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Murder
Near the Crosses
by
Peter R. Sandman
In both stores now.
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Downtown (575) 524-8471
Solano (575) 647-4472
In 1949 a young woman was killed in Las
Cruces, New Mexico. Ovida (Cricket) Coogler became a household name in
the small agricultural town just north of the U.S./Mexico border that
was celebrating its first 100 years. Her death became national news
when Time magazine ran a story about it. The investigation of her
murder soon involved not only the local police, but also the New Mexico
State Police and the FBI. Even J. Edgar Hoover took a personal interest
in the search for her killer. It wasn't just Cricket's death that
interested these government agencies. Organized crime was testing
whether New Mexico could soon become the gambling capital of the west.
Bugsy Siegel was seen in Santa Fe. The Cleveland Mob was operating
illegal casinos in the state. Meyer Lansky, Moe Dalitz, and Butts
Lowenstein were making their presence known. The governor, lieutenant
governor, and other state officials were enjoying the attention
accorded people who could make things happen. In the midst of these
activities was a member of the Dona Ana County sheriff's department who
carefully investigated the young woman's murder, kept extensive notes,
and himself became a victim of the times. Roy Sandman, the author's
father, knew who the killer was. He didn't live to tell, and so the
death of Cricket Coogler remains one of the best known, unsolved
murders in New Mexico. This is the story that Sandman would have told.