Hollywood & Crime - The Cotton Club Murder | La Rubia | 1

Episode Date: December 2, 2024

A beekeeper's grisly discovery in a remote Los Angeles canyon sets off an investigation into the murder of aspiring movie producer Roy Radin. As detectives piece together his final days, they... uncover Radin's partnership with a seductive cocaine dealer named Lanie Jacobs. The investigation heats up as they connect both Roy and Lanie to Hollywood royalty – movie producer Robert Evans. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Wondery Plus subscribers can binge all episodes of Hollywood and Crime, The Cotton Club Murder, early and ad-free. Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts. The California sun beats down on Caswell Canyon Road, about 65 miles north of Los Angeles. It's 10.30 a.m. Friday, June 10th, 1983. A pickup truck bounces down the dirt track, leaving a trail of rising dust. The truck comes to a stop where the road dead ends. A landscape of gnarled trees and scrub brush stretches out in every direction. The area is part of the Angeles National Forest and spreads over 700,000 acres. When Glenn Fisher steps outside the truck, his shirt is already soaked with sweat. It's almost
Starting point is 00:01:07 91 degrees, but he's used to working outdoors. Fisher is a second-generation beekeeper. After weeks of searching, he hopes he's found the perfect location to store his beehives. The area is filled with buckwheat and sage. The bees would have plenty of food to produce quality honey. And it's so remote, it's unlikely people could disturb the sensitive hives. So far, so good. Fisher turns toward the truck. A forest ranger sits behind the wheel. He tells her there's a clearing he wants to check out, then heads toward a nearby path. He walks several feet and glances down.
Starting point is 00:01:51 There's broken glass scattered on the ground. A flash of metal catches his eye. He crouches down, squinting. Looks like bullet casings. Maybe somebody used the area for target practice. Fisher's disappointed. The beehives and gunshots aren't a good mix. Maybe somebody used the area for target practice. Fisher's disappointed. The beehives and gunshots aren't a good mix.
Starting point is 00:02:13 He moves towards some dry brush when a foul odor hits him. Maybe a dead cow. Could have strayed from a ranch and then encountered a bear. Curiosity yanks him forward, despite his creeping unease. He keeps walking, until he catches sight of an odd shape sticking out of the dusty soil. Fisher inches closer, then recoils. It's no cow. This is a human, or what's left of it.
Starting point is 00:02:45 He can see a skeletal hand jutting out of the ground, with its index and middle finger extended. Fisher makes out a pair of shriveled legs underneath some faded blue fabric. It looks like a man's suit. At the top, where the collar is, are remnants of a head. Jesus, he thinks. Fisher stares, disbelief twisting his face. But it's real. With a surge of adrenaline, he bolts towards the truck.
Starting point is 00:03:11 There's a dead man back there, he shouts to the stunned ranger. They need to call the police right away. Without another word, they climb into the truck and speed to the ranger station two miles away. they climb into the truck and speed to the ranger station two miles away. Instead of finding a haven for his bees, Fisher has found a dead man in a suit, one hand clawing at the sky. It was just the beginning of a twisted Hollywood mystery. of a twisted Hollywood mystery. The Grinch is back again to ruin your Christmas season with Tis the Grinch Holiday Podcast. Listen as his celebrity guests try to persuade the Grinch
Starting point is 00:03:56 that there's more to love about the holiday season. Follow Tis the Grinch Holiday Podcast on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. Grown-ups, enjoy bonus content of Tis the Grinch Holiday Podcast exclusively on Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. Grown-ups, enjoy bonus content of Tis the Grinch Holiday Podcast exclusively on Wondery Plus. Each morning, it's a new opportunity, a chance to start fresh. Up First from NPR makes each morning
Starting point is 00:04:14 an opportunity to learn and to understand. Choose to join the world every morning with Up First, a podcast that hands you everything going on across the globe and down the street, all in 15 minutes or less. Start your day informed and anew with Up First by subscribing wherever you get your podcasts. From Wondery, I'm Tracy Patton, along with my co-host, Josh Lucas. And this is Hollywood and Crime, The Cotton Club Murder.
