The Bad Blood

Heard this story on NPR this morning:

The criminal brain has always held a fascination for James Fallon. For nearly 20 years, the neuroscientist at the University of California-Irvine has studied the brains of psychopaths. He studies the biological basis for behavior, and one of his specialties is to try to figure out how a killer's brain differs from yours and mine.

About four years ago, Fallon made a startling discovery. It happened during a conversation with his then 88-year-old mother, Jenny, at a family barbecue.

"I said, 'Jim, why don't you find out about your father's relatives?' " Jenny Fallon recalls. "I think there were some cuckoos back there."

Fallon investigated.

"There's a whole lineage of very violent people — killers," he says.

One of his direct great-grandfathers, Thomas Cornell, was hanged in 1667 for murdering his mother. That line of Cornells produced seven other alleged murderers, including Lizzy Borden. "Cousin Lizzy," as Fallon wryly calls her, was accused (and controversially acquitted) of killing her father and stepmother with an ax in Fall River, Mass., in 1882.

I guess it's nice to know that cousin Lizzie's murdering ways were clearly due to the Cornell blood (via the dubiously-named Miss Innocent Cornell), and not a product of good, pure, Borden blood.

3 thoughts on “The Bad Blood

  1. CharleyCarp

    Hey, as a descendant of Thomas Cornell’s sister Elizabeth, I have to speak up here:

    John Cornell, in his Genealogy of the Cornell Family, wrote that the trial “reads like a farce. It appears that the old lady having been sitting by the fire smoking a pipe, a coal had fallen from the fire or her pipe, and that she was burned to death. But on the strength of a vision which her brother John Briggs had, in which she appeared to him after her death and said: ‘See how I was burned with fire.’ It was inferred that she was set fire to, and that her son who was last with her did it, and principally on this evidence Thomas Cornell was tried, convicted and hung for her murder. Durfee in his Legal Tracts of Rhode Island, comments on the strangeness of this trial and the injustice of the execution. The writer of this remarked to a leading lawyer of Newport (who knows much of the history of Rhode Island), that there seemed very little evidence to convict this Thomas Cornell, the lawyer’s answer was simply: ‘There was no evidence.’

  2. CharleyCarp

    I, uh, am also a descendant of John Briggs (and his wife Sarah Cornell — sister of Thomas Cornell’s father) so I can claim bad blood of either flavor here.

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