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The story you're about to hear is true, only the names have been changed, to protect
the innocent.
The team of cigarettes, best of all, long cigarettes, brings you dragnet.
Bureau detective sergeant, you're assigned the juvenile bureau, the potential killer
roams the halls of one of the high schools in your city, girls, students have been brutally
slashed by the criminal, your job, stop him.
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Dragnet, the documented drama of an actual crime.
For the next 30 minutes in cooperation with the Los Angeles Police Department, you will
travel step by step on the side of the law through an actual case from official police files.
From beginning to end, from crime to punishment, dragnet is the story of your police force in
action.
It was Thursday, November 4th, it was windy in Los Angeles.
We were working the day watch out of Georgia Street, juvenile bureau.
My partner is Ben Romero, the boss is Captain Bowling, Commander, juvenile division.
My name is Friday.
It was 2.45 pm when we got to charter high school, main entrance.
What's with you?
I don't know.
We can ask this boy.
Hey, son.
Where's the principal's office?
Straight down the hall.
Last door on the left.
Thank you.
What's all the noise about?
Football rally.
We're playing P-month today.
Probably lose.
Can't beat confidence like that.
Kids, you sure are funny nowadays.
Yeah.
Check that site.
Mm-hmm.
You're doing your prom.
$25 per cup.
Makes you feel old, don't you?
I never did go to those high school dance.
I'll come.
Yes, sir?
Like to see Mr. Chase.
Who could I have your name, please?
Romero and Friday.
Oh, yes, he's expecting you.
You can go right in.
That's my name.
Thank you, man.
Mr. Chase?
Yes.
My name is Friday.
I talked to you on the phone.
Well, yes.
Certainly, Sergeant.
Never chair.
Thank you.
It's my partner, Ben Romero.
How do you do, sir?
Hi, Mr. Chase.
Sit down.
Sit down.
Certainly glad to see you, gentlemen.
I'm at the end of my rope.
Would you mind breathing, Mr. Chase?
How did all this trouble start?
I don't know.
How it started?
I don't know why.
But here's the result, Sergeant.
This dress blood stains on it.
What's the story?
A woman stormed in here and said her daughter came home from school
yesterday wearing this dress.
As she told her, her mother, she'd been knifeed here at the school.
How many cases like this have you had?
21 in the past three weeks.
Why didn't you notify us?
Believe me, Sergeant.
I didn't know which way to turn.
When I first learned about these knifeings,
I wanted to call in the police.
But some of the girls who didn't cut the parents didn't want to be part of the publicity
that notoriety they didn't want to.
Don't you realize, Mr. Chase, that it's a pretty serious thing?
Believe me, I did realize.
What could I do?
The knifeings had to be stopped.
The parents didn't want them reported.
I tried everything humanly possible to find out who's responsible.
What have you tried, Mr. Chase?
Well, I called on some of the older students from the boys' council.
I placed them all over the grounds of the buildings and told them to keep an eye out.
No results.
The knifeings have gone right on.
This past week, they've even gotten worse.
Oh, that reminds me.
Just a moment, please.
Yes, Mr. Chase.
Adaris, would you get Jim Travis, please?
Have him come to my office right away?
Yes, Mr. Chase.
Travis is ahead of the boys' council.
He helped organize the system of guards.
He might be able to give you some information.
You said a minute ago that the situation has been worse this past week.
You mean the knifeings have gotten more frequent?
More frequent and more serious.
One girl was cut very badly this morning.
She had to be sent home.
All right, most of these girls cut in pretty much the same man.
The school nurse treated some of them.
She says it looked to her as though the girls had been slashed with a very sharp knife.
Probably a razor.
Is there any definite time pattern to these knifeings?
All of them happened between periods when the students changed classes.
The card is a pretty well-crowded.
That's why it's so difficult to pin it down to any one person.
I see.
How about the victims themselves, Mr. Chase?
Is there any set pattern there?
That's what has to be frightened.
Most of the victims are rather pretty girls.
Whoever's doing this seems to have a preference for them.
It's frightening when you think of what kind of mind the person must have.
It's a little more than frightening, Mr. Chase.
Huh?
The person with a knife must be a metal king.
It's probably a dangerous one.
I don't think he's going to be satisfied with just knifeing the girls.
Is it possible if we let it go much longer?
You want to see me, Mr. Chase?
Come in, Jim.
I'll come soon.
I'll tie it up with a rally committee.
And this is Sergeant Friday and Sergeant Romero, police officers.
Right.
They had to investigate the knifeings.
I thought maybe you'd be able to help out with some information.
Well, I still have the fellows on the council watching the carters.
