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Quiz about The Juan Corona Affair
Quiz about The Juan Corona Affair

The Juan Corona Affair Trivia Quiz


Here is a quiz pertaining to Juan Corona, one of the most notorious killers in California history.

A multiple-choice quiz by macabrescribe. Estimated time: 4 mins.
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Time
4 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
305,236
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
7 / 10
Plays
399
Awards
Top 35% Quiz
Last 3 plays: Guest 76 (7/10), GoodVibe (0/10), Guest 136 (10/10).
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Question 1 of 10
1. Juan Corona was born in Mexico in 1934. He migrated to Yuba City, California, years later for farm work. Corona eventually rose to the position of labor contractor, making him responsible for hiring itinerants to pick fruit for local growers, despite being diagnosed with what in his younger days? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. The workers Corona hired received very little pay, and he housed them in dismal buildings. It gave him control of their food and shelter, which kindled his psychopathic tendencies. At which ranch did he take advantage of his workers' predicaments by selecting men to rape and murder? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. In 1971, a Japanese farmer named Goro Kagehiro discovered a large hole in a peach orchard. Kagehiro later stumbled upon the same spot and realized the hole had been filled. Suspicious, he notified the authorities. They arrived, excavated, and found the body of which victim? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. Soon after, another farmer claimed that there was a newly filled-in hole on his land. It harbored the body of an old drifter. Then more land in the Yuba City area was excavated and more graves turned up. In the end how many bodies were found? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. The position in which the corpses were discovered was very peculiar. The men were found facing up, arms positioned above the head, and the shirt covering the face. There was very little discrepancy.


Question 6 of 10
6. A victim named Melford Sample had evidence in one of his pockets that led law enforcement to Corona. The police searched Corona's home and found a pistol, bloodstained knives and clothes, and a ledger with several victims in it. What was the clue that pointed authorities to Corona? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. Juan Corona was arrested and indicted with all 25 murders. He pleaded "not guilty" and the trial began. Of course, Corona's defense insisted that he was not the culprit. Who did the defense claim was the true killer? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. Corona's then-alleged escapades led him to be dubbed with which pseudonym? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. Although he was found guilty and condemned to serve 25 life sentences, Corona sought to appeal the verdict. The Machete Murderer claimed that his initial defense panel had been inept because they never plead insanity due to Corona's schizophrenic condition. Did he win his appeal?


Question 10 of 10
10. During the appeal process, Corona was ambushed in prison by fellow inmates. In the course of the attack, he was left without the use of what? Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Dec 07 2024 : Guest 76: 7/10
Dec 06 2024 : GoodVibe: 0/10
Nov 05 2024 : Guest 136: 10/10

Score Distribution

quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Juan Corona was born in Mexico in 1934. He migrated to Yuba City, California, years later for farm work. Corona eventually rose to the position of labor contractor, making him responsible for hiring itinerants to pick fruit for local growers, despite being diagnosed with what in his younger days?

Answer: Schizophrenia

With his labor contracting, Corona provided a stable life for his wife and four children. The majority of the men he hired were destitute Mexicans. Many of them were unemployable: homeless, alcoholic, old, or social dropouts.
2. The workers Corona hired received very little pay, and he housed them in dismal buildings. It gave him control of their food and shelter, which kindled his psychopathic tendencies. At which ranch did he take advantage of his workers' predicaments by selecting men to rape and murder?

Answer: Sullivan Ranch

It was ordinary for people to disappear without anybody taking notice. The absences did not alarm anyone. Due to this, Corona didn't try very hard to wipe out evidence that could link him to the slain men.
3. In 1971, a Japanese farmer named Goro Kagehiro discovered a large hole in a peach orchard. Kagehiro later stumbled upon the same spot and realized the hole had been filled. Suspicious, he notified the authorities. They arrived, excavated, and found the body of which victim?

Answer: Kenneth Whitacre

Kenneth Whitacre was the first to be uncovered. He was bashed in the head and stabbed in the chest. There were also deep defensive wounds on his hands, which indicated a struggle.
4. Soon after, another farmer claimed that there was a newly filled-in hole on his land. It harbored the body of an old drifter. Then more land in the Yuba City area was excavated and more graves turned up. In the end how many bodies were found?

Answer: 25

When Corona was incarcerated for the 25 killings, it made him one of the most notorious American killers, since nobody had been convicted for that many murders at that time.
5. The position in which the corpses were discovered was very peculiar. The men were found facing up, arms positioned above the head, and the shirt covering the face. There was very little discrepancy.

Answer: True

The trousers of a few men were found down around their ankles.
6. A victim named Melford Sample had evidence in one of his pockets that led law enforcement to Corona. The police searched Corona's home and found a pistol, bloodstained knives and clothes, and a ledger with several victims in it. What was the clue that pointed authorities to Corona?

Answer: A receipt

The receipt was made out to a "Juan V. Corona". More receipts and slips rose to the surface. And many people came forward to say they'd seen victims with Corona shortly before the disappearances.
7. Juan Corona was arrested and indicted with all 25 murders. He pleaded "not guilty" and the trial began. Of course, Corona's defense insisted that he was not the culprit. Who did the defense claim was the true killer?

Answer: Corona's half-brother

Natividad, the brother, ran a café in a nearby town. He had once sexually assaulted a customer and put his beaten body in a bathroom. When the victim was about to press charges, Natividad fled to Mexico to escape prosecution. Despite this affair, there was no concrete evidence that connected him to the crimes-at-hand.
8. Corona's then-alleged escapades led him to be dubbed with which pseudonym?

Answer: The Machete Murderer

Aside from the condition in which the deceased bodies of Corona's victims were left, the men had cross-shaped gashes across the back of the head. And their bodies had been viciously hacked with a machete.
9. Although he was found guilty and condemned to serve 25 life sentences, Corona sought to appeal the verdict. The Machete Murderer claimed that his initial defense panel had been inept because they never plead insanity due to Corona's schizophrenic condition. Did he win his appeal?

Answer: No

For most of the first trial, Corona's attorney was a hotshot lawyer who was just looking to make a name for himself. But things didn't exactly work out as planned due to Corona's incarceration. Corona's representation for the appeal didn't have any more luck than the first guy.
10. During the appeal process, Corona was ambushed in prison by fellow inmates. In the course of the attack, he was left without the use of what?

Answer: An eye

Juan Corona was sliced nearly three dozen times with razorblades by fellow prisoners. He almost died, but ended up surviving and recovering from the assault, aside from the loss of sight in one of his eyes.

Here I'd like to thank the sources I used in constructing this quiz:

"The A to Z Encyclopedia of Serial Killers" by Harold Schechter and David Everitt

www.crime.about.com

latinamericanstudies.org

monstropedia.org

www.trutv.com
Source: Author macabrescribe

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor DakotaNorth before going online.
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