People v. Elbroch

250 A.D. 583, 294 N.Y.S. 961, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8408
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 16, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 250 A.D. 583 (People v. Elbroch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Elbroch, 250 A.D. 583, 294 N.Y.S. 961, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8408 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Martin, P. J.

On August 19,1935, Battisto Salvo was Iddnapped and held captive in the county of Bronx, city of New York, until August 22, 1935, on which date he was released on payment of a ransom in the sum of $9,000. The kidnapping is alleged to have been carried out by eight conspirators, Louis Elbroch, Frederick Miller, Edward Knott, Frank Dolak, Benjamin Holinsky, A1 Stern, Harold Brooks and Leo Aaronson. Of these men, Elbroch, Miller and Knott were indicted, tried and convicted; four others, Dolak, Holinsky, Stern and Brooks, were dead at the time the indictment was filed, and the eighth man, Aaronson, testified on the trial as a witness for the People.

[585]*585The principal witnesses on behalf of the People were Leo Aaronson, confessedly one of the kidnappers, and Irving Blauner who, although he had knowledge of the conspiracy and of the crime, was not made a defendant.

On July 18, 1935, Brooks and Stern rented an apartment in premises 1687 Carter avenue, Bronx. At a meeting held in that apartment on August 15, 1935, the eight conspirators were present, and they then determined to kidnap Salvo. Aaronson was given $150 to buy a truck for use in the kidnapping. He purchased a Chevrolet truck with a closed body on August 16, 1935. Holinsky knew Salvo, and on August 19, 1935, at the Carter avenue apartment, he agreed to point out Salvo to the conspirators. That evening Holinsky, Dolak and Aaronson left the apartment and drove in a Buick car bearing New Jersey license plates to One Hundred and Seventy-fourth street and Third avenue, where they picked up Blauner, who also knew Salvo. The four men then proceeded to White Plains avenue and Gun Hill road, where Salvo and his business partner, Milo, had an office on a used-car lot. Blauner stepped out of the car, looked into the shack which was used as an office, and then reported to the conspirators that neither Salvo nor Milo was in the office. The men then drove around the block, and while doing so Holinsky remarked that he saw Salvo get out of an automobile and enter the office. Being satisfied that Salvo was in his office, the group returned to the apartment on Carter avenue. Holinsky left the car before it reached the apartment. Dolak, Aaronson and Blauner met Stern at the apartment. Aaronson took a brief case containing four pistols and, with Dolak and Blauner, went to One Hundred and Seventy-fourth street and Third avenue, where they met Knott, Miller, Elbroch and Brooks. Blauner was driving the Buick car, with Aaronson and Dolak as passengers. Miller entered that car. Knott drove the closed Chevrolet truck in which Elbroch and Brooks rode. The car and the Luck then proceeded to White Plains avenue and Gun Hill road. Before the Buick reached the used-car lot Blauner left the automobile and Aaronson took the wheel.

When the car and the truck arrived at the used-car lot where Salvo’s office was located, Salvo was observed coming out of his office and going toward his car. Brooks and Elbroch, who had been in the Chevrolet truck, approached Salvo and “ stuck him up;” Brooks hit him on the head and with Elbroch’s assistance pushed Salvo into his own car. Miller and Dolak, who had stepped out of the Buick car and walked around the block, were then about fifty feet away. They joined Brooks and Elbroch in Salvo’s car, which drove from the scene. Aaronson drove the Buick away, and Knott [586]*586drove the Chevrolet truck. Aaronson arrived at the Carter avenue apartment and met Stern. In a few minutes Miller, Elbroch, Dolak and Brooks, with Salvo, came into the apartment. Aaronson and Dolak drove Salvo’s automobile to Echo place and Jerome avenue, Bronx, notified someone in Salvo’s office that the car could be found there, and then returned to the Carter avenue apartment. Kolinsky was in the apartment with Brooks when Aaronson and Dolak returned. The kidnapped man denied he was Battisto Salvo and claimed he was a brother of that man. Kolinsky was sent for and identified the prisoner as Battisto Salvo. The kidnappers then demanded a ransom of $25,000. On August 22, 1935, the sum of $9,000 was paid, and Salvo was released.

At about three o’clock on August 22, 1935, the eight conspirators met at the home of Aaronson, at which time Stern produced the $9,000 ransom and each of the eight men was given $1,000. Out of the balance a new Chevrolet automobile was purchased, in payment for which the Buick car was traded in and $500 of the ransom money was used. From the sum he received Kolinsky paid Blauner $250. On August 24, 1935, the Chevrolet closed truck which had been purchased for use in the kidnapping and was so used was driven by Knott to the repair shop of Louis Petchers on Webster avenue, Bronx. Knott told Petchers he would call for it within three days. He did not do so and the police officials removed the truck some months thereafter.

Anna Urban, an assistant to the superintendent of 1687 Carter avenue, testified that she saw six of the conspirators going in and out of the apartment used by the kidnappers. She also testified that she saw the kidnapped man Salvo leave the premises accompanied by some of the kidnappers. Madeline Bradman, the superintendent of the apartment house, said that the apartment was rented on July 18, 1935, and vacated on August 22, 1935. She identified all of the conspirators except Knott as having entered or left the apartment. Petchers testified that Knott brought the Chevrolet closed truck to his garage. Assunto Cancellieri testified that Miller had a large sum of money on the night of August 22, 1935.

The defendants did not take the stand. Knott called no witnesses. Miller called several witnesses to substantiate his alibi defense. One of his witnesses, related to him by marriage, testified that Miller was in his company on August 19, 1935, the day of the kidnapping, from six-thirty a. m. to six-forty-five p. m. and from eight p. m. to eleven-thirty p. m. Witnesses also testified that on August 21, 1935, Miller was in their company from six or six-thirty p. m. until about eleven-thirty p. m. These witnesses [587]*587claimed to be certain of the date because one of them returned that day from Metropolitan Hospital with a new-born baby. Another witness testified that on August twenty-second, the day the conspirators released Salvo and divided the ransom money, she saw Miller for an hour or more commencing at one-forty-five p. m.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 A.D. 583, 294 N.Y.S. 961, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-elbroch-nyappdiv-1937.