At least 10 people died under Linda Hazard's care, but none of them had indicated starvation. The Vice Consulate was building a case against her when he went to the prosecution. He said, look, we have got to do something and stop this woman. And they did agree. In January 1912, almost six months after Dora left Ola, Linda Hazard's trial began.
In 1911, two sisters traveled to Seattle to meet a "doctor" named Linda Hazzard. The sisters didn’t seem very sick, but when they arrived, Dr. Hazzard told them they didn’t have a moment to lose – they needed to begin her treatment right away.
A few months later, one of the sisters wrote a letter to her old governess. “I am wonderfully better in fact,” she said, “getting stronger by leaps.” But her handwriting was messier than usual, and her sentences ran together and overlapped.
You can find Gregg Olsen’s book, Starvation Heights, here.
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