Mugshot Mysteries
Some stories are solved. Most aren’t.
The interesting ones refuse to stay buried.
Mugshot Mysteries is a deep-dive podcast hosted by Kathryn and Gabriel, exploring true crime, conspiracies, paranormal encounters, cults, historical disasters, government cover-ups, and the stories that keep people awake long after the episode ends.
Every episode blends immersive storytelling, psychological analysis, dark humor, and the kind of rabbit holes that make you question whether history is telling the full truth.
One week it’s serial killers. The next it’s MKUltra, haunted hospitals, vanished ships, UFO encounters, or deaths that still don’t make sense decades later.
Kathryn brings the research. Gabriel brings the questions, the theories, and occasionally a comment so out of pocket it completely derails the conversation.
Expect deep dives, unexpected tangents, and at least one moment where Kathryn has to stop and say, “Wow. Wow wow wow.”
If it’s disturbing, unexplained, historically strange, or impossible to forget… it belongs in the lineup.
New episodes every week.
Mugshot Mysteries
The Black Dahlia: Hollywood's Most Infamous Unsolved Murder
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January 9, 1947. Elizabeth Short walks into the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles. She paces for four hours. Makes calls. Waits. At 10 PM, someone waves through the glass doors. She walks out. Turns south on Olive Street. Forty-eight hours later, her body is found cut in half on a vacant lot.
This episode reconstructs Elizabeth Short's final 48 hours in real time. One hour of her life equals one minute of runtime. We walk backward from the moment Betty Bersinger found what she thought was a mannequin to the moment Elizabeth left the Biltmore.
Kathryn and Gabriel use newly released Los Angeles District Attorney files that debunk the "missing week" myth. Elizabeth didn't vanish. At least twelve witnesses saw her. She had dinner at Mark Hansen's house on January 11 with a boyfriend. On January 14, LAPD Officer Meryl McBride encountered her twice, first sobbing in terror about a man who threatened to kill her, then leaving a bar with two men and a woman.
Two men and a woman. The same configuration as visitors who came to the French house in San Diego, visitors she refused to see because she was "very frightened." Ten hours after McBride's final sighting, Elizabeth Short was dead.
We examine the autopsy evidence. Ligature marks indicating she was bound for extended periods. The precise bisection performed with medical knowledge. The body drained of blood, washed clean, posed like art. No blood at the scene. The killer had medical and forensic knowledge, washed evidence with gasoline, and mailed Elizabeth's belongings to the Los Angeles Examiner.
Elizabeth Short wasn't a prostitute or aspiring actress. She was 22. Her father abandoned the family when she was six. Her fiance died days before the war ended. She spent her final weeks broke and sad. The newspapers invented everything else.
SOURCES:
FBI Records on the Black Dahlia (Elizabeth Short). FBI.gov.
Los Angeles Police Department case files on Elizabeth Short murder, 1947.
Los Angeles District Attorney's Black Dahlia case files, released 2003-2004.
Hodel, Steve. Black Dahlia Avenger. New York: Arcade Publishing, 2003.
Hodel, Steve. Black Dahlia Avenger II. CreateSpace, 2014.
Eatwell, Piu. Black Dahlia, Red Rose: The Crime, Corruption, and Cover-Up of America's Greatest Unsolved Murder. New York: Regan Arts, 2017.
Gilmore, John. Severed: The True Story of the Black Dahlia Murder. Los Angeles: Amok Books, 1994.
Newbarr, Frederick. Coroner's autopsy report on Elizabeth Short. Los Angeles County Coroner's Office, January 16, 1947.
Witness statements: Harold Studholme (Biltmore Hotel bell captain), Betty Bersinger, Robert "Red" Manley, 1947.
Witness statements: Connie Starr, Ann Toth. Los Angeles District Attorney files.
Officer Meryl McBride witness statement. Los Angeles District Attorney files.
Dorothy French witness statements regarding San Diego sightings. LAPD case files, 1947.
Asdel, Ralph. Interview. Los Angeles Times, 2003.
Los Angeles Times archives, January 1947.
Los Angeles Herald-Examiner archives, January 1947.
Los Angeles Examiner archives, January 1947.
Esotouric "The Real Black Dahlia" tour research and primary source documentation.
Deranged LA Crimes (Joan Renner), primary source research on Elizabeth Short case.
DISCLAIMER:
This podcast discusses a brutal unsolved murder including graphic details from autopsy reports, descriptions of torture and mutilation, media exploitation of a victim, and the failure of law enforcement to solve the case. We emphasize that Elizabeth Short was a real person whose life and death were sensationalized by newspapers that invented false narratives about her character. Content includes discussion of violence against women, abandonment, and the psychological impact of media circuses on murder investigations. The views, theories, and interpretations expressed are those of&
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