Seattle man gets life in prison for 1957 slaying of young girl

SYCAMORE, Ill. (AP) - Friends and family who had all but given up on seeing anyone brought to justice for the murder of a young Illinois girl more than 50 years ago said they were at peace Monday after a former police officer was sentenced to life in prison.
Jack McCullough, 73, was convicted in September in one of the oldest unsolved crimes in American history to make it to trial. He was sentenced in a small town courtroom a few blocks from where Maria Ridulph played with a friend on Dec. 3, 1957, before she was grabbed, choked and stabbed to death in an alley. The 7-year-old's body was found months later, dumped in woods more than 100 miles away.
The little girl's friends and relatives didn't utter a sound or betray the slightest emotion as a silver-haired Jack McCullough stood, turned to them and proclaimed his innocence.
"I did not, did not, kill Maria Ridulph," said McCullough, who grew up in Sycamore and was 17 when Ridulph died. "It was a crime I did not, would not, could not have done."
Judge James Hallock admonished McCullough to face him, not the spectators, and a sheriff's deputy stood behind McCullough to block his view of Ridulph's relatives and the childhood friend who was left behind.
"He can say all he wants to say," Kathy Chapman, now 63, said afterward. "This finally puts this part of my life to a resting point."
Chapman had been playing with Ridulph in the snow when she ran home to get her mittens, leaving her friend with a teenager who had been giving them piggyback rides. When she returned, both were gone.
While Chapman and others had waited 55 years for justice for Ridulph, and they made it clear they weren't going to let McCullough hurt or affect them again. When the sentencing was over, they simply left their seats and walked out of court.
"I'm satisfied," said Charles Ridulph, Maria's older brother.
"This is all we could expect," Chapman added, referring to the life sentence. Illinois abolished the death penalty last year. "Now Maria is finally at peace."
Monday's hearing was the latest chapter in a case that started during a more trusting and innocent era, when people across the country and particularly in small towns like Sycamore, left doors unlocked and parents didn't give much thought to their children hopping on bikes and riding off with friends - or playing in their front yard.
No crime like this had ever happened in Sycamore, and the abduction of a child was rare enough anywhere that the before the massive search ended with the girl's body found in a forest the following April it was said President Dwight Eisenhower and FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover asked for daily updates on the investigation.
In asking for the longest possible sentence, DeKalb County Assistant State's Attorney Victor Escarcida tried to capture just what McCullough did to the people in the courtroom, who were children themselves when the girl vanished.
"Jack McCullough left a lifetime of emotional wreckage in his wake," he said. "Jack McCullough made Sycamore a scary place. Now there was a true boogeyman living among them."
But nobody knew it was McCullough. Though he was one of more than 100 people who were briefly suspects, he had what seemed like a solid alibi. On the day Ridulph vanished, he told investigators, he'd been traveling to Chicago for a medical exam before joining the Air Force.
McCulllough spent years in the military, first in the Air Force and then in the Army. He eventually settled in Seattle, working as a Washington state police officer.
McCullough might have lived out his life quietly, but on her deathbed in 1994, his mother told McCullough's half-sister, Janet Tessier, that she'd lied to police when she supported her son's alibi.
Once a new investigation was launched, authorities went to Chapman, Ridulph's childhood friend, and showed her an old photograph if McCullough. A half century later, she identified him as the teenager who came up to them that snowy day and introduced himself as "Johnny."
Chapman and Janet Tessier both testified at trial.
McCullough did not. On Monday, he pointed to a white box that he said contained 4,000 pages of FBI documents that he said would prove he was not in Sycamore when Ridulph disappeared. His attorneys had argued during the trial that the material supported McCullough's alibi, but Hallock ruled it inadmissible because the people in the documents were dead and could not be cross-examined. On Monday, McCullough's attorney said there would be an appeal and that the FBI documents would be part of that appeal.
McCullough, who suffers from heart and blood pressure problems, also was sentenced to five years for kidnapping - the maximum sentence for that crime in 1957. He will be eligible for parole in 20 years, his attorney said.
Jack McCullough, 73, was convicted in September in one of the oldest unsolved crimes in American history to make it to trial. He was sentenced in a small town courtroom a few blocks from where Maria Ridulph played with a friend on Dec. 3, 1957, before she was grabbed, choked and stabbed to death in an alley. The 7-year-old's body was found months later, dumped in woods more than 100 miles away.
The little girl's friends and relatives didn't utter a sound or betray the slightest emotion as a silver-haired Jack McCullough stood, turned to them and proclaimed his innocence.
"I did not, did not, kill Maria Ridulph," said McCullough, who grew up in Sycamore and was 17 when Ridulph died. "It was a crime I did not, would not, could not have done."
Judge James Hallock admonished McCullough to face him, not the spectators, and a sheriff's deputy stood behind McCullough to block his view of Ridulph's relatives and the childhood friend who was left behind.
"He can say all he wants to say," Kathy Chapman, now 63, said afterward. "This finally puts this part of my life to a resting point."
Chapman had been playing with Ridulph in the snow when she ran home to get her mittens, leaving her friend with a teenager who had been giving them piggyback rides. When she returned, both were gone.
While Chapman and others had waited 55 years for justice for Ridulph, and they made it clear they weren't going to let McCullough hurt or affect them again. When the sentencing was over, they simply left their seats and walked out of court.
"I'm satisfied," said Charles Ridulph, Maria's older brother.
"This is all we could expect," Chapman added, referring to the life sentence. Illinois abolished the death penalty last year. "Now Maria is finally at peace."
