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"Instead, his insurance plot became one of the most bizarre homicides in California. And that is saying something. The jury found him guilty of first degree murder in 1939. He was executed by hanging at San Quentin. And he was one of the last before the state abandoned that method of execution. So, lunch buddies, when you add both a human accomplice and an animal in your murder scheme, there is the potential for things to go very wrong for all parties. Come back for more lunchtime crime."