Ruth Snyder

May Ruth Snyder (née Brown; March 27, 1895 – January 12, 1928) was an American murderer. Her execution in the electric chair at New York's Sing Sing Prison in 1928 for the murder of her husband, Albert Snyder, was recorded in a highly publicized photograph.

Murder of Albert Snyder
May Ruth Brown met Albert Edward Snyder (né Schneider) in 1915 in New York City, when she was 20 years old and he was a 33-year-old artist. The couple had little in common; Brown, who went by her middle name of Ruth to most people and was known as "Tommy" to close friends, was described as vivacious and gregarious, while Snyder was described as quiet and reserved and very much a "homebody". Despite their differences in personalities and age, the couple married and settled in a modest house in Queens. In 1918, Ruth gave birth to their only child, a daughter named Lorraine. Albert Snyder was employed as an art editor for Motor Boating magazine, published for most of its run by Hearst Magazines, and earned $100 per week.

In 1925, Ruth began a love affair with Henry Judd Gray, a married corset salesman who lived in the New Jersey suburbs. Ruth began planning the murder of her husband Albert, enlisting Gray's help, but he was reluctant. Some claim that Ruth's disdain for her husband apparently began when he insisted on hanging a portrait of his late fiancée Jessie Guischard on the wall of their first home and had named his boat after her. Guischard had died ten years earlier and Albert described her to his wife as "the finest woman I have ever met". However, others have noted that Albert Snyder was emotionally and physically abusive, blaming Ruth for the birth of a daughter rather than a son, demanding a perfectly maintained home and physically assaulting both her and their daughter Lorraine when his demands were not met.

Ruth first persuaded Albert to purchase insurance, and with the assistance of an insurance agent (who was subsequently fired and sent to prison for forgery), "signed" a $48,000 life insurance policy with a double indemnity clause, paying extra if an unexpected act of violence killed the victim. According to Gray, Ruth had made at least seven attempts to kill Albert, all of which he survived. On March 20, 1927, the couple strangled Albert with a picture wire, stuffed his nose full of chloroform-soaked rags, and beat him with a sash weight, then staged his death as part of a burglary. Detectives who investigated the crime noted that there was little evidence that a burglar had actually broken into the house. Moreover, Ruth's behavior was inconsistent with her story of a terrorized wife witnessing the violent murder of her husband.



Detectives discovered that the property Ruth had claimed had been stolen in the burglary had been hidden in the house. The real breakthrough came when a detective found a paper with the initials J.G. on it (it was a memento Albert had kept from former lover, Jessie Guischard). When asked by Detectives who "J.G" was, Ruth became flustered and instantly thought of Gray, whose initials were also J.G. She asked the detective what Gray had to do with the murder; it was the first time Gray had ever been mentioned, and the police immediately became suspicious. Gray was found in Syracuse, New York. He claimed he had been there all night, but it was determined that a friend of Gray's had obtained a hotel room in Gray's name to support his alibi. Under interrogation, Gray proved far more forthcoming than Ruth about his actions. He was arrested and returned to Queens. Both Gray and Ruth were charged with Albert's murder.

The trial


Ruth and Gray turned on each other, contending the other was responsible for killing Albert; both were convicted and sentenced to death.

Execution
Ruth was imprisoned at Sing Sing in Ossining, New York. On January 12, 1928, she became the first woman to be executed at Sing Sing since Martha Place in 1899 and the third woman to be executed by the State of New York. She went to the electric chair 10 minutes before Judd Gray, her former lover. Her execution was surreptitiously photographed at the moment electricity was running through her body with the aid of a miniature plate camera strapped to the ankle of Tom Howard, a Chicago Tribune photographer working in cooperation with the Tribune-owned New York Daily News. Howard's camera was later owned by inventor Miller Reese Hutchison and later became part of the collections of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History. Both Snyder and Gray were electrocuted by New York State Electrician Robert G. Elliott, Snyder being the first woman he executed. In his autobiography, Elliott recalled that Ruth Snyder almost fainted when she saw the electric chair and that she had to be seated with the help of the matrons who had taken care of her while on death row. About the published photo of Snyder's execution, Elliott remarked that if such photos were routinely printed in newspapers they either could have served as a deterrent against crime or have persuaded the public that capital punishment had to be abolished.

Ruth was interred in the Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx. Gray was interred in Rosedale Cemetery in Montclair, New Jersey.

