In the late summer of 1954, a single gunshot on Railroad Street in Morehead, Kentucky ended the life of a local man and set off a murder trial that drew attention across the region. The case involved a divorced café operator, a dispute over borrowed money, and sharply conflicting testimony about what had happened in the moments before the fatal shot.
When the trial finally concluded the following spring, a Rowan County jury would deliver a verdict that suggested they believed the truth lay somewhere between self-defense and unjustified killing.
The Night of the Shooting
The events that led to the death of Fred Randall Amburgey, a 42-year-old Morehead man, unfolded on the night of September 10, 1954.
Amburgey went to the property of Myrtle Hamm, a divorced woman who operated a restaurant on Railroad Street in Morehead. Hamm lived in a residence beside the restaurant she ran, and it was there—outside her home—that the confrontation occurred.
Exactly what took place in those final moments became the central question of the trial.
According to testimony later presented in court, Amburgey had come to Hamm’s home asking to borrow money. Newspaper accounts differ on the amount. Some reports stated he asked for $20, while others said the request was for twenty cents.
Hamm refused the request.
What happened next depended entirely on whose story the jury believed.
Hamm later testified that after she refused to lend him money, Amburgey asked her for a match. She said she went to the door and opened the screen door in order to hand him one.
At that moment, according to Hamm, Amburgey grabbed for her.
Feeling threatened, she pulled a pistol and fired.
The single shot struck Amburgey and proved fatal.
Other witnesses offered a different version.
Two prosecution witnesses, Miss Gladys Lacy and G. H. Morrison, testified that Amburgey had been with them before the shooting and that the exchange between him and Hamm unfolded differently. According to their testimony, Amburgey asked Hamm for money and she replied sharply:
“I have it, but you won’t get it.”
The witnesses stated that Hamm then opened the door and fired, without Amburgey assaulting her.
With Amburgey dead and the stories in conflict, the case quickly moved from a local tragedy to a criminal prosecution.
Charges Filed
Within days of the shooting, Myrtle Hamm was charged with murder.
Early newspaper reports described the killing as having occurred at Hamm’s Café, the restaurant she operated on Railroad Street. Later accounts clarified that the shooting had actually occurred outside her residence, which stood beside the café.
The case attracted considerable local attention. Amburgey was not an unknown figure in the community. He was the son of Elijah Amburgey, a former Morehead city police judge and a well-known local official.
Meanwhile, Hamm was described in the press as a divorced restaurant operator, a woman who lived and worked on the same property where the fatal encounter had taken place.
The case was scheduled to be heard in Rowan Circuit Court, but the proceedings would not begin immediately.
Delays Before Trial
In late 1954, the defense argued that Hamm was too ill to stand trial.
Her attorneys told the court that she was suffering from serious health problems, and a local physician reportedly supported their claim that she was unable to appear in court at that time.
The prosecution challenged that assertion, suggesting that the defense request might simply be an effort to delay the proceedings.
The dispute became heated enough that the judge ordered further medical examination before the trial could move forward.
As a result, the case was postponed, and the trial did not begin until the following spring.
Jury Selection and Trial
By March 1955, the case was finally ready for trial.
Jury selection proved difficult. Initial efforts to seat a panel were unsuccessful, forcing the court to call additional jurors before a full jury could be assembled.
The trial itself moved quickly once it began.
Each side presented six witnesses, and testimony focused primarily on the brief exchange between Hamm and Amburgey immediately before the shooting.
Hamm’s defense centered on self-defense. Her attorneys argued that she fired the weapon only after Amburgey grabbed her at the doorway of her home.
The prosecution sought to portray the shooting as unnecessary and unjustified. Their witnesses testified that Amburgey had not assaulted Hamm and that she fired after refusing to lend him money.
The central issue for the jury was therefore simple but difficult: whether Hamm had fired in fear for her safety or whether she had shot Amburgey during a dispute that had escalated too far.
The Verdict
After hearing the testimony, the case went to the jury.
They deliberated for several hours before returning their decision.
The jury did not convict Hamm of murder.
Instead, they found her guilty of manslaughter.
Under Kentucky law at the time, the penalty for manslaughter could range from one year to twenty-one years in prison.
In a decision that suggested the jurors viewed the killing as a lesser form of homicide, they imposed a sentence of two years in prison, only slightly above the minimum allowed.
Following the verdict, Judge John T. Winn formally sentenced Hamm in Rowan Circuit Court.
Her attorneys declined to request a new trial.
Sentenced to Prison
Soon after the trial concluded, Hamm was taken into custody and transported to the Kentucky State Reformatory for Women in LaGrange.
She was eligible for parole after serving eight months of the sentence.
According to one newspaper account, Hamm appeared composed in the hours following the verdict. She reportedly spoke with friends and acquaintances and indicated that she was glad the long ordeal was over.
A Case Remembered
The death of Fred Randall Amburgey and the conviction of Myrtle Hamm faded from headlines soon after the trial ended.
Like many mid-century criminal cases in small Kentucky communities, it left behind only scattered newspaper reports and the memories of those who had followed the trial at the time.
Yet the case remains a striking example of how quickly an argument can turn deadly—and how a jury, confronted with conflicting stories and uncertain motives, sometimes reaches a verdict that reflects compromise as much as certainty.
More than seventy years later, the brief confrontation on Railroad Street still stands as one of the lesser-known but compelling criminal cases in the history of Morehead and Rowan County.


