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Black Dahlia
Black Dahlia
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Elizabeth Short (July 29, 1924 – c. January 14–15, 1947), posthumously known as the Black Dahlia, was an American woman found murdered in the Leimert Park neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, on January 15, 1947. Her case became highly publicized owing to the gruesome nature of the crime, which included the mutilation and bisection of her corpse.

Key Information

A native of Boston, Short spent her early life in New England and Florida before relocating to California, where her father lived. It is commonly held that she was an aspiring actress, though she had no known acting credits or jobs during her time in Los Angeles. Short acquired the nickname of the Black Dahlia posthumously, as newspapers of the period often nicknamed particularly lurid crimes; the term may have originated from the film noir thriller The Blue Dahlia (1946). After the discovery of her body, the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) began an extensive investigation that produced over 150 suspects but yielded no arrests.

Short's unsolved murder and the details surrounding it have had a lasting cultural impact, generating various theories and public speculation. Her life and death have been the basis of numerous books and films, and her murder is frequently cited as one of the most famous unsolved murders in U.S. history, as well as one of the oldest unsolved cases in Los Angeles County.[2] It has likewise been credited by historians as one of the first major crimes in postwar America to capture national attention.[a]

Life

[edit]

Childhood

[edit]

Elizabeth Short[b] was born on July 29, 1924, in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, the third of five daughters to Cleo Alvin Short Jr. (October 18, 1885 – January 19, 1967) and his wife, Phoebe May Sawyer (July 2, 1897 – March 1, 1992).[8][9] Her sisters were Virginia May West (1920–1985), Dorothea Schloesser (1922–2012), Elnora Chalmers (1925–2022) and Muriel Short (1929–2023).[10][11] Short's father was a United States Navy sailor from Gloucester Courthouse, Virginia,[12] while her mother was a native of Milbridge, Maine.[13] The Shorts were married in Portland, Maine, in 1918.[12] The Short family briefly relocated to Portland in 1927,[14] before settling in Medford, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston, that same year.[15]

Short's father built miniature golf courses until he lost most of his savings in the 1929 stock market crash.[9] In 1930, his car was found abandoned on the Charlestown Bridge,[16] and it was assumed that he had jumped into the Charles River.[16] Believing her husband to be deceased, Short's mother began working as a bookkeeper to support the family.[16] Troubled by bronchitis and severe asthma attacks, Short underwent lung surgery at age 15, after which doctors suggested she periodically relocate to a milder climate to prevent further respiratory problems.[17] Her mother sent her to spend winters with family friends in Miami, Florida, for the next three years.[18] Short dropped out of Medford High School during her sophomore year.[19]

Relocation to California

[edit]
Short's arrest photo from 1943 for underage drinking

In late 1942, Short's mother received a letter of apology from her presumed-deceased husband, which revealed that he was in fact alive and had started a new life in California.[19] In December of that year, at age 18, Short relocated to Vallejo, California, to live with her father, whom she had not seen since age 6.[20] At the time her father was working at the nearby Mare Island Naval Shipyard on San Francisco Bay. Arguments between Short and her father led to her moving out in January 1943.[21]

Short took a job at the Base Exchange at Camp Cooke (now Vandenberg Space Force Base) near Lompoc, California, briefly living with a United States Army Air Force sergeant who reportedly abused her.[21] She left Lompoc in mid-1943 and moved to Santa Barbara, where she was arrested on September 23 for drinking at a local bar while underage.[22] Juvenile authorities sent her back to Massachusetts,[c] but she returned instead to Florida, making only occasional visits to her family near Boston.[25]

While in Florida, Short met Major Matthew Michael Gordon Jr., a decorated Army Air Force officer of the 2nd Air Commando Group, who was training for deployment to Southeast Asian theater of World War II. Short later told friends that Gordon had written to propose marriage while he was recovering from injuries from a plane crash in India.[26] She accepted his offer, but Gordon died in a second crash on August 10, 1945.[27] Short's sister Dorothea also served in the war and was assigned to decode Japanese messages.[28]

In July 1946, Short relocated to Los Angeles to visit Army Air Force Lieutenant Joseph Gordon Fickling, an acquaintance from Florida,[29] who was stationed at the Naval Reserve Air Base in Long Beach.[30] Short spent the last six months of her life in southern California, mostly in the Los Angeles area; shortly before her death she had been working as a waitress and rented a room behind the Florentine Gardens nightclub on Hollywood Boulevard.[31] Short has been variously described and depicted as an aspiring or "would-be" actress.[32] According to some sources, she did in fact have aspirations to be a film star,[33] though she had no known acting jobs or credits.[d]

Murder

[edit]

Prior activities

[edit]

On January 9, 1947, Short returned to her home in Los Angeles after a brief trip to San Diego with Robert "Red" Manley, a 25-year-old married salesman she had been dating.[31] Manley stated that he dropped Short off at the Biltmore Hotel in downtown Los Angeles, and that Short was to meet one of her sisters, who was visiting from Boston, that afternoon.[31] By some accounts, staff of the Biltmore recalled having seen Short using the lobby telephone.[e] Shortly after, she was allegedly seen by patrons of the Crown Grill Cocktail Lounge at 754 South Olive Street, approximately 38 mile (600 m) away from the Biltmore.[31]

Discovery

[edit]

On the morning of January 15, 1947, Short's naked body, severed into two pieces, was found in a vacant lot on the west side of South Norton Avenue, midway between Coliseum Street and West 39th Street (at 34°00′59″N 118°19′59″W / 34.0164°N 118.333°W / 34.0164; -118.333) in the neighborhood of Leimert Park, which was largely undeveloped at the time.[36]

Short's severely mutilated body was completely severed at the waist and drained of blood, leaving her skin a pallid white.[37][38] Medical examiners determined that she had been dead for around ten hours prior to the discovery, leaving her time of death either sometime during the evening of January 14 or the early morning hours of January 15.[39] The body had apparently been washed by the killer.[40] Short's face had been slashed from the corners of her mouth to her ears, creating an effect known as the "Glasgow smile".[36] She had several cuts on her thigh and breasts, where entire portions of flesh had been sliced away.[41] The lower half of her body was positioned a foot away from the upper, and her intestines had been tucked neatly beneath her buttocks.[40] The corpse had been "posed", with her hands over her head, her elbows bent at right angles, and her legs spread apart.[39][37]

Los Angeles Herald-Express reporter Aggie Underwood was among the first to arrive at the crime scene, and took several photos of Short's body and its surroundings.[42] Near the body, detectives located a heel print on the ground amid the tire tracks,[43] and a cement sack containing watery blood was also found nearby.[44][45]

Autopsy and identification

[edit]

An autopsy of Short's body was performed on January 16, 1947, by Frederick Newbarr, the Los Angeles County coroner.[46] Newbarr's autopsy report stated that Short was 5 feet 5 inches (1.65 m) tall, weighed 115 pounds (52 kg) and had light blue eyes, brown hair and badly decayed teeth.[47][f] There were ligature marks on her ankles, wrists and neck, and an "irregular laceration with superficial tissue loss" on her right breast.[48] Newbarr also noted superficial lacerations on the right forearm, left upper arm and the lower left side of the chest.[48]

Short's death certificate

Short's body had been cut completely in half by a technique taught in the 1930s called a hemicorporectomy. The lower half of her body had been removed by transecting the lumbar spine between the second and third lumbar vertebrae, thus severing the intestine at the duodenum. Newbarr's report noted "very little" ecchymosis (bruising) along the incision line, suggesting it had been performed after death.[49] Another "gaping laceration" measuring 4+14 inches (110 mm) long ran longitudinally from the umbilicus to the suprapubic region.[49] The lacerations on each side of the face, which extended from the corners of the lips, were measured at three inches (75 mm) on the right side of the face, and 2+12 inches (65 mm) on the left.[48] The skull was not fractured, but there was bruising noted on the front and right side of her scalp, with a small amount of bleeding in the subarachnoid space on the right side, consistent with blows to the head.[48] The cause of death was determined to be hemorrhaging from the lacerations to her face and the shock from blows to the head and face.[50] Newbarr noted that Short's anal canal was dilated at 1+34 inches (45 mm), suggesting that she might have been raped.[49] Samples were taken from her body testing for the presence of sperm, but the results came back negative.[51]

Short was identified after her fingerprints were sent to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI); her fingerprints were on file from her 1943 arrest.[52] Immediately following the identification, a team of reporters from William Randolph Hearst's Los Angeles Examiner contacted her mother, Phoebe Short, in Boston over the phone. Wain Sutton spoke with Short's mother while City Editor Jimmy Richardson and Jim Murray sat next to him. Sutton intentionally deceived Phoebe and told her that her daughter had won a beauty contest.[53][36] It was only after prying as much personal information as they could from Phoebe that the reporters revealed that her daughter had in fact been murdered.[36]

Jim Murray would recount the infamous phone call to journalist Larry Harnisch in an interview decades later:

"Wain called the mother and asked all these questions and took all these notes," Murray recalled. "I sat there and listened to the poor, dear mother telling him about her school-day triumphs. I can still see him put his hand over the mouthpiece of the old-fashioned upright phone and say, 'Now, what do I tell her?'

