Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 15

Publication:
The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SUNDAY, MAY 11, 2003 NATION THE RECORD A-15 hem a del eeiiwe cS liter Book ties socialite doctor to legendary Black Dahlia murder 4 The transcripts of overheard conversations include i 1 it 1 Ms Two photographs of Elizabeth Short in a small album that belonged to Steve Hodel's father. Her body was found sliced in half in a vacant lot and arranged in a pose resembling a sculpture. 4 vr 1 I 1.1. Iff WW ikT ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS Steve Hodel, a retired Los Angeles Police Department homicide detective, with a copy of his book. Hodel believes his father, a respected doctor, killed Elizabeth Short, the Black Dahlia, in 1947.

'i 1 i) The author also said he recognizes his father's handwriting on taunting cards and letters sent to the police after the Black Dahlia killing. He said his research indicates that his father and an alleged accomplice might also be linked to the murders of seven other women and suggests that they were serial killers. Why didn't the police prosecute Hodel's father? The book offers a complicated theory involving police corruption and the father's position-as the doctor who worked with the Public Health Department in treating venereal diseases in Los Angeles. His medical files might have included some famous names. Steve Hodel also suggests that some authorities were bribed.

He also notes that as the investigation progressed, the doctor left the country, spending most of the rest of his life in the Philippines. Hodel's theory, placing his father in the same league as Jack the Ripper, is not without its skeptics. Over the years, many people confessed to being the Black 5i 114, i i By LINDA DEUTSCH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LOS ANGELES -He carries it in his pocket as a talisman, a tiny 3-inch book of grainy photos that he touches now and then as if reminding himself that the horror is real. Steve Hodel, a retired Los Angeles homicide detective, is adjusting to the discovery of evidence, in- cluding this book, that he said proves his late father, a respected Los Angeles doctor, was the torture I'll i i ci ii lunci ui cmaueui oiiui me su-called Black Dahlia. Hodel believes his father might have killed several other women, as well.

If he is correct, Hodel has cracked a more than half-century-old murder case that is the oldest and most notorious of Los Angeles' unsolved "cold cases." It also is one of the most sensational, a mystery replete with a beautiful victim, a grotesque murder, an incest trial, and famous characters from the heyday of old Hollywood. Hodel, 61, has written this gruesome tale in a book, "Black Dahlia Avenger." "This is Hannibal Lecter meets LA Confidential in Chinatown," said Hodel, who now lives in Lake Arrowhead, a mountain town east of Los Angeles. "You couldn't make up a story like this. "Even before this, people would say to me, 'Your family is so interesting. You should write a Hodel said in an interview.

"But the fact that I would grow up to be a policeman and then discover this, well. His voice trails off in sadness. In his book, Hodel paints his fa-, ther, Dr. George Hodel, as a fiend who tortured and carved up a young woman and perhaps went on to kill others before he abandoned his family and fled the United States. "I loved my father and respected him," Hodel said.

"His blood flows through my body. He gave me being. But now I have come to look at my father as the true Dr. Jekyl and 1 Mr. Hyde." Steve Hodel's journey into the darkness of his father's life began with the little brown photo album given to him by his father's widow when the elder Hodel died in 1999 at the age of 91.

Its yellowing pages contained snapshots of some of George Hodel's 11 children from four marriages, including Steve and his mother, the ex-wife of director John Huston. But what caught his eye were "two carefully posed and framed photographs of a mystery woman with flowers in her hair. "It wasn't immediate recognition," the author recalls. "But I thought, Why do I know this He remembered a movie about the Black Dahlia case and began to do computer research, comparing the photos in the album with those of Elizabeth Short. "Initially, I was sure there was some other explanation," Hodel said.

"Dad knew a lot of beautiful women. I was in denial." But as his research continued, his conclusion became inescapable. Dr. George Hodel was a man with a genius I.Q. who socialized "I always thought my father had killed the Black Dahlia.

I said it back then." Tamar Hodel in Hodel's voice 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." At another point, he is quoted as saying, "Maybe I did kill my secretary." And there is a tape in which a woman is heard screaming. The younger Hodel now believes that his father killed the secretary to keep her from talking. He also links his father to the so-called "red lipstick murder" of Jeanne French, a woman found slain within weeks of Short's murder with an obscenity and the initials "B.D." scrawled on her nude body in red lipstick.

a statement in George Hodel's voice saying: "Supposin' I did kill the Black Dahlia. "They Couldn't prove it IlOW They Can talk to my secretary anymore because she's dead." with Hollywood legends such as Huston and artist-photographer Man Ray. He is shown in his son's book as the central figure in a depraved social set that dabbled in orgies and drugs. The 1947 Black Dahlia killing is a Los Angeles legend. The body was severed at the waist, drained of blood and washed, then carefully posed in a vacant lot Hodel said the pose was right out of a sculpture by his father's famous friend, Man Ray.

Contributing to the crime's enduring fascination were the beauty of the 22-year-old victim, who wore dahlias in her black hair, and the stories circulated at the time of her Hollywood ambitions. "It's become synonymous with unsolved murders of beautiful women," said Sandi Gibbons, spokeswoman for the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office. Mystery writer Robert Crais, the author of "LA Requiem" and other books set in Los Angeles, said it was no ordinary crime. "Certain things are part of the fabric of Los Angeles," he said, "and the Black Dahlia is one of them." Elizabeth Short had come from Massachusetts in the 1940s in search of a better life. She dated many men and lost her true love in a wartime plane crash.

