Book description
More than fifty years after what has been called "the most
notorious unsolved murder of the 20th century," the case has
finally been solved. On January 15, 1947, the body of beautiful
22-year-old Elizabeth Short, dubbed the Black Dahlia because of her
black clothing and the dahlia she wore in her hair, was discovered on
a vacant lot in downtown Los Angeles, her body surgically bisected,
horribly mutilated, and posed as if for display. Even the most
hardened homicide detectives were shocked and sickened by the sadistic
murder. Thus began the largest manhunt in LA history. For weeks the
killer taunted the police, and public, much as his infamous English
counterpart Jack the Ripper had done in London 60 years before,
sending tantalizing notes, urging them to "catch me if you
can." And for weeks and months the LAPD came up empty. Charges of
police ineptitude soon gave way to rumors of corruption and cover-up
at the highest levels. Meanwhile, a rash of lone women in LA were
brutally murdered, and their cases also remained mysteriously
unsolved. Could the Black Dahlia Avenger be, in fact, a serial killer
stalking the city streets?