Black Dahlia Murder
Fame. The condition of being known or talked about by many people, especially on account of notable achievements. A young woman by the name is Elizabeth Short with the face of a doll dreamed of fame and stardom at a young age, but one should always be careful with what they wish for. When locals find her body gruesomely mutilated, the news spread fast and The Black Dahlia case became the talk of the town. The mystery behind The Black Dahlia murder can be summed up into two theories; George Hodel or Walter Bayley was the murder.
To start, The Black dahlia murder till this very day is one of L.A’s oldest cold cases to date. On January, 15, 1947, A local resident finds a severed body of a 22 year old woman named Elizabeth Short (Newton 25). Later, Investigators found that Short had been taken and killed somewhere else, washed and drained of blood, and then discarded in a vacant lot. (Newton 35). Rope marks were visible around her ankles and neck, Suggesting torture. Though, Investigators later notice that they
…show more content…
The Expert cutting and use of tools lead many to think that the killer had surgical knowledge (Smith 2). Granted, Steve Hodel, George hodel’s son hired a handwriting expert who found the similarities uncanny (Murr 1). Furthermore, On February, 2013, Investigators searched hodel’s home. Buster, a trained police dog detected traces of human decomposition (“Black Dahlia Bio”) The police bugged George until they recorded him saying “ Supposin’ I did kill the black dahlia. They couldn’t prove it now. They can’t talk to my secretary anymore because she’s dead”(Smith 9) It’s understandable why theorist would believe that George was the culprit. George had the surgical knowledge to be able to create such clean cuts and his occupation lined up with Short’s autopsy report. Given the evidence, George Hodel being Short’s killer is a fairly probable