Lgdi 46 10 04 (003) Kleptomaniac
# Let George Do It: Kleptomaniac
The autumn night crackles with tension as our hero George Valentine finds himself tangled in a web of compulsion and crime that cuts deeper than any simple heist. When a desperate woman arrives at his office, her hands trembling and her confession tumbling out in fractured sentences, George discovers that the city's most brazen jewel thief may not be a criminal mastermind at all, but rather a tormented soul enslaved by forces beyond her control. As the case unfolds across dimly lit department stores and shadowy society ballrooms, George must navigate the murky intersection between culpability and compassion, where every clue threatens to unravel not just a crime, but a life already hanging by a thread. The clock ticks relentlessly as both the police and a ruthless fence close in, leaving George to race against the darkness to find redemption before it's too late.
*Let George Do It* flourished during radio's golden age precisely because it understood that noir needn't be cynical—it could be humane. Unlike the hard-boiled detectives who preceded him, George Valentine possessed genuine warmth beneath his streetwise exterior, allowing writers to explore psychology and morality alongside mystery. This 1946 episode exemplifies the show's appeal, capturing that distinctly mid-century American fascination with the human condition even while celebrating the clever detective work that made radio audiences lean closer to their speakers.
Don't miss this haunting tale of theft and redemption, where solving the case means understanding the criminal as much as catching them. Tune in to *Let George Do It* and discover why, for nearly a decade, listeners across the nation made this their appointment with noir.