Syd Jones
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Unknown
Syd Jones | |
|---|---|
| Born | Syd Jones Unknown Alabama, United States (presumed) |
| Died | June 25, 1915 |
| Cause of death | Executed by hanging |
| Conviction | First degree murder |
| Criminal penalty | Death |
| Details | |
| Victims | 13 |
Span of crimes | 1900s–1914 |
| Country | United States |
| States | Alabama, Nebraska, California, Kentucky, New Mexico, Wyoming |
Syd Jones (died June 25, 1915) was a self-confessed American serial killer who admitted to 13 murders in several states, starting from sometime in the 1900s and ending in 1914. He was executed for murdering a fellow convict, while serving a life sentence for another murder.[1]
Dated murders
Much of Jones' life, including his date of birth, remains a mystery. It is presumed that he was a native to Alabama, and that at one point he served for the 10th Cavalry Regiment.[2] While stationed in Monterey, California, he shot and killed one of his victims, a deputy sheriff named W. S. Moseley. Jones was given life imprisonment for a murder.[3]
He then proceeded to murder a fellow convict, most likely Cleave Waters, for which he was given the death penalty. On the day of his execution, he left a note in his cell, confessing to 13 murders and naming his victims as follows:[3]
- 1907 - unnamed convict at Banner mines, Alabama
- 1911 - unnamed convict at Banner mines, Alabama
- May 22, 1911 - Cleave Waters, convict at Banner mines, Alabama[1]
Undated murders
- Thomas Thompson - Crawford, Nebraska
- Charles Bennett - Crawford, Nebraska
- W. S. Moseley - deputy sheriff at Crawford, Nebraska
- Shay White - Monterey, California
- Thomas Shay - Monterey, California
- Sam Lee - Chinese man at Monterey, California
- Unknown - Unidentified brakeman for Mobile & Ohio Railroad at Bardwell, Kentucky
- Bessie Humphrey - Huntsville, Alabama
- Pattie Quiergo - Mexican woman at Fort Wingate, New Mexico
- John Little John - Native American at Sheridan, Wyoming[1]
Jones also confessed to a failed murder attempt against a man named Richard Moore, putting the date as September 12, 1912. He expressed regret at this failure, as he apparently wanted to even out his kill count.[3][1]
Syd Jones was one of three convicts hanged on June 25, 1915, in Alabama, the other two being:[4]
- Lon Carter, hanged at Birmingham for murdering his wife
- Tim Sharpe, hanged at Anniston for murdering two policemen