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In this gripping episode of Dragnet, Sergeant Joe Friday and Ben Romero tackle a supposed hit-and-run that turns out to be a calculated murder cloaked in tire tracks and silence. The body of Edward Raymond Stokes is found lifeless in the street, and the only evidence at first is a set of worn skid marks. But the clues don’t add up—and neither do the witness stories.
The case unravels slowly as Friday and Romero encounter a wall of silence from patrons of the Brown Barrel Tavern, where Stokes was last seen. Even his common-law wife, Marion Fuller, remembers nothing of value—claiming she passed out in a stranger's car and woke up at home. But the forensics raise suspicion: the injuries don’t match a hit-and-run, and the skid marks are older than the death.
Bit by bit, the truth surfaces. A reluctant witness remembers a drunken man warning of a fight. A local butcher hears whispers of a murder. And eventually, a trail of misinformation leads to Carl Janson, the bar’s owner, who admits there was indeed a cover-up—designed to protect his business from scandal.
The real killer is identified as Henry Baxter, a seaman with a violent temper and a grudge. In a dramatic arrest at a nightclub, he confesses proudly to the murder, thinking he got away with it. But Dragnet’s detectives—like the truth—never rest.
A stark look at how lies pile up to bury justice, The Big Frame is a powerful study in persistence, policework, and the thin line between negligence and conspiracy.
Keywords: "Dragnet The Big Frame episode," "July 1950 Dragnet radio drama," "Joe Friday hit and run case," "Edward Stokes murder story," "Carl Janson bar cover-up," "Henry Baxter confession," "Fatima cigarettes Dragnet ads," "classic LAPD radio show."
Cast: Jack Webb (Joe Friday), Barton Yarborough (Ben Romero), with supporting performances by Harry Bartell, Herb Butterfield, and others from the Dragnet radio company.
By OTRPODSIn this gripping episode of Dragnet, Sergeant Joe Friday and Ben Romero tackle a supposed hit-and-run that turns out to be a calculated murder cloaked in tire tracks and silence. The body of Edward Raymond Stokes is found lifeless in the street, and the only evidence at first is a set of worn skid marks. But the clues don’t add up—and neither do the witness stories.
The case unravels slowly as Friday and Romero encounter a wall of silence from patrons of the Brown Barrel Tavern, where Stokes was last seen. Even his common-law wife, Marion Fuller, remembers nothing of value—claiming she passed out in a stranger's car and woke up at home. But the forensics raise suspicion: the injuries don’t match a hit-and-run, and the skid marks are older than the death.
Bit by bit, the truth surfaces. A reluctant witness remembers a drunken man warning of a fight. A local butcher hears whispers of a murder. And eventually, a trail of misinformation leads to Carl Janson, the bar’s owner, who admits there was indeed a cover-up—designed to protect his business from scandal.
The real killer is identified as Henry Baxter, a seaman with a violent temper and a grudge. In a dramatic arrest at a nightclub, he confesses proudly to the murder, thinking he got away with it. But Dragnet’s detectives—like the truth—never rest.
A stark look at how lies pile up to bury justice, The Big Frame is a powerful study in persistence, policework, and the thin line between negligence and conspiracy.
Keywords: "Dragnet The Big Frame episode," "July 1950 Dragnet radio drama," "Joe Friday hit and run case," "Edward Stokes murder story," "Carl Janson bar cover-up," "Henry Baxter confession," "Fatima cigarettes Dragnet ads," "classic LAPD radio show."
Cast: Jack Webb (Joe Friday), Barton Yarborough (Ben Romero), with supporting performances by Harry Bartell, Herb Butterfield, and others from the Dragnet radio company.