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George J.

Hassell of Farwell, Texas, was charged with felony counts of malice aforethought, murder and child
abuse in connection with the discovery of the graves in his own property. Hassell was put in custody and was
facing trial on seven counts, including two counts of first-degree murder and two counts of aggravated battery
stemming from the Aug. 5, 1926 incident. According to court documents, Hassell was inside his home when his
son discovered the bodies. In a fit of anger, he retrieved a rifle and killed all the adults and injured his son before
turning the weapon on himself. He was ordered held without bail after appearing in court on the afternoon of
Sept. 8, 1926.

Amarillo, Tex., Dec. 24. 1926 Hassell admitted to killing his wife and eight small children three days earlier and
then buried their skeletal remains in a makeshift grave in the back yard. George J. Hassell told detectives that he
went to work on his farm on the morning of Aug. 5, leaving his wife with the children, but returned after words,
took the rifle, and shot his wife three times in the back of the head and once in the side.

According to the details of the story given by Hassell, he went back to the house and cleaned up, cooking a stew
for his daughter. Later that night, he went with his father to another address and returned with two boys, one of
them having been left at the farm to tend to his cows. He was with his father when the two men were confronted
by two armed men who identified themselves as law enforcement officers. George J. Hassell told detectives that
he did not remember much after the men took him into the house.

Police detectives conducted several unsuccessful searches for the skeletal remains of the boys, searching
everywhere they were known to go. Detectives were not satisfied with the information they received from the
neighbors and asked that the bodies be exhumed and positively identified by DNA testing. The autopsy
performed by Fort Bowie mortuary showed that both boys died of blunt trauma to the head.

George J. Hassell was convicted of three counts of first-degree murder, two counts of second-degree murder, and
one count of involuntary manslaughter, in the deaths of thirteen-year-old Johnny Price and eleven-year-old Billy
Price. His conviction was overturned on the fourth trial date, when a new forensic dentist discovered that the bite
marks on the boys were not really bite marks at all, but rather marks of animal teeth. After further testing, it was
discovered that the actual perpetrator of the crime, George J. Hassell Jr., was not charged in the murders. active
serial killers He was instead tried and convicted for second-degree murder and involuntary manslaughter. Though
he was cleared of the first-degree murders, he was convicted of the second-degree murder charges, and a retrial
of his first conviction was ordered. On February 10, 1928 George J. Hassell was put to death in the electric chair by
the State of Texas.

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