On May 21, 1921, Anna Brown arrived half-drunk at the home of her sister Mollie Burkhart in Gray Horse, Oklahoma. After causing a scene in front of Mollie’s in-laws who had been invited to dinner, fighting with her invalid mother and with Mollie, Anna walked out the door and became a statistic.
Her badly decomposed body was found about a week later in the bottom of a ravine. The coroner had her body hauled to the top of the ravine where an inept autopsy was immediately performed. A bullet hole was found in the back of her skull. A coroner’s inquest, composed of white men present during the retrieval of the body and the autopsy, concluded that Anna had been murdered.