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Black Dahlia Murder-70 years ago (1 Viewer)

Uncle CornCob

Footballguy
January 15th , 1947 .I love true crime , books,movies , podcasts etc. and the Black Dahlia murder might be my favorite case. I've read Elroy's novel and a few other TC books on the Dahlia murder.


After 70 Years, The Black Dahlia Murder Still Haunts Los Angeles






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January in Los Angeles is the closest the city gets to winter. Gray skies, brief rainstorms and a not-so-bone-chilling chill visit Southern California, all welcomed guests for the otherwise perennially sunny region.

The morning of January 15, 1947 was nothing out of the ordinary. Betty Bersinger and her three-year-old daughter were walking around their Leimert Park neighborhood when Bersinger noticed something odd in a vacant, weed-filled lot on 39th Street and Norton Avenue. “The thought of a dead person did not enter my mind,” she later recalled about her discovery. “I thought it was a mannequin because it was so white.” 

Short's mugshot for underage drinking. (Photo via Wikimedia Commons)
Unfortunately for Bersinger, she hadn’t stumbled upon a the remnants of an art project gone awry. Instead, she had found the naked, mutilated body of 22-year-old Elizabeth “Betty” Short, whose given name was soon eclipsed by moniker of her demise: the Black Dahlia. 

Bersinger’s observation was in no way hyperbolic. Short has been sliced in half at the waist and drained of blood, both done with such precision that one of the case’s original investigators Detective Harry Hansen concluded that her killer was most likely a "top medical man" and "a fine surgeon." Short also suffered a blow to the head, various wounds throughout her body in which chunks of her flesh were cleanly cut out, and her face was sliced from ear to ear in a grisly “Glasgow Smile.” 

After Bersinger alerted the authorities, droves of police and reporters descendedupon Norton Avenue, but it was the Los Angeles Examiner who managed to strike a deal with the LAPD: the paper would transmit the victim’s fingerprints through the wirephoto system and in return the police would give them exclusive press rights to the identification on the macabre killing. The police accepted—the cops and the press were a little too intimate in that era—and by the next day, Short’s identity was confirmed through a set of fingerprints from 1943 when she was arrested in Santa Barbara for underage drinking.

The Examiner then had the task of breaking the news to Short’s mother, Phoebe. Today their tactic would be shamed, stamped as cruelty masquerading under journalism, not to mention utterly void of ethics; the newspaper called saying that her daughter Elizabeth had won a beauty contest and after collecting personal information from the gushing and proud woman, informed her that the reason for the call was because her daughter was found murdered. They then flew her out to Los Angeles and hid her their competition to secure their monopoly on the story and cement their lack of morals.

One of these competing newspapers was the Herald Express, who at the time had a reputation for nicknaming murder cases. They had coined the "White Orchid Murder" and the "Red Hibiscus Murder," but the Black Dahlia was not their creation. The name had been attributed to Short while she was alive and staying near a Long Beach drugstore. It was a pseudo-portmanteau, a combination of the 1946 noir flick The Blue Dahlia and Short’s penchant for sporting sheer, black clothing. 

The nature of the killing threw the media into a frenzy as newspapers wove a salacious role for Short, casting her as a licentious seductress who overstepped her boundaries, and unknowingly cementing her in history as a noir cautionary tale. In reality, Short was an unassuming girl, one of many who flocked to Los Angeles with lofty hopes of making it as an actress, only to find her sought-after fame post-mortem as the star in one of the city’s most gruesome slayings. A girl from Medford, Massachusetts, she had adopted a nomadic lifestyle upon her move to California at nineteen years old. She never stayed in the same place for more than a few weeks and maneuvered around her perpetually broke existence by going on frequent dates, knowing that with the male attention came the promise of a free meal. 

The chaotic hunt for Short’s killer began as police poured through suspects. The first was Robert "Red" Manley, a pipe clamp salesman from San Diego and the the last known person to have seen Short alive. Manley had driven short to the Biltmore hotel downtown six days prior to Bersinger’s sighting of her body. According to Manley, Short checked in her luggage before disappearing. Naturally, LAPD detectives were suspicious, but after passing a polygraph test, Manley was free to go. 

