Ask Yahoo!
Ask Home - Yahoo! - Help

 Ask Yahoo!
Wednesday April 19, 2006 Previous | Next
Dear Yahoo!:
What's the oldest cold case ever solved?
Rus
Lebanon, Indiana
Dear Rus:
It was a slow day at the Ask Yahoo! detective agency. We were about to catch some Z's when a question glided across our desks like an angel on cloud nine. A client wanted us to find the oldest cold case ever solved. He said it was dangerous work. "Dead links everywhere," he whispered. "What else is new?" we grumbled. Then, quicker than a Brooklyn bookie collecting a debt, we donned our trench coats and began our investigation.

Yahoo! Search, our most reliable source, gave us results. All the cases were mustier than a grandmother's attic, but two stood out. The first involved a boy who police believed was murdered in 1933. Not so. According to current forensic investigators, the boy drowned. The original autopsy missed the mark -- and badly.

The second case took us back to 1930. Judge Joseph Crater went missing in the Big Apple and was never seen again. Investigators now believe they may have finally tracked him down -- buried at Coney Island, murdered by a corrupt cop and his cabbie brother.

So, are these the absolute oldest cases ever solved? Maybe, maybe not. In this business, nothing's a sure thing except danger, dames, and doubt.

 
Related Links
·Exactly how do lie detectors work?
·Is it true that black belts are required to register their bodies as deadly weapons?
More Questions About
·Law Enforcement
·Yahoo! Answers - Law Enforcement & Police
Get Ask Your Way
·Most Popular
·Yahoo! Toolbar
· View RSS Feed  add to My Yahoo!
Email this page -    Save to del.icio.us    Save to My Web    Digg This

Copyright © 2006 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Copyright/IP Policy

All information available through or in connection with Ask Yahoo! is informational only and provided "as is" without warranties, representations, or guarantees of any kind. Yahoo! disclaims any and all implied warranties respecting Ask Yahoo!. Use of Ask Yahoo! is entirely at your own risk and is not a substitute for conducting your own research.