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Essay / Winnie Ruth Judd - 2248
Perhaps one of the most questionable cases of all time is the crime committed by Winnie Ruth Judd in 1931. Although she is infamous for being one of the killers in history's most heinous series, some wonder whether or not she actually committed the murders, or if she really had to kill to defend herself. Through her difficulties, Winnie Ruth Judd invented one of the best-known national stories of the 20th century. Winnie Ruth Judd was born on January 29, 1905, in Oxford, Indiana. His mother was a friendly Christian who worked hard to care for her family and keep the house in order. Judd's father was a Free Methodist minister, who believed that there was good in everyone. Winnie grew up with another sibling, a brother, who was 19 months younger than her. She grew up in Indiana and eventually married, at the age of eighteen, a physician named William C. Judd on April 18, 1924. Soon after, they traveled to Vanegas, Mexico, where the doctor had gotten a job in a silver mine. The couple spent three years in Mexico, the only visibly happy years they would experience together. Winnie became pregnant twice, but each time the baby did not survive labor due to tuberculosis that Winnie had developed as a child and was now intensifying due to the weather in Mexico. Over the course of three years, Ruth, as she liked to be called, returned to the United States three times due to illness. She eventually traveled to Phoenix and stayed there, concluding that her health could not withstand the conditions in Mexico. But frankly, Phoenix is the city that Winnie Ruth Judd is best known for. After working several jobs, Ruth finally settled in a clinic where she obtained a stable income for...... middle of paper ...... approximately... Over time, more and more more people will join us. among those who think his sentence should be commuted. What we will see is not a question of modern penology, but a portrait of outright persecution of an unfortunate old grandmother. It is up to the commission to grant him a commutation of his sentence now. On December 21, 1971, Arizona Governor Jack Williams put pen to paper and presented Winnie Ruth Judd with an official parole. Winnie lived into her old age for some time after her death. release. She returned to California to work for the Nichols family who previously employed her. She then moved to Stockton, California for a few years before returning to Phoenix for the final time. Winnie Ruth Judd died on October 23, 1998 in her sleep, aged 93, ending a long, respectable, famous and unforgettable life..