Nine days after her remains were found, the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner received an envelope full of Short’s personal belongings. Inside was her birth certificate, social security card, and photos of an address book, all sent from the apparent killer. The envelope featured clippings from movie advertisements, including the phrase "Heaven is HERE!" The address book led to approximately 75 men who all had similar interactions with Short: they met her at a bus stop or a street corner, went to a meal or club with her and never heard from her again. Nothing conclusive was ever discovered.

Perhaps Short would have received her justice if she had been killed in a different era. Instead, her legacy spans decades of conversation, books and films devoted to analyzing her ending. She never achieved fame in her earthly form, but as part of the Los Angeles’ mythos, she is immortal.

 
How the Black Dahlia Murder Became a Twin Obsession for Two L.A. Writers






Short was arrested in 1943 for underage drinking.

Wikimedia Commons







January 15, 1947, is one of the uglier anniversaries in Los Angeles history, one immortalized in a number of books, movies and endlessly proliferating websites. It started out as a clear, cold, average L.A. winter day. 

A housewife named Betty Bersinger was pushing her baby in its stroller down Norton Avenue, a residential street near USC: 

“It was about the time kids were going off to school … and I had to go by this plot that was undeveloped ... covered with weeds and what have you … there was [broken] glass on the sidewalk … as I was walking along I glanced over to my side and saw this strange sight … it looked like a mannequin, that had been cut in half, and was separated, and it was lying there … The thought of a dead person did not enter my mind! I though it was a mannequin because it was so white!” 

Mrs. Bersinger walked quickly to a nearby house and called the police.

The "mannequin" turned out to be the bisected corpse of a murder victim. She was 22-year-old Elizabeth Short, an aspiring actress from Medford, Massachusetts. It's been said her nickname among friends had been the “Black Dahlia” (after a 1946 noir film, The Blue Dahlia). The two halves of her body had been completely drained of blood, and blunt force trauma to the head was the cause of death, according to the coroner’s report. Gouged-out chunks of flesh were found stuffed inside the body. “The young woman’s mouth,” the L.A. Times reported, “was slit with a knife three inches on each side while she was still alive.”

Of course it was a press sensation. In life, Short always wore black dresses, her beautiful ivory-white face topped with a full, luxuriant head of jet-black hair. Photographs, found later in her trunk at a Greyhound bus station, showed that the girl’s heavy makeup often gave her the appearance of a geisha. The LAPD had to deal with scads of false confessions from psychologically disturbed young (and old) men. But nothing stuck, and it remains officially an unsolved case.





Short in an undated photo

Herald-Examiner Collection/Courtesy Los Angeles Public Library Archive







Fast-forward to 1982: John Gilmore, a former actor and freelance journalist for the old L.A. Free Press, was now telling the L.A. Herald-Examiner that he had been in touch with a good, likely suspect in the 35-year-old open case: a man he’d met with several times in “crummy” Main Street bars, who told him certain things about the murder of Elizabeth Short that jibed with certain little-known facts, facts Gilmore knew because his father, an LAPD cop, had worked on the case. 

His suspect was an aging, alcoholic drifter with a long criminal record named Jack Anderson Wilson, alias Arnold Smith. Gilmore had first met him back in 1966 at the Hollywood apartment of a mutual friend, who happened to be a burglar. Now Gilmore was appearing on the TV news with artist Mary Pacios, a childhood friend of Short’s, and giving out a few, select details about the suspect. It seemed like something was finally in the offing.

Meanwhile, a onetime alcoholic and petty criminal with a giant appetite for crime novels was drying out and working as a golf caddy in Hancock Park; he also was working on an ambitious novel based on the Dahlia case. Born with a name he hated, Lee Earle Ellroy, he was determined to write masterpieces of L.A. crime fiction in the mold of Ross Macdonald and Elmore Leonard. By 1982, he was James Ellroy, 34, with several published books already under his belt. 

Twin obsessions, both picking up steam.

Beth Short always liked to be seen “on the town” in 1945 and ’46, in nightclubs and swanky Hollywood restaurants, but she was lousy at networking. She wanted fame, but was scatterbrained. Despite later rumors of “lost screen tests” and possible involvement with porn, Short’s efforts toward starting a career never amounted to anything more than having some cutie-pie shots taken in front of John Marshall High School in Los Feliz late in 1946. Friends would remember her as kind and warm; she also seems to have been lazy and perhaps too timid to compete. She often dated for dinner because she was always broke and sleeping on couches. But Beth Short wouldn’t sell herself. Many men later recalled her as a tease. 