We haven't seen anything yet.
Well, do you have any time after the rally, Jim?
We'd like to have you show us around.
Okay, Sergeant.
Is the school nurse still in the office?
I took the hurt too.
I think so.
Jim, when does Miss Wesley go home?
Uh, 3.30 on Thursday, Mr. Chase.
I'll tell her to stay on a few minutes.
That's fine.
We'll meet you outside the office here.
Okay, I'll see you later then.
Run.
The school out for the day?
Yes, it is.
I guess we'll have to wait a morning to interview the victim.
This is the first class of the eight o'clock.
I'll have the girls assembled in the classroom next to my office.
All right, Mr. Chase.
Thank you.
I'll be right back, Darius.
See you, gentlemen.
It's like the rally's just breaking up, huh?
Three o'clock, now.
The game's a three-stake.
Here's a certain jam up the corridor.
Come on, come on.
Let us go here.
Let us go here.
Let us go here.
All right.
The rest of you go about your business.
Go on now.
What's the matter, young lady?
What's the trouble?
Hey, Mark, what's the matter with you?
Look at her dress.
It's covered with blood.
An ambulance was called.
The injured girl was taking the Georgia Street receiving hospital
where she was treated for a cut on her right forearm
and a deep slash across her hips.
She was not in serious condition.
It was the doctor's opinion that the wounds had been inflicted
either by a very sharp knife or more probably a razor.
A detail of plain clothesmen were dispensed to child her high school
to keep the grounds and quarters under strict surveillance
until further notice.
At 7.30 the next morning, policewoman Lorraine Jensen, Ben and I,
met at the high school with principal Jason Jim Travers,
the head of the boys' council.
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By 9 a.m., all of the 21 nightings that comes were assembled
in one of the empty classrooms.
Policewoman Jensen outlined our plan of questioning.
May I have your attention, please?
This isn't going to take very long, girls.
But I will have to ask you to cooperate with us.
Try to remember every detail of the time and the place
that the nightings occurred.
We all have report forms right now.
Yeah, they're all set.
We'd like to have you write three things.
First, exactly where you were when you were injured.
After that, write the date and the time.
Make that just as close as you can remember.
The bottom of the page writes the name of the person
you suspect might have caught you.
Your answer will be kept confidential.
Please don't compare notes with the girl next to you.
We want your version, not your neighbor.
Sergeant, you have driving?
Five minute warning.
Okay.
All right?
Yeah, Joe.
There's a recess coming up.
We want to check the quarters.
Can you make out alone for a while?
Sure. You can go ahead.
I can check the slips when you get back.
All right. Let's go over there.
Yeah.
The top of the stairs are the best, Sergeant.
Okay.
If you stand back a little from the railing,
no one down below them will tell if they're being watched either.
Okay.
I'm pretty much interested in police work.
You know, the light of tech and stuff.
Sorry, sir.
I'm going to keep on going here.
One more flight.
All right.
A group of people wants to own a light of tech and stuff,
because the only thing they can teach you like it.
That's so, you know,
I've been reading how they take fingerprints,
crock and prints and all that.
Pretty interesting.
Here we are.
We can keep an eye on the whole car they're from here.
Okay.
What detail do officers work out of?
The Georgia Street Viewer.
You know, Lee Jones or Ray Pinker?
Oh, yeah.
I've read a lot about the crime, lad.
Once you come downtown some afternoon, we'll show you around.
Might be swell.
Okay.
Must be interesting meeting all kinds of people
and watching how they behave, you know.
Yeah.
During a recess,
while the students move from classroom to classroom,
we kept the main corridor under closer surveillance.
The other men from juvenile bureau
covered the rest of the quarters.
We kept an eye on the main corridor
during the third recess between periods of 11 a.m.
Again, no results.
At 11.30,
drivers went to check with the members
of the boys' consoles set up the noon time watch.
Then an eye went back to the classroom
and the main floor to check with police woman Jensen.
We helped her tally the results of the question
of the girl victims that morning.
That's the 17, 18, 19.
Who?
Who takes care of the lot?
I see.
There it is.
Now what's it mean?
Well, 12 say they were knifeed on the main corridor,
three knifeed outside the building,
four on the stairway, two in the classroom.
At times, ain't this?
Doesn't look like there's any pattern there.
How about the suspects if they're locked down?
That's even got me, B.
We've got more of them than we have victims here.
There's four pages of names.
Some of the girls wrote down as many as five suspects.
Oh, that's going to help a lot.
How many altogether?
Let's see.
34.
Oh, hi, Mr. J.
Did you find out anything?
Well, it didn't turn out too well, nothing definite.
Terrible morning.
