60
Principles and Practice of Criminalistics
Few working criminalists today would support the extrapolation of such
specific details about a person’s life and habits from the examination of phys-
ical evidence, let alone a single glove or pair of overalls. Such inferences were
probably overstatements even for the time, but with the increasingly mobile
and eclectic nature of our society, they
become irresponsible at best, mislead-
ing at worst. Most forensic scientists practicing in the current climate shy away
from grand sweeping Holmesian deductions, instead limiting themselves to
Heinrich was convinced that the man was left-handed. This conclusion was based on the finding
of wood chips in the right pocket, where he said they would land while a left-handed person chopped
a tree (his right side would be facing the tree, and the wood chips would fly in), the wear on the left
side pockets, and his observation that the overall had been buttoned exclusively from the left side.
The neatness of the fingernail trimmings convinced him of the fastidious nature of the man. The
height, he calculated by measuring the overalls between the shoulder buckles and the bottoms of the
trouser legs. Heinrich maintained that the fact that the left buckle was
3
/
4
inch higher than the right
was further proof of left-handedness. The creases on the bottom of each leg told him that they had
been tucked into shoe tops, “just as a lumberjack does.”
The
most concrete finding, extricated from a deep narrow pencil pocket in the bib, was a
registered mail receipt for $50 sent by Roy D’Autrement from Eugene, Oregon to his brother in
Lakewood, New Mexico. This piece of information led police to Paul D’Autrement, father of three
sons, Roy and Ray (who were twins), and Hugh. The elder D’Autrement recounted that his sons had
vanished the day before the train was held up. His description of Roy appeared to coincide with
Heinrich’s description, and he was a left-handed lumberjack.
A number of personal items were collected from the D’Autrement house. Heinrich matched a hair
from a towel used by Roy to the one from the overall button. From the items in the cabin, he determined
that the knapsack contained fir needle fragments and was mended with the same coarse black thread
that had been used to mend the overalls — it was “identical.” From measurements of the underwear
and socks, he calculated the stature and physique of the wearer, and, deciding
that the person was larger
than the owner of the overalls, concluded that such a person exactly matched the description of Ray
given by his father.
From the Colt automatic revolver, from which the external serial number had been partially
obliterated, he found a second, internal serial number. The gun was traced to a store in Seattle and
had been sold to, and signed for, by a William Elliott. Elliott’s signature was sent to Heinrich, who
established that it was — “identical” — to that of Roy D’Autrement. According to the gun dealer, the
gun buyer fitted the description of Roy. Finally, a canteen and water bag were reported to have been
sold from an army surplus store in Eugene to three men who had come in together. According to
Block, “Obviously, these were the three brothers, and they must have used the cabin as their rendezvous
before the robbery.”
Three
years later, in March, 1927, Hugh D’Autrement was arrested after a former military
colleague recognized his photograph on a wanted poster. A month later, an elderly gentleman, rec-
ognized the twins’ photographs from an article in the Sunday paper. They were picked up from the
Ohio steel mill where they had been working under false names. Hugh was tried first, and convicted,
inspiring the twins to confess, as finally did Hugh himself. They were all sentenced to life imprisonment
in the Oregon State Penitentiary at Salem.
It is difficult to know from a historical account what part the forensic evidence actually played
in the investigation and conviction of the D’Autrement brothers. Most forensic scientists working today
would agree that Heinrich’s conclusions, the significance he accorded them, and the confidence with
which they were proffered, far exceeded the data on which they were based. However, no one can
disagree that Heinrich was instrumental in
popularizing forensic science, and educating law enforce-
ment and the public about the potential contributions of physical evidence to the solution of crime.
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