Let George Do It 1948 04 05 (082) The Murder Of A Mind
# Let George Do It - The Murder of a Mind
A woman's scream pierces through the static of a New York nightclub, and private investigator George Valentine finds himself caught between a desperate widow, a fortune-teller's premonition, and a murder that may never have happened at all. In this chilling April 1948 episode, the line between the physical and the psychological begins to blur as George navigates the shadowy underworld of séances and psychological manipulation. What starts as a routine missing persons case spirals into something far more sinister—a killer who leaves no body, no weapon, and no evidence except the destroyed mind of a woman who may be either witness or accomplice. Bob Bailey's weathered voice cuts through the noir darkness with the perfect blend of world-weariness and determination that made George Valentine the most believable detective on radio, as orchestral cues and sound effects create an atmosphere thick enough to cut with a knife.
*Let George Do It* was the thinking man's detective show, a program that thrived on intelligent storytelling rather than gunfire alone. During the post-war years when America was grappling with returned soldiers and psychological trauma, the show frequently explored the darker recesses of the human mind. This particular episode exemplifies what made the series stand out during its eight-year run on the Mutual network—it refuses easy answers, challenging both George and the listener to question whether evil is something external or something we harbor within ourselves.
If you're a fan of classic noir who appreciates genuinely unsettling mysteries that linger long after the final commercial, *The Murder of a Mind* demands your attention. Settle in, turn off the lights, and let George do what he does best—solve a case that will haunt you long after the final fadeout.