The Black Dahlia Files by Don Wolfe
In the Homicide Division of the Los Angeles Police Department, the Black Dahlia case file bears the stamp "OPEN and UNSOLVED." After more than 50 years of dead-end investigations, Donald H. Wolfe identifies the killer and reveals his motive - along with a cover-up involving a corrupt L.A.P.D.; shady, famous Hollywood figures, and crooked politicians. In 1947, the dismembered body of a young movie-land wannabe named Elizabeth Short was discovered in a vacant lot near the Wilshire district of Los Angeles. The gruesome details of the case instantly made headlines and captured the attention of the nation. Elizabeth Short became known as the Black Dahlia and her murder became one of the most notorious of the 20th century.
For the first time, the Los Angeles District Attorney's office has opened its files on the Black Dahlia, and Wolfe has unearthed shocking, new revelations that no other journalist or author has.
Special thanks to Hex Correpondent Elisabeth Reynolds for the heads up.
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