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Image / Burmah White at police "showup"

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Title
Burmah White at police "showup"
Alternative Title
Los Angeles Herald Examiner Photo Collection
Date Created and/or Issued
1933
Contributing Institution
Los Angeles Public Library
Collection
Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection
Rights Information
Images available for reproduction and use. Please see the Ordering & Use page at http://tessa.lapl.org/OrderingUse.html for additional information.
Description
Photograph was edited for publication purposes.; Photograph attributed to Crory.
In August of 1933, 19-year-old Burmah White, a hairdresser and former Santa Ana High School student, and her husband of less than one week, twenty-eight year old Thomas White, an ex-con, spent their honeymoon on a crime spree. The couple perpetrated ten stick-ups, seven in a single evening; but the worst of their crimes was the shooting of a popular elementary school teacher, Cora Withington, and a former publisher, Crombie Allen, who was teaching her how to drive his new car. They were stopped at a light when a car driven by a young blonde woman pulled up alongside them, and a man brandishing a gun jumped out of the vehicle. The bandit pointed his weapon at Withington's head and said, "Shell out, sweetheart..." Just as Withington and Allen were handing over their valuables there was a gunshot - and it tore through Miss Withington's left eye, came out near the right eye and ripped a hole in Allen's neck. Despite his injury, Allen memorized the license plate number of the bandit's car. Both victims survived their wounds, but Allen was permanently blinded. White's lack of remorse and abrasive demeanor were great fodder for the press, but earned the young widow a guilty conviction on eleven felony counts, and she was sentenced to a term of from 30 years to life. She began serving her time at San Quentin, but was ultimately transferred to the Women's Prison at Tehachapi where, in 1935, Aggie Underwood interviewed her and a few of the other inmates for a multi-part series on women in prison. Underwood noted that her attitude had completely changed and White even wrote an open letter to young women entitled "Crime Never Pays." White was denied parole a few times before she was discharged on December 1, 1941. She'd served less than eight years for her part in the 1933 crime spree. Upon her release, White vanished from public view.
Photograph caption dated September 9, 1933 reads, "This dramatic photo shows Burmah White, icy blonde widow, appearing in a police 'showup' last night before a score of victims of the slain 'rattlesnake' bandit, Thomas D. White. With a group of girl police department employes [sic], mostly blondes, and the slain bandit's sister, Violet Dillon, the icy blonde paraded before the victims with a sneer on her face. Suddenly a woman in the audience clutched a policeman's arm. 'That girl,' she whispered pointing to Burmah White, 'is the one who drove the car for the bandit that robbed me.' Then another woman and two men pointed out the fgirl as the bandit's aide. The White girl is indicated by arrow and Mrs. Dillon, who had no connection with the bandit's activities, is at the extreme left." This "showup" took place in the Homicide Department at City Hall.
Type
Image
Format
1 photographic print :b&w ;21 x 26 cm.
Photographic prints
Identifier
00128409
Herald Examiner Collection
HE box 4818
CARL0005449940
http://173.196.26.125/cdm/ref/collection/photos/id/34217
Subject
Los Angeles City Hall (Los Angeles, Calif.)
Female offenders--California--Los Angeles
Widows--California--Los Angeles
City halls--California--Los Angeles
Police stations--California--Los Angeles
Policewomen--California--Los Angeles
Women--California--Los Angeles
Men--California--Los Angeles
Audiences--California--Los Angeles
Portrait photographs
Interiors--California--Los Angeles
Downtown Los Angeles (Los Angeles, Calif.)
Los Angeles Evening Herald and Express photographs
Herald-Examiner Collection photographs

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