George Joseph Cvek

George Joseph Cvek (1918 February 26, 1942) was an American murderer and serial rapist. He was executed for killing 29-year-old[lower-alpha 1] Catherine "Kitty" Pappas, the wife of a coffee importer, in the Bronx, New York City on February 5, 1941.[1]

Cvek was born in 1918 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania and raised in nearby Steelton, Pennsylvania, descended from Yugoslavian and Hungarian heritage, and by his own admission in an abusive family.

Bronx detectives, working with an unprecedented number of city, state and federal authorities from Maine to New Orleans, as well as the surviving victims, traced at least 81 robberies and rapes during a nine-month span from mid-1940 to February 1941 to Cvek's unique modus operandi of asking for a glass of water and aspirin that earned him the moniker "The Aspirin Bandit", and "The Gentleman Killer" following the Pappas murder. After his arrest on the Pappas murder charge, Cvek admitted to the rapes of 14 other women in the New York City area.

The jury found him guilty of murdering Pappas on May 19, 1941, and only took 20 minutes to deliberate before sentencing him to death.[2] He was executed on February 26, 1942, in the electric chair at Sing Sing Prison in New York.[3]

He was the subject of a 2017 episode of the Investigation Discovery series A Crime to Remember.[4]

Notes

  1. The 1942 Associated Press report of Cvek's execution gives Pappas' age as 34. In 2008 the New York Daily News stated she was 29, as does the 2017 episode of A Crime to Remember.

Sources

  1. Nash, Jay Robert (1992). World Encyclopedia of 20th Century Murder. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 162. ISBN 9781590775325.
  2. Bovsun, Mara (March 22, 2008). "Justice Story: The Aspirin Bandit". New York Daily News. Retrieved 22 June 2017.
  3. "Tramp Rapist Executed for Slaying N.Y. Woman". The Chicago Tribune. Associated Press. 27 February 1942. Retrieved 22 June 2017.
  4. A Crime to Remember, Season 4 Episode 5, "The Gentleman Killer", January 3, 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.