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- <text id=90TT1436>
- <title>
- June 04, 1990: Daddy's Little Girl
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 04, 1990 Gorbachev:In The Eye Of The Storm
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 56
- Daddy's Little Girl
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Did eight-year-old Eileen Franklin see her father kill her
- friend? Or is 29-year-old Eileen Franklin-Lipsker looking for
- revenge?
- </p>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson
- </p>
- <p> All happy families are alike, wrote Tolstoy, but unhappy
- ones are unhappy in their own way. Perhaps none was unhappier
- last Thursday than the family of Eileen Franklin-Lipsker, who
- took the stand in municipal court in Redwood City, Calif., to
- accuse her father, George Franklin Sr., of sexually molesting
- and then beating to death her best friend, Susan Nason, in her
- presence more than 20 years ago.
- </p>
- <p> When Franklin-Lipsker, now 29, first made that stunning
- disclosure last November, it broke open a case that local
- authorities thought they would never solve. Her story was
- credible enough for police to arrest Franklin, 50, a retired
- fireman and real estate agent, for first-degree murder and hold
- him on $2 million bail. Since then, the Franklin family has
- split apart. One of Franklin-Lipsker's three sisters distrusts
- her. Her brother, George Jr., will take the stand against her
- in their father's defense. Eileen's mother, who divorced George
- Sr. in 1975, is said to be "100%" supporting Eileen.
- </p>
- <p> The case against the father rests almost entirely on the
- daughter. Thus, much like a rape victim's, her character and
- credibility will be on trial when a jury determines what her
- father did on the afternoon of Sept. 22, 1969, when Susan, 8,
- did not return home from playing. Two months later, Susan's
- decomposed body was discovered near Crystal Springs Reservoir.
- Did little Eileen Franklin actually see her father murder Susan
- and repress it for two decades? Could her mind be playing
- tricks on her--or worse, could she be getting revenge on the
- father who once doted on her but abandoned her when she was 14
- to go live with another woman and her children?
- </p>
- <p> As Franklin-Lipsker took the stand to tell her story under
- oath for the first time, she looked utterly normal, an
- attractive California suburbanite reminiscent in her demeanor
- and tightly pulled-back hair of Maureen Dean sitting primly
- behind her husband John during the Watergate hearings. Father
- and daughter avoided looking at each other. But when Eileen
- sheepishly admitted that she considered undergoing hypnosis for
- weight loss (hypnosis-induced memories are inadmissible in
- California criminal trials), George Franklin smiled and tried
- to catch his daughter's eye, as if he saw for a moment his
- pudgy little girl, not the accuser who sent him to prison.
- </p>
- <p> Franklin hardly looks the part of the monster, as he sits
- not 20 feet from his daughter. When he was arrested, he looked
- like evil incarnate: barrel-chested and menacing, with his long
- hair brushed up into points. Since then he has lost 40 lbs.;
- he is now well-coiffed, and has donned steel-rimmed glasses.
- </p>
- <p> When she told her tale, Franklin-Lipsker became
- otherworldly, retreating into herself, a child of eight again,
- riding along in her father's Volkswagen van. As she now
- remembers that day, they stopped and offered a ride to Susan
- Nason, who lived five houses away. The two girls piled into the
- back to bounce on the mattress until her father pulled off the
- road near the reservoir and joined them. Eileen got into the
- front passenger seat; when she looked back she saw her father
- holding Susan's hands above her head, "on top of her, her legs
- spread apart...with pelvis against pelvis...and Susan
- saying, `Stop, no, don't.'"
- </p>
- <p> Eileen testified that she climbed back to help but was too
- frightened to do anything. She then recalls her father and
- Susan at the bottom of a wooded hill and her father raising a
- rock above his head. "I think I screamed. I did something that
- made Susie look up at me. She met my eyes." That look, she
- testified, was replicated by her own six-year-old daughter one
- day in January 1989, when she looked up from her coloring and
- asked, "Isn't that right, Mommy?" It triggered
- Franklin-Lipsker's first memory. She remembers seeing a smashed
- ring on Susan's bloodied finger and then being grabbed from
- behind by her father, who knocked her down and told her that
- this was her fault. It was her idea to invite Susan into the
- van, he said; if she told about this, no one would believe her--and he would kill her.
- </p>
- <p> Franklin-Lipsker's story has some corroboration. The
- prosecution's other witnesses testified that a mattress was
- found over Susan's body and that the girl died of a skull
- fracture, possibly from a rock. The defense intends to point
- out discrepancies in what Eileen told various family members
- and her marriage counselor. Also, she could have learned
- circumstances of the murder from Susan Nason's older sister
- Shirley, who was present when the police visited the Nason
- family after the body had been found. A curious fact that can
- be used to different effect by both sides is that Eileen's
- older sister Janice went to San Mateo County authorities five
- years ago with her own suspicions about their father's
- involvement in the Nason murder. Police said they did not have
- enough to go on, and no investigation was pursued.
- </p>
- <p> The defense is also expected to show that Franklin-Lipsker
- hopes to profit from her story. She has been deluged with book
- and movie deals by literary agents and entertainment lawyers,
- and it may not help that she told her story to NBC News in
- January.
- </p>
- <p> Judge James Browning Jr., who as a U.S. attorney in 1976
- prosecuted Patty Hearst for a Symbionese Liberation Army bank
- holdup, is expected to turn the case over to a jury.
- Franklin-Lipsker explained to NBC why she is putting her family
- through such a wrenching ordeal. "There was nothing I could do
- at the time to protect Susan," she said. "I was the only other
- person there. And I just feel that I owe it to her to tell the
- truth." Whatever the outcome, it is hard to imagine the
- Franklins being like other families again. If they ever were.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-