While on the Mansonblog tour this year, I requested that we
go by a particular street in West Hollywood.
Horn Avenue looking towards Sunset Blvd. |
There is a little street named Horn Avenue that is off
Sunset Boulevard. The street is just two
blocks long and intersected by a single street, Shoreham Drive. While just a short street it does have quite
a few residents due to a handful of apartment buildings on the long side of the
street. Between the apartment buildings
there are single family residences.
Horn is conveniently located in the heart of the Sunset
Strip just a couple of blocks east of the Whisky a-go-go and a couple of blocks
west of Mel’s Drive-In.
Horn Avenue came to my attention because it’s where Bernard
“Lottsapapa” Crowe was arrested for forgery at the end of March 1970. Crowe, who was arrested with three others,
claimed that the apartment at 1211 Horn Avenue was his residence. However, we know that Crowe actually lived on
Woodrow Wilson Drive up in Laurel Canyon.
The newspaper article telling about his arrest erroneously
gives the name as Horn Street, there is no Horn Street in West Hollywood or Los
Angeles. The house number is consistent
with an apartment building on Horn Avenue.
The apartment building where Crowe was arrested has 16 units.
1211 Horn Avenue |
Not long after learning about Crowe’s “other” residence I
was reading the first homicide report for the
Tate murders. The report details the
movements of Wojiciech Frykowski in the afternoon of the night of the
murders. At about 3 PM Frykowski left
the Tate residence and went over to Jay Sebring’s home on Easton Drive. Apparently, Sebring had asked Frykowski to
pick up Suzan Peterson who had been Sebring’s companion the previous night, and
Frykowski was to take her to her home.
They first made a stop at Witold Kaczanowski’s gallery on
Wilshire Boulevard, where Frykowski’s wanted to pick up a key to the house on
Woodstock. The key to the house was not
in Kaczanowski’s possession so Frykowski, Peterson and Kaczanowski all went to another
person’s home and eventually secured the key.
After dropping Kaczanowski off back at he the gallery Frykowski finally
took Peterson home.
Turns out that Suzan Peterson lived, according to the
report, on Horn Street!
Okay, a second reference to Horn, be it street or avenue. Horn sometimes had N. in front of it. This is true of most the streets on the north side of Sunset Blvd. though it doesn't usually show on maps, just on the street signs.
In an endeavor to find Peterson’s exact address on Horn, I
looked through several newspaper articles.
I was not able to determine her exact address but I did find that there
had been another arrest on Horn not long after Crowe’s arrest.
On June 18 1969 an article in the Van Nuys Valley News
reported that law enforcement had made arrests of several people for breaking
into travel agencies and stealing blank airline tickets.
According to other articles in the Los Angeles Times the
robberies had been taking place for two or three years prior to the arrests but
the airlines were reluctant to press charges against those using the stolen
tickets, they figured they could eat the loss in favor of good customer
relations. When the airlines found they
were suffering more and more losses they decided to report the stolen airline
tickets to law enforcement. Law
enforcement had been investigating the robberies for at least six months prior to the
arrests.
The initial newspaper article explains the depth of the
stolen airline tickets and just how lucrative a business it could be for those
who were stealing the tickets.
There were three people of those arrested that got my
attention because they lived at 1211 Horn Avenue. They are David P. Marsh, 23; Stephen E.
Pankey, 26; Linda Faye Cody,22. That’s very same address that Lottsapapa was
using for his forgery business. Since it
was an apartment building it’s more than likely that they lived in different
apartments.
Another two people in that group, Dennis A. Blum, 23, and
Jack R. Mirsky, 23, lived at 840 Larrabee Street. This was the same address that Joel Rostau
gave when he reported a break-in at his apartment back in March 1969. Rostau was living a couple of blocks over at
999 Doheny when he was murdered in May 1970.
What the heck is going on?
How is it that these two criminal enterprises, Crowe’s forgery business
and the stolen airline tickets, which have a rather symbiotic relationship
could be operating in the same building at roughly the same time?
