THEY GOT AWAY WITH MURDER
Reader's Digest US|April 2020
Five whodunits that continue to confound the law
Bill Hangley Jr., Andy Simmons, and Marc Peyser
THEY GOT AWAY WITH MURDER

WHO KILLED THE BLACK DAHLIA?

A former Los Angeles police detective is sure he knows who the murderer is, and the suspect is too close for comfort.

WINTER MORNINGS IN Los Angeles can be chilly, and so it was as Betty Bersinger pushed her daughter’s stroller along the weedy sidewalks of Leimert Park on January 15, 1947. In those days, LA was full of half-finished developments like this: gap-toothed mixtures of bungalows and empty lots, construction stalled by the war.

As she approached 39th and Norton at about 11 a.m., Bersinger spotted amid the tall grass and shattered glass what she thought was a broken mannequin just feet from the street. A cloud of insects hung over pale body parts. In the distance, she saw children on bikes. “It just didn’t seem right,” she said later. “I thought I’d better call somebody.”

Within an hour, the overgrown lot was crawling with cops and reporters, all gaping at a dismembered corpse. The body of the victim—a small woman, about 118 pounds, dark hair, five foot six—had been meticulously severed at the waist and emptied of blood, and it was covered with bruises and violent lacerations. The woman’s liver hung from her torso. Her mouth had been sliced from ear to ear. It was, said one eyewitness, “sadism at its most frenzied.”

All signs pointed to an agonizing death at the hands of a disturbed soul—perfect fodder for LA’s rapacious news biz. The victim, Elizabeth Short, was on every front page within hours: an unemployed Boston girl with no fixed address who’d once been named “Cutie of the Week” while working the PX at a nearby Army base. The owner of a drugstore the aspiring actress frequented mentioned the floral nickname some of his male customers had for her, and the papers soon slapped “Black Dahlia” on every story they ran.

Esta historia es de la edición April 2020 de Reader's Digest US.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.

Esta historia es de la edición April 2020 de Reader's Digest US.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE READER'S DIGEST USVer todo
Pier Pressure - A brutal storm rips a floating beachside store from its moorings, sending it and its occupants out to sea
Reader's Digest US

Pier Pressure - A brutal storm rips a floating beachside store from its moorings, sending it and its occupants out to sea

A brutal storm rips a floating beachside store from its moorings, sending it and its occupants out to sea. It was around 6:30 on a June morning in 2023, and a Facebook post caught Boyd Jordan's eye. Shell Isle Mercantile, a floating store that sold beachgoing fare-sunglasses, inflatables, food, umbrellas-had been ripped from its moorings on Shell Island, just off Florida's northern Gulf Coast, by a storm the night before and had floated 3 miles across the bay to Panama City.

time-read
3 minutos  |
September 2024
Do You Kiss Your Dog? - Find out how gross your questionable habits really are, according to health experts
Reader's Digest US

Do You Kiss Your Dog? - Find out how gross your questionable habits really are, according to health experts

I admit it, when it comes to food, I have some eeew-inducing practices, like skimming mold off old cheddar and feeding the rest to my unsuspecting family. We're still alive, so how bad can it be? Because our gross human habits fall somewhere along the spectrum from mildly cringeworthy to full-on repulsive, I reached out to experts to find out where some common behaviors land on the gross-o-meter.

time-read
7 minutos  |
September 2024
What's Ailing Our Doctors? - Today's physicians are burned out and battered by spreadsheets. We patients suffer too.
Reader's Digest US

What's Ailing Our Doctors? - Today's physicians are burned out and battered by spreadsheets. We patients suffer too.

Today’s physicians are burned out and battered by spreadsheets. We patients suffer too. America's doctors are in crisis. Six in 10 physicians say they're burned out, with burnout rates for some specialties, such as primary care, reaching 70%. When polled by the American Medical Association, 40% of doctors said they were considering leaving their practices in the next two years. Another study, conducted by health-care industry publisher Elsevier, revealed concerns about mental health and burnout: 63% of med students in the United States reported that they had no intention of practicing clinical medicine after graduation and will instead work as lab researchers or academics. This is despite a predicted shortage of 124,000 physicians over the next 10 years.

time-read
10+ minutos  |
September 2024
Now Hear This
Reader's Digest US

Now Hear This

Losing your hearing suddenly, even if there is no pain, is always urgent

time-read
4 minutos  |
September 2024
Go for the Gumbo
Reader's Digest US

Go for the Gumbo

The soulful stew synonymous with Louisiana is delicious anywhere you eat it

time-read
2 minutos  |
September 2024
BETWEEN A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE
Reader's Digest US

BETWEEN A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE

Pinned by a giant boulder, a hiker had two choices: panic or gut it out. He did both.

time-read
10+ minutos  |
September 2024
Fathers of the Bride
Reader's Digest US

Fathers of the Bride

A young woman finds a unique way to honor the many men who helped her survive her childhood

time-read
8 minutos  |
September 2024
MY SMART PET
Reader's Digest US

MY SMART PET

These clever critters are some smart C-O-O-K-I-E-S

time-read
5 minutos  |
September 2024
How Hobbies Help Us
Reader's Digest US

How Hobbies Help Us

Far from a waste of time, pastimes are good for body, brain and spirit

time-read
10+ minutos  |
September 2024
1+1 = MORE (or LESS)
Reader's Digest US

1+1 = MORE (or LESS)

A math whiz encourages you to play with your numbers

time-read
3 minutos  |
September 2024