Parents calling up newspapers.
I don't know.
It's certainly out of my hands.
Is there any assembly scheduled for this afternoon?
Yes, after the fifth period.
Why?
I think maybe a better cancel.
It seems like every time the kids are crowded together,
we just ask for trouble.
No, I don't have a cancel.
Something else, Mr. J.
The girls that we had in this room this morning,
the victims, we'd like to have every one of them brought back
here after the next class.
All right, Sergeant, I'll have two slips sent to each one.
Thank you, sir.
Here's your children.
Those kids getting cut up in broad daylight.
Wherever it is, the guy's got a stomach for it.
How do you know it's a guy?
This is pretty guess as any.
How about the school employees, the janitors, and the rest of them?
Check them all out before you.
When we get the girls back here, we'll go through the same routine.
One thing we missed the last time we talked to them.
Yeah.
We ask them to pick suspects.
We might have more luck if we have a bigger choice.
Well, how do you mean?
Well, instead of asking to pick out somebody,
we'll tell them to list the names of every person
who was around him or near him when they were cut.
I might work if we can spot a couple of rupees.
Tell them, all right?
Sergeant, they want your downstairs, hurry.
Come on, Ben.
What's the matter?
It's terrible.
I found her.
You found who?
A Betty Price.
Where?
Downstairs unconscious.
I'm afraid.
What do you mean you're afraid?
I'm not sure she's alive.
We located the unconscious girl in a corner of the basement
near the rear entrance of the girl's locker room.
She'd been cut severely about the face and arms.
At Georgia Street receiving hospital,
she was given an immediate blood transfusion.
In addition to her wounds, she was also treated for shock.
We questioned the victim.
She stated that she did not see the person who attacked her.
Later that afternoon, she was removed to her own home
upon the advice of her family physician.
1.35 p.m.
Ben and I got back to the high school and checked in
with policewoman Lorraine Jensen.
How'd the last station turn out, Lorraine?
A lot better.
It was a good idea, Jones.
Yeah.
How'd we come out?
Pretty good.
Yeah, the list they made out.
21 of them.
Oh, huh.
Each girl lists as an average of eight persons
around her at the time she was nine.
Yeah.
There's one name that occurs on 19v21 list.
Yeah, Joe.
Jim Travers.
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Friday, November 5, 145 pm.
Ben and I started checking on Jim Travers.
In the registrar's file,
he was listed as James Kirkland Travers, 17 years old.
He was a well-known popular student.
He was a fine athlete.
He was from a well-to-do family.
His father was the head of an engineering firm.
His mother was from one of the oldest families in the city.
During his three-and-a-half years at Charter Heights,
Jim Travers had maintained close to an A average in his studies.
He'd been president of his class in freshman year,
and he'd held numerous other class offices.
We interviewed his teachers.
They had nothing but praise for Travers.
They tabbed him as a brilliant young man with an excellent future.
We asked about Travers' friends who we paled around with.
They picked up a small league.
We were told that he had very few,
if any, close personal friends among the students.
But he did have one girl at the high school he was especially fond of.
Her name was Barbara Ferris,
a tall, dark-haired girl, exceptionally pretty.
Her scholastic record was almost as high as Travers,
2 p.m.
Policewoman Lorraine Jensen and I interviewed the girl in a small room
off the principal's office.
We're not thinking you out, Barbara.
We're interviewing most of the girls in the upper classes.
You mean about what's been happening around schools?
Yes, that's right.
Well, I don't know much about it.
I was talking to Jim Travers last night.
He's a friend of mine. He told me why you were here.
How long have you known Jim Travers, Barbara?
Oh, since freshman year, I guess.
You go steady with him?
Well, we don't like to call at that, but I guess so.
We go to the dances together.
Sometimes we go to the show on weekends.
You're delight with him, very often.
No, not very often. Jim is usually pretty busy. He studies a lot.
Does he go out with other girls, do you know?
Well, no, I don't.
Lucky went out with Betty Fisher. He said he didn't like him much.
Betty's kind of a party girl.
Jim likes to talk about things. You know, physiology, books, stuff like that.
Do you get along with him pretty well?
We get along fine.
Sometimes he's moody, but I guess I am too.
Could you tell us a little more about Jim? What's he like?
Well, what do you want to know that for? Is there anything wrong?
No, it's just routine questioning, Barbara. We have to check on everybody.
Oh, I see.
Well, Jim's certainly all right.
He's like the rest of the fellas at school, I guess.
Only smarter than most of them.
Well, is there anything, maybe it's odd about him, that you noticed anything very different?
No, not that I've noticed.
He's always been pretty bashful until this last year anyway.
