On July 17, 1940, Goldie Crow, 28-year-old wife of Oklahoma City milk truck driver Albert Crow, died of peritonitis from a criminal abortion performed July 2 by Otto Castro Lucy. Lucy was a 37-year-old psychologist and teacher, had previously been dean of men at Central State College. He performed the fatal abortion on Goldie while he was out on bail pending trial for the abortion death of Mary Ellen Legge. Though he was not a physician, Lucy had a listing in the telephone book reading "Dr. Otto C. Lucy".
Albert admitted that he had purchased some abortifacients, which had not had their desired effect. He went to Lucy's apartment in June, thinking that Lucy was a doctor. He told him that Goldie was pregnant and that they didn't want the child. He also told Lucy that he had no money, and Lucy said that he couldn't do anything for him.Otto Lucy |
Over the next few days, Goldie's condition deteriorated. Albert called Lucy, who said he'd done all he could for her and told Albert to take his wife to a hospital. Albert called the family doctor, who also said to take Goldie to a hospital. Albert called a taxi and did so. But despite the efforts of doctors there, Goldie died, leaving Albert to care for their two young children.
During the investigation into Goldie's abortion, police found surgical instruments wrapped in a towel and bloody newspaper, stuffed into a garbage can in the basement of the apartment building where Lucy lived. He was convicted of first degree manslaughter and sentenced to 25 years in the state penitentiary for Goldie's death.
Watch Kills Second Woman While Out on Bail on YouTube.
Sources:
- “Lucy Murder Trial Set for April 7”, The Oklahoman, Mar. 29, 1941
- “Prosecutor is Set to Open Otto Lucy Death Trial Monday”, The Oklahoman, Apr. 5, 1941
- “Surgical Tools Enter Lucy’s Abortion Trial”, The Oklahoman, Apr. 7, 1941
- “No Witnesses Are Heard in Lucy Defense”, The Oklahoman, Apr. 8, 1941
- “Teacher Convicted in Abortion Death Case,” Miami (OK) News Record, Apr. 10, 1941
- “Lucy Drops Appeal Plan, Starts to Prison”, The Oklahoman, Apr. 14, 1941
Photo courtesy of Gateway to Oklahoma History
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