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| The Axe Man breaking into a house, axe in hand |
The New Orleans Axe Man
was a serial killer or repeat murderer active in New Orleans and Gretna,
Louisiana, from May 1918 to October 1919, although some sources suspect he
started as early as 1911 and continued his murder spree into the 1920s.
“These murders and
woundings,” said Sheriff Frank T. Mooney, “are undoubtedly the work of some
brutal, murderous degenerate.” And while he admitted small sums of money were
taken at some of the crime scenes, the sheriff believed it was to throw
detectives off. He assured citizens that a “petty housebreaker” did not commit
the crimes.
On May 23, 1918, Joseph
Maggio (39) and his wife were “hacked to death” in their store at Upperline and
Magnolia. The prosperous Italian couple lived in the back of their grocery
store.
Detectives said the
killer entered the home before dawn. He knocked out a panel in the rear door
and crawled inside. Ironically, the murder was committed in a tiny room
decorated with pictures of the crucifixion and other religious artifacts.
The killer whacked each
victim on the head with an ax, then slit their throats with a razor. Catharine
Maggio lay on the floor, a bloody mess. Joseph was sprawled across the bed,
half on and half off. And the murder weapons, a razor and ax, rested on the
floor in a puddle of blood.
Joseph’s brothers,
Jacob and Andrew, discovered the bodies and notified the police of the attack.
A few hours later, detectives arrested them because Andrew was seen coming home
early in the morning. However, the investigation went nowhere, and Jacob and
Andrew were released a few days later.