He's still that way sometimes when we go out on date.
How do you mean, how is he bashful?
You know, about the girls and things.
He's always nice though. He's not always thinking about necking and stuff like most of them.
You mean he's not the romantic type?
Well, he can be romantic when he wants to.
Once we parked outside my house after a dance, he's always nice.
It was just this one time.
What was that?
Well, he kissed me and then he twisted my arm behind my back.
He kept twisting it for no reason.
Yeah. I told him it hurt me but he wouldn't let go.
He kept twisting my arm.
What do you say?
That's what was so funny.
He said, I like you better than any girl I know.
Yeah.
Then he said, that's why I'm hurting you.
After talking with Barbara Ferris, we had a pretty good idea that Jim Travers was a suspect we wanted.
But because of his fine background and his record, we realized that we'd have to prove beyond any question of a doubt that he was the guilty person.
We had only one thing to go on besides the information Barbara Ferris had given us.
During the morning recesses, when Travers was with Ben and I was watching the corridors, not one nighting took place.
When we had left Travers and gone downstairs to check with policewoman Jensen, a girl had been found slugged and cut it for Rear of the girl's locker room.
2.30 p.m. Ben and I met with a suspect.
How was going, Sergeant?
Any luck?
Nothing lucked, Jim.
What's that, another rally?
You know a band practice.
Junior proms tonight, isn't it?
Yeah.
You talked to a girl who was nice downstairs, didn't you?
Find out anything?
No, nothing much.
You want to stick with us this afternoon, I think you might be able to help us out.
Sure, I've got the fellows on the council standing by, if you want them.
All right.
Let's go outside, huh?
We've got seven to ten.
Sure, okay.
We can go out this way.
I certainly appreciate you letting me hang along, hoping you help him.
I think you can, Jim.
When we talk to those girls this morning, we'll drop a new list of possible suspects.
Yeah.
Funny thing, one of the names on the list was yours.
Well, I've got nothing to hide.
Well, we'll make a systematic check of each name on the list and start with you.
Well, well, we have to go on the line, Detective.
I don't like to try that, I never saw one.
I only picked you up.
No, no, you won't have to go through that.
I'll just be in a couple of questions and then we're going to check your locker.
Okay, I'd be glad to show you.
Is this take us to the locker room?
Yeah, we can cut through here.
Say, yeah, when we were questioning those girls this morning,
someone said that they saw you in different parts of the building on the market.
It took place.
What do you mean?
Well, your location didn't exactly jive with your classroom schedule.
In other words, your classroom was on the third floor,
but you were sitting down in the main corner in the honey counter for that.
Well, you see, I usually take walks between the periods.
Sitting in the classroom was like the nervous sometimes, you know.
And here, I'll get the door open.
Any other questions I can answer, Sergeant?
No, that's all.
How did you happen to get an interest in police work, Jim?
You said your father was an engineer, didn't you?
Yeah, that's fine.
I don't know how I got into it, but I just took two out of guess.
I always like to watch people's reactions and everything.
That's me.
No, the locker room's down this way.
Okay.
What are you planning on doing when you graduate?
Dolly?
Yeah, I guess so.
My dad wants to send me the MIT.
It's good school.
Yeah.
Say, if you ever have the time, I'm sure I like to see some of the ballistics equipment
about police crime lab.
I've read up on the ballistics quite a bit too.
Oh, is that so?
Yeah.
They probably have a light attack effect.
That's my favorite though.
Wonderful to see.
Mm-hmm.
Imagine charting positive and negative reactions like that.
Marvelous.
Yeah, it is.
Say, either one of you ever read Dawson's Trees?
I think it's called the psychology of the criminal mind.
Have you ever read it?
I think we had that in training, didn't we, Dad?
I don't know, something like that.
How about criminal behavior and its basis?
Maxwell's book.
Did you ever read that one?
No, I don't think I did.
That's a great book.
I've got quite a few textbooks on crime.
One of the sex crimes I just got very good.
Mm-hmm.
This locker room.
I think she almost went past it.
My locker's down this way.
How do you save Jim?
Do you use an electric razor or a safe razor?
Me.
Electric razor.
They have the best.
Yeah.
They're a lot easier to use.
Here it is.
I'll open it for you.
All right.
Then you get some envelopes.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, there.
Okay.
Would you step aside there, Jim?
Yeah, sure.
I can get some dust scrapings from the shelf, please.
All right.
There you are, Ben.
You want a market?
No.
Jim, drivers.
Dust scrapings.
One locker for it.
Let's see here.
Here's some more scrapings from the bottom of the locker this time.
Okay, I'll send these envelopes.
