While researching my latest book, Murder Capital, one of the astounding
facts I discovered was that in Madison, Wisconsin’s 170-year history, only four
police officers were killed in the line of duty. I say “only” because one might
expect a state capital to be slightly more dangerous. The even more interesting
part of this historical footnote, however, is that all four murders occurred
around the time of Prohibition – for the over 80 years since combined, the
level of danger comes nowhere close to the risk of patrolling in those 13
lawless years.
Three of those four deaths are covered in Murder Capital. The fourth, that of Officer
Edward Riphon, was excluded because it could not be directly connected to the
group of bootleggers and bloodthirsty killers I was putting the spotlight on.
This does not mean, however, that Riphon’s story is not worth telling. With
that in mind, the following summary of his heroic death is provided in remembrance.
Edward Francis Riphon was born on March 3, 1894 in
the rural Dane County community of Spingdale, where he was raised by his
parents, Martin Riphon and Sarah Moran Riphon, and helped out on the family
farm at an early age and through his early 20s. The town was rural enough that
his address was simply “on the Mount Horeb Road”[i]
Even as recently as 2010, much of the town was without water and sewer
facilities.
By the middle of 1917, Edward was married and still
working on the family farm.[ii] What
made his decide to switch careers is unknown. After getting hired on as a
police officer in June 1927, Riphon apparently moved into Madison gradually.
The 1930 Federal Census has him boarding at 615 West Main Street without his
family joining him.[iii]
From his first day on the force, he was scheduled on the night shift.
The most memorable moment in Riphon’s career came in
December 1931, when he encountered John Schyler in the Forrest Taylor soft
drink place. Schyler appeared to be reaching for a gun when Riphon intervened.
After a short hand-to-hand melee, Riphon came out on top. Back at the station,
it was determined that Schyler was the head of a bank robbery gang out of Fond
du Lac. From his jail cell, Schyler gave up gang member Herman Ringhand. Riphon
was highly commended and the pair were sent up to the state prison for 25
years.
At 1:00am on May 16, 1932, Riphon made his report
into headquarters from a callbox outside the Tenney building (110 East Main) on
the Capitol Square. He had just finished a late night meal at Bailey’s (518
East Wilson) with cabbie Gus Wilson, just as he had many nights before.[iv] Around
1:30, he was seen by garage employee Carl Deering speaking with three men in a
large, dark-colored sedan. The automobile was parked on South Pinckney, halfway
between Main and Washington. When Riphon did not make his 2:00 telephone call
in to Sgt. Patrick Powers, they knew something was wrong.
Officer Riphon was found around 7:50am in a gravel
pit on Hope Road, east of Madison. Tragically, it was 10-year Olin K. Jacobson,
on his way to school, who first saw the horrific sight. Jacobson thought the
man in the ditch was merely asleep, and alerted Fred Horstmeyer, who relayed
the word to Julius Irvin Witte, proprietor of the Hope general store (and the
nearest telephone).[v]
Riphon had been shot twice, with one bullet penetrating his temple. He was
apparently also beaten, as his body was covered in bruises. His patrol car was
parked at the capitol building in the center of town, further indicating he had
been “taken for a ride”. Rumors circulated that Riphon had a “black book” with
the names of local gangsters and this was the cause of his death.
Immediate suspicion was turned toward Archie Dell Delaney,
who was seen with Riphon on the day he vanished. Delaney had been sent to the
reformatory at Green Bay for burglary a few years prior. Questioning of Delaney
cleared his name immediately; he may have been a burglar, but he was no
murderer. Riphon’s wife suspected area bootleggers. She told detectives that
they had received many threatening letters over the years, and on one occasion
there was an altercation with a south side restaurant owner. She feared that
his being transferred from the south side to the capitol square might give the
bootleggers the false impression that he was scared, despite his not asking to
be transferred.[vi]
Not long after the apparent abduction, an automobile
matching Deering’s description was found abandoned in McHenry, Illinois,
approximately 95 miles southeast of Madison. Today, McHenry is considered by
some to be the northwest edge of the Chicago suburbs. An automobile had been
hijacked near Rush Street in Chicago from Major F. O. Wood of Camp McCoy[vii],
and police believed this car, a Studebaker, was driven to Madison and back to
McHenry before being dumped. Wood was even an occupant for approximately twenty
minutes before being forced out at Halsted and Fulton (in the River West
neighborhood). During the ride, Wood was ordered to “look straight ahead” and
had a nickel-plated .32 pointed at him. He initially described two of the
hijackers as “an Italian” and “a Norwegian” who was a “darn nice looking boy”.
