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Sergeant Doe assured both agents that he had never really been married to Elizabeth Short and "the postcards were only a joke to her former boyfriend."

Marjorie Graham

A friend of Elizabeth's from Massachusetts, Marjorie Graham had originally met Elizabeth in Cambridge, where they had both worked together as waitresses in a restaurant near the Harvard campus. The Los Angeles press contacted Marjorie Graham back in Massachusetts on January 17, and in the telephone interview she provided the following information:

Marjorie had come out to Hollywood to visit Elizabeth in October 1946 and shared a room with her. She told reporters that "Elizabeth had told me her boyfriend was an Army Air Force lieutenant, currently in the hospital in Los Angeles," adding that "she was worried about him and she hoped that he would get well and out of the hospital in time for a wedding they planned for November 1."

Marjorie said that she (Graham) had "returned to Cambridge, Massachusetts, on October 23, 1946," adding, "I received one letter from Elizabeth since my return to Massachusetts, but in it Betty did not tell me whether the wedding had taken place or not." Nor, said Marjorie, had Betty "included the name of her prospective husband in the letter."

Lynn Martin (real name: Norma Lee Myer)

Lynn Martin was a fifteen-year-old runaway from Long Beach, California, who, according to most accounts, looked as if she were a woman in her early twenties. By the time she met Elizabeth, Martin had already spent a year at the El Retiro School for Girls, a correctional institution. Describing herself as "an orphan," the already street-smart Martin admitted to a juvenile record of eight prior arrests in Los Angeles and Long Beach when she was arrested by police and told them she was one of the seven women who had shared room 501 at the Chancellor Hotel on North Cherokee Avenue in Hollywood with Elizabeth. Martin also briefly shared a room with Elizabeth and Marjorie Graham at the Hawthorne Hotel at 1611 North Orange Drive, also in Hollywood.

Because her guardians in Long Beach had filed a missing persons report on her, Martin was afraid of being arrested as a runaway and attempted to elude the police for the first several days after the murder. Almost a week after the murder, she was located by the police in a motel at 10822 Ventura Boulevard in North Hollywood and was arrested and detained at Juvenile Hall, where she was interviewed by LAPD Juvenile detectives.

Martin told the police that she knew Elizabeth "only casually." Martin said that Elizabeth's friend Marjorie Graham had come out from Massachusetts, and Elizabeth persuaded Graham to share a room with her and Martin at the Hawthorne Hotel. The three women lived together for a short time until, "after a brief argument" with Martin, "Short and Graham moved out of that room and took another room in the same hotel." Martin told police that she "learned of the murder on January 17, when a friend stopped me on the street in Hollywood and showed me my picture in the newspaper."

Joseph Gordon Fielding

Pilot Joseph Gordon Fielding was an Army Air Force lieutenant, honorably discharged at the end of the war, who flew for a commercial airline in Charlotte, North Carolina. Because of letters LAPD detectives found in Elizabeth Short's luggage on January 17 between the two, they contacted Fickling in January 1947 and had detectives from the Charlotte Police Department interview him.

The letters reveal a long-distance romance, more in Elizabeth's mind than in Fickling's. According to their notes, he said he had first met Elizabeth in Southern California in 1944, before he had gone overseas, and while he had corresponded with her he "denied ever being engaged or contemplating marriage to Elizabeth Short."

In a letter found in Elizabeth's trunk, Fickling wrote to Elizabeth on April 24, 1946:

You say in your letter you want to be good friends, but from your wire you seem to want more than that. Are you really sure just what you want? Why not pause and consider just what your coming out here to me would amount to? In your letter you mentioned a ring from Matt. You gave no further explanation. I really don't understand. I wouldn't want to interfere.

In a second letter, also found in her trunk, Fickling wrote:

I get awfully lonesome sometimes and wonder if we really haven't been very childish and foolish about the whole affair. Have we?

He wrote that an engagement or marriage to her was out of the question:

My plans are very indefinite and uncertain. There's nothing for me in the army and there doesn't seem to be much outside. Don't think I think any less of you by acting this way, because it won't be true.

Fickling told the Charlotte detectives he had received a final letter from Elizabeth dated January 8, 1947, in which she told him not to write her anymore at her address in San Diego because her plan was to relocate to Chicago.

Five unidentified youths

Immediately after LAPD detectives identified their "Jane Doe Number 1" as Elizabeth Short, they located three young men and two women who knew her and had been in Hollywood in December 1946. Detectives interviewed them but refused to divulge their names to the press. The interview notes and witness statements that would have been entered into the LAPD murder book case file have never been made public and may no longer exist. Similarly, the whereabouts of the investigators' summaries of their interviews are unknown. All that exists is a brief but very important collective statement, made by the five to the police and released to the newspapers the day after the discovery of Elizabeth Short's body. In that statement, published in the L.A. Times, the LAPD is quoted as saying, "These five witnesses recognized the victim as Betty Short. They had seen her in Hollywood in December of 1946, and the five had visited a nightclub in Hollywood with her earlier in the fall. These acquaintances of Elizabeth Short described her as 'very classy,' and they said that Elizabeth Short told them that 'she planned to marry George, an army pilot from Texas.'"

Juanita Ringo

Juanita Ringo was the apartment manager at the Chancellor Hotel in Hollywood, at 1842 North Cherokee Avenue, where Elizabeth shared room number 501 with seven other girls, each of them paying a dollar a day for rent. In interviews with reporters following the identification of Elizabeth Short's body, Juanita Ringo stated, "Elizabeth came to the apartment building on November 13, 1946," adding, "she wasn't sociable like the other girls who lived there with her. She was more the sophisticated type."

On December 5, 1946, Mrs. Ringo said she attempted to collect the rent from Elizabeth, who told her she did not have the money. So, Ringo said, she "held her luggage as collateral." Elizabeth then asked one of her roommates to accompany her to a Crescent Drive apartment in Beverly Hills, where, she told them, "A man would pay the rent." Elizabeth went there, obtained the money that evening, paid her landlady the following day, and moved out. Mrs. Ringo told the papers, "I felt sorry for her even when she got behind on the rent. She looked tired and worried."

Linda Rohr

Twenty-two-year-old Linda Rohr, who worked in "The Rouge Room" at Max Factor's in Hollywood, was one of Elizabeth's seven roommates at the Chancellor Apartments. During interviews three days after Elizabeth's body was discovered, she told the newspapers, "Elizabeth was odd. She had pretty blue eyes, but sometimes I think she overdid it with makeup an inch thick. Elizabeth dyed her brown hair black, then red again." Rohr said that Elizabeth dated men frequently. "She went out almost every night and received numerous telephone calls at the apartment from different men."

Specifically recalling December 6, 1946, the day Elizabeth moved out, Linda Rohr said, "Elizabeth was very anxious the morning she left. She told me, 'I've got to hurry. He's waiting for me.' None of us ever found out who 'he' was." It was Rohr's impression, she told reporters, that "Elizabeth was going to leave and go visit her sister in Berkeley."