Monday's hearing was the latest chapter in a case that started during a more trusting and innocent era, when people across the country and particularly in small towns like Sycamore, left doors unlocked and parents didn't give much thought to their children hopping on bikes and riding off with friends - or playing in their front yard.
No crime like this had ever happened in Sycamore, and the abduction of a child was rare enough anywhere that the before the massive search ended with the girl's body found in a forest the following April it was said President Dwight Eisenhower and FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover asked for daily updates on the investigation.
In asking for the longest possible sentence, DeKalb County Assistant State's Attorney Victor Escarcida tried to capture just what McCullough did to the people in the courtroom, who were children themselves when the girl vanished.
"Jack McCullough left a lifetime of emotional wreckage in his wake," he said. "Jack McCullough made Sycamore a scary place. Now there was a true boogeyman living among them."
But nobody knew it was McCullough. Though he was one of more than 100 people who were briefly suspects, he had what seemed like a solid alibi. On the day Ridulph vanished, he told investigators, he'd been traveling to Chicago for a medical exam before joining the Air Force.
McCulllough spent years in the military, first in the Air Force and then in the Army. He eventually settled in Seattle, working as a Washington state police officer.
McCullough might have lived out his life quietly, but on her deathbed in 1994, his mother told McCullough's half-sister, Janet Tessier, that she'd lied to police when she supported her son's alibi.
Once a new investigation was launched, authorities went to Chapman, Ridulph's childhood friend, and showed her an old photograph if McCullough. A half century later, she identified him as the teenager who came up to them that snowy day and introduced himself as "Johnny."
Chapman and Janet Tessier both testified at trial.
McCullough did not. On Monday, he pointed to a white box that he said contained 4,000 pages of FBI documents that he said would prove he was not in Sycamore when Ridulph disappeared. His attorneys had argued during the trial that the material supported McCullough's alibi, but Hallock ruled it inadmissible because the people in the documents were dead and could not be cross-examined. On Monday, McCullough's attorney said there would be an appeal and that the FBI documents would be part of that appeal.
McCullough, who suffers from heart and blood pressure problems, also was sentenced to five years for kidnapping - the maximum sentence for that crime in 1957. He will be eligible for parole in 20 years, his attorney said.
The story tells us that USA is quite different between 1957 and 2012. In 1957, a missing girl could get President's attention. In 2012, USA president don't even blink his eye if there are missing a thousand girls in a day or worse.
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The USA society is getting worse yearly.
This shows you can't run from everything.
Encyclopedia Brown doesn't like this story.
I couldn't even recognize people I was in school with for years, let alone some guy I saw for a short while all those years ago. This conviction troubles me.
This thing really scares me. Most people were long dead. Woman showed a picture 50 years later now says he was the guy. If this guy is guilty great, but from what I have read this sounds too much like they may well have just found someone to pin this on who did nothing.
@Alex Clayton I had the same thoughts. Usually when cold cases are solved it's because DNA has been processed. That doesn't seem to be the case here. Was this girl not shown his picture 50 years ago? If his face is so burned in her memory then I'm sure she would have had a reaction to seeing his picture back then which would have led the investigators to really check behind his alibi and maybe realize his ticket was never used, etc. If those documents he has are real... it's not really his fault the people are dead. The fact that he has held on to them all of these years leads me to believe he knew he would have to defend himself again at some point...
 @Alex Clayton From the article:
"But nobody knew it was McCullough. Though he was one of more than 100 people who were briefly suspects, he had what seemed like a solid alibi. On the day Ridulph vanished, he told investigators, he'd been traveling to Chicago for a medical exam before joining the Air Force."That seems to me like a fairly easy thing to verify - there should be travel records unless he drove to Chicago, and military records of the exam.  I don't understand what all of the people being involved being dead has to do with that particular aspect - either the exam or travel time happened at the time of the murder or it didn't.  The original investigators never checked out his alibi?
 @aegis11  @Alex Clayton From what I remember of an earlier article, he originally claimed he took the train but then, when his girlfriend at the time of the kidnapping told pd 45 years later, that she had recently found his unused train ticket (which was part of what re-opened the investigation), his travel mode changed to a car ride.
 @katiemcc  @Alex Clayton It's kind of hard to think in terms of 50 years ago compared to today's technology.  So the murder happened during the travel time and not the examination time?  I wonder if  he still would have had time to do the murder and then make his appointment or if that's what the issue was.
I agree with everyone here who states if he did it great, but I don't see how anyone can not give pause when someone says they have evidence that will exonerate them but our legal system prevents that evidence from being heard, let alone considered.
 @Alex Clayton It is scary! He claims to have evidence of his alibi but it can't be admitted because the people referenced are dead. Well the one who is now refuting his alibi (his mother) is also dead. Why is that allowed but not the others?
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Like you said, if he is guilty then great. Just seems a little sketchy though.
 @Alex Clayton It is scary, at least based on what's been told here.
You can run, but you can't hide. Justice will be served eventually.
I wonder if he only killed once. Doesn't seem likely.
I have a few questions here... If McCullough was one of more than 100 people who were suspects at the time of the disappearance, why wasn't this little girl's childhood friend shown a photograph of this guy back than, and not over 50 years later?
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It's great the half-sister went to police, but how does a mother live with that kind of "secret" her whole life? Were they estranged? Or do you have a murderer over for christmas dinner every year just like the other family members?
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Is this guy possible implicated in other deaths? I'm also disturbed that a murdering psychopath could, not just end up on the police force, but have a life-long career as one.
I thought of a new and cheaper way for the taxpayers to deal with these people... Â fly them out to Afghanistan at the front lines and leave them to try and survive on their own.Â
Bet the old fart thought he got away with that one too. Think again you evil scum.