Unknown to Wood, the vehicle continued on to
Madison, stopping multiple times to change license plates. In Whitewater,
plates were stolen from garage owner Max Frederick Foerster. Upon reaching
Madison, they stole another set from the Studebaker of Philo Buck, professor of
comparative literature at the University of Wisconsin. Probably unknown to the
men, they were also parked right outside the home of Dean Charles Schlichter.
The stolen plates may have been the cause of Officer Riphon’s questioning, and
if so, his death may have been spur of the moment rather than anything planned
or “contracted”.
On the morning of May 18, law enforcement personnel
had Wood look through thousands of rogues gallery photographs in Chicago. He
picked out five men who seemed familiar to him: Albert Novak, Clarence Flynn,
Minard Batjes, Henry Decker and William Kasierod. All the men were around age
20. The two most likely suspects according to Wood were Novak, a car thief who
had once been an accessory to murder, and Flynn, a known rapist.[viii]
The sedan itself was
a bloodbath; splatters were found on the ceiling, the rear door, the windshield
and elsewhere. The belief was that Riphon had been bludgeoned repeatedly with a
gas pipe. Two such pipes, both 18 inches in length, were found in the car, one
of them still smeared with blood and hair. A pencil from Koch Rent-a-Car was
found, as was a key, both items tracing back to Riphon.[ix]
After abandoning the
murder vehicle, the killers stole another car in McHenry, one owned by grocery
store proprietor Peter William Frett. According to the newspaper, by some
strange coincidence, Frett had actually known Riphon in passing from being in
Madison on business. The Frett car, in turn, was deposited in Chicago, and the
men were seen fleeing by railroad porter Adolph Herman of 5442 Higgins Avenue
(in the Jefferson Park neighborhood). As the newspaper put it, they “fled to
cover in the Chicago underworld”.[x]
Patrolman Riphon had
served with the agency for five years. He was survived by his wife, Isabelle Berg
Riphon and their children Marian, Berniece, and Raymond. When the funeral took
place at St. Bernard’s Catholic Church a few days later, 900 mourners came to
pay their respects. Fifteen uniformed officers were on site, including the six
pallbearers. Father John A. Risch told his parishioners, “When our friends close
their eyes for the last time, we should open ours.” He swore that Riphon’s life
was taken by “a detestable scoundrel endeavoring to undermine human society.”[xi]
Despite the identification of suspects by Wood, no arrests were ever made and the Riphon homicide remains unsolved.
The story of Officer Riphon briefly made the news more than 80 years after his passing, due to another family tragedy. His son, Raymond Riphon, had lost his father at the tender age of 7 and turned to the Catholic Church to be his guide. For the next eight decades, he attended school, he attended mass, and was well-known and respected by all who knew him. "He always sat in the third pew, aisle side, for five o'clock mass every Saturday," Father Michael Radowicz says. "He had a very good friend that would bring him to mass. He was always just a wonderful guy and just always had a bright smile." Therefore it came as a great shock when at Raymond’s funeral in 2012, someone stole the memorial box – not simply the money, but the cards, as well. Raymond’s “safe haven” was violated.[xii]
Gavin Schmitt's Murder Capital is available now.
[i] 1900,
1910 Federal Census
[ii]
World War I Draft Registration
[iii]
1930 Federal Census
[iv]
“Police Hunt Pair After Killers Take Officer Riphon for ‘Ride’” Wisconsin State
Journal. May 16, 1932.
[v]
“Police Hunt Pair”
[vi]
“Police Hunt Pair”
[vii]
There was some confusion on the identity of Wood. When consulted, Camp McCoy
knew of no such man. A Major Norman B. Wood of Two Rivers, connected with Camp
Grant, existed. Whether the man incorrectly identified himself or was misheard
by police is unclear. The discrepancy is covered in William H. McCall, “Bloody
Auto Points Slayers’ Trail to Lair”, Wisconsin State Journal. May 17, 1932.
[viii]
McCall, William H. “Order Arrest of 5 ‘Bad’ Chicago Suspects in Riphon ‘Ride’
Murder” Wisconsin State Journal. May 18, 1932.
[ix]
McCall, William H. “Patrolman Beaten with Gas Pipe, Death Car Tells” Wisconsin
State Journal. May 18, 1932
[x]
“Gas Pipe”
[xi]
“Death Great Preacher, Teacher, Priest Tells Riphon Mourners” Wisconsin State
Journal. May 18, 1932.
[xii] http://www.wkow.com/story/24139649/2013/12/Wednesday/tonight-at-10-donation-box-from-funeral-stolen-from-local-family