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BLACK DAHLIA
Suspects


The LAPD has refrained from speculating on the identity of killer. The truth is that Elizabeth Short's killer is most likely dead — if not of disease, of old age — and will never be brought to justice. This fact hasn't stopped a large group of amateur sleuths from picking up the torch in an attempt to solve the case. Their conclusions range from fanciful to downright risible:

  • Mary Pacios pins the blame, incredibly, on movie director Orson Welles, who once did a magic act where he "sawed" a woman in half.
  • In another book, "Daddy Was the Black Dahlia Killer," a public relations specialist named Janice Knowlton blames her father for the murder. She writes that therapy helped her recover childhood memories of her father forcing her to watch him torture, murder and hack up Short. Knowlton goes on to accuse her father of nine such killings, including that of a son he engendered with her. Her book was a flop, but Knowlton harassed anyone writing about the case who did not support her claims until she committed suicide in 2004 with a drug overdose. 

Book cover: Daddy was the Black Dahlia Killer
Book cover: Daddy was the Black Dahlia Killer
 

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Here are some of the suspects who've topped the list as the could-haves the last 60 years:

  • Robert Manley
    Manly was the last known person to see Short alive. He was initially booked as a suspect, but released after he passed a polygraph test. Beset by a long history of mental health problems, in 1954, his wife committed him to a psychiatric hospital after he told her he was hearing voices. That same year, doctors gave him a shot of sodium pentothal — aka the "truth serum" — in another attempt to glean information about the Black Dahlia murder from him. He was absolved a second time. He died in 1986, 39 years to the day after he left Short at the Biltmore. The coroner attributed his death to an accidental fall.
  • Mark Hansen
    Hansen's name was embossed on the address book that was mailed to the Examiner; it's unclear how the item fell into Short's hands. The 55-year-old Denmark native was the manager of the Florentine Gardens, a sleazy Hollywood nightclub featuring burlesque acts. Many of the young women working for Hansen lived at his home, which was located behind the club. Short was his guest for several months in 1946, and the aging lothario is rumored to have tried to bed her - unsuccessfully.
  • George Hodel
    In 2003, a retired LAPD detective named Steve Hodel published another daddy-did-it tract, but this one became a national bestseller.  According to the "Black Dahlia Avenger: A Genius for Murder" Hodel Jr. depicts his dad as a tyrant and misogynistic pervert who held orgies at the family home and was put on trial for raping own his 14-year-old daughter (he was acquitted). After his father died in 1999, Steve Hodel acquired his father's private photo album, which contained two snapshots of a dark-haired woman. Hodel claims the woman was Short, but Short's family has refuted his claims.

Steve Hodel and book cover: Black Dahlia Avenger
Steve Hodel and book cover: Black Dahlia Avenger

  • Jack Anderson Wilson
    In "Severed: The True Story of the Black Dahlia Murder," actor-cum-crime writer John Gilmore fingers an alcoholic drifter named Jack Anderson Wilson. When Gilmore interviewed him in the early 80s, Wilson purportedly divulged details about the murder that only the killer would have known, including knowledge a supposed vaginal defect which would have prevented Short from having sexual intercourse. A few days before his pending arrest, Wilson died in a hotel fire. The book's validity has been questioned by other Dahlia devotees who have failed to track down many of Gilmore's primary sources - leading them to question the sources' very existence.

Jack Anderson Wilson
Jack Anderson Wilson

  • Walter Alonzo Bayley
    In 1997, a Los Angeles Times writer named Larry Harnisch suggested yet another suspect: Dr. Walter Alonzo Bayley, a surgeon whose house was located one block south of the lot where Short's body was found. Bayley's daughter was a friend of Short's sister Virginia. Harnisch theorizes that Bayley suffered from a degenerative brain disease that made him kill Short. While the police believe Short's killer was affiliated with a cutting profession — a surgeon or butcher, say — Bayley was 67 at the time of the murder and had no known record of violence or crime. Neither is it known whether he ever met Short.

None of these suspects have been endorsed by the LAPD. And because most of the key physical evidence has disappeared from the Black Dahlia file — including 13 scornful letters the killer sent the police and the media — it's unlikely the case will ever be solved. Det. Brian Carr, who inherited it in 1996, has publicly stated as much.

 
Scarlett Johansson
Scarlett Johansson
 
Hilary Swank
Hilary Swank

Elizabeth Short will finally make it onto the big screen this fall — six decades after her death — in a Universal Pictures release based on the 1987 James Ellroy novel ''The Black Dahlia.''

Directed by Hollywood heavyweight Brian De Palma and budgeted at about $45 million, the cast that includes Josh Hartnett, Aaron Eckhart, Scarlett Johansson, Hilary Swank and, as the enigmatic title lady, Mia Kirshner.

 







TEXT SIZE
CHAPTERS
1. Black Dahlia Intro

2. Macabre Discovery

3. The Investigation

4. Bette Short

5. "Camp Cutie"

6. Doomed Romance

7. Fickling

8. Last Days

9. The Investigation

10. The Missing Week

11. Suspects

12. Daughter

13. Bibliography

14. Photo Gallery

15. Time Line

16. Black Dahlia Maps

17. The Black Dahlia Movie

18. Book & Movie Reviews

19. The Author

- Black Dahlia Full Coverage

- The Killer Profiled

- Discussion Forum

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Black Dahlia Murder Full Coverage
Profile of the Black Dahlia's Killer
Death of Marilyn Monroe
The Black Dahlia Movie


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