Late on the chilly morning of March 2, 1937, two engineering students at the University of Virginia at Charlotte took time between classes to visit the grave of a friend who had recently been killed in a car crash. The cemetery was separated from the campus by a low stone wall. A stile offered an easy way over.
As they crossed the stile, the young men spotted something out-of-place on the campus side of the wall. A young woman lay in the leaves, her face covered with a cloth. The students thought that perhaps the woman was sleeping. They went on their way to pay their respects to their friend.
When the students crossed the stile again to return to campus, they saw that the woman was still lying there, utterly unmoving amid the leaves on the cold ground. They were disquieted. When they got to class they told the Dean of Engineering. The dean called the Albermarle County sheriff.
Friends and neighbors had combed the area, looking for Cleo and speaking to anybody who might have seen her. A schoolmate said that he'd seen Cleo walking near the movie theater some time after 6 p.m. One of Cleo's friends, Ethel Sealock, said that Cleo had pulled up outside her home at around 7:30 p.m. Cleo had been the passenger in a brown sedan driven by a man that Ethel couldn't see. Cleo, the young woman said, had asked Ethel to come driving with her but Ethel said she declined and didn't even get off the porch to approach the car because she didn't have shoes on.
Now Sheriff Smith had to go to the campus to see if the widow Sprouse's worst fears were realized.
He and his men had to shoo away the crowd of curious onlookers who had gathered. Fortunately, nobody had disturbed the body or the leaves that still partially covered it. Sheriff Smith carefully began moving aside the leaves. The young woman lay almost primly, her clothing in perfect order. A small cloth the size of a hand towel covered her head and some object that was propped on her face.
A gas station owner said that Miller, with Cleo in the car, had stopped for gas at his business before heading north away from the city.
A bus driver told the police that he had seen a brown sedan parked near a railroad underpass at the university golf course, which was about 400 yards from the cemetery, between 1:30 and 1:45 on the morning Cleo's body had been discovered. The motor was running, both car doors were open and a bottle was lying on the road.
Meanwhile Sheriff Smith pondered the choice of dump sites. Had the killer placed the young woman's body on the cemetery side of the wall rather than the campus side, it might have gone undiscovered for quite a while. Why had he hidden her where she could be easily stumbled across?
Sheriff Smith turned the body over to Dr. W. H. Weaver, University of Virginia pathologist, who took it to the mortuary for a postmortem examination.
The coroner's office bungled their handling of the autopsy. Rather than sending Cleo's organs to experts in Charlottesville, somebody sent them to Richmond, Virginia, where they had ended up in a laboratory at the Department of Agriculture rather than the laboratories of the Department of Health. Once they were located they were taken to the proper laboratory for analysis.
Miller had a very positive reputation in town, considered a pillar of the community. He told police that a can of chloroform had been missing from his office since February. He kept it in his office as a solvent to use in making fillings, not as an anesthetic. He said that he had been treating Cleo and had stepped out of the exam room to take a phone call. Upon returning to the exam room, he said, he had found Cleo closing the cabinet door.
This was considered sufficient to bring Dr. Miller in for questioning. The next day, police arrested Miller at his office, leaving a patient still in the dental chair. They walked him the six blocks to the police station through a growing crowd of people who wanted to see the Chloroform Murderer. As the evening wore on, so many people gathered that the porch collapsed under their weight.
He said that he had known Cleo for about nine months and had been treating her for problems with her gums. She had come to him requesting an abortion, and when he had refused she threatened to claim that he was the father of her baby. Under this pressure, he said, he had agreed.
Rather than do the procedure in his office, he had driven her in a borrowed car to a place about six miles north of Charlottesville with the intention of doing the abortion in the vehicle. The place where Miller said he'd pulled the car over to do the abortion matched the location where a bus driver said that he'd seen a brown sedan parked, engine running and doors open, the night Cleo had died.
He said that he had waited until dark then driven back to town, intending to bring Cleo's body to an undertaking establishment and confess to the police, but that he had panicked and decided to pose her body in hopes that her death would be deemed a suicide.
Miller spoke at greater length during a nearly five-hour questioning at the jail. He then wrote out a confession.
Though some people had suggested that classmates from Lane High School serve as pall bearers, Cleo's family said that her classmates really didn't know her well and "she rarely went around with boys."
At the burial, Mrs. Sprouse collapsed as around 400 mourners and curious townspeople gathered around the grave. The pastor had to stop the ceremony to berate photographers.
Miller was indicted for first-degree murder because prosecutors believed that he had deliberately killed Cleo. They believed that his story about an intended abortion was concocted to allow a lesser charge. Wouldn't Miller have performed an abortion in his office, where he had safe and familiar anesthetics on hand, rather than in a borrowed car using chloroform that he ordinarily used as a solvent? Why couldn't he lead police to the place where he said he'd ditched the instruments?
His attorneys originally planned to plead insanity on the grounds that Miller had suffered brain damage when he'd accidentally shot himself while hunting seven weeks earlier, grazing his temple. Since the middle-aged father of two had been otherwise perfectly normal since the incident, this defense didn't fly.
Watch The Chloroform Murder on YouTube.
Sources:
- "Body of Schoolgirl, 18, Chloroformed, Found In University Grounds," Richmond Times-Dispatch, March 3, 1937
- "Dentist Tells of Death of Virginia Girl," Baltimore Sun, March 4, 1937
- "Autopsy Here In Girl's Death To Start Today," Richmond Times-Dispatch, March 4, 1937
- "Dentist Charged With Murder Of Cleo Sprouse at University; Rushed to Henrico County Jail," Richmond Times-Dispatch, March 4, 1937
- "Dentist is Held as Girl's Slayer," (Hanover, PA) Evening Sun, March 4, 1937
- "Prosecutor Says Chloroform Case is Plain Murder," Intelligencer Journal, March 5, 1937
- "Dentist Faces First Degree Murder Trial," (Uniontown, PA) Daily News Standard, March 5, 1937
- "Will Ask early Trial for Dentist Accused in Death," (Hanover, PA) Evening Sun, March 5, 1937
- "New Arrest Seen as Science Aids in Sprouse Case," Washington, DC Evening Star, March 6, 1937
- "Dentist Plea in Murder to Be Insanity," (Wilkes-Barre, PA) Evening News, March 6, 1937
- "Chloroform Can Seen As Type for Poison In Cleo Sprouse Death," Richmond Times-Dispatch, March 8, 1937
- "Poison Blamed in School Girl Death," The Shamrock Texan, March 8, 1937
- "Grand Jurors Indict Miller As Murderer Of Schoolgirl," Richmond Times-Dispatch, March 9, 1937
- "Jail to Hold Dr. Miller Until Trial," Richmond Times-Dispatch, March 11, 1937
- "Deliberate Murder Charged In Cleo Sprouse's Slaying," Bristol Herald Courier, March 17, 1937
- "Virginia Sportsman Faces Long Term in Girl's Death," Dayton Herald, April 7, 1937
- "Dentist Sentenced," Chicago Daily Tribune, April 9, 1937
- "Death on the Campus," Page 1, Page 2, Tampa Bay Times et al., October 6, 1940
- Original and amended death certificates



























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