

Nov. 8, 1933: Los Angeles history is so rich that all you need to strike gold is to poke a stick in the ground, and today is a perfect example.
We have the story of Jack Bodin Sr., 41, who was estranged from his wife, and Bodin’s girlfriend, Barbara Muller, either 21 or 22 depending on news reports. Bodin, who was variously identified as a salesman, advertising executive and “cafe man” and Muller had a daughter, Audrey Louise Muller Bodin, on Aug. 1, 1932, but abandoned her in a downtown movie theater at 5th and Broadway on Oct. 3.
The couple apparently decided to commit suicide by booking passage on the steamer ship Yale, sailing from Los Angeles to San Diego and then jumping from the ship on its return to Los Angeles.
In The Theaters: “Footlight Parade” premieres at Warner Bros. Hollywood.










Note: This is a post I originally wrote in 2006 for the 1907 project.

In case you just tuned in, we are looking at the “Masked Marvel Murder” of actor David G.G. Bacon, who was stabbed to death Sept. 12, 1943. Bacon was apparently driving back to Los Angeles from Venice, crashed his car into a bean field on Washington Boulevard and collapsed, dying of a deep stab wound. His killing was never solved.