Lorraine Snyder
Following the pronouncement of the death sentence on Ruth Snyder in May 1927, legal disputes arose between the relatives regarding the care of Ruth and Albert's daughter, Lorraine, who was nine years old at the time. Warren Schneider, brother of Albert, petitioned to be allowed to appoint a legal guardian who was not a member of Ruth's family. Josephine Brown, mother of Ruth, also petitioned for custody of the girl. Lorraine had been in the care of Brown since the murder. Lorraine was formally placed by her maternal grandmother in the Catholic institution where she had been residing at the time of her mother's execution. Ruth requested that her daughter not be brought to the prison for a final visit.

On September 7, 1927, Josephine Brown was awarded guardianship of the girl. During this time, there were disputes with the insurance company Ruth had used to insure her husband's life. Although one policy, worth US$30,000, to Gray's daughter, was paid without contest, it filed suit to void two other policies, worth $45,000 and $5,000 (the three combined policies worth $ million in ). By May 1928, the insurance company made available $4,000 for the maintenance of Lorraine. In November 1928 a ruling in the case was reached, with a court finding the policies could not be collected because they had been issued fraudulently. At the time of the judgment, the lawyer acting on behalf of Ruth's family asked the court to allow them to appeal without a printed record on the basis that the family was destitute and unable to sell the house due to the notoriety of the case. By May 1930, it was ruled on appeal that the two policies were invalid. While incarcerated on death row, Ruth Snyder wrote a sealed letter that she requested be given to Lorraine "when she is old enough to understand". One year after her mother's execution, Lorraine was apparently aware that her parents were both dead, but not of the manner of either of their deaths.

Depiction in popular media

 * The drama Machinal (1928) by playwright Sophie Treadwell is based on Snyder's trial.
 * The movies Blessed Event (1932) and Picture Snatcher (1933) make references to Snyder's execution.
 * A fictionalized version of the trial was the basis of scenes in State's Attorney (1932) with John Barrymore as the prosecutor.
 * In the movie The Penguin Pool Murder (1932), the characters suspect their case is similar to the Snyder-Gray case. There is also a reference to a woman being recently executed.
 * The case was the inspiration for the novella Double Indemnity (1936) by James M. Cain, which was adapted for the screen (1944) by Billy Wilder and Raymond Chandler.
 * Later, Billy Wilder added to his filmed version (1974) of Ben Hecht’s The Front Page junior journalist character Rudy Keppler, ruining his attempt to take a photo with a hidden camera when, overwhelmed by emotion, the young man wets his pants.
 * Cain mentioned that his book The Postman Always Rings Twice (1934) took inspiration from the crime.
 * In chapter 16 of Raymond Chandler's 1949 novel "The Little Sister", detective Philip Marlowe reviews photographs taken secretly by a blackmailer, stating "I figured it must have been the hidden-camera trick, the way they took Ruth Snyder in the electric chair."
 * In the 1951 sci-fi film "The Thing from Another World", reporter Ned Scott (Douglas Spencer (actor)) mentions having attended the 1928 execution of Snyder and Gray. Another character asks him if he was able to get a picture of it. Scotty answers, "No, they didn't allow cameras, but one guy ... " He is interrupted by the Thing's approach before he can finish the sentence. Scotty is referring to Chicago Tribune photographer Tom Howard, who smuggled a miniature camera into the execution chamber strapped to his ankle and took the famous photograph of Snyder's final moments in the electric chair.
 * In the 1954 novel The Bad Seed, author William March based his depiction of Bessie Denker's execution upon that of Ruth Snyder.
 * Guns N' Roses' 1991 album Use Your Illusion features, as part of the enclosed artwork, a photo of the band posing in front of a Doug and Mike Starn (Popular photographer twin brothers who came to prominence in the 1987 Whitney Biennial) photograph that contains an oversized reproduction of the Daily News headline/photograph announcing Ruth Snyder's execution.
 * The photograph of Snyder's execution was originally published in 1928 under the headline “Dead!” My Chemical Romance’s 2006 album The Black Parade features a song also called “Dead!”, which ties back to Snyder's execution in its themes of a drawn-out, torturous death being viewed as entertainment.
 * Saul Bellow's 1953 novel The Adventures of Augie March alludes to the Ruth Snyder photograph in Chapter 8.
 * The 2001 book Seeds of Evil: The Gray-Snyder Murder Case by Karl Schweizer is an account of the case, and is based on actual court records interspersed with vivid dialogue.
 * The 2011 novel A Wild Surge of Guilty Passion by Ron Hansen is based on the murder case.
 * The case is also featured on the show Deadly Women, presented as the second of three cases in the eighth-season episode "Three's a Crowd," which aired on August 15, 2014.