Location: # 132A, Winfield Apartments
(now Winfield Place Condominiums)
7430 E. Chaparral Road, Scottsdale, AZ
(1/4 mile east of Scottsdale Road)
Related
Locations:
Sunburst Resort
(Southeast corner of Chaparral & Scottsdale Roads)

Safari Restaurant at the Safari Resort
4611 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale

Windmill Dinner Theatre
(Now the "Buzz"; Southeast corner of Shea Blvd and Scottsdale Rd, in the center of the parking lot behind the stores along the streets.)

Bobby McGee's Conglomeration
7000 E. Shea Blvd., Scottsdale

Date: June 29, 1978

In the afternoon of June 29, 1978, actress Victoria Berry1 knocked on the door to apartment 132A at the Winfield Apartments. She expected her knock to be answered by former TV star Bob Crane. There was no answer. She pushed the open the unlocked door and went inside. There she found his half naked body lying in bed. His face was so badly beaten that he was unrecognizable from the left side. An electric cord was wrapped around his neck.2

The publicity surrounding the crime brought more attention to Bob Crane than he had seen in the 7 years since Hogan's Heroes left the air. Before the prison camp closed, Crane had enjoyed a constantly rising career.

Crane dropped out of school at 16 beginning a career as a drummer in a symphony orchestra. His sense of humor got him in trouble and he was fired for clowning around. After playing with several bands and marrying his highschool sweethart, the 22 year old Crane was hired as an announcer at a small radio statin for $37.50 a week. After a couple of moves to different stations, his salary shot up to $500 per week.

In 1956, at the age of 28, he hit the big time. CBS radio in Los Angeles hired him as the morning drive time personality. After a tame start, the rating spiraled up, as did Crane's salary. Crane hobnobbed with stars interviewing countless celebrity guests, including Jerry Lewis, Bob Newhart, Jonathan Winters, Marilyn Monroe, Jane Mansfield, Frank Sinatra, and Ronald Reagan.

Crane developed an interest in acting. He appeared in a number of local theater productions. He also became interested in photography, making home movies of skits with his family.

His radio celebrity lead to a number of guest appearances on TV shows. Then, in 1963 he moved to television when he was cast as in the recurring role of the Stone's next-door neighbor on the "The Donna Reed Show". He did not give up his day job as "King of the Airwaves" at KNX, maintaining busy schedule. From 6 to 10 in the morning he was live on radio. For the rest of the day he was on the set of the TV show.

Crane departed the show in 1964, some say because of a sexually aggressive attitude toward his stage wife. His biggest triumph was already in the works: A unusual series set in a World War II prison camp.

In 1965, Hogan's Heroes premiered. It placed 9th in the Nielsens, and was the only new series to do well. In the first two seasons, Crane twice received Emmy nominations for Best Actor.

The handsome star of the hit new television series became a fixture in Hollywood night scene. He revealed an interest in buxom women and was a frequent visitor to topless bars and strip clubs. He found a way to blend his sexual interests with his love of the camera. He began to videotape his sexual encounters. Co-star Richard Dawson introduced Crane to video salesman John Carpenter who shared Crane's interest in photography and, as it turns out, sex.3

Still married, Crane had an affair with actress Cynthia Lynn who played the played Colonel Klink's secretary. Later, he had an affair with the actress Patti Olsen. After 21 years of marriage Crane divorced his wife and married Patti.

To the surprise of the cast, Hogan's Heroes was canceled after its 6th season.4 Crane would never be able to replicate the success of the series.5 A romantic comedy film ("The Wicked Dreams of Paula Schultz", 1968), was a dismal flop. He did a few TV movies and a Disney film ("Superdad", 1974). In 1975 NBC gave him his second shot at a series. "The Bob Crane Show" lasted only 13 weeks.

To jump start his career, Bob Crane turned to the stage and the play, "Beginner's Luck" which he had earlier purchased. He began to tour the dinner theater circuit which brought him to Scottsdale's Windmill Dinner Theatre in the summer of 1978. This was the last performance which Crane would ever make. His body was found in the Scottsdale apartment where he was staying for the run of the play.

Crane had not left performing before the TV camera entirely behind. The police found video equipment and a library of video tapes in the apartment. The tapes showed the actor engaged in group sex with various women. Prominently featured in the videos was Crane's long time friend and videophile John Carpenter.

