Isidor Fisch
Isidor Fisch | |
---|---|
File:IsidorFisch.jpg
Fisch in a 1932 passport application
|
|
Born | Isidor Srul Fisch 26 July 1905 Leipzig, Germany |
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Leipzig, Germany |
Isidor Srul Fisch (26 July 1905 – 29 March 1934) was a German friend and business associate of Bruno Richard Hauptmann, from whom Hauptmann claimed to have received a box containing part of the ransom money in the kidnapping of Charles Augustus Lindbergh, Jr.[1] The Fisch story was an integral part of Hauptmann's unsuccessful defense in his kidnapping and murder trial.
Life
Fisch was born into a Jewish family in Leipzig, Germany, and in 1925 immigrated to America, where he continued to work as a fur cutter.[citation needed] Among the German Americans in the Bronx, Fisch was known as a strange character; he often tried to involve others in fraudulent business schemes and money laundering. Fisch and Hauptmann met in 1932, became friends, and agreed to pool the risks and profits of Fisch's trade in furs and Hauptmann's stock investments.[citation needed]
Fisch was so poor that he depended on money sent by his parents in Germany. He was constantly sick and virtually starving to death. His brother told the German police that Fisch had never made any mention of Hauptmann before his death, and Fisch's German acquaintances characterized him as a "harmless fur trader".
Fisch applied for a passport on 12 May 1932, the same day that the Lindbergh baby was found dead. On 9 December 1933, he sailed for Germany, taking with him $600 worth of Reichsmarks. On 29 March 1934, he died of tuberculosis in Leipzig.[2]
Lindbergh ransom money
After Hauptmann's arrest, police found $14,600 of the ransom money in a box in his garage. Hauptmann claimed that Fisch had given him a shoebox, wrapped with paper and string, just before returning to Germany. Hauptmann said that when a roof leak damaged the box, he opened it and discovered the money. He claimed that since Fisch had owed him $7,000 he decided to keep it, hiding it behind some wooden boards in his garage. He told investigators that he began spending the cash without telling his wife.[citation needed]
The daughter of Hauptmann's landlady told investigators that Fisch knew that he was extremely ill, and that she believed that had Fisch had money, he would have sought medical attention.[citation needed]
Fisch's siblings, and his nurse, traveled to New Jersey from Germany to testify at Hauptmann's trial.[3] They testified that Fisch could not afford medical treatment in his final months, and had died a pauper. A few weeks after Fisch's death, Hauptmann wrote to the family that Fisch had left certain articles in his care, but he made no mention of the shoebox or any money.
Hauptmann was convicted of first-degree murder in the kidnapping[4] and executed in 1936.
References
- Jim Fisher, The Lindbergh Case. Rutgers University Press, 1994. ISBN 0-8135-2147-5
- Lloyd C. Gardner, The Case that Never Dies: The Lindbergh Kidnapping. Rutgers University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-8135-3385-6
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- Articles with short description
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with hCards
- Articles with unsourced statements from January 2015
- Articles with unsourced statements from April 2020
- 1905 births
- 1935 deaths
- People from Leipzig
- German Jews
- German emigrants to the United States
- 20th-century deaths from tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis deaths in Germany
- Lindbergh kidnapping