UP FOR AUCTION, IS A VERY RARE, ORIGINAL FBI POSTER OF THE "BLONDE TIGRESS" ELEANOR JARMAN. 

ELEANOR JARMAN was an American fugitive and convicted robber who was imprisoned and escaped from custody in 1940. Jarman was never apprehended, and her ultimate whereabouts remain unknown.  On August 4, 1933, Dale, Jarman and Leo Minneci tried to rob a clothing store in Chicago's far West Side. In a struggle with the shop owner, Gustav Hoeh, Jarman clawed at him, but then Dale shot him.

When the robbers drove away, several witnesses noted the license plate. That led police to Minneci, who blamed the other two, who were soon arrested. Dale blamed Minneci for the robbery. Jarman said that she did not know which one did it. She claimed she was in the back room looking for clothes.

However, witnesses described how Jarman and Dale had entered the store and claimed she had threatened the clerk. Press made her a major player in all of Dale's crimes, dubbed her "the Blond Tigress" and compared her to Bonnie Parker (of Bonnie and Clyde).

Jarman was not tried for robberies but for complicity in Hoeh's murder. Her defense attorney was A. Jefferson Schultze. The prosecuting attorney, Wilbur Crowley, called for the death penalty.

George Dale was sentenced to die in the electric chair. As his last wish, he wrote a love letter to Jarman. Minneci and Jarman were sentenced to jail—Jarman for 199 years, One of the longest criminal sentences ever imposed at the time. Her children were sent to live with her older sister and her husband, Hattie and Joe Stocker, in Sioux City, Iowa.

After imprisonment

A model prisoner

For the next seven years, Jarman was a model prisoner at the Dwight Correctional Center (Illinois). In 1940, according to her family, she heard that her son was about to run away from home and, concerned about her children, escaped the prison on August 8, 1940,[3] with another inmate, Mary Foster.[4] She apparently went to Sioux City, Iowa, confirmed that her children were all right and then went underground.

The 1975 meeting

Over the next 35 years, Jarman maintained surreptitious contact with her family through classified ads. In 1975, she arranged a secret meeting with her brother Otto Berendt, his wife Dorothy, and Jarman's son Leroy, by then in middle-age. During this meeting, which the family disclosed decades later, Leroy tried to persuade his mother to give herself up. She refused and said that she was not worried about capture, believing the authorities had long since stopped looking for her. Communications with her family through newspaper ads tapered off in the mid-1990s. A 1993 petition to grant Jarman a pardon failed.

Although Jarman officially remained a fugitive, she was born in 1901 (122 years ago), so it is essentially certain that she is dead, and that her death was recorded under an alias.

Eleanor's likely burial under an alias is discussed in Silvia Pettem's book, In Search of the Blonde Tigress: The Untold Story of Eleanor Jarman

 THIS A PIECE OF HISTORY. NO ONE HAS IT, AND YOU CAN LOOK LONG AND HARD, YOU WILL NEVER FIND IT.  THIS POSTER IS IN BEAUTIFUL, PRISTINE, CONDITION, AS YOU CAN SEE. DON'T MISS IT!


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