Richardson screwed up his one good eye and said, 'Now tell her'

"'You son of a bitch,'" Murray said, imitating Sutton.

Murray told Harnisch in the same interview that he was "still appalled" and that the "incident was sharply etched in his memory."[54] Phoebe Short initially could not believe what the reporters had told her. She refused to believe that her daughter had been murdered until eventually she received confirmation from the Los Angeles Police through her local police department.

The Examiner also offered to pay Phoebe's airfare and accommodations if she would travel to Los Angeles to help with the police investigation; that was yet another ploy since the newspaper kept her away from police and other reporters to protect its scoop.[55] The Examiner and another Hearst newspaper, the Herald-Express, later sensationalized the case, with one Examiner article describing the black tailored suit Short was last seen wearing as "a tight skirt and a sheer blouse."[56] The media nicknamed her the "Black Dahlia",[57] and described her as an "adventuress" who "prowled Hollywood Boulevard." Additional newspaper reports, such as one published in the Los Angeles Times on January 17, deemed the murder a "sex fiend slaying."[58]

Investigation

[edit]

Initial investigation

[edit]

Letters and interviews

[edit]

On January 21,[59] a person claiming to be Short's killer placed a phone call to the office of James Richardson, the editor of the Examiner, congratulating Richardson on the newspaper's coverage of the case and stating he planned on eventually turning himself in, but not before allowing police to pursue him further.[31] Additionally, the caller told Richardson to "expect some souvenirs of Beth Short in the mail".[31]

Three days later, a suspicious manila envelope was discovered, addressed to "The Los Angeles Examiner and other Los Angeles papers", with individual words that had been cut-and-pasted from newspaper clippings; additionally, a large message on the face of the envelope read: "Here is Dahlia's belongings[,] letter to follow."[31] The envelope contained Short's birth certificate, business cards, photographs, names written on pieces of paper and an address book with the name Mark Hansen embossed on the cover.[60] The packet had been carefully cleaned with gasoline, similarly to Short's body, which led police to suspect the packet had been sent directly by her killer.[61] Despite efforts to clean the packet, several partial fingerprints were lifted from the envelope and sent to the FBI for testing; however, the prints were compromised in transit and thus could not be properly analyzed.[62] The same day the packet was received by the Examiner, a handbag and a black suede shoe were reported to have been seen on top of a garbage can in an alley a short distance from Norton Avenue, two miles (three kilometers) from the crime scene. The items were recovered by police but had also been wiped clean with gasoline, destroying any fingerprints.[15]

On March 14, an apparent suicide note scrawled in pencil on a bit of paper was found tucked in a shoe in a pile of men's clothing by the ocean's edge at the foot of Breeze Avenue in Venice. The note read: "To whom it may concern: I have waited for the police to capture me for the Black Dahlia killing, but have not. I am too much of a coward to turn myself in, so this is the best way out for me. I couldn't help myself for that, or this. Sorry, Mary." The pile of clothing was first seen by a beach caretaker, who reported the discovery to lifeguard captain John Dillon. Dillon immediately notified Captain L. E. Christensen of West Los Angeles police station. The clothes included a coat and trousers of blue herringbone tweed, a brown and white T-shirt, white jockey shorts, tan socks and tan moccasin leisure shoes, size about eight. The clothes gave no clue about the identity of their owner.[63][64]

Police quickly deemed Mark Hansen, the owner of the address book found in the packet, a suspect.[65] Hansen was a wealthy local nightclub and theater owner[66] and an acquaintance at whose home Short had stayed with friends.[67] According to some sources,[g] Hansen also confirmed that the purse and shoe discovered in the alley were in fact Short's.[31] Ann Toth, Short's friend and roommate, told investigators that Short had recently rejected sexual advances from Hansen, and suggested it as potential motive for him to kill her;[15] however, Hansen was cleared of suspicion in the case.[68] In addition to Hansen, the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) interviewed over 150 men in the ensuing weeks who they believed to be potential suspects.[69] Robert Manley, who had been one of the last people to see Short alive, was also investigated, but was cleared of suspicion after passing numerous polygraph examinations.[15] Police also interviewed several persons found listed in Hansen's address book, including Martin Lewis, who had been an acquaintance of Short's.[70] Lewis was able to provide an alibi for the date of Short's murder, as he was in Portland, Oregon, visiting his dying father-in-law.[71]

A total of 750 investigators from the LAPD and other departments worked on the Short case during its initial stages, including 400 sheriff's deputies and 250 California State Patrol officers.[62][72] Various locations were searched for potential evidence, including storm drains throughout Los Angeles, abandoned structures and various sites along the Los Angeles River, but the searches yielded no further evidence.[72] Los Angeles City Councilman Lloyd G. Davis posted a $10,000 (equivalent to $140,820 in 2024) reward for information leading police to Short's killer.[73] After the announcement of the reward, various persons came forward with confessions, most of which police dismissed as false. Several of the false confessors were charged with obstruction of justice.[74]

Media response; decline

[edit]

On January 26, another letter was received by the Examiner, this time handwritten, which read: "Here it is. Turning in Wed., Jan. 29, 10 am. Had my fun at police. Black Dahlia Avenger."[68] The letter also named a location at which the supposed killer would turn himself in. Police waited at the location on the morning of January 29, but the alleged killer did not appear.[68] Instead, at 1:00pm, the Examiner offices received another cut-and-pasted letter which read: "Have changed my mind. You would not give me a square deal. Dahlia killing was justified."[75]

The graphic nature of the murder and the subsequent letters received by the Examiner had resulted in a media circus surrounding Short's murder.[76] Both local and national publications heavily covered the story, many of which reprinted sensationalistic reports suggesting that Short had been tortured for hours prior to her death; the information, however, was false, yet police allowed the reports to circulate so as to conceal Short's true cause of death—cerebral hemorrhage—from the public.[62] Further reports about Short's personal life were publicized, including details about her alleged declining of Hansen's sexual advances; additionally, a stripper who was an acquaintance of Short's told police that she "liked to get guys worked up over her, but she'd leave them hanging dry."[77] This led some reporters (namely the Herald-Express's Bevo Means) and detectives to look into the possibility that Short was a lesbian, and begin questioning employees and patrons of gay bars in Los Angeles; this claim, however, remained unsubstantiated.[62][74] The Herald-Express also received several letters from the purported killer, again made with cut-and-pasted clippings, one of which read: "I will give up on Dahlia killing if I get 10 years. Don't try to find me."[78]

On February 1, the Los Angeles Daily News reported that the case had "run into a Stone Wall", with no new leads for investigators to pursue.[62] The Examiner continued to run stories on the murder and the investigation, which was front-page news for thirty-five days following the discovery of the body.[39]

When interviewed, lead investigator Captain Jack Donahue told the press that he believed Short's murder had taken place in a remote building or shack on the outskirts of Los Angeles, and that her body was transported to the location where it was disposed of.[79] Based on the precise cuts and dissection of Short's body, the LAPD looked into the possibility that the murderer had been a surgeon, doctor or someone with medical knowledge. In mid-February 1947, the LAPD served a warrant to the University of Southern California Medical School, which was located near the site where the body had been discovered, requesting a complete list of the program's students.[68] The university agreed so long as the students' identities remained private. Background checks were conducted but yielded no results.[68]

Grand jury and aftermath

[edit]

By the spring of 1947, Short's murder had become a cold case with few new leads.[79] Sergeant Finis Brown, one of the lead detectives on the case, blamed the press for compromising the investigation through journalists' probing of details and unverified reporting.[80] In September 1949, a grand jury convened to discuss inadequacies in the LAPD's homicide unit based on their failure to solve numerous murders—especially those of women and children—in the previous several years, Short's being one of them.[81][82] In the aftermath of the grand jury, further investigation was done on Short's past, with detectives tracing her movements between Massachusetts, California and Florida, and also interviewed people who knew Short in Texas and New Orleans. However, the interviews yielded no useful information in the murder.[80]

Suspects and confessions

[edit]

The notoriety of Short's murder has spurred a large number of confessions over the years, many of which have been deemed false. During the initial investigation, police received a total of sixty confessions, most made by men.[83] Since that time, over 500 people have confessed to the crime, some of whom had not even been born at the time of her death.[84] Sergeant John P. St. John, an LAPD detective who worked the case until his retirement, stated, "It is amazing how many people offer up a relative as the killer."[85]

In 2003, Ralph Asdel, one of the original detectives on the case, told the Times that he believed he had interviewed Short's killer, a man who had been seen with his sedan parked near the crime scene in the early morning hours of January 15, 1947. A neighbor driving by that day stopped to dispose of a bag of lawn clippings in the lot when he saw a parked sedan, allegedly with its right rear door open; the driver of the sedan was standing in the lot. His arrival apparently startled the owner of the sedan, who approached his car and peered in the window before returning to the sedan and driving away.[86] The owner of the sedan was followed to a local restaurant where he worked, but was ultimately cleared of suspicion.[86]

