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Inez
PALMER
Ohio’s First Female Sheriff Solves A Thriller
In 1927
It had all the makings of a modern thriller about a
double murder – a missing man, a suspicious will, a greedy son, the
son’s shifty girlfriend, a woman’s body that was burnt beyond
recognition and a young mother who became sheriff after her husband
was gunned down.
In today’s post, rather than discussing leadership
directly, we’d like to take a look at a trailblazer from the
Appalachian region of Ohio. Ohio’s (and possibly the nation’s) first
female sheriff, Maude Collins, was married to Vinton County Sheriff
Fletcher Collins. She was a young mother of five when her husband was
shot and killed by a man he’d pulled over on a speeding violation. It
would be easy for someone to dismiss her as a figurehead who was
appointed to finish her husband’s term and then elected due only to
the high estimation her husband was held in by the locals. However,
this would definitely not be the truth. “Sheriff Maude”, as she was
known by the locals, was a formidable sheriff and achieved national
fame when a case she’d solved was reported in Master Detective
magazine.
Shortly after her election, Sheriff Maude
investigated the murder of a local woman, Sarah Stout, whose body was
found partially burned in her own home. It was determined that,
despite the severe burning of the face, neck and other parts of the
body, the cause of death was strangulation. One of her sons, Arthur,
was arrested for her murder. If the case had ended there, perhaps, no
one other than those living at the time and her family would have
remembered Sheriff Maude. However, she was then challenged with the
task of investigating the disappearance of the murdered woman’s
husband.
In early 1927 (the history is a little unclear as
to exactly when and to whom), Arthur’s girlfriend, Inez Palmer,
reported that Arthur’s father, William Stout, had “traveled west never
to return”. When Sheriff Maude questioned Inez, Inez said that the
last time she saw William he was mending fences. Sheriff Maude and her
deputy found the patched fences along with a lunch pail left under a
tree with an interesting paper inside and footprints leading to and
from the lunch pail. The paper turned out to be a handwritten will in
which William had made Arthur his sole heir despite having other
children and grandchildren. Later, Sheriff Maude returned to the Stout
home and found a pair of William’s shoes that fit exactly into
footprints around the lunch pail, but that’s about the only thing that
did fit. Slipping the shoes on, Sheriff Maude realized that the
resulting indentation in the soil was the same as the depth of the
existing tracks. The footprints weren’t deep enough to be made by a
person the size of William. They had to be made by a smaller person.
At this point, Sheriff Maude searched the Stout
home and found that the things William would have taken with him if
he’d truly left for good were still in the house. She then went to the
bank where William was a customer to compare the handwriting on the
new will to that on William’s cancelled checks. They didn’t match.
With a bit more investigating, Sheriff Maude found
William’s body in a well behind the house. It was determined that he
died due to severe head trauma caused by a blunt instrument. Faced
with the evidence, Inez Palmer confessed to the murder and the staging
of the footprints and fake will. Informed of her confession, Arthur
confirmed her story adding that she was also responsible for the
murder of Sarah Stout. Arthur had been her accomplice by attempting to
burn the body to get rid of it.
Due to Sheriff Maude, Arthur was found guilty of
second degree murder and Inez Palmer of first degree murder. They both
received life sentences.
As for Sheriff Maude, she finished her elected term
as sheriff before being elected Clerk of Courts and then working as a
matron at the Columbus State School until she retired. She passed away
in 1972 at the age of 78.
AppalachianLeadershipAcademy.wordpress.com
Athens Messenger
April 22, 1927
Inez Palmer Pleads Guilty
on First Degree Murder; Gets Life Term -- With No Hope of Pardon -- At
Marysville.
Arthur Stout, Her Lover,
Also Serving Life Term in Ohio Pen for Implication in Another Murder
-- Has Chance of Pardon
McArthur, April 22 -- A
sordid tragedy of unlawful love and of murder was brought to a close
in Vinton county court late yesterday when Inez Palmer pleaded guilty
to a first-degree murder indictment and was sentenced to life
imprisonment in the women's reformatory at Marysville. Her trial was
to have started next Monday.
Mrs. Palmer, an attractive
woman of 24, was indicted for the slaying of William Stout, 65,
well-to-do farmer and father of Arthur Stout, with who Mrs. Palmer
lived "without benefit of clergy" for nearly a year in a little shack
in the hills.
Found in Well
The body of William Stout
a farmer, was found in a well on his farm eight miles from here, and
Mrs. [sic] Palmer, who came here from West Virginia, confessed the
crime, it is alleged.
Arthur Stout, 33, now is
serving a life term in Ohio penitentiary for implication in the murder
of his stepmother, Sarah Stout, second wife of William.
Alleged Slayer
Arthur Stout is alleged to
have slain his aged stepmother because she chided him for his
relations with the Palmer woman. It was alleged at the time that he
killed the woman and then attempted to burn the body.
Judge Darby prefaced his
sentence with a statement that mercy should be extended the woman that
she might escape the electric chair. She will have, however, no hope
of pardon or parole.
Arthur Stout was convicted
on a second degree indictment and although his term also is life, he
has hope of parole or pardon.