times. September 11, 1930. p. 1. ProQuest 11838224.
  25. "Federal men scan Crater bank books". The New York Times. September 6, 1930. p. 1.
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  35. ^ Shteir, Rachel (February 25, 2013). "The Dead Woman Who Brought Down the Mayor". Smithsonian Magazine.
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