The police investigation immediately centered on Carpenter. It had been a pattern for Carpenter to visit Crane in towns where Crane was on tour. The two would make the rounds to bars and night spots to pick up women, bringing them to Crane's apartment to perform in front of the camera. The handsome, personable and famous Crane was Carpenter's entre to women and sex. But Crane had expressed his intention to break of his relationship with Carpenter, and possibly end his sexual escapades.

Carpenter had been bar hopping with Crane on the night of the murder. They had picked up two women and had been seen the Safari cafe. Crane went home alone. Carpenter took one of the women to his motel, the Sunburst Resort, only a block away. Carpenter left early the next morning. Blood matching Crane's rare blood type was found in the car Carpenter had rented. But no murder weapon was found, and DNA testing which could make a positive identification had not yet been developed. The county attorney at the time declined to prosecute.

In 1992, the investigation was reopened. Investigators determined that bits of fat tissue seen in photos of Carpenter's rental car matched those found at the murder scene. They also concluded that the murder weapon was a second tripod seen in video tapes but missing from the actor's apartment. Charges were brought by the new county attorney, and in 1994 Carpenter was placed on trial. After two months of trial, Carpenter was found not guilty.6
FOOTNOTES
  1. Identified as Victoria Wells on E! True Hollywood Story. Harris, Mark A. and Rob Sharkey, "Bob Crane", E! True Hollywood Story, E! Entertainment Television, aired 4-19-98. Back.
  2. The Maricopa County Medical Examiner surmised that Crane was murdered in the early morning by a strong man known to him. The coldness of the body and onset of rigor mortis established the time. The lack of splattered blood on the ceiling suggest a short swing of the blunt instrument; a woman or less powerful man would require a larger arc spattering blood to inflict the injury. The examiner found a couple of blobs of semen on Crane's thigh which he assumed not to be Crane's, and flaky, white, dry material around his groin. This lead to the theory that "the killer whacked Crane in the head and then beat off over him." Robert Graysmith, The Murder of Bob Crane: Who Killed the Star of Hogan's Heroes?, Crown Publishers, Inc. (New York, 1993), p. 81. Back.
  3. Crane, Carpenter and Dawson all shared an interest in very young women and video. Crane's interest were later to take a turn to the decidedly kinky. Crane had many contacts in the San Francisco sexual underground, including a dominatrix an S & M place called the Castle. Crane would take out ads in swinger's club mailing lists, and pay for construction of dungeons in the homes of those who responded. Ibid, p. 149, 163-165. Back.
  4. Hogan's Heroes was among the top rated shows when the decision was made to cancel it in 1970, but its demographics were bad. To attract more of the desired 18 to 34 age group, CBS canceled a number of winning shows including The Ed Sullivan Show, Lassie, Mayberry R.F.D., The Beverly Hillbillies, The Jim Nabors Hour, Hee-Haw, and Green Acres. They were replaced by shows like All in the Family, and The Mary Tyler Moore Show which had more favorable demographics. Robert Graysmith, The Murder of Bob Crane: Who Killed the Star of Hogan's Heroes?, Crown Publishers, Inc. (New York, 1993), p. 156. Back.
  5. Crane was not in a pinch for money. In lieu of a raise each year, he had gotten a percentage of profits and a higher royalty rate. Hogan's Heroes became one of the most successful syndicated shows from the 1960's. Ibid, p. 56, 57. Back.
  6. Other theories of Crane's murder include a hit by the mafia husband or boyfriend of one of his many conquests. A tampered valve stem causing a flat tire on Crane's car intended to strand him in the darkened parking lot at the theater after his last performance. Back.
SOURCES

Anonymous, Donna Fan (Geo Cities 1998).

Anonymous, "Hogan's Heroes", Nick at Night's TVLand.

Graysmith, Robert, The Murder of Bob Crane: Who Killed the Star of Hogan's Heroes?, Crown Publishers, Inc. (New York, 1993); 364.1523 G795m.

Harris, Mark A. and Rob Sharkey, "Bob Crane", E! True Hollywood Story, E! Entertainment Television, aired 4-19-98. Related site: E! Online.

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