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True Crime Historian

A Parasite's Progress

True Crime Historian

Richard O Jones

True Crime, Documentary, Arts, Society & Culture, Performing Arts

4.4729 Ratings

🗓️ 13 November 2024

⏱️ 81 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Episode 280 is a reading of "The Black Negligee Murder" By Frederic Holmes

Adapted from True Detective, v.43 no.1

Ad-Free Safe House Edition

There’s a lot going on in this story. The seams show in the author’s reporting as he occasionally allows glimpses into his process, but at the same time, he makes it seem like he’s telling story from the point of view of the bad guy for most of the first two thirds of the narrative. The really cool nerdy part for me as a writer and a fan of pulp, is that you can hear the author’s disdain and sympathy both for the character as well as his determination to be fair and to let the story unfold no matter how disagreeable he may find it. So this tells me that he might have had a frank, lengthy, detailed interview with Dahlbender, was maybe even charmed by him a little, just as Rose Whitmore was, but also repulsed by his plotting and despicable actions. Still, the author seems to get in Dahlbender’s head and lets him have his say, but his self-pity doesn’t make his actions any less reprehensible.

 I checked with some of the newspaper articles of the day, and this story seems to be sticking to the gist of what reporting I found. Dahlbender was quite contrite when he was caught and his confession seemingly heart-felt. True crime magazines have a terrible reputation for not being totally committed to the “true” in the interest of sensationalizing the stories. The do typically veer from newspaper journalism in a lot of ways, such as inventing dialogue and giving people intentions they can’t possibly know, but I have found them to be relatively reliable, at least as reliable as daily newspaper reporting, as far as the general facts of the case go. Before I share a story from the old pulps, I always do at least a cursory check against newspaper reporting to make sure there really was such a case and that the basic facts are accurate if not the details. There’s a big difference between a true story and a story based on a true story, and I try to lean toward the former in my curation. I’ve got some really well-told stories in my back pocket that I can’t yet prove their veracity, mainly because they’re about really old cases and I don’t have access to the right archives to give adequate confirmation. At least not yet. I’ll keep them in my pocket for now.

I’ve known some guys who did this kind of magazine work, and they were always meticulous in their reporting and had an advantage of time that daily newspaper reporters don’t have. This story was written three years after the trial and covers the case not only from the reporter’s and the perpetrator’s points of view, but the last third switches over to the police investigation, which is usually the sole perspective in most pulp stories. So I believe the author did his homework for us and presents us with an interesting, somewhat sympathetic portrait of a sleazy opportunist.



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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Popular.com

0:03.4

The Playboy's career as a con man was over when his sweetheart became a slew.

0:19.5

A Parasite's Progress by Frederick Holmes.

0:27.1

A Mrs. Whitmore to see you, Mr. Dallbender.

0:31.3

The tall, slender man at the desk in his New York office looked up.

0:36.8

Whitmore.

0:41.8

He had a client of that name, a Frederick C. Whitmore,

0:46.9

to whom he had sold some securities, but he'd not seen the man in some months.

0:56.3

Send her in, he said to his secretary. A moment later, a woman dressed in deep mourning entered his office.

1:04.3

I am Mrs. Frederick Whitmore, she said in a softly modulated voice. I believe you know my husband.

1:12.1

Dahlbender rose. Indeed, I do know him. Won't you sit down?' She seated herself gracefully.

1:18.4

"'I'm sorry to have to tell you that Mr. Whitmore died in Palm Beach just a few weeks ago.' "'Dollbender's thin face took on a shocked expression.

1:22.3

"'You don't mean it, why he appeared perfectly well when I last saw him.'

1:27.1

"'It was very sudden, a heart attack.

1:30.2

I'm so sorry.

1:31.7

The widow smoothed their gloves.

1:34.6

For a moment, she seemed at a loss for something to say.

1:38.3

Then, he told me if anything happened to him, I should consult you about investment matters.

1:46.4

The broker's eyes showed keen interest. Here was a possible client, and a valuable one if he could land her.

1:53.4

Whitmore must have left a sizable fortune. I'll be happy to serve you in any way possible.

2:00.4

Well, I haven't anything special in mind just now.

2:04.1

He left all of his affairs in good shape, fortunately for me, as I know little or nothing of business.

...

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