Indiana Approves Plan to Exhume John Dillinger’s Grave on New Year’s Eve

Wire Service
By Wire Service
October 6, 2019US News
share
Indiana Approves Plan to Exhume John Dillinger’s Grave on New Year’s Eve
Indiana Reformatory booking shots of 21-year-old John Dillinger. (The Indianapolis Star, Charlie Nye/AP Photo)

The grave of gangster John Dillinger, once called “Public Enemy No. 1,” is set to be exhumed at the end of this year at the wishes of Dillinger’s niece and nephew.

Michael Thompson, Dillinger’s nephew, submitted an application to the Indiana State Department of Health for a permit to disinter the grave underneath Dillinger’s headstone, according to documents obtained by CNN affiliate WXIN.

The state health department approved the disinterment for Dec. 31, 2019, with reinterment of the remains to follow on the same day.

The documents contain an affidavit from Dillinger’s niece, Carol Thompson, which builds the case that someone other than her Dillinger is buried in the grave.

According to the conventional narrative, Dillinger was buried at Crown Hill Cemetery in Indianapolis, Indiana on July 26, 1934. He reportedly died four days earlier, after being shot by FBI agents outside Chicago’s Biograph Theater.

People view the body of gangster John Dillinger
People view the body of gangster John Dillinger in a Chicago morgue in July 1934. (AP Photo)

In the affidavit, Dillinger’s niece writes that she’s seen evidence that the man shot by the FBI was someone other than her uncle.

The FBI disputes Thompson’s position in an August tweet, arguing that “a wealth of information” supported their story of Dillinger’s demise, including three sets of fingerprints.

They point the public toward a trove of of documents available on their website.

But Thompson says there is evidence that the man in the grave does not match Dillinger’s eye color, fingerprints, anterior teeth, ears and head shape.

“It is my belief and opinion that, if the FBI killed the wrong man outside the Biograph Theater, it is also important to identify the man in the grave at Crown Hill Cemetery,” Thompson writes.

To do that, the document says there are plans to analyze the body for testing and that the family is allowing the exhumation to be filmed.

The exhumation was originally set for Sept. 16, with plans to film it as part of a documentary slated to air on the History Channel.

But that planned dig was halted during a dispute between the family and Crown Hill Cemetery.

The cemetery had opposed the exhumation, expressing concern in an August statement to the IndyStar that the dig might “cause disruption to the peaceful tranquility of the Cemetery.”

CNN has reached out to the cemetery for comment.

2019 CNN Trademark

ntd newsletter icon
Sign up for NTD Daily
What you need to know, summarized in one email.
Stay informed with accurate news you can trust.
By registering for the newsletter, you agree to the Privacy Policy.
Comments