Records show that several witnesses identified Short as a girlfriend of George Hodel. When District Attorney Steve Cooley decided recently to release the long-secret files on the case, Steve Hodel's theory gained substance. His father's photograph was in the file, along with transcripts of electronic surveillance on his home for three weeks in 1950. The reports are fragile, typed on onionskin paper that is yellowed and crumbling. But they make clear that Dr.

Hodel was one of the prime suspects in the investigation of Short's murder. He had been tried and acquitted on a charge of committing incest on his 14-year-old daughter in a sensational 1949 trial during which the Black Dahlia was mentioned. Afterward, police electronically bugged his Hollywood mansion, a Mayan-style edifice designed by Frank Lloyd Wright's son Lloyd Wright, where the rich and famous parted. The transcripts of overheard conversations include a statement Allergy Care Centers qftfr fffif, jf CoitforAUSeuoM TXT Dr. George Hodel in a 1952 photo taken in Oahu, Hawaii.

He was acquitted in 1949 of committing incest with a daughter. in Hawaii, said she was branded a liar in the trial and went into exile with her mother in Mexico after the scandal. "Now everything is falling into a clear fight," she said. "Even with all the horrible things they said about me, I was under my father's spell for quite a while," she said. "But I'm so glad I told the truth Now I understand his cruelty, and I see it had nothing to do with me." Steve Hodel believes his search was worthwhile.

He said he often imagined Elizabeth Short and the other women his father may have killed crying out for justice. "I've investigated 300 murders, and I've never seen anything close to this," he said. "I feel that I was being guided to find these important truths. It's been a spiritual trip for me." Hearing Screening. Dahlia killer, but no one was ever charged.

Books were written and movies made about the case. Dozens of Web sites are devoted to it Theories abound about who might have killed Elizabeth Short. One writer even tried to implicate the director Orson Welles. A supporter of Hodel's theory is Deputy District Attorney Stephen Kay, a former prosecutor in the Charles Manson case who worked with Steve Hodel for many years. He said Hodel's story is different because he arrives with unusual credentials.

For 24 years, he was an LAPD homicide detective assigned to Hollywood. "He had a reputation for honesty and being a good investigator," Kay said. When the younger Hodel began his unusual project, he went to Kay and swore him to secrecy. The prosecutor, stepping outside his official duties, said he would privately examine Hodel's evidence and tell him whether the case could have been prosecuted. At the time Hodel wrote the book, the DA's files were not open to him.

He gleaned most of his information from newspapers, public documents, and family archives. Based on Hodel's evidence, Kay said he would have no reluctance to file a murder case against the doctor if he were alive. Hodel has broken with some family members over his book. His father's widow no longer speaks to him. But his half-sister, Tamar, the subject of the incest trial, is convinced he is right "I always thought my father had killed the Black Dahlia," she said in a telephone interview.

"I said it back then." Tamar Hodel, now 68 and living offer or discount 88A8. Not wfirf A Joan V.R. Princeton (609) 520-1 1 53 Edison (732) 549-1964 Eatontown (732) 544-1279 584-2789 on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. BUY AND fee3 (50G jri Off fwfcfc May Is Better Hearing Month. Make An Appointment For Your Free Spring has Sprung.

Allergies are more than a nose and watery eyes. Cold like symptoms, poor performance at work or school headaches and fatigue may be caused by allergies. Our Allergists have the latest medicines, testing and treatment programs to help you feel better quickly, easily and safely. All without the painful scratch tests. Limited Time Only! 800.535.5227 Ptat cmttfwm appointment MyAttetgyConxom BRING THIS COUPON AND SAVE: We Participate with most Health-Plans Offices Conveniently Located In: Millbum, Edison, Clifton, Paramus 2 PACKS OF BATTERIES RECEIVE ONE 50 OFF In-The-Ear.

Everyday Low 2,045 ea. Promo 1,023 68. In-The-Canal: Everyday Low 2,320 ea. Promo 1,160 ea. FREE Siemens Music Digital Hearing Aid Siemens Music Digital Hearing Aids Provide: Touch-of-a-Button adjustment that lets you easily tune into two specific enviroments as needed.

Fully automatic volume control that lets you adjust to changes in sound levels. Digital sound processing technology. Your inturanci plan may provide full or partial payment for hearing aids. Call today to inquire about coverage. Offt expires 53tfflL with any other offer or discount HearUSA, Inc.

Company. Hamill Hearing Aid Dispenser MG00701 Toms River (732)818-1089 Pennsville (856)339-9415 Somerville (908) 575-1267 1. w-m I a mr Not valid with any other Offer expires Rio 886-4984 Cherry 661-0673 Newark (973) 522-0487 864-4008 HEARx is accredited by the Joint Commission The Healthcare Quality Improvement Organization of New Jersey, Inc. recognizes the contributions of Mew Jersey hospitals for their pursuit of excellence in providing care to their We salute the hospitals participating in the Newjersey Medicare Quality Initiative. Egg 645-1453 Paramus (201)291-0223 Burlington (609)239-2717 Deptford (856) 384-5973.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Record
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Record Archive

Pages Available:
3,310,451
Years Available:
1898-2024