Suspects remaining under discussion by various authors and experts include a doctor named Walter Bayley, proposed by former Times copyeditor Larry Harnisch;[75] Times publisher Norman Chandler, whom biographer Donald Wolfe claims impregnated Short;[87] Leslie Dillon,[88] Joseph A. Dumais,[89] Artie Lane,[66] Mark Hansen,[65] Francis E. Sweeney,[90] Woody Guthrie, Bugsy Siegel, Orson Welles,[91] George Hodel,[92] Hodel's friend Fred Sexton,[93] George Knowlton,[94] Robert M. "Red" Manley,[15] Patrick S. O'Reilly,[95] and Jack Anderson Wilson.[75][96]

Although he was never formally charged in the crime, George Hodel came to wider attention after his death when he was accused by his son, LAPD homicide detective Steve Hodel, of killing Short and committing several additional murders. Prior to the Dahlia case, George Hodel was suspected, but not charged, in the death of his secretary, Ruth Spaulding; and was accused of raping his own daughter, Tamar, but acquitted. Hodel fled the country several times and lived in the Philippines between 1950 and 1990.[97][98] Additionally, Steve Hodel has cited his father's training as a surgeon as circumstantial evidence.[99] In 2003, it was revealed in notes from the 1949 grand jury report that investigators had wiretapped George Hodel's home and obtained recorded conversation of him with an unidentified visitor, saying: "Supposin' I did kill the Black Dahlia. They couldn't prove it now. They can't talk to my secretary because she's dead. They thought there was something fishy. Anyway, now they may have figured it out. Killed her. Maybe I did kill my secretary."[92]

In 1991, Janice Knowlton, who was aged 10 at the time of Short's murder, claimed that she witnessed her father, George Knowlton, beat Short to death with a claw hammer in the detached garage of her family's home in Westminster.[100] She also published a book titled Daddy was the Black Dahlia Killer in 1995, in which she made additional claims that her father sexually abused her.[94] The book was condemned as "trash" by Knowlton's stepsister, Jolane Emerson, who stated: "She believed it, but it wasn't reality. I know, because I lived with her father for sixteen years."[101] Additionally, St. John told the Times that Knowlton's claims were "not consistent with the facts of the case."[101]

The 2017 book Black Dahlia, Red Rose by Piu Eatwell focuses on Leslie Dillon, a bellhop who was a former mortician's assistant; his associates Mark Hansen and Jeff Connors; and Sergeant Finis Brown, a lead detective who had links to Hansen and was allegedly corrupt.[66] Eatwell posits that Short was murdered because she knew too much about the men's involvement in a scheme for robbing hotels. She further suggests that Short was killed at the Aster Motel in Los Angeles, where the owners reported finding one of their rooms "covered in blood and fecal matter" on the morning Short's body was found.[66] The Examiner stated in 1949 that LAPD chief William A. Worton denied that the Aster Motel had anything to do with the case, although its rival newspaper, the Los Angeles Herald, claimed that the murder took place there.[102]

In 2000, Buz Williams, a retired detective with the Long Beach Police Department, wrote an article for the LBPD newsletter The Rap Sheet on Short's murder. His father, Richard F. Williams, was a member of the LAPD's Gangster Squad investigating the case. Williams' father reportedly believed that Dillon was the killer, and that when Dillon returned to his home state of Oklahoma he was able to avoid extradition to California because his ex-wife Georgia Stevenson was second cousins with Illinois Governor Adlai Stevenson II, who contacted the governor of Oklahoma on Dillon's behalf. Williams' article claimed that Dillon sued the LAPD for $3 million, but that the suit was dropped.[103] Harnisch disputes this, stating that Dillon was cleared by police after an exhaustive investigation and that the district attorney's files positively placed him in San Francisco when Short was killed.[104] Harnisch claims that there was no LAPD coverup, and that Dillon did in fact receive a financial settlement from the City of Los Angeles, but has not produced concrete evidence to prove this.[105]

[edit]

Cleveland Torso Murders

[edit]
Police search for remains in the Cleveland Torso Murders, 1936; some journalists and law enforcement have speculated a connection between the Cleveland crimes and Short's murder.[h]

Several crime authors, as well as police detective Peter Merylo, have suspected a link between the Short murder and the Cleveland Torso Murders, which took place in Cleveland, Ohio, between 1934 and 1938.[107][108] As part of their investigation into other murders that took place before and after the Short killing, the original LAPD investigators studied the Torso Murders in 1947 but later discounted any connection between the two cases. In 1980, new evidence implicating a former Torso Murder suspect, Jack Anderson Wilson, was investigated by St. John in relation to Short's murder. He claimed he was close to arresting Wilson in Short's murder, but that Wilson died in a fire on February 4, 1982.[109] The possible connection to the Torso Murders received renewed media attention when it was profiled on the NBC series Unsolved Mysteries in 1992, in which Eliot Ness biographer Oscar Fraley suggested Ness knew the identity of the killer responsible for both cases.[106]

Lipstick Murders

[edit]

Crime authors such as Steve Hodel and William Rasmussen have suggested a link between the Short murder and the 1946 murder and dismemberment of 6-year-old Suzanne Degnan in Chicago, Illinois.[110] Captain Donahoe of the LAPD stated publicly that he believed the Black Dahlia and the "Lipstick Murders" in Chicago were "likely connected."[111] Among the evidence cited is the fact that Short's body was found on Norton Avenue, three blocks west of Degnan Boulevard, Degnan being the last name of the girl from Chicago. There were also striking similarities between the handwriting on the Degnan ransom note and that of the "Black Dahlia Avenger." Both texts used a combination of capitals and small letters (the Degnan note read in part "BuRN This FoR heR SAfTY" [sic]), and both notes contain a similar misshapen letter P and have one word that matches exactly.[112] Convicted serial killer William Heirens served life in prison for Degnan's murder. Initially arrested at age 17 for breaking into a residence close to that of Degnan, Heirens claimed he was tortured by police, forced to confess and made a scapegoat for the murder.[113] After being taken from the medical infirmary at the Dixon Correctional Center on February 26, 2012, for health problems, Heirens died at the University of Illinois Medical Center on March 5, 2012, at age 83.

Lone Woman Murders

[edit]

Between 1943 and 1949, over a dozen unsolved murders occurred in Los Angeles which involved the sexual mutilation of young attractive women.[114][115][116] Authorities suspected at the time that they could have been the work of a single unidentified serial killer.[117][118][119] In 1949, a Los Angeles County grand jury was tasked with investigating the failure on the part of law enforcement to solve the cases.[81][82] As a result, further investigation was done on the homicides although none of them were solved.[80]

