| Clementine Barnabet (enhanced picture from the New Orleans Item. April 2, 1912) |
The Midwest ax murderer wasn’t the only fiend causing havoc in the early 1900s. Detectives in Louisiana and Texas found themselves pitted against a repeat murderer closely following the Southern Pacific Railroad tracks. Thirteen black families had been slaughtered in their sleep in less than two years.
Several
people were questioned but quickly released. Then, in November 1911, Detectives
in Lafayette, Louisiana, arrested Clementine Barnabet.
Six
months later, the nineteen-year-old housekeeper confessed to killing seventeen
of the forty-plus Negroes murdered in and around Lafayette, and for a moment,
it seemed as if the case was solved. But unfortunately, the killings continued
for nearly a year after her arrest.
For her
part, Clementine enjoyed the spotlight. She smoked cigars with the reporters
crowded around her cell, cracked jokes, and made light of the killings, blaming
her capture on the loss of the “cunjah bag” Joe Thibodaux, a “Voodoo Doctor,”
sold her.
The papers described Thibodaux as an old Voodoo priest who sold charms and conjure bags, which he “guaranteed would make the wearers immune from arrest, no matter how atrocious the crime.”



