Seduction

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  • TRIAL TRANSCRIPT: People v. Max Krakauer (Part 1)

    0491: The People of the State of New York v. Max Krakauer

    Max Krakauer is indicted for seduction. Lillian Schlosser, 19, a recent immigrant from Hungary, testifies that in August 1903, on account of severe toothache, she visited the office of Max Krakauer, a dentist. Later that week, Krakauer, after visiting Schlosser at her lodgings in Stanton Street, told her that he wanted to marry her. She was initially hesitant – she told him that she was only a poor girl with no expectation of marrying a doctor – but on Thanksgiving Day in November 1903, Krakauer held an engagement party when he announced to various friends and acquaintances that they were to be married. The following month, in December 1903, at Christmastime, Krakauer persuaded her to have sex. Schlosser testifies that she subsequently became ill in March 1904. Krakauer took her to a doctor who performed an abortion. They had intercourse again that summer and in August 1904 the same doctor performed a second abortion. Krakauer stopped visiting her that month and she no longer had contact with him. Several acquaintances and relatives testify that they witnessed Krakauer give Schlosser an engagement ring at the Thanksgiving party in 1903 and that he had announced his intention to marry her. The defense presented two witnesses who claimed that they had had sex with Schlosser either before or during her engagement. William Lubliner, a photographer, testified that he had sex with her four times in July 1903 and three times later that year, in November 1903; Joseph Silverman said he had sex with Schlosser four times in October 1903. Arthur Camnitzer, a physician, testified that he had examined Schlosser in March and August 1904. He denied ever having performed an abortion and claimed that Schlosser had twice experienced a natural abortion. The transcript is incomplete and there is no record of a verdict. [Note: The jury found Krakauer guilty and the judge, Warren Foster, sentenced him to a term of imprisonment not less than 42 months and not more than 54 months.]
  • People v. Charles Weintraub (Part 1)

    1849: The People of the State of New York v. Charles Weintraub

    Frieda Milovitz, 18, a domestic servant, testifies that she came to the United States from Hungary in 1910. She met the defendant, Charles Weintraub, a fruit peddler, in August 1913. He asked her to marry him shortly after their introduction and later that year, on October 28, she agreed to have sex with Weintraub when he told her they would be married that week. She went with Weintraub to City Hall on November 3 and they obtained a marriage license. It was only several weeks later that she realized that it had been necessary to obtain a marriage certificate and that they were not, therefore, legally married. She separated from Weintraub on November 26 after he had told her that he expected her to work as a prostitute. Other witnesses, including Milovitz’s two sisters, testify that they had heard the defendant promise to marry the complainant. James Dalton, a police detective, testifies that he had arrested Weintraub on November 27 on a charge of seduction under the promise of marriage. Charles Weintraub testifies in his own defense, saying that he had intended to marry Frieda Milovitz and denying that he had expected her to work as a prostitute. The jury returns a verdict of guilty on the indictment of seduction.
  • People v. Peter J. Brennan (Part 1)

    2650: The People of the State of New York v. Peter J. Brennan

    Peter Brennan is indicted for seduction under promise of marriage. Irene Gkork, 20 years old, first met Brennan at a party in May 1918. She accepted his invitation to a vaudeville show and, according to her testimony in court, they met several times each week thereafter until October 1918. Gkork testifies that Brennan proposed to her three weeks after they had first met and that she accepted his offer; and he subsequently asked several people to witness the ceremony. On Wednesday, August 14, she went with the defendant to the apartment on 9th Avenue where he lived with his father and cousin. They were alone together in the front room when he asked her to have sex with him, saying that no one would know about it and that they were to be married that November. She refused; but he took her into the bedroom, pulled her onto the bed, lifted her clothes, unbuttoned his trousers, and they had intercourse. That September, after she told him that she had not menstruated, Brennan arranged for her to have an abortion but she refused the operation. He ended contact with her, no longer calling at her apartment, and in November 1918, after she filed a complaint, the police arrested him on a charge of seduction. Several witnesses, including Irene Gkork’s sister, Helen; her mother, Delia; and a friend, Helen Spalding, all testify that Brennan had talked about his intent to marry and that he had stated that the wedding would occur in November 1918. Peter Brennan, testifying on his own behalf, states that he had only met Irene Gkork four times, denies that he had proposed marriage, and claims that she had been pregnant on account of sex with another man. John Joseph Frazer, 22, a welder, testifies that he had had sex with her two times, in August 1918. Irene Gkork had worked at the Vitagraph Company and several employees, including Brennan’s cousin, Mamie Eustace, state that she had frequently spoken of liaisons with several men. The jury returns a guilty verdict and Brennan is sentenced to a term of imprisonment not less than two years and six months and not more than five years.