  • On July 27, 1943, the son of a greenskeeper discovered the nude body of 41-year-old Ora Elizabeth Murray lying on the ground near the parking lot of the Fox Hills Golf Course.[120] Murray had been severely beaten about her face and body, and the autopsy determined that her cause of death was due to "constriction of the larynx by strangulation". Murray was last seen on July 26, 1943, attending a dance at the Zenda Ballroom in downtown Los Angeles with her sister before leaving with an unidentified man. Her murder remains unsolved.
  • John Gilmore's 1994 book Severed: The True Story of the Black Dahlia Murder, suggests a possible connection between Short's murder and that of 20-year-old Georgette Bauerdorf.[121] At 11 a.m. on October 12, 1944, Bauerdorf's maid and a janitor arrived to clean her apartment in West Hollywood where they found her body face down in her bathtub.[122][123] It is believed that Bauerdorf was attacked by a man who was waiting inside the apartment for her. Gilmore suggests that Short's employment at the Hollywood Canteen, where Bauerdorf also worked as a hostess, could be a potential connection between the two women.[121] However, the claim that Short ever worked at the Hollywood Canteen has been disputed by other sources, such as the retired Times copy-editor Larry Harnisch. Regardless, Steve Hodel has still suggested that both women were killed by the same individual since in both cases the media received notes supposedly from the killer taunting the police and boasting of his skills.[124]
  • The murder of 44-year-old Jeanne "Nettie" French on February 10, 1947, was also considered by the media and detectives as possibly being related to Short's killing.[125] French's body was discovered in West Los Angeles on Grand View Boulevard, nude and badly beaten.[125] Written on her stomach in lipstick was what appeared to say "Fuck You B.D." and the letters "TEX" below.[125] The Herald-Express covered the story heavily and drew comparisons to the Short murder less than a month prior, surmising the initials "B.D." stood for "Black Dahlia".[126] According to historian Jon Lewis, however, the scrawling actually read "P.D.", ostensibly standing for "police department."[127]
  • On March 12, 1947, the nude body of 43-year-old Evelyn Winters was found at 12:10 a.m. in a vacant lot of an abandoned rail yard in Norwalk, California, along the Los Angeles River.[128] Winters had been bludgeoned and strangled to death. She was last seen by a male acquaintance, James Joseph Tiernan, who stated to authorities that he saw her leave the Albany Hotel in Los Angeles at 8:00 p.m.[129]
  • Dorothy Ella Montgomery, aged 36, was found at about 10:30 a.m. in a vacant field on May 4, 1947, under a pepper tree in Florence-Graham, California.[130] Montgomery had died due to strangulation and was found nude and beaten. She had been missing since 9:30 p.m. the previous evening when she had left her home to pick up her daughter at a dance recital.[131]
  • On May 12, 1947, the body of 39-year-old Laura Eliza Trelstad was discovered by an oil company patrolman in an oil field on Long Beach Boulevard. Trelstad had been sexually assaulted, strangled with a belt and then thrown from a moving vehicle.[132] According to her husband, they had both been playing cards the night prior at their home in 2211 Locust Avenue, Long Beach, with friends in the late afternoon.[133] Trelstad's husband wanted to continue; but she had become bored and left to go to the Crystal Ballroom. She stated: "If the boys can play poker, we girls can go dance." She was not seen alive again.[134]
  • On July 8, 1947, the naked body of Rosenda Josephine Mondragon, aged 21, was discovered by a postal clerk in a gutter near Los Angeles City Hall.[135] Mondragon had been strangled by a silk stocking. She was last seen by her estranged husband that morning, at 1 a.m., when he had been served by her with divorce papers at his residence. She then left entering a stranger's car.[136]
  • On the evening of October 2, 1947, Lillian Dominguez, aged 15, was walking home with her sister and a friend in Santa Monica, when a man approached them and proceeded to stab Dominguez in the heart with a stiletto blade, between her second and third ribs.[137] One week later, on October 9, a note on the back of a business card was left under the door of a furniture store. The message was written in pencil and read: "I killed the Santa Monica Girl, I will kill others."[138]
  • On February 14, 1948, 42-year-old Gladys Eugenia Kern, a Los Angeles real estate agent, was found stabbed in the back with a hunting knife in a vacant house that she was showing in the Los Feliz district at 4217 Cromwell Avenue.[139] That afternoon Kern was last seen with an unidentified man at the counter of a nearby drugstore. The murderer had stolen her appointment book and had cleaned the murder weapon before he left.
  • Cosmetologist Louise Margaret Springer, aged 35, was found murdered on June 13, 1949, in the backseat of her husband's convertible sedan alongside a street in South Central Los Angeles. She had been garroted with a length of clothesline that had been knotted and a stick had been inserted into her anus.[140] Springer's husband notified law enforcement of her disappearance that evening when he returned from an errand inside her shop to find both Springer and his vehicle missing.[141]
  • Mimi Boomhower, aged 48, was last heard from when she telephoned a friend from her home in the 700 block of Nimes Road in Los Angeles on August 18, 1949.[142] Between 7:00 and 8:00 p.m., the call ended. Five days after she vanished, Boomhower's white handbag was discovered in a phonebooth at a grocery store in Los Angeles. Boomhower was never heard from again, and she was later declared legally dead.[143]
  • On the evening of October 7, 1949, 26-year-old Jean Spangler left her home in Los Angeles, telling her sister-in-law that she was going to meet with her ex-husband before going to work as an extra on a film set.[144] She was last seen alive at a grocery store several blocks from her home at approximately 6:00 p.m.[145][146][147] Two days later, Spangler's tattered purse was discovered in a remote area of Griffith Park, approximately 5.5 miles (8.9 km) from her home; inside was a letter addressed to a "Kirk," which mentioned seeing a doctor.[148]

Rumors and factual disputes

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Numerous details regarding Short's personal life and death have been points of public dispute.[i] The eager involvement of both the public and press in solving her murder have been credited as factors that complicated the investigation significantly, resulting in a complex, sometimes inconsistent narrative of events.[151] According to Anne Marie DiStefano of the Portland Tribune, many "unsubstantiated stories" have circulated about Short over the years: "She was a prostitute, she was frigid, she was pregnant, she was a lesbian. And somehow, instead of fading away over time, the legend of the Black Dahlia just keeps getting more convoluted."[152] Harnisch has refuted several supposed rumors and popular conceptions about Short and also disputed the validity of Gilmore's book Severed, claiming the book is "25% mistakes, and 50% fiction."[6] Harnisch had examined the district attorney's files (he claimed that Steve Hodel has examined some of them pertaining to his father, along with Times columnist Steve Lopez) and contrary to Eatwell's claims, the files showed that Dillon was thoroughly investigated and was determined to have been in San Francisco when Short was killed. Harnisch speculated that Eatwell either did not find these files or she chose to ignore them.[105]

Murder and state of the body

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A number of people, none of whom knew Short, contacted police and newspapers claiming to have seen her during her so-called "missing week," between her January 9 disappearance and the discovery of her body, on January 15. Police and district attorney's investigators ruled out each alleged sighting; in some cases, those interviewed were identifying other women whom they had mistaken for Short.[153] Short's whereabouts in the days leading up to her murder and the discovery of her body are unknown.[150]

After the discovery of Short's body, numerous Los Angeles newspapers printed headlines claiming she had been tortured leading up to her death.[56] This was denied by law enforcement at the time, but they allowed the claims to circulate so as to keep Short's actual cause of death a secret from the public.[62] Some sources, such as Oliver Cyriax's Crime: An Encyclopedia (1993), state that Short's body was covered in cigarette burns inflicted on her while she was still alive,[154] though there is no indication of this in her official autopsy report.[41]

In Severed, Gilmore states that the coroner who performed Short's autopsy suggested in conversation that she had been forced to consume feces based on his findings when examining the contents of her stomach.[155] This claim has been denied by Harnisch[6] and is also not indicated in Short's official autopsy,[41] though it has been reprinted in several print[156] and online media.[157]

Nickname

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Some sources attribute the Black Dahlia name to the 1946 film noir The Blue Dahlia, starring Veronica Lake and Alan Ladd (pictured).[158]

According to newspaper reports shortly after the murder, Short received the nickname "Black Dahlia" from staff and patrons at a Long Beach drugstore in mid-1946 as wordplay on the film The Blue Dahlia (1946).[158][159] Other popularly-circulated rumors claim that the media crafted the name because Short adorned her hair with dahlias.[150] According to the FBI's official website, Short received the first part of the nickname from the press "for her rumored penchant for sheer black clothes."[160]

However, reports by district attorney's investigators state that the nickname was invented by newspaper reporters covering her murder; Herald-Express reporter Bevo Means, who interviewed Short's acquaintances at the drugstore, has been credited with first using the "Black Dahlia" name,[161] though reporters Underwood and Jack Smith have been alternatively named as its creators.[150] While some sources claim that Short was referred to or went by the name during her life, others dispute this.[j] Both Gilmore[162] and Harnisch agree that the name originated during Short's lifetime and was not a creation of the press: Harnisch states that it was in fact a nickname she earned from the staff of the Long Beach drugstore she frequented;[6] in Severed, Gilmore names an A.L. Landers as the proprietor of the drugstore, though he does not provide the store's name.[163] Prior to the circulation of the "Black Dahlia" name, Short's killing had been dubbed the "Werewolf Murder" by the Herald-Express because of the brutal nature of the crime.[72][150]

Alleged prostitution and sexual history

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Many true crime books claim that Short lived in or visited Los Angeles at various times in the mid-1940s, including Gilmore's Severed, which claims she worked at the Hollywood Canteen. This is disputed by Harnisch, who states that Short did not, in fact, live in Los Angeles until after the canteen's closing in 1945.[6] Although some of Short's acquaintances and several commentators described Short as a prostitute or call girl during her time in Los Angeles,[k] according to Harnisch, the contemporaneous grand jury proved that there was no existing evidence that she was ever a prostitute.[6] Harnisch claims that the rumor regarding Short's history as a prostitute originates from John Gregory Dunne's 1977 novel True Confessions, which is based in part on the crime.[6]

Another widely circulated rumor (sometimes used to counter claims that Short was a prostitute)[165] holds that Short was unable to have sexual intercourse because of a congenital defect that resulted in gonadal dysgenesis, also known as "infantile genitalia."[l] Los Angeles County district attorney's files state that the investigators had questioned three men with whom Short had engaged in sex,[166] including a Chicago police officer who was a suspect in the case; FBI files on the case also contain a statement from one of Short's alleged lovers.[167] Short's autopsy itself, which was reprinted in full[41] in Michael Newton's 2009 book The Encyclopedia of Unsolved Crimes, notes that her uterus was "small"; however, no other information in the autopsy is provided that would suggest her reproductive organs were anything other than anatomically normal.[47][49] The autopsy also states that Short was not and had never been pregnant, contrary to what had been claimed prior to and following her death.[166]

Another rumor—that Short was a lesbian—has often circulated; according to Gilmore, this rumor began after Means was told by the deputy coroner that Short "wasn't having sex with men" owing to her allegedly "small" genitalia.[168] Means took this to mean that Short had sex with women, and both he and Herald-Express reporter Sid Hughes began fruitlessly investigating gay bars in Los Angeles for further information.[74]

Legacy

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Short's grave in Oakland, California

Short is interred at the Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland.[164] After her younger sister, Elnora, had grown up and married, their mother Phoebe moved to Oakland to be near her daughter's grave. She finally returned to the East Coast in the 1970s, where she lived into her nineties and died in 1992.[35][13] On February 2, 1947, just two weeks after Short's murder, Republican state assemblyman C. Don Field was prompted by the case to introduce a bill calling for the formation of a sex offender registry; the state of California would become the first U.S. state to make the registration of sex offenders mandatory.[68]

Short's murder has been described as one of the most brutal and culturally enduring crimes in U.S. history,[99] and Time magazine listed it as one of the most infamous unsolved cases in the world.[169]

Short's life and death have been the basis of numerous books, television shows and films, both fictionalized and non-fiction. Among the most famous fictional accounts of Short's death is James Ellroy's 1987 novel The Black Dahlia, which, in addition to the murder, explored "the larger fields of politics, crime, corruption, and paranoia in post-war Los Angeles," according to cultural critic David M. Fine.[170] Ellroy's novel was adapted into a 2006 film of the same name by director Brian De Palma: Short was played by actress Mia Kirshner.[158] Both Ellroy's novel and its film adaptation bear little relation to the facts of the case.[171] Michael Connelly's 2024 novel The Waiting has a major subplot involving the Black Dahlia case.