Skeptics might ask: How likely was it that John Gilmore would run into someone connected with the Black Dahlia murder? Remember that the population of L.A. before the early 1980s was much smaller than it is now and had been relatively stable for decades. Factor in, too, that criminal circles were even tinier. It’s not that huge a stretch. In his book Corroborating Evidence, author Craig Rasmussen states that a “known sodomite” named Jack Wilson was a suspect in the unsolved Cleveland Torso Murders of the late 1930s, and speculates that Gilmore’s suspect, Jack Anderson Wilson, who was born in Ohio, had “stalk[ed] Elizabeth Short when she was in Chicago in 1945.” (The Cleveland Torso Killer had sent the police a taunting note: “Gone to California for the winter.”)

John Gilmore eventually put all of his findings into a book, Severed: The True Story of the Black Dahlia Murder, published by AMOK Books in 1998. David Lynch hailed it as “the most satisfying and disturbing conclusion to the Black Dahlia case.” Severed quotes L.A. Sheriff's detective Joel Lesnick, who makes the connection between Beth Short (who “hung around with thugs,” according to her estranged father) and a group of thieves and robbers in Hollywood known as the McCadden Gang, all of whom frequented Boardner’s Bar, a favorite hangout of the Dahlia (a former landlord of Short’s also complained that her friends all seemed to be “hoodlums”). 

Wilson, according to Lesnick, “was the outsider of the … gang.”

Ellroy’s classic novel The Black Dahlia is, of course, pure fiction: “I never knew her in life,” the book begins. “She exists for me through others, in evidence of the ways her death drove them.” In the autobiographical My Dark Places, Ellroy reveals that after his own mother’s unsolved murder in 1958, gorgeous, dead Elizabeth Short supplanted all of his seething, barely suppressed desire for the late Jean Hilliker Ellroy: “I was in the tub … I saw my mother naked, fought the image and lost.” 

Other suspects: the controversial Black Dahlia Avenger by Steve Hodel certifiably established (if nothing else) that the author’s father, Dr. George Hodel, was a sexual sadist who hung out with fellow libertines such as novelist Henry Miller and artist Man Ray, airily swapping theories of murder-as–self-expression. But Dr. Hodel, an early Dahlia suspect, was cleared by a grand jury. A look at Steve Hodel’s current blog indicates that his once-focused research has lately devolved to comparing Man Ray sculptures with the shapes of Elizabeth Short’s knife wounds, seeking revelations there.

James Ellroy no longer comments publicly on the Elizabeth Short case. He never met John Gilmore, who died last October. For his part, the author of Severed once told L.A. Weekly, “Ellroy said it’s an unsolvable case. I thought that was kind of cool.”

 
There's a pretty interesting theory that suggest the killer(s) may had been a woman.

Larry Harnisch discovered an important connection between the body dump site near 39th and Norton, and two medical doctors. One of the doctors, Walter Alonzo Bayley (here's his wiki entry), had lived in a house just one block south of the place where Elizabeth Short’s body had been discovered. At the time of the murder he was estranged from his wife who still occupied the home. Bayley had left his wife for his mistress, Alexandra Partyka, also a medical doctor. Partyka had emigrated to the U.S. and wasn’t licensed to practice medicine, but she did assist Bayley in his practice.

There is also a link between Bayley’s family and Short’s. In 1945 one of Dr. Bayley’s adopted daughters, Barbara Lindgren, was a witness to the marriage of Beth’s sister, Virginia Short, to Adrain West at a church in Inglewood, California, near Los Angeles.

Here's a tumblr post with a couple details more I made a long time ago |Link contains graphic pictures!

Edit: Bayley died in 1948 and leaved everything to Partyka.

 
January 15th , 1947 .I love true crime , books,movies , podcasts etc. and the Black Dahlia murder might be my favorite case. I've read Elroy's novel and a few other TC books on the Dahlia murder.

It is certainly a fascinating mystery and the book was excellent. This may have been the house she was killed in. Pretty slick place. 
 
saw those crime scene photos many years ago, before the innerwebz - incredibly haunting in their stark brutality. 

will never 'unsee'

R.I.P.

 

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