Episode 7 - Suspects and the End

Episode 7 - Suspects and the End

Author: Artificial Intelligence February 23, 2026 Duration: 33:19

Episode 6: Other Suspects and the End of the Case

Episode Summary

In the final chapter of our Black Dahlia series, the investigation widens one last time. With the major theories exhausted, police files and later researchers turn toward a cluster of secondary suspects whose names surfaced briefly, then disappeared. Some were questioned and released. Others were investigated quietly and never revisited. Together, they form the outer perimeter of the case.

This episode examines three of the most persistent alternate suspects, the reasons they were considered, and the evidence that ultimately failed to sustain those theories. It also addresses how the investigation finally dissolved, why no official closure ever came, and how the Black Dahlia transformed from an active homicide into one of the most mythologized crimes in American history.

The episode concludes with the argument that the case did not remain unsolved because the truth was unknowable, but because the investigation fractured under pressure, politics, and institutional failure. What survived was not resolution, but narrative.


Featured Subjects

Leslie Dillon

A bellhop with an interest in crime who corresponded with LAPD psychiatrist J. Paul De River. Dillon’s detailed letters raised suspicion, but inconsistencies, lack of corroboration, and procedural misconduct ultimately undermined the case against him.

Jack Anderson Wilson

A former LAPD informant and convicted criminal who claimed responsibility for the murder while hospitalized. His confession failed to match known evidence and was dismissed by investigators.

Jeff Connors

A bit-part actor who died by suicide in 1947 and was briefly examined due to timing and rumor. No physical or documentary evidence ever linked him to Elizabeth Short.

The Collapse of the Investigation

By mid-1947, the case was no longer being worked in any coordinated way. Tips continued to arrive, but no suspect remained active. Files were reorganized, leads were deprioritized, and responsibility quietly dispersed.


Key Topics Covered

  • Why confessions in high-profile cases often fail verification

  • The role of police psychiatry in 1940s investigations

  • How media pressure reshaped investigative priorities

  • The disappearance of suspects through bureaucratic attrition

  • The moment the case effectively ended without announcement


Sources and References

Primary and Historical Sources

Los Angeles Times Black Dahlia Archivehttps://www.latimes.com/projects/la-me-black-dahlia/

FBI Vault: Black Dahlia Fileshttps://vault.fbi.gov/Black%20Dahlia

LAPD Historical Homicide Fileshttps://www.lapdonline.org/history/


Books and Longform Research

John Gilmore, _Severed: The True Story of the Black Dahlia Murder_https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/163983.Severed

Larry Harnisch, “The Black Dahlia Files”http://www.lmharnisch.com

Steve Hodel, _Black Dahlia Avenger_https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/164564.Black_Dahlia_Avenger

Janice Knowlton and Michael Newton, _Daddy Was the Black Dahlia Killer_https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/289238.Daddy_Was_the_Black_Dahlia_Killer


Academic and Contextual Material

FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin Archivehttps://leb.fbi.gov

Postwar Los Angeles Policing Historyhttps://www.lapdhistory.org


Episode Review

Episode 6 closes the Black Dahlia series not with revelation, but with examination. By moving away from dominant theories and toward the structure of failure itself, the episode reframes the case as a study in investigative collapse rather than criminal brilliance. It emphasizes proximity, documentation, and institutional behavior over mythmaking, leaving listeners with a clear understanding of why the case ended the way it did.

No culprit is crowned.No certainty is manufactured.The story ends where the investigation actually did.

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Ever wondered how artificial intelligence might interpret the darkest chapters of human history? AI True Crime is an experiment at the intersection of cold cases and cutting-edge code. Each episode delves into a documented true crime story, but the narrative is uniquely shaped by AI text generation tools like ChatGPT. The process doesn't stop there; these AI-generated scripts are then converted into spoken word through voice-to-text synthesis, creating an eerie, automated narration that offers a strange new perspective on familiar tragedies. It’s a fusion where technology meets the traditional true crime genre, set against an atmospheric backdrop of music by Bensound. This podcast, authored by an entity simply called Artificial Intelligence, sits in a curious space between the history it examines and the technological tools it employs. You’ll hear known events reconstructed through an unfamiliar, algorithmic lens, prompting questions about storytelling, memory, and the very nature of investigation itself. The result is a listening experience that feels both familiar and profoundly uncanny, perfect for those intrigued by the shadows of the past and the potential of future narratives. Tune in to hear history filtered through code, and discover how machines recount our most haunting tales.
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