Short was also portrayed in heavily fictionalized accounts by Lucie Arnaz in the 1975 television film Who Is the Black Dahlia?,[172] by Jessica Nelson in Season Four, Episode 13 of Hunter,[173] and by Mena Suvari in the series American Horror Story in 2011, featuring Short in the plot line of the episode "Spooky Little Girl",[174] and again in 2018 with "Return to Murder House".[175]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Sources

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Elizabeth Short (July 29, 1924 – c. January 14, 1947), a 22-year-old aspiring actress born in Boston, Massachusetts, and posthumously nicknamed the Black Dahlia by the press, was the victim of a gruesome unsolved murder in . Last seen alive around January 9, 1947, in Los Angeles, her nude body, bisected cleanly at the waist, washed, drained of blood, and posed with extensive mutilations including facial lacerations known as a "Glasgow smile" (slashes from the corners of her mouth to her ears), was discovered in a vacant lot in the Leimert Park neighborhood on January 15, 1947. The determined that Short died from cerebral hemorrhage from facial lacerations and shock from blows to the head, with postmortem and other cuts indicating the killer possessed anatomical skill, though the absence of blood at the scene suggested the killing occurred elsewhere. Despite an intensive investigation by the with FBI assistance involving over 150 suspects and numerous false confessions, no arrests led to conviction, rendering the case one of the most enduring mysteries in American criminal history. The murder's sensational details fueled widespread media coverage and public obsession, inspiring countless theories, books, and films while highlighting early shortcomings in forensic and investigative practices.

Early Life

Childhood and Family Background

Elizabeth Short was born on July 29, 1924, in Hyde Park, Boston, , the third of five daughters to Cleo Alvin Short, a course builder, and Phoebe Mae Sawyer Short. Her sisters were Virginia, Dorothea, Elnora, and Muriel. The family resided in nearby , in a modest working-class environment typical of the era. In 1930, when Short was six, her father abandoned the family by staging a disappearance resembling —leaving his car parked on a bridge—following financial ruin from the and the onset of the , which devastated his business ventures. He was later found to be alive, having relocated and started a new life in without contacting the family until the early . Phoebe Short, then raising five young daughters alone, sustained the household through sporadic employment as a bookkeeper supplemented by welfare and maternal aid programs. Short suffered from chronic respiratory ailments, including recurrent and severe attacks, which required lung surgery at approximately age 15 in 1939. These health challenges marked her early teenage years amid the family's ongoing economic hardships.

Adolescence and Early Adulthood

Elizabeth Short dropped out of Medford High School during her sophomore year around age 15 or 16. Chronic bronchitis and asthma prompted relocation to Florida in her late teens for the milder climate, as recommended by physicians. In late 1942, she joined her father, Cleo Short, in Vallejo, California, after his reemergence, but arguments led to her leaving in January 1943. Short obtained clerical work at the on Camp Cooke military base near , that same month, as confirmed by federal employment records. During this period, she became involved romantically with a U.S. sergeant stationed there, resulting in a brief that ended due to her deteriorating respiratory health. Family accounts described her role at the base alternatively as waitressing. By 1944, Short had moved to , where she worked as a and met Major Matthew Michael Gordon Jr., a decorated U.S. pilot. Gordon proposed marriage by telegram during his service in ; Short accepted, though the union remained unconsummated amid wartime separation. He died in a plane crash on August 10, 1945, shortly before the war's end. Short returned briefly to Vallejo and other locales for visits and employment in 1944–1945.

Life in California

Relocation and Employment

Elizabeth Short returned to in July 1946 after time in Florida, arriving in to visit Army Air Force Joseph Gordon Fickling, a longtime acquaintance from her days there. Her stated goal was to seek opportunities in the film industry, though she had no prior professional experience or connections beyond casual interest. Short obtained no documented acting roles, extra positions, or other film-related employment during her six months in the region, despite repeated efforts to network in Hollywood. Claims of sporadic work as a waitress or clerk in lack corroboration from employment records or contemporary witnesses, with investigations confirming she held no steady job. Her subsistence depended on temporary favors from acquaintances, including shared rooms and meals, amid evident financial strain evidenced by her pattern of unpaid bills and abrupt departures from lodgings. Short's housing reflected this instability, with frequent relocations across Los Angeles, Long Beach, and . She stayed at the Washington Hotel in Long Beach from July 12 to August 3, 1946, before shifting to various Hollywood Boulevard addresses such as 6303 and 6445 Hollywood Blvd. By late fall, she moved south to around December 6, rooming briefly with a family met through social contacts. Correspondence to her mother during this period maintained an upbeat tone about potential breakthroughs, downplaying rejections and economic precarity to avoid concern. This transient pattern, spanning at least five known addresses in under six months, underscored her lack of rooted or independent means.

Social Connections and Lifestyle

Elizabeth Short maintained a transient lifestyle in Southern California from mid-1946 to early 1947, frequently relocating between Hollywood, Long Beach, and while depending on acquaintances for temporary housing and sustenance rather than securing stable employment. She shared residences with "Margie" Graham at the Hawthorne Hotel and Guardian Arms apartments in Hollywood during late August to September 1946, and later resided with the Dorothy French family in from December 9, 1946, to January 8, 1947, where she assisted with minor household tasks but held no paying job. Her verifiable social and romantic associations included an intermittent relationship with Gordon Fickling, a decorated Army Air Forces she had known since 1943, with whom she cohabited briefly in Long Beach apartments in August 1946 and corresponded via letters, including a December 13, 1946, missive expressing relational tensions. In late 1946, she met "Red" Manley, a 25-year-old married salesman, during a San Diego outing around December 9; Manley provided her motel lodging and, on January 9, 1947, drove her northward to the Biltmore Hotel in , marking the last confirmed sighting of her alive before he returned to his wife in . Short's routines involved patronizing Hollywood-area bars and clubs, including the Crown Grill, Frolic Room, Four Star Grill, and Tabu Club, where witnesses reported she ordered soft drinks rather than alcohol, often in the company of friends like Don Leyes or Harold Costa who covered her expenses. She sustained family ties through frequent letter-writing, composing multiple notes to relatives and contacts such as Graham on dates like January 5, 1947, while in , and avoided consistent work by fabricating employment at places like , though acquaintances confirmed her and reliance on others for meals and . Chronic respiratory ailments, including and exacerbated by cold weather, prompted her southward migrations and were referenced in family correspondence; she also sought treatment for fatigue, chills (noted January 8, 1947), and a inflammation from a Hollywood physician in December 1946. LAPD records and contemporary witness accounts, including from dated partners and investigators, document no arrests or verified involvement in or other vice activities by Short in during 1946-1947, attributing such claims to unsubstantiated media rather than ; her sole prior legal encounter was a 1943 citation for underage bar presence.

The Murder

Last Known Movements

On January 9, 1947, Elizabeth Short departed with Robert "Red" Manley, a 25-year-old married salesman she had met earlier that week, traveling north in his after spending the previous night at the Franciscan in . The pair arrived in around 6:30 p.m., where Manley dropped Short off at the Biltmore Hotel in , entering the lobby with her briefly before departing southward. Short remained in the Biltmore lobby, observed by hotel staff and witnesses making multiple telephone calls from a payphone, reportedly attempting to contact acquaintances or arrange a meeting. She was seen exiting the hotel's Olive Street entrance around 10:00 p.m., marking the last verified public sighting of her alive, with no records of her checking into a room or leaving belongings there. Short carried minimal possessions during this period, including only a small purse, as she had entrusted her suitcase to Manley for safekeeping in , and witness accounts indicate she possessed little cash, relying on sporadic support from contacts. Subsequent unverified reports placed her at bars and nightspots in the days following January 9, such as possible appearances at establishments linked to nightclub owner Mark Hansen, with whom she had associated earlier in 1946; however, these sightings remain unsubstantiated, and Hansen's alibi confirmed no return by Short to his residence after mid-December 1946. No corroborated timeline exists for her activities between departing the Biltmore and her presumed disappearance shortly thereafter.

