Real Name: Beulah George "Georgia" Tann
Case: Child Abduction/Abuse/Murder
Location: Memphis, Tennessee
Date: 1920's to 1950
Beulah George Tann (Georgia)
From 1924 through 1950, Beulah George "Georgia" Tann ran the
Tennessee Children's Home Society, from a stately home on Poplar Avenue
in Memphis, TN. Tann used it as a front for an illegal foundling home
and adoption agency that placed over 5,000 newborn infants and children,
from toddlers up to age 16, to sell to what Ms. Tann called "high type"
families in 48 states. She used manipulation, deception, pressure
tactics, threats, and brute force to take children from mainly poor
single mothers in a five-state area to sell to wealthy parents up until
outrage, lawsuits, and complaints spurred a state investigation into her
tactics closed her down in 1950. Protected by the infamous Edward Hull
"Boss" Crump, she regularly altered and destroyed the records of the
children "processed" through her custody and did not conduct checks on
the adoption homes to which she sent children. It is believed Ms. Tann
craved the wealth and power that her position and role afforded her,
hopefully to eclipse her locally famous father, who was a judge in
Mississippi and who had prohibited her from entering the field of law.
She delivered speeches about adoption in Washington, New York, and other
major cities and was consulted by Eleanor Roosevelt regarding child
welfare. So many children died while in Tann's care that at one point,
the infant mortality rate in Memphis, Tennessee was highest in the
country and many more deaths were never reported. Notable celebrities
such as Joan Crawford, June Allyson, and her husband Dick Powell, Smiley
Burnette, and Pearl Buck used her services as well as the parents of
New York governor Herbert Lehman. Tann's death prior to prosecution in
1950 led to more stringent laws on adoption in Tennessee in 1951. Fewer
than 10% of these stolen children were ever reunited with parents or
siblings due to the complicity of local and state officials such as
Juvenile Court Judge Camille Kelley, who provided about 20% of the
children adopted out by Tann, and difficulty finding true and accurate
documentation for identification. Cindy Lou Presto was one of the
children adopted by her and was reunited with her mother after
thirty-two years. She was abducted by her while she was playing at a
park when she was just a toddler. Two of her former children, Lynne
Heinz and Nancy Turner, are looking for their birth families.
Extra Notes:
This case first aired on the December 13, 1989
episode. It inspired the movies, "Missing Children: A Mother's Story"
and "Stolen Babies." The book, The Baby Thief: The Untold Story of Georgia Tann, the Baby Seller Who Corrupted Adoption, by Barbara Bisantz Raymond, was published in the U.S., Australia, and the U.K. Georgia Tann was profiled on Deadly Women.
Results:
Solved. Soon after the broadcast, Lynn was reunited with
her father and two half-brothers. Nancy was also able to locate and
reunite with her sister, Evelyn Routh, whom she hadn't seen in over
forty years.
Links:
Source: unsolvedmysteries.wikia.com