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Murder Sheet

The Other Long Island Serial Killer: Part Two

Murder Sheet

MurderSheet

True Crime, Murder, Unsolved Case, Killing, Murderer, Cold Case

3.82.8K Ratings

🗓️ 26 October 2021

⏱️ 46 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A killer stalked across Long Island in the summer of 1959, preying upon employees working solo shifts in diners and delicatessens. He ended up claiming three innocent lives.

A single tip would put an end to the murderer's reign of terror. But could police make the case against the accused stick?

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Tired of ads interrupting your gripping investigations? Good news. Add free listening on Amazon Music

0:06.5

is included with your Prime Membership. Ads shouldn't be the scariest thing about true

0:11.6

crime podcasts. To start listening, download the Amazon Music App or visit amazon.co.uk

0:17.8

forward slash true crime ad free. That's amazon.co.uk forward slash true crime ad free to catch

0:24.2

up on the latest episodes without the ads. Content warning. This episode contains discussion

0:31.9

of murder and violence. We also apologize in advance if we mispronounce any names in this

0:38.4

episode. The two customers waited at the counter perplexed. Philip Enowitz and Ronald

0:47.9

Gallic had walked into Bailey's restaurant at 125 a.m. on August 8th 1959. They were looking

0:57.4

for coffee and maybe a bite to eat. Something to fuel them as they sailed out into the deep

1:03.4

dark water. The two weren't long island locals. Enowitz hailed from the flat bush neighborhood

1:11.2

of Brooklyn while Gallic made his home in the upper west side of Manhattan. They'd come

1:17.0

to West Hampton on Long Island to fish. During the summer months, visitors flocked to the

1:23.2

island to cast their nets and lines for fluke, seabass, and cod, according to fishing

1:29.0

bookers complete guide to fishing on Long Island. But instead of finding a hot breakfast

1:35.1

at Bailey's, these two would be fishermen found a deserted diner. According to news

1:42.0

day, one of the men yelled, how about some coffee at some point? Nobody came rushing

1:49.6

with a flustered apology and a pot of Java. The only sign of life was a single plate of

1:55.4

eggs long gone cold on the counter. Others might have left at this point, chalking up the

2:02.5

odd incident to bad service. But Enowitz and Gallic seemed to sense something was very

2:09.2

wrong. I wonder if they'd been recommended Bailey's

2:13.2

restaurants specifically. After all, they were staying at Bailey's motel, 150 yards down

2:19.5

the road. That was owned by local businessmen Irving Bailey. The Bailey family had once

...

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