Starting point is 00:05:05 It was the early 1980s. Hollywood glittered with money, movies, and a dark secret. Cocaine. In this world of excess, Roy Radin craved wealth, power, and fame as a movie producer. He thought he was on his way. Until gunshots ended his life. The story unfolded like a Hollywood thriller
Starting point is 00:05:27 with a cast worthy of the silver screen. There was Robert Evans, a famous producer driven to make a comeback, but what price was he willing to pay to be back on top? And there was the woman at the center of it all, Lainey Jacobs. She had her own Hollywood aspirations, but also a dark past. Was Lainey a pawn in a dangerous game, or was she pulling the strings behind Radin's
Starting point is 00:05:57 death? His murder would be forever linked to the film they were so desperate to make, The Cotton Club. The trail would go cold until it was ignited by another murder. It would take more than five years of dogged investigation and undercover police work to find out who killed Roy Radin and why. This six-part series reveals the hidden demons that shaped Roy Radin, Lainey Jacobs, and Robert Evans. It's a story about three people bound by a shared dream, yet divided by their desperate ambition. The prize meant everything, and the cost was someone's life.
Starting point is 00:06:43 This is Episode One, La Rubia. It's just after 2.30 p.m. on June 10th, 1983, when Detective Carlos Avila and his partner Willie Ahn arrive at Caswell Canyon. The two men are with the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department. Earlier that morning, they got word about a body dump that a beekeeper stumbled on, deep in a remote canyon off the 5 freeway. The two detectives get out of the car and stretch. Traffic had been the usual bumper-to-bumper out of LA. The Los Angeles Police Department
Starting point is 00:07:27 handles crime within the city, but the body was found near a town called Gorman. Gorman is part of an area that stretches over 3,000 square miles of mountains, waterways, valleys, and small towns. This entire region falls under the jurisdiction of the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department. That means the investigation lands squarely on the shoulders of Sheriff's homicide detectives. Avila and Ahn walk towards the crime scene. The area is already buzzing with Sheriff's deputies. Avila gestures towards the body. It's cordoned off with crime scene tape.
Starting point is 00:08:03 There's our guy. Not gonna be pretty Carlos Avila is 49, stocky with graying hair He takes off his jacket and rolls up the sleeves of his dress shirt Then catches a familiar smell, a decaying body Avila is a seasoned homicide detective with 23 years under his belt He's no stranger to gruesome crime scenes. He reaches the body first in a dry creek bed.
Starting point is 00:08:31 Spent bullet casings litter the ground around the lifeless form. Looks to be the remains of a large man wearing a three-piece blue suit. Avila leans over to get a closer look. One entire side of the victim's face appears blown off. There are jagged tears in the victim's vest and jacket where several buttons are missing. To Avila, it indicates a struggle between the victim and his killer, or killers. He fixes his gaze on the hand protruding from the ground. A sheriff's deputy quips that it must have been offering up a silent prayer.
Starting point is 00:09:09 The comment hangs in the air, gallows humor. Detective Ahn swats at a buzzing fly. Guy's got good taste. He points to the feet. One is clad in a Gucci loafer. The other shoe is strewn to the feet. One is clad in a Gucci loafer. The other shoe is strewn to the side. A tie with the Pierre Cardin logo still visible dangles in the hot breeze. Avila looks at the remains. Something feels off. The pant pockets, both front and back, have been emptied of their contents. The wrists
Starting point is 00:09:40 are bare, where a watch would usually be. Ahn suggests maybe a robbery gone bad, but Avila doesn't think so. Those Gucci loafers scream Beverly Hills. You don't take someone this far out of town for a quick mugging. An hour later, the medical examiner arrives to collect the remains for autopsy. Avila and Ahn head to a nearby sheriff's station to file their report. But there's a nagging feeling in Avila's gut. A methodical detective, he lives by the motto, look slow, look close. Every detail, no matter how insignificant, could unlock the truth. That afternoon, with dusk closing in,
Starting point is 00:10:25 he returns to the crime scene alone. It's quiet, just a few deputies packing up to leave. He pulls out a filtering screen, then carefully sifts through the earth where the body was found. A few minutes later, the mesh catches something. He extracts his fine. A low whistle escapes his lips.
