Published on Apr 6, 2025, 6:59:23 AM
Total time: 00:28:57
Originally Aired: December 15, 1949
The Garbage Chute Murder: Locked Doors and Loose Ends
In this atmospheric and tightly plotted episode of Dragnet, Sergeant Joe Friday and his partner Ben Romero are called to investigate the baffling murder of Laura Barclay—a nightclub organist found strangled in her locked apartment. With no signs of forced entry, the case initially presents itself as a classic locked-room mystery.
Barclay, a quiet woman with no known enemies, is discovered dead with a lamp cord around her neck. The apartment is neat, untouched—except for one thing: a garbage chute just large enough for a man to crawl through.
As the detectives peel back layers of Barclay's quiet life, they find photos of vaudeville performers, a landlady who swears by her tenant’s character, and a set of stolen diamond rings missing from the crime scene. The trail leads Friday and Romero through the seedy underbelly of Los Angeles nightlife, to pawn shops, an old vaudeville agent, and eventually to a chilling profile: a man with big hands, a taste for easy money, and no criminal record—until now.
Fingerprints and a pattern of unusual entry finally point to Martin Eric Swanson, a man using garbage chutes as his signature method of operation. In a climactic foot chase through alleyways and a busy cafeteria kitchen, Friday brings down the killer—finding the stolen rings still on his finger.
A stark reminder that even a locked door won’t keep evil out, this early Dragnet classic showcases the methodical detective work and street-level grit that defined the series.
Keywords: "Dragnet Garbage Chute Murder episode," "December 1949 Dragnet radio drama," "Laura Barclay locked-room case," "Martin Eric Swanson killer," "Joe Friday Ben Romero LAPD," "garbage chute criminal M.O.," "classic Fatima Cigarette Dragnet episode."
Cast: Jack Webb (Joe Friday), Barton Yarborough (Ben Romero), with supporting voices from the Dragnet radio company. Technical supervision by LAPD and produced by W.A. Wharton.