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🎙️ Mugshot Mysteries: Episode — Ruth Snyder: The Tabloid Murderess
January 1928: New Yorkers awoke to a front page screaming DEAD! Beneath it was a blurred photo of a woman in the electric chair, captured at the moment of death. That woman was Ruth Snyder, a Queens housewife whose affair and insurance plot spiraled into one of the Jazz Age’s most infamous crimes.
In this episode, we trace Ruth’s path from Queens to Sing Sing: her affair with corset salesman Henry Judd Gray, the forged double indemnity policy, the staged burglary, and the tabloid circus that made her the most notorious woman in America.
Her story inspired Double Indemnity and Machinal, reshaping how America saw crime, gender, and punishment. And that execution photo? It sparked a media ethics debate still alive today.
📰 Sources
🧠 Themes
😷 PS: Forgive the scratchy voice—I recorded this while sick. Call it my “Jazz Age rasp.”
Support the show
💬 Like what you hear? Follow us on Instagram and TikTok @MugshotMysteries for behind-the-scenes content, old mugshots, and vintage scam stories.
⭐ Rate & review to help others discover the twisted brilliance of the world’s most bizarre historical criminals.
🎧 Listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your shows.
Thanks for listening. We’ll see you next time with another face… and another mystery.
Send us a text
🎙️ Mugshot Mysteries: Episode — Ruth Snyder: The Tabloid Murderess
January 1928: New Yorkers awoke to a front page screaming DEAD! Beneath it was a blurred photo of a woman in the electric chair, captured at the moment of death. That woman was Ruth Snyder, a Queens housewife whose affair and insurance plot spiraled into one of the Jazz Age’s most infamous crimes.
In this episode, we trace Ruth’s path from Queens to Sing Sing: her affair with corset salesman Henry Judd Gray, the forged double indemnity policy, the staged burglary, and the tabloid circus that made her the most notorious woman in America.
Her story inspired Double Indemnity and Machinal, reshaping how America saw crime, gender, and punishment. And that execution photo? It sparked a media ethics debate still alive today.
📰 Sources
🧠 Themes
😷 PS: Forgive the scratchy voice—I recorded this while sick. Call it my “Jazz Age rasp.”
Support the show
💬 Like what you hear? Follow us on Instagram and TikTok @MugshotMysteries for behind-the-scenes content, old mugshots, and vintage scam stories.
⭐ Rate & review to help others discover the twisted brilliance of the world’s most bizarre historical criminals.
🎧 Listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your shows.
Thanks for listening. We’ll see you next time with another face… and another mystery.