Starting point is 00:10:48 It's a fragment of a jawbone studded with several teeth. No ID, no witnesses, just a collection of grim souvenirs. The teeth could be the key to unlocking the victim's identity once they get a hit on the missing person's database. For now, without a name, he's John Doe, number 94. It was Friday, January 7th, 1983, four months before Caswell Canyon became a bloody gravesite for John Doe No. 94.
Starting point is 00:11:30 Miles away, in the sprawl of Los Angeles, a different landscape shimmered. Benedict Canyon was surrounded by lush lawns, manicured gardens, and sprawling mansions. Bentleys and Jaguars lined the driveways. Here, the story was just beginning. Lainey Jacobs threaded her way through a crowded cocktail party in one of those exclusive homes. She leaned against a mirrored wall and took a sip of her martini. The event was a retirement party for her friend Carol Johnston's father. He used to be a Hollywood studio bigwig.
Starting point is 00:12:09 The guest list was supposed to be brimming with power players. Carol had even promised her an introduction to someone special. Lainey wasn't holding her breath. The room was overflowing with geriatric types. She was going to need a boost to get through this night. Lainey darted into a marble bathroom and locked the door.
Starting point is 00:12:30 Then she pulled a gold compact from her purse and flipped it open. Inside was a small mound of white powder. Closing her eyes, she held the compact up to her nose and snorted quickly, twice. The world seemed to sharpen. Lainey lifted her chin. A cool reflection met her gaze in the mirror. Highlighted blonde hair framed her sharp cheekbones, skin smooth as porcelain. Polished elegance clung to her like a second skin.
Starting point is 00:13:01 Her good looks had served her well, but she refused to be defined by them. There was a new ambition that burned beneath her glossy surface. Lainey Jacobs wanted to be a movie producer. At 35, the path might not be simple, but her past was filled with calculated risks, and she had something more working for her. An iron will. Lainey adjusted her evening gown and rejoined the crowd. A dark-haired woman with dangly earrings and frosted lipstick approached her. It was Carol, the hostess. There was a glint in her eye and a man beside her. Lainey Jacobs, meet Roy Radin. You two are going to get along like a house on fire. Lainey looked up. Roy Radin, dark-haired with a beard, towered over her at six foot one.
Starting point is 00:13:55 A three-piece pinstripe suit, perfectly tailored, draped his heavyset frame. A fedora hat and his antique cane added theatrical flair. Roy extended his hand. Pleasure to meet you, he boomed. There was a definite New York accent. Lainey smiled up at him and extended her hand. Her own voice purred with southern charm. Likewise, Roy.
Starting point is 00:14:22 Carol winked at Lainey. She said Roy was a successful variety show producer on the East Coast. He had just moved to LA too, and he was looking to expand into movies. Laney's eyebrow cocked with interest. She didn't say anything about her own agenda. She never liked to reveal the hand she was playing until she was ready. A few minutes later, the two of them were tucked away on an Italian leather sofa, talking like old pals. Lainey retrieved her compact and opened it. Radon's eyes lit up. They spoke the same language.