Here's an L5.
Okay, Jim.
Now you hold out your right hand.
Oh, yeah.
Holding envelope under your hand.
What do you think?
You got something else, scraping?
Yeah.
Thank you, yeah.
So, what's all this for, Sergeant?
Oh, it's just routine with everybody, Jim.
Just gonna take some sample specimens to run through the spectrograph.
The spectrograph?
Mm-hmm.
Now, let me scrape that middle finger down a little.
Oh, okay.
That's it.
Now I'll be in the next finger.
Well, what about the spectrograph?
We use it all the time.
Well, we won't work in a case like this, will we?
That's all for the right hand, Ben.
Don't forget to mark the envelope.
Yeah.
And some Jim, drivers.
Scraping.
From finger, nails.
Back.
Hand.
Handling, no.
No other left hand, Jim.
Yeah.
No, we don't know if this is gonna work or not.
It's worth a try.
We'll know this afternoon.
This afternoon?
Yeah.
We'll have to run you through on the machine and hold the envelope
a little closer then.
Oh, yeah.
Well, how's it gonna help you?
It might tell us what you had for breakfast a week ago.
It might tell us what kind of clothes you wore three days ago.
Kind of objects you came in contact with.
Oh.
Well, what kind of principles does it operate on?
I don't know.
We can ask lead, Jones.
Here.
Let me get this paper from your thumb.
There it is.
I'll see what the market's been.
You want to call the officer and tell him we're on our way in.
Yeah.
I'll be in that room right next to the principal's house.
Okay.
You can close your locker, Jim.
That's all.
Yeah, all right.
We'll check the things in your pocket so we get to the crime line.
Let's go.
That spectra graph must be a marvelous machine.
Well, it's worked for us a lot of time.
If we've got evidence on this aspect of either your convicts or a clearism,
you'll probably get a cake out of it.
Mm-hmm.
I'd like to see it.
You say it tells you everything your person has come in contact with, huh?
Yeah.
That's right.
Could it tell you how I shave?
You know how do you mean?
I mean, with an electric razor or a safety razor.
Oh, sure.
That's one of the primary things.
Mm-hmm.
I don't know exactly how it works, but it does the job.
We'll get Lee Jones to explain to us.
How up the story?
Cut across the courtyard.
Oh, there's a sure nice grounds.
Well, Lee, keep me long downtown, Sergeant.
What do you think, Jim?
You know, it stains quite about these nice things out of you.
What's that?
Whoever's responsible probably doesn't even realize what he's doing.
Yeah.
Man, Lee's sick.
He's very sick.
The best thing for him would be a doctor.
Mm-hmm.
Just like any other sickness, it's not going to get better by itself.
Yeah.
The only trouble is, he's just getting his appetite up with these nice things.
Yeah, if he goes much longer.
How about that spectrograph, Sergeant?
Say, for instance, well, if I happen to hold a knife in my hand, or maybe a razor.
Oh, yeah.
That is showing the machine.
We're going here?
Yeah.
Terrible thing.
Whoever it is.
Terrible thing.
Yes, it is.
Terrible.
You hear it?
Terrible.
Terrible.
Terrible.
Terrible.
Terrible.
Jill, how's it going?
I think he's ready to tell us.
Hope so.
I expect a powerful one.
All right, son, you want to tell us about it now?
I couldn't help myself.
I had to do what I had to.
I couldn't sleep.
I couldn't study unless I did.
I couldn't help myself.
You're responsible for all the knifeings I get.
Yeah.
You're losing.
Who told you?
You told us, yeah.
I'm glad you caught me.
It was getting worse.
It might have been too late.
I'm glad you caught me.
Why?
Vibrant.
After the prom tonight.
Yeah.
I was going to kill her.
The story you have just heard was proved.
Only the names were changed to protect the innocent.
On December 15th, the hearing was held in Juvenile Court Department 38
City and County of Los Angeles, state of California.
In a moment, the results of that trial.
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17-year-old James Travers was examined by court psychiatrist
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You have just heard Dragnet, a series of authentic cases from official files.
Technical advice for Dragnet comes from the Office of Chief of Police,
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Screen Directors Playhouse presents a Damon Runyon story tomorrow on NBC.
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Access to a portable credit helps me pay my employees.
But I don't really need it.
Infliction is killing me.
Who cares?
Big retailers and making record profits.
That's why we support the German Marshall Credit Card Bill.
See?
Banks and credit unions help small businesses make payroll.
This bill would cut the vital resources they need.
While increasing Megastore profits.
They deserve it.
Don't they?
Tell Congress stop the German Marshall Money Graph for corporate megastores.
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