co-founder of earth day
Murder of Holly Maddux
Einhorn had a five-year relationship with Holly Maddux, a graduate of Bryn Mawr College who was originally from Tyler, Texas. In 1977, Maddux broke up with Einhorn and went to New York City, where she became involved with Saul Lapidus. On September 9, 1977, Maddux returned to the Philadelphia apartment she had previously shared with Einhorn to collect her belongings (which Einhorn had reportedly threatened to throw out into the street as trash) and was never seen again. Several weeks later, the Philadelphia police questioned Einhorn about her disappearance. He claimed that Maddux had gone out to the neighborhood co-op to buy some tofu and sprouts, and never returned.
Einhorn's initial alibi came into question when his neighbors began complaining about a foul smell coming from his apartment, which in turn aroused the suspicion of authorities. Eighteen months later, on March 28, 1979, Maddux's decomposing corpse was found by police in a trunk stored in Einhorn's closet. After finding the body, a police officer reportedly said to Einhorn, "It looks like we found Holly," to which he reportedly replied, "You found what you found." Einhorn's lawyer, Arlen Specter, negotiated bail of $40,000 ; he was released from custody after posting a bond of $4,000, or 10% of the bail amount. This amount was paid by socialite Phyllis Lambert, one of the many people Einhorn had convinced to support him financially.[citation needed] During Einhorn's flight he was aided by Barbara Bronfman, who also gave investigators an outdated lead on where to find him.[9]
In 1981, just days before his murder trial was to begin, Einhorn skipped bail and fled to Europe. He lived there for the next seventeen years and married a Swedish woman named Annika Flodin. In Pennsylvania, as Einhorn had already been arraigned, the state convicted him in absentia of Maddux's murder in 1996. Einhorn was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Early life and activism
Ira Einhorn was born into a middle-class Jewish family.[1][3] As a student at the University of Pennsylvania,[4][5] he became active in ecological groups and was part of the counterculture, anti-establishment, and anti-war movements of the 1960s and 1970s.[1] Einhorn participated in the first Earth Day event in Philadelphia in 1970, and later claimed to have been instrumental in creating and launching the event,[1] but other event organizers dispute his account.[6][7]
Einhorn was a teaching fellow at the Harvard Institute of Politics, at Harvard University.[5][8]
Ira Samuel Einhorn (May 15, 1940 – April 3, 2020), known as "The Unicorn Killer", was an American environmental activist and convicted murderer. He was convicted of murdering his ex-girlfriend, Holly Maddux. On September 9, 1977, Maddux disappeared following a trip to collect her belongings from the apartment she and Einhorn had shared in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Eighteen months later, police found her partially mummified body in a trunk in Einhorn's closet.[1]
After his arrest, Einhorn fled the country and spent twenty-three years in Europe before being extradited to the United States. He took the stand in his own defense, claiming his ex-girlfriend had been killed by CIA agents who framed him for the crime because he knew too much about the agency's paranormal military research. He was convicted and served a life sentence until his death in prison in April 2020.[1][2]
His moniker, "the Unicorn", comes from the surname Einhorn, which means "unicorn" in German.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ira_Einhorn
Unsolved Mysteries with Robert Stack - Season 8 Episode 7 - Full Episode\
https://youtu.be/EG5zp0SgRHQ
This episode includes: Forklift Mystery & UD, Unicorn's Secret & UD, Where's Jim?, Ohio Video Robbery and Grace's Ghost.
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Generally credited to Warren Commission staffer Arlen Specter [2] (later a United States Senator from Pennsylvania), this theory posits that a single bullet, known as “Warren Commission Exhibit 399” (or "CE 399") caused all the wounds to the governor and the non-fatal wounds to the president, which totals up to seven entry/exit wounds in both men.[3]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-bullet_theory