The Jar That Betrayed a Killer: How a Label Cracked the Case
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A handwritten blue-ink label on a jar of fig preserves sitting on a food bank shelf became the single clue that pointed to a man who never missed his Wednesday 11 p.m. phone call and who died from a single blunt-force impact. How did one small piece of penmanship connect a donated jar to a homicide that went unseen for four days?
In this episode, you will hear the timeline from the moment a retired postal worker found the jar in early February through the discovery of the body on Alderman Street and the questions detectives pursued about who entered the house after the death. What led investigators from a food bank shelf to revisit a routine work order and missing call logs?
Person: Frank Price
Age: 53
Location: Alderman Street, Dellwood, Ohio
Date of estimated death: January 25
Cause of death: single blunt-force impact to the head
- The jar label included product name, a pair of initials, and a month, written in careful blue ink.
- Frank Price had been dead for eleven days when his handwriting was recognized on the jar found at Saint Brendan's food bank.
- Frank donated preserves regularly to the parish food bank and kept a spiral notebook logging date, yield, and processing time for each batch.
- Frank called his daughter Megan every Wednesday at 11:00 p.m. for four years and missed the call on the night of January 29.
- The porch light burned continuously three nights (Jan 26-28), and the medical examiner estimated time of death as the night of January 25.
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