Architectural ramblings

Every day, I visit a friend who is recovering from cancer surgery at Glendale Memorial Hospital, so I took a short detour and visited the boyhood home of Caryl Chessman, the "Red Light Bandit."

 

Chessman_3280_larga
Photograph by Larry Harnisch / Los Angeles Times
3280 Larga Ave., Atwater Village, Calif.

Caryl_chessman_1948_0124_bob_jakobs

Photograph by  Bob Jakobsen / Los Angeles Times

Caryl Chessman, left, with Detective E.M. "Al" Goossen, Jan. 23, 1948. At the time, Chessman was living at the home on Larga and had been arrested 6th Street and Shatto Place after a high-speed chase. He was convicted on eight counts of robbery, four counts of kidnapping, two morals charges, one count of attempted robbery, one count of attempted rape and auto theft. He was sentenced to the gas chamber on two counts of kidnapping and was executed in 1960.

Goossen worked many prominent cases of the 1940s and ’50s, including the gang slaying of Tony Brancato and Tony Trombino and the murder of Gladys Kern, a real estate agent who was killed while showing a home in Los Feliz. He worked as a private investigator in the San Fernando Valley after retiring from the LAPD.

Email me

Unknown's avatar

About lmharnisch

I am retired from the Los Angeles Times
This entry was posted in Caryl Chessman, LAPD and tagged , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to Architectural ramblings

  1. Joe D's avatar Joe D says:

    Did Chessman kill anybody? Was he executed for kidnapping?
    –Correct. Chessman was executed under the “Little Lindbergh Law.” He never killed anyone.
    –Larry

    Like

  2. Lisa's avatar Lisa says:

    This is unfair. The Death Penalty was created to kill people who KILL others… you know, “pay your life for taking another.” Caryl KIDNAPPED people, but they killed him because of one other crime by Bruno Hauptmann decades ago.

    Like

Comments are closed.