Joe Guntman aka Joe Gunn seemed to be the head of this
particular gang of eight people. His own
company Shady Productions was located at 8780 Sunset Blvd. which is a block and
a half from the intersection of Horn Avenue.
The Los Angeles Times was more forthcoming in naming the
entertainers who were busted using the stolen tickets than the Van Nuys Valley
News. Some of those in the entertainment
industry were 15 people traveling with Carlos Santana who were arrested in New
York on their way to London and Linda Ronstadt and five backup musicians were stopped
in San Francisco on their way to Honolulu.
They said their tickets were given to them by their manager, the tickets
were stolen in a robbery in Hollywood on April 27, 1970.
The weekend prior to the arrests of the gang, Eric Burden
and War were stopped at the Anchorage Alaska airport with tickets that were
stolen in the Los Angeles area.
A 1972 newspaper article told of a group of people who were
arrested back east for stealing and selling airline tickets. In this article the FBI and Interpol joined
forces for the arrests because “underworld figures” were using the tickets to
smuggle drugs and to unload “millions of dollars in stolen securities throughout
Europe.”
It’s not a stretch to consider that Joel Rostau may have
been using stolen tickets when going abroad while he was unloading securities
Europe, stolen from the U.S. mail at airports.
If one were to purchase a fake driver’s license and social security card
from “Lottsapapa” and his crew it would be a simple thing, back in those days,
to get a passport in an assumed name and to conduct business under the radar. Grab yourself some cut-rate airline tickets
and you’re good to go!
While on tour, Dreath and I endeavored to locate reverse
street directories for West Hollywood so we could find out exactly in what
apartment each of those arrested resided and when. Also, to find out what was the address where Suzan Peterson lived on Horn
Avenue. We went to the West Hollywood
Library only to find that there was no such animal for the years we required that
included Horn Avenue. The adult services librarian, David Davis, did his best to help us going as far as phoning other library branches to see if they had the information we sought and even sent a follow up email after we
returned home.
So, if all that isn’t enough, I also learned that there
is a connection to Horn Avenue with Dianne Linkletter, who committed suicide October 4 1969 by
jumping out her sixth-floor kitchen window to her death. Dianne lived at 8787 Shoreham Drive. Remember I said earlier that the only street
to intersect Horn Avenue was Shoreham Drive.
The location of Dianne’s apartment in that building was across the street from 1211 Horn Avenue.
Shoreham Towers fronts Shoreham Drive. Dianne's apartment was on the left facing 1211 Horn Avenue. |
Dianne had apparently called her friend Edward Durston to
come to her apartment in the middle of the night because she wanted to talk. Durston arrived at the apartment about 3
AM. Durston did not have far to go
because he lived at 1211 Horn Avenue. Though Ed Durston was not considered a suspect in Linkletter's death, his presence at the accidental 1985 death of Carol Wayne, in Mexico, raised some eyebrows. Wayne was a television and film actress who made numerous appearances on the Johnny Carson Show as Art Fern's Tea Time Movie lady.
Los Angeles Times Oct. 5, 1969 |
Later newspaper articles said that Linkletter was a friend
of Abigail Folger and probably knew Sharon Tate. The article went on to say that Durston was a
“speaking acquaintance” of Voityck Frokowski.
Independent Press-Telegram Oct. 18, 1969 |
Four days after Dianne Linkletter’s suicide another woman
committed suicide, this time by overdose.
She had told her husband that she was despondent over the Linkletter
suicide. The woman, Toni Monti, lived at
1211 Horn Avenue.
If there ever was a place for paranormal activity in West
Hollywood, I think it would be on Horn Avenue.
All of this led me to conclude that if “Lottsapapa” had any
connection, no matter how small, to the Tate/LaBianca saga, that connection would lie with the
victims and not the Manson Family. "Lottsapapa" sure as heck didn't have anything to do with the Family after he was shot by Manson. Frykowsky had been to Horn Avenue on the day of his death. Sebring most likely was familiar with Horn
Avenue because of Suzan Peterson.
I was never able to reach that ah-ha moment with all of this information but if you can come up with something, I'm all ears.
I was never able to reach that ah-ha moment with all of this information but if you can come up with something, I'm all ears.