Body Discovery

On January 15, 1947, at approximately 10:00 a.m., Betty Bersinger discovered the mutilated body of a young woman while pushing her three-year-old daughter, Anne, in a stroller along a in a weedy vacant lot at 3705 South Norton Avenue in the Leimert Park neighborhood of . The lot was situated south of Coliseum Place, near the of 39th Street and , about one to two feet from the sidewalk edge. The body lay face up, naked, and bisected precisely at the waist, with the upper torso positioned slightly farther into the lot and the lower section offset about one foot south; the legs were spread apart, and the arms extended above the head in a posed manner. It exhibited a stark with no visible blood at the scene or pooling underneath, suggesting complete prior to placement and possible post-mortem transport to the site after 2:00 a.m. that day, as dew had evaporated by then. The form appeared meticulously cleaned or washed, with adhering stiff brush bristles on the skin and no smears or stains, further indicating handling away from the discovery location. Gashes extended from the corners of the mouth toward the ears, creating a "" incision. Horrified and initially believing the white figure to be a broken store , Bersinger left her daughter with the body briefly before rushing to a nearby residence—reportedly a doctor's home—to the (LAPD) at around 10:45 to 11:07 a.m., describing only a body in the lot without detailing its condition or gender. LAPD officers arrived by 11:18 a.m., promptly established a perimeter to secure the scene, and notified additional divisions, though initial attempts to lift fingerprints failed due to skin slippage from the body's condition. The discovery drew rapid response from multiple LAPD units and soon attracted reporters, marking the onset of the official investigation.

Autopsy and Forensic Details

The autopsy of Elizabeth Short was conducted on January 16, 1947, by County Chief Autopsy Surgeon Dr. Frederick Newbarr at the county morgue. Newbarr's examination determined the as cerebral hemorrhage resulting from multiple lacerations to the face and blows to the head, with death estimated to have occurred on January 14 or 15. The body showed extensive mutilation, including a deep incision from ear to ear across the (severing the ), additional slashes on the cheeks and jaw, and superficial cuts on the breasts and thighs; the torso had been bisected horizontally between the second and third in a single, precise cut approximately 4 inches deep. All blood had been drained from the body post-mortem, likely via incisions in the antecubital fossae of both arms and possibly other sites, with no blood present at the discovery scene. Forensic analysis indicated no evidence of recent sexual intercourse, as no semen was detected in the vaginal or rectal cavities despite mutilations to the genitalia, including removal of the . The exhibited internal hemorrhaging, consistent with trauma but without signs of or venereal . Toxicology results confirmed the absence of alcohol or narcotics in Short's system. Portions of the intestines had been removed and partially everted, with segments draped over the right and placed beneath the body; other abdominal contents were displaced or absent, though thoracic organs such as the lungs were present and examined, showing no independent . No fingerprints or identifiable tool marks were recoverable from the incisions due to the body's condition and cleaning, precluding definitive linkage to specific instruments. Identification was achieved via fingerprints lifted from the body and transmitted to the FBI, which matched them in 56 minutes to records from Short's application for a clerk position at Camp Cooke, an Army base in ; she was confirmed as 22 years old at death. The inquest on January 22, 1947, upheld Newbarr's findings, ruling the as by cerebral hemorrhage from homicidal violence.

Investigation

LAPD Initial Efforts

The (LAPD), with assistance from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), initiated its investigation immediately after the discovery of Elizabeth Short's body on January 15, 1947, in a vacant lot in the Leimert Park neighborhood. Jack A. Donohoe, head of the LAPD's division, took charge of the case and assigned detectives Finis Brown and Harry Hansen to lead the on-scene examination and early inquiries. The department mobilized at least 750 investigators from the LAPD and assisting agencies including the FBI, who conducted extensive interviews—including nationwide interviews by FBI agents—and canvasses over the initial weeks and months. Early efforts focused on identifying Short and tracing her recent movements, including searches of her known residences in and contacts from her transient lifestyle. Robert "Red" Manley, the last person confirmed to have seen Short alive after driving her from to on January 9, 1947, was detained and subjected to a examination administered by LAPD's Ray Pinker, which cleared him of involvement. The victim's identity was rapidly confirmed through fingerprint comparison by the FBI, which matched records in just 56 minutes after receiving prints from the LAPD. Teletype bulletins and wanted flyers bearing Short's photograph and description were distributed nationwide to alert other agencies, targeting 's large population of transients and migrants where Short had associated. Investigators encountered significant hurdles from the outset, including forensic indicators that the occurred elsewhere: the body had been drained of , meticulously cleaned, severed into sections post-mortem, and transported to the discovery site, leaving no local evidence or immediate witnesses. The absence of a fixed address for Short and her connections to the city's itinerant hotel and rooming-house scene complicated lead verification amid the post-World War II influx of temporary residents in . Despite these obstacles, the LAPD prioritized procedural canvassing of potential dump sites and surgical facilities, though no definitive early breakthroughs emerged from the transient-focused inquiries.

Media Sensationalism and Public Tips

The Los Angeles Herald-Express provided some of the earliest and most detailed on-scene reporting of Elizabeth Short's murder, with veteran crime reporter Agness "Aggie" Underwood arriving shortly after police on January 15, 1947, and contributing to the paper's emphasis on the crime's gruesome aspects. This local coverage quickly amplified into national prominence, as wire services disseminated stories nationwide within hours, fueling public fascination with the mutilation and the victim's purported Hollywood aspirations. Such rapid dissemination prioritized dramatic elements over verified details, setting the stage for widespread speculation. The ensuing media frenzy overwhelmed the with public tips, including numerous false confessions from attention-seekers and opportunists, which diverted investigative resources from credible leads. LAPD files document an influx of , with detectives sifting through hundreds of suspects and tips that ultimately yielded no arrests, as the volume strained telephone lines and personnel. Tabloid tactics exacerbated this, such as the Hearst-owned Examiner's deception of Short's mother—falsely claiming her daughter had won a beauty contest to coax family details for publication—introducing distorted personal narratives that blurred factual boundaries. A $10,000 reward for information leading to the killer, publicized amid the hype, generated further submissions but correlated with heightened rather than progress, as empirical patterns in LAPD records show proliferation outpacing actionable intelligence. Critics of the era's press, including officials, noted how sensational headlines and unverified rumors about Short's life distorted public perception and complicated sifting genuine evidence from the noise.

Letters, Interviews, and Hoaxes

On January 24, 1947, ten days after the discovery of Elizabeth Short's body, the Los Angeles Examiner received an anonymous package postmarked from Hollywood, containing Short's , business cards, and selected pages from her with names and phone numbers inked out except for those of prominent individuals like Robert "Red" Manley. The envelope was addressed using words clipped from newspapers and pasted together, and the contents had been washed with to destroy latent fingerprints or scents, a detail consistent with efforts to evade tracing. Investigators regarded this mailing as authentic, attributing it to the perpetrator due to the exclusive possession of Short's personal effects, which were verified as hers through handwriting comparisons and prior associations. Subsequent letters and postcards arrived at police stations and media outlets, including a series in early February 1947 signed "Black Dahlia Avenger," featuring messages assembled from cut-out words and letters sourced from magazines and newspapers to prevent handwriting analysis. These taunted authorities with claims of responsibility, such as assertions of the killer "cracking" under pressure or demanding "terms," and were mailed on specialized printer's proof sheet paper uncommon outside print shops. One such note explicitly referenced the murder's gruesomeness, but lacked specific forensic details unavailable to the public. Contemporary investigators dismissed these later communications as hoaxes, citing inconsistencies like generic phrasing, absence of private case knowledge, and patterns mimicking sensational crime correspondence of the era, while affirming only the initial package's legitimacy. The inundation of such fabrications, alongside anonymous tips, diverted investigative focus without yielding breakthroughs. Los Angeles Police Department detectives conducted interviews with over 150 suspects and persons of interest flagged via public leads or tangential links to Short, scrutinizing alibis, timelines, and behavioral inconsistencies to rule out most. False confessions proliferated, often from individuals seeking notoriety or evading other charges, further exemplifying the era's hoax epidemic that overwhelmed the probe without substantiating culpability.

