Bimb 49 11 12 (009) The Sgt Gordon Ellis Murder Case
# The Sgt Gordon Ellis Murder Case
Picture this: New York City, late November 1949, and the neon-soaked streets of Broadway are darker than usual. Detective Danny Malloy is about to wade into one of his most explosive cases yet—the murder of Sergeant Gordon Ellis, a decorated cop found lifeless with questions that cut deeper than any blade. As you settle into your chair and tune in, you'll hear the gritty authenticity that made this show a must-listen across America: the squeal of tires on wet pavement, the clang of a precinct bell, and Paul Stewart's gravelly voice cutting through the static like a searchlight in the fog. This isn't some sanitized drawing-room mystery—it's the brutal, unglamorous world of homicide investigation where a badge doesn't protect you from death, and the case file grows murkier with each new witness interrogation.
*Broadway Is My Beat* captured something uniquely American during its five-year CBS run: the postwar anxiety of a city caught between its golden-age glamour and the hard-boiled reality lurking beneath the marquee lights. Created to satisfy audiences hungry for procedural authenticity, the show eschewed melodrama for genuine police methodology, with Stewart's Malloy embodying the weary competence of the real detectives who inspired the series. Set against Broadway's theatrical backdrop, cases like Ellis's murder became metaphors for moral ambiguity—where suspects wear costumes both literal and figurative, and truth proves as elusive as a standing ovation.
Don't miss "The Sgt Gordon Ellis Murder Case" as Danny Malloy peels back layer after layer of deception to find a killer in his own department. This is detective radio at its finest—smart, suspenseful, and utterly grounded in the New York that made the genre legendary.