Murder of Laura Law

Lea Laura Luoma Law (January 20, 1914 – January 5, 1940), a Finnish immigrant to the USA, was the wife of militant labor leader Richard Law. She was mysteriously murdered on January 5, 1940. The case is still unsolved.

Laura Law was found murdered in her house at 1117 East 2nd Street in Aberdeen, Washington by her parents. She was bludgeoned with an axe and her skull was caved in. The murder happened so quietly that Law's toddler son was found sleeping in the next room when her mother found her corpse. There are many suspicions as to who killed her and for what reasons. Richard Law was one of the suspects, even though he was at a union meeting at the time of the murder.

Richard Shelton Law, a communist and labor activist, claimed that the murder happened when government agents were caught by Laura looking for evidence for the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). Other stories claim that communists from the Soviet Union killed her because of what she might have known about the then-ongoing Winter War (1939–1940).

The story of Laura Law's murder reveals the political and ethnic atmosphere of Aberdeen, Washington during the 1940s, characterized as a "hotbed of labor strife." The division between White Finns and Red Finns, and the different European ethnicities living in Aberdeen are highlighted because of this. The labor struggles of the area also comes to light, as there was a struggle between American Federation of Labor's unions and Congress of Industrial Organizations' unions; union and non-union workers; and local businesses and striking workers. Richard Law purported that his wife's murder could have been carried out by the Aberdeen Business Builders, an anti-union, right-wing group, as a threat to him or for retaliation. Provided by Wikipedia
Showing 1 - 1 results of 1 for search 'Laura Law', query time: 0.02s Refine Results
  1. 1