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Murder in Salem, Massachusetts

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The Story

Without reservation, she opened the door. Without hesitation, she hopped into the car, adjusting the skirt of her summer-weight navy blue suit to keep it unwrinkled as she sat down.

And just like that, 19-year-old Frances Cochran jumped into the void.

On July 17, 1941, in Lynn, Massachusetts, attractive nineteen-year-old Frances Cochran stepped off a commuter bus and into a mysterious black automobile. Three days later, police discovered her mutilated body in a Salem lover's lane.

Her murder made national headlines on the eve of WWII. Investigators checked twelve thousand cars and interviewed almost two thousand witnesses. They scrutinized a "Peeping Tom" men's club. Despite leads that spanned the continent, decades passed and the killer was never caught. Like a poisonous vine, the death of Frances Cochran is tangled with other unsolved murders, including the 1947 Los Angeles Black Dahlia case.

As local author Rob Fitzgibbon reveals, it is also a story shrouded in "the Salem Factor," the odd and inexplicable coincidences that occur in an area notorious for witchcraft and hauntings.

Description

Without reservation, she opened the door. Without hesitation, she hopped into the car, adjusting the skirt of her summer-weight navy blue suit to keep it unwrinkled as she sat down.

And just like that, 19-year-old Frances Cochran jumped into the void.

On July 17, 1941, in Lynn, Massachusetts, attractive nineteen-year-old Frances Cochran stepped off a commuter bus and into a mysterious black automobile. Three days later, police discovered her mutilated body in a Salem lover's lane.

Her murder made national headlines on the eve of WWII. Investigators checked twelve thousand cars and interviewed almost two thousand witnesses. They scrutinized a "Peeping Tom" men's club. Despite leads that spanned the continent, decades passed and the killer was never caught. Like a poisonous vine, the death of Frances Cochran is tangled with other unsolved murders, including the 1947 Los Angeles Black Dahlia case.

As local author Rob Fitzgibbon reveals, it is also a story shrouded in "the Salem Factor," the odd and inexplicable coincidences that occur in an area notorious for witchcraft and hauntings.

Murder in Salem, Massachusetts | World of Books