Starting point is 00:14:59 Radon launched into explaining his business. He brought together aging crooners, old-time comedians, and entertainers to perform in touring variety shows. Small-town crowds ate it up. Now he was looking to expand his empire in movies and TV, and he wanted to partner with the right Hollywood players. A few snorts later, Lainey spun her own tale of success. She was starting fresh in LA too, said she was a
Starting point is 00:15:26 successful clothing designer with a knack for savvy investing. Laney wasn't necessarily lying, just omitting some details. As the crowd thinned, Radin declared it was too early to call it a night. They should go to his hotel. Laney agreed and motioned Carol over to join the after party. She felt a tug of excitement. She had a feeling Roy Radin had a lot to offer. And Laney, ever the shrewd gambler, was eager to see where the game would lead. the game would lead. A half hour later, Roy Radin burst through the front door of his hotel suite near West Hollywood. His assistant, Jonathan Lawson, jumped to his feet from the couch. Laney and Carol glided in behind Roy where introductions followed. Jonathan excused himself
Starting point is 00:16:22 and then reappeared with a bottle of Tattinger on ice and a tray of hors d'oeuvres. Roy smiled. Despite being his assistant for just one year, Jonathan was in perfect sync with Roy's unpredictable demands. But as they clinked glasses, Roy felt a prickle of anxiety. He'd painted himself as a picture of success for Laney. And it was true. He had made millions and was confident he'd make more. But the past few years had been a whirlwind of trouble for Roy Radin Enterprises. The business wasn't raking in cash like it used to.
Starting point is 00:17:00 And the accounting was a tangled mess. Then he'd weathered that nasty scandal back in the Hamptons. The whole thing was a stain on his image, and one he desperately needed to disappear. But Roy had lots of irons in the fire. He still had some show tours scheduled and was managing a TV actor named Demond Wilson. The champagne slid easily down his throat, and Laney had already
Starting point is 00:17:28 whipped out more coke. Roy felt Jonathan's silent judgment from across the room. He'd promised to cut back on the blow, but there was always time for that later. He took a big snort. He took a big snort. Success in L.A. could be his redemption, and meeting Lainey was perfect timing. A new connection, fun and easygoing. And she had plenty of coke. Yes, meeting Lainey Jacobs was a very good omen. Miami Beach, Friday, July 1979.
Starting point is 00:18:12 Four and a half years before Roy Radin was murdered. 32-year-old Lainey Jacobs raced out of the offices of Beerman, Sonnet, Bailey, and Showhat attorneys at law. She worked there as a legal secretary, her days measured by stacks of tedious paperwork and legal transcriptions. The practice was booming, thanks to the city's never-ending drug arrests. Lainey walked to the parking lot
Starting point is 00:18:38 and slid into her old VW Beetle. Two pops of the clutch and it was ready to rumble. One day, she'd have something sleek to drive, maybe a Mercedes or Porsche. She cruised into the heart of the city. Open-air cafes buzzed with voices and music. Laney loved Miami, the weather, the nightlife, from Little Havana to Coconut Grove. She moved here 12 years ago after ditching Methodist Junior College back in Georgia. School was never her thing.
Starting point is 00:19:15 Most of her high school friends were married with kids by now. She tried marriage. A lot. By the time Karen Laney Jacobs was 28, she'd been hitched five times. None of them stuck for long. Trust and love? No thanks. Her troubled childhood in Alabama had taught her that much. Her father drank and talked with his fists.
Starting point is 00:19:38 Her mother escaped that hell only to marry and divorce again. When she was 15, Laney got shipped off to her God-fearing grandparents. Their weekends revolved around services, Sunday school, and belting out hymns. They tried to instill the Lord into her, but Lainey had more of the devil. She ran around with the fast kids who smoked and drank. She couldn't wait to get out on her own. Lainey pulled up and parked outside her second-floor garage apartment. She ran up the rickety stairs
Starting point is 00:20:11 and opened the door to her cramped studio. Two hours later, she was transformed. Gone was the buttoned-up office suit. Now she sparkled in a pale blue bell-bottom jumpsuit, her dark blonde hair loose, almost ready to conquer Friday night. Lainey grabbed a tiny vial from her nightstand. She unscrewed the cap, snorting a quick hit of cocaine. Coke was a revelation she had discovered in Miami. It ignited her senses. With each hit of magic dust, she could step into any persona she desired.
Starting point is 00:20:50 But that wasn't enough. Partying and dead-end jobs had filled Lainey's 20s. Now, at 32, she was ready to kickstart her new plan. Miami was teeming with wealthy Latinos, jet-setters, and a new breed of in-crowd. They were called cocaine cowboys, shadowy figures who smuggled and distributed the white powder. Lainey had been working a fresh angle, one that could guarantee the lifestyle she wanