Showing posts with label torture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label torture. Show all posts

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Robbers Use Poker to Torture Victim

1920

Crime Is Hidden From Police by Frightened Laborer

ST. PAUL, Minn., Jan. 1. — Tortured with a red-hot poker until the flesh was burned from his toes, and robbed of $450 by three burglars, Lazar Jvasku, a Hungarian worker in a South St. Paul plant, asked the police to keep the crime a secret because he feared the burglars would return if they knew who had informed the authorities.

The three men entered the Jvasku home at midnight, after they aroused Jvasku, who came downstairs and opened the door. They represented themselves as Federal agents. Jvasku was ordered to throw up his hands. While one of the bandits covered him with a gun, a second bandit went upstairs and dragged Mrs. Jvasku and Joseph, her 8-year-old son, from bed and took them to the kitchen.

Jvasku and his son were then bound with a clothesline, while Mrs. Jvasku, scantily clad, shivered in a corner. Jvasku asked that she be permitted to dress. In reply one of the bandits knocked him to the floor with the butt of his revolver. The burglars then cut the telephone wires and blew out the lamps, and made a systematic search of the house with the aid of flashlights.

The savings of six months, $450, which was hidden in a drawer, and $150 belonging to a roomer, absent at the time, were taken. Believing Jvasku has more money hidden in the house, the burglars proceeded to torture him with a hot poker. The son screamed when his father was attacked and at that the burglars became frightened and hurried away.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Torture in India — The Misery Suffered by Prisoners

1878

Torture in India

A paper published in India says: The following facts, elicited at the trial at the recent sessions in North Arcot of a case in which five natives were charged with having murdered five of their caste people, show that torture is not yet extinct in that part of the world: The prisoners' fields were robbed of a small quantity of cumboo and the deceased and three others being suspected of having had a hand in the robbery, they were, by the orders of the first prisoner, who was the village reddy (headman), seized and tied, some to the trunks of trees and others to large stones.

In the first case the feet of the unfortunate victims were tied above ground, but the mode adopted subsequently was even more cruel, for the men were bound with their faces exposed to the scorching rays of the sun, with their hands tied above their heads. The whole five having been firmly bound, cold water was, by the orders of the first prisoner, poured upon the ligatures with the object of tightening the bonds and thereby increasing the suffering of the suspected men. After this the first prisoner poured scalding water over the hands and arms of the sufferers. The object of this was to extort a confession of their guilt, and a statement implicating others.

After the men had suffered excruciating agony for eight hours, and were released, it was found that one of them was dead, while the others were unable to move. Two of them died in the hospital, whither they were sent for treatment; one expired in his village, while the fifth was able to give his evidence before the committing magistrate, but never rallied from the effects of the torture, and died after the case was committed to the court of sessions. The medical evidence was sickening in its details, as it is described how the arms, hands and lower extremities of the victims had become gangrenous and how the fingers had rotted and dropped off.

The authority and influence a reddy usually has in a village went in a great measure to deter the spectators of this wholesale murder from interfering on behalf of the tortured men. The court convicted the first, second, fourth and fifth prisoners, and sentenced the first to death and the others to transportation for life.