Suspects

Primary Persons of Interest

Robert "Red" Manley, a 25-year-old salesman, was among the first persons of interest after identifying Elizabeth Short's purse and shoes on January 24, 1947, and admitting he had driven her from to on January 9, 1947, making him one of the last known individuals to see her alive. Investigators subjected Manley to intense questioning and a examination, which he passed, confirming his alibi that he had returned to for work on the day Short disappeared and could not have committed the murder around January 14-15, 1947. Despite initial suspicion due to his recent acquaintance with Short—having met her about a month prior—no or motive linked him to the crime, leading to his clearance by the (LAPD). Mark Hansen, a 60-year-old owner and Hollywood of Danish descent, emerged as a suspect due to Short's occasional stays at his properties and an containing his name found in a mailed related to the case on January 24, 1947. LAPD records indicate Hansen had attempted to initiate a romantic or sexual relationship with Short, which she rebuffed, providing a potential motive of rejection, though he denied any . His for the dates was not robustly verified in contemporary investigations, and his connections to Short's social circle kept him under scrutiny, but forensic evidence failed to tie him directly to the body or , resulting in no charges. Dr. George Hill Hodel, a prominent gynecologist and surgeon, was investigated in 1949 amid broader LAPD probes into his personal life, including allegations of illegal abortions and ; wiretap transcripts from early 1950 captured him hypothetically stating to an associate, "Supposin' I did kill the Black Dahlia. They can't prove it now," though this was not presented as a direct and lacked corroborating . Hodel's medical expertise aligned with the precise incisions observed in Short's , such as the clean bisection at the waist, but no blood, fibers, or witnesses connected him to the victim or the Leimert Park dump site. In 2003, his son, former LAPD detective Steve Hodel, publicly accused him of the murder and linked him to other based on reexamined handwriting and photographs, claims that remain speculative without forensic validation and were dismissed by LAPD as insufficient for prosecution. Dr. Walter Alonzo Bayley, a retired surgeon, was later proposed as a suspect in 1997 by Los Angeles Times researcher Larry Harnisch, citing Bayley's residence one block from the crime scene, his familiarity with surgical tools, and a hand injury that might explain certain cuts on Short's body, alongside his 1947 separation from his wife who lived nearby. Bayley's professional background included desensitization to blood from years of operations, fitting the methodical dismemberment, but no records show any acquaintance with Short, and he died of heart disease in January 1948 without ever being formally questioned by LAPD as a Dahlia suspect. Lack of direct evidence, such as DNA or witness ties, precluded any viable case against him. Across these individuals, investigations yielded no arrests or indictments due to unbreakable alibis, absence of matching forensics like traces or tool marks definitively linked to suspects, and reliance on circumstantial associations rather than causal proof, underscoring the empirical shortcomings in tying any primary to the January 15, 1947, body discovery.

Confessions and Their Dismissals

Dozens of individuals confessed to the murder of Elizabeth Short in the weeks and months following its discovery on , , fueled by extensive media coverage that detailed the case's gruesome elements. These admissions, often from attention-seeking persons or those with psychological vulnerabilities, were routinely dismissed by investigators due to factual inaccuracies, inability to recount withheld crime scene details, or verifiable alibis such as incarceration at the time of the killing. One prominent case involved Leslie Dillon, a 27-year-old and former mortician's assistant, who in early contacted crime reporter Aggie Underwood claiming knowledge of the killer but was arrested after revealing details like the body's drainage of blood, which police had not publicized. Under , Dillon implicated nightclub owner Mark Hansen and associate Jeff Connors, but his account collapsed amid inconsistencies, failure to match all mutilation specifics, and lack of ; he was released without charges after tests and further scrutiny cleared him. Other confessions, including those from women like an unidentified caller who claimed to have stabbed Short and , were quickly rejected for lacking precise knowledge of the bisecting incision or ligature marks, elements not fully disclosed to the public. None of the confessors demonstrated familiarity with the full extent of the surgical precision in the or the absence of at the discovery site, underscoring their unreliability as derived from media rather than . In September 1949, a County reviewed the LAPD's handling of the case, including reexamined confessions and leads, but issued no indictments owing to evidentiary deficiencies and unresolved gaps in linking any admission to forensic facts.

Theories

Surgical Expertise Hypotheses

The autopsy conducted by Los Angeles County Chief Autopsy Surgeon Frederick Newbarr on January 16, 1947, described the bisection of Elizabeth Short's body at the waist as executed with minimal bruising along the incision line, suggesting it occurred post-mortem, and characterized the procedure as indicative of advanced skill, stating that "whoever did this surgical procedure was a very fine surgeon." Newbarr further noted the removal of internal organs, including the uterus, with clean incisions through the abdominal wall and lack of hemorrhage in those areas, which fueled speculation of medical knowledge. Lead investigator Harry Hansen similarly testified to a grand jury that the organ removal and precise cuts pointed to surgical expertise, prompting LAPD to scrutinize physicians and medical personnel. Hypotheses attributing the mutilations to professional involvement often cite the hemicorporectomy-like —a technique involving separation at the level, historically taught in U.S. schools from —as evidence of formal training. Prominent among these is the theory advanced by Steve Hodel, a former LAPD detective, implicating his father, , a trained , based on the latter's familiarity with such procedures and alleged access to facilities for post-mortem work. Other conjectures link the crime to hospital settings, positing Short was transported to or from a site for the and evisceration, given the complete drainage of blood—estimated at over 80% of her volume—without spatter at the Leimert Park discovery site on , 1947. However, no forensic traces of specialized medical tools, such as scalpels with unique serrations or residues like antiseptics beyond basic cleaning (possibly ), were identified in the or scene analysis, undermining claims of clinical precision. The incisions, while straight, were achieved through separation feasible with a sharp, non-serrated blade or saw applied methodically over time, a replicable by a determined individual without formal training, as jagged edges were absent but not indicative of exclusive professional technique. itself requires no advanced setup; severing carotid arteries or jugular veins, or suspending the body post-mortem, allows gravitational drainage in a rudimentary location like a or basin, consistent with the absence of blood pooling at the kill site and the body's scrubbed condition prior to transport. Absent direct evidence tying the method to medical practice, the emphasis on surgical hypotheses overlooks simpler causal factors, such as the perpetrator's motive-driven persistence with available tools, rather than specialized access.

Connections to Other Crimes

Some investigators and authors have speculated connections between the murder of Elizabeth Short on January 15, 1947, and the Torso Murders, a series of 12 killings in , , from September 1935 to August 1938, due to shared elements of and partial in several victims. However, empirical comparisons reveal key differences: the Torso killings targeted mostly indigent transients and involved varied disposal methods, including dumping in creeks or boxes, without the precise bisection or blood drainage seen in Short's case; moreover, the geographic separation (Midwest versus ) and temporal gap of nearly a decade lack supporting evidence like witness travel records or forensic matches. , who led the Cleveland investigation, noted surgical skill in some dismemberments but never linked cases to , and no fingerprints, tool marks, or victim profiles overlapped. The "Lipstick Murder" of Jeanne French on March 11, 1947—less than two months after Short's death—prompted theories of serial linkage, as French's nude body was found beaten and arranged in a vacant lot with "F**k you, B.D." scrawled in nearby, interpreted by some as referencing "Black Dahlia." Similarities include the location, exposure of female victims post-mortem, and public outrage over brutality, but modus operandi diverged sharply: French suffered blunt force trauma from stomping and an iron bar, without the clean surgical incisions, organ removal, or evident in Short's . Author Steve Hodel alleged the same perpetrator—his father, —committed both, citing purported LAPD internal memos, but official records show no shared suspects, weapons, or biological traces confirmed the tie, rendering the lipstick message's reference speculative amid 1940s homicide rates. Claims of ties to the "Lone Woman Murders," a loose grouping of unsolved attacks on women from 1943 to 1949 (including Georgette Bauerdorf's 1944 ), hinge on geographic clustering and female but falter under scrutiny of inconsistent methods: Bauerdorf was asphyxiated in a bathtub without mutilation, and other cases involved shootings or stabbings, none replicating Short's ritualistic posing or precision cuts. Hodel extended serial attributions to these, but absent DNA cross-matches, eyewitness corroboration, or patterned escalation—beyond coincidental urban violence in postwar —no causal serial pattern emerges, as victim ages, professions, and injury types varied widely without forensic or ballistic links. Chronological proximity in local cases reflects era-specific crime volumes rather than proven offender continuity.

Contemporary Reexaminations

In 2003, former LAPD detective Steve Hodel published Black Dahlia Avenger, alleging that his father, George Hodel, a physician, committed the murder based on purported matches between crime scene photographs and images in George Hodel's personal albums, as well as handwriting analysis linking him to taunting letters sent to media and police. Hodel further claimed forensic linguistics tied his father's poetry to the Black Dahlia avenger letters and asserted LAPD surveillance records from 1949 placed George Hodel at the Sowden House near the crime scene disposal site. These arguments expanded in subsequent books and podcasts, with Hodel positing connections to other unsolved crimes like the 1940s Black Dahlia-like murders, though LAPD has acknowledged investigative links in some related cases without endorsing his specific conclusions on Elizabeth Short's death. Hodel released an updated edition, Black Dahlia Avenger — Case Closed (2025): The Truth Wasn't Lost, It Was Buried, on October 21, 2025, incorporating 150 additional pages of archival documents, photographic analysis, and claims of new evidence reinforcing his father's guilt, including alleged cover-ups by LAPD officials. However, independent researcher Larry Harnisch, who has documented the case since the through archival review, has critiqued Hodel's evidence as circumstantial and flawed, particularly disputing photo identifications as misattributions from unrelated sources and handwriting comparisons as subjective without forensic validation. Harnisch argues that Hodel's narrative overlooks contradictory timelines, such as George Hodel's verified alibis during key periods, and relies on interpretive leaps rather than direct physical links like fingerprints or eyewitness ties. Forensic reexaminations have yielded no breakthroughs. Efforts to extract DNA from the 1947 taunting envelopes, including stamps and adhesive, have been proposed repeatedly—such as Hodel's 2018 push for testing LAPD-held items—but degradation over decades has rendered viable profiles unobtainable, with no matches reported from partial analyses attempted in the 2010s. The FBI, which assisted the original LAPD probe, maintains the case as unsolved in its records, stating in early 2024 that the passage of 77 years and evidentiary deterioration make resolution improbable absent new, preserved biological material. This assessment underscores the evidentiary limits: without direct causal links—such as perpetrator DNA on the body or tools—theories remain speculative, preserving the murder's open status despite persistent claims.

Myths and Debunkings

Nickname Origins and Media Distortions

The nickname "Black Dahlia" originated in the summer of at Lander's Drugstore, located at 1st Street and Linden Avenue in , where Elizabeth Short occasionally patronized the . Local patrons reportedly bestowed it on her due to her dark hair styled in a flower-like arrangement, evoking the black dahlia bloom, combined with allusions to the 1946 The Blue Dahlia. There is no contemporary evidence that Short actively adopted or promoted the moniker herself during her lifetime; it appears to have been a casual, localized label rather than a self-chosen alias. Following the discovery of Short's body on January 15, 1947, newspapers, including the Herald-Express, rapidly incorporated the nickname into coverage, supplanting their initial attempts to brand the crime as the "Werewolf Murder." This adoption amplified the term's prominence, transforming a minor pre-murder epithet into a sensational hallmark of the case, though police records and Short's associates did not reference it as her known identity prior to the killing. Media distortions surrounding the often romanticized its origins, with some outlets falsely claiming posthumous invention by to heighten intrigue, thereby obscuring the mundane drugstore context. Publications further linked it to fabricated personality traits, such as portraying Short as a sultry, noir-esque figure clad in sheer black attire who embodied Hollywood glamour and vice—depictions unsupported by verified acquaintances or her modest employment history in clerical and medical roles. These embellishments, driven by competitive among tabloids like the Herald-Express and Examiner, prioritized narrative allure over factual restraint, fostering enduring myths that eclipsed empirical details of Short's transient, unremarkable existence in .

Lifestyle Rumors and Victim Blaming

Following the discovery of Elizabeth Short's body on January 15, 1947, anonymous letters and tips to the alleged that she had worked as a prostitute in Hollywood and other cities, claims that quickly spread through sensationalized newspaper coverage. These assertions lacked substantiation, as the LAPD investigation uncovered no arrest records for or related vice activities in Short's name across jurisdictions she had lived in, including , , and . Detectives interviewed acquaintances, including former roommates and romantic partners, who described Short as aspiring actress with a transient but denied involvement in sex work, attributing the rumors to unsubstantiated gossip from Hollywood fringes. Short's documented sexual history, based on contemporaneous interviews with family and friends, indicated limited partners—primarily a few boyfriends during her early 20s—and no reports of sexually transmitted diseases or pregnancies in medical or autopsy records released by authorities. Conflicting fringe theories, such as one author's unverified claim of pregnancy based on reinterpreted evidence, have been dismissed by investigators for lacking forensic or eyewitness support. The absence of such indicators aligns with accounts portraying her as selective in relationships, countering portrayals of habitual promiscuity. These lifestyle allegations fueled victim-blaming narratives in media, framing Short's as a of moral peril for unattached young women migrating to urban centers like amid postwar social shifts. Newspapers amplified anonymous rumors to stoke public fears of and female independence, reflecting broader moral panics over transient migrants' vulnerability to opportunistic crimes rather than inherent "vice." Such speculation diverted scrutiny from perpetrator motives and forensic leads, prioritizing character judgments over evidence-based analysis of how Short's itinerant job-seeking—common among aspiring entertainers—increased exposure to isolated risks without implying personal culpability.

Mutilation Exaggerations and Factual Errors

Media accounts and subsequent popular narratives have frequently exaggerated the bisection of Elizabeth Short's body as a "surgically precise" act implying specialized medical training, but County Chief Frederick Newbarr's January 16, 1947, report described the transverse cut at the waist as clean and made with a sharp instrument after , with minimal bruising along the incision line indicating no vital reaction, achievable by non-professionals using common tools rather than requiring surgical expertise. Newbarr noted the absence of hemorrhage in the deeper dissections, confirming most organ removals—including sections of intestine placed near the body—occurred post-mortem, without evidence of ritualistic intent or ante-mortem surgical intervention. Claims of prolonged torture while alive lack substantiation from the , which attributed to cerebral hemorrhage and shock from multiple blows to the face and head, with secondary contributing factors like the facial lacerations; the majority of body cuts showed no inflammatory response or , signifying they were inflicted after Short was deceased, resulting in a rapid rather than extended demise. Sensationalized descriptions of the mouth slashes as extending fully "ear to ear" are inaccurate; Newbarr documented incisions starting at the corners of the and curving upward toward but not reaching the s, forming a partial "" without severing the full length. Unverified media embellishments, such as the insertion of foreign objects like into the body, find no support in police or records and appear derived from unsubstantiated rumors amplified by early press coverage. The complete draining of blood, often mystified as symbolic, aligns causally with practical concealment: the absence of any blood at the January 15, 1947, discovery site in Leimert Park indicates occurred elsewhere prior to transport and posing, minimizing leakage and odor during disposal. These factual clarifications, drawn from primary forensic documentation, counter horror-oriented distortions that prioritize spectacle over .

Legacy

Cultural Depictions

The Black Dahlia murder has inspired numerous works of and , often prioritizing narrative drama over empirical fidelity to police records and findings. James Ellroy's 1987 novel The Black Dahlia fictionalizes the investigation through invented detectives and conspiracies involving corrupt elites, transforming Elizabeth Short from a transient seeking opportunities into a enigmatic entangled in high-society intrigue. Similarly, John Gilmore's 1994 book Severed: The True Story of the Black Dahlia Murder proposes a specific based on circumstantial links but embellishes Short's lifestyle with unverified claims of bohemian excess, diverging from documented evidence of her modest, itinerant existence in rooming houses. Brian De Palma's 2006 film adaptation of Ellroy's novel amplifies these inventions, depicting Short (played by ) as a seductive amid hallucinatory plot twists, while conflating real LAPD procedural flaws with fabricated motives unsupported by forensic reports from January 1947. The portrayal critiques institutional but distorts causal realities, such as the absence of for elite cover-ups, instead favoring noir tropes that glamorize the mutilation as artistic rather than the precise, post-mortem incisions noted in the County coroner's examination. Television and documentary formats have perpetuated speculative revivals, exemplified by the 2019 TNT series I Am the Night, which interweaves the Hodel family narrative with invented detective pursuits, and the 2025 updated edition of Steve Hodel's Black Dahlia Avenger, promoting his father's guilt through reinterpreted wiretap logs without new forensic corroboration. These depictions rarely adhere to verifiable timelines—such as Short's body discovery on January 15, 1947, in Leimert Park—or her limited Hollywood contacts, instead recasting her as a mythic victim to sustain unresolved intrigue, thereby obscuring the case's evidentiary gaps like unidentified blood types and absent eyewitnesses. Such fictionalizations, while commercially enduring, erode public discernment by conflating hypothesis with fact, as seen in the pattern of portraying Short's bisected corpse as symbolic eroticism rather than clinical dismemberment for drainage.

Impact on Criminology and Public Perception

The Black Dahlia investigation exemplified early tensions between and media, as reporters accessed and trampled the Leimert Park on January 15, 1947, compromising potential evidence before forensic teams arrived. This interference, coupled with over 150 false confessions and thousands of tips flooded by sensational headlines, diverted resources and prolonged the case's unsolved status, highlighting how public frenzy can obstruct objective policing. The processed more than 60 suspects initially, but media distortions amplified rumors, fostering a pattern of investigative overload seen in subsequent high-profile cases. In , the case advanced awareness of forensic constraints in the pre-DNA era, with techniques like fingerprinting—submitted to the FBI but unmatched to records—revealing gaps in national databases and autopsies that noted precise surgical incisions without identifying the perpetrator. It prompted retrospective links to serial dismemberments, such as Cleveland's killings (1935–1938), influencing later by emphasizing mutilation as a signature of organized killers rather than isolated rage. Unlike modern resolutions via in cases like the Golden State Killer, the 1947 murder exposed 1940s limitations—including no blood typing reliability or preservation—without absolving errors like delayed scene securing or inter-agency silos. Public perception endures through the case's archetype of unsolved glamour amid brutality, sustaining over 50 books and multiple s since 1947, with Steve Hodel's October 2025 edition of Black Dahlia Avenger adding 150 pages of circumstantial claims tying it to his father, reigniting debates despite evidentiary critiques. This fascination underscores a cultural fixation on mysteries defying closure, contrasting solvable contemporaries via advancing tech while critiquing how initial perpetuated victim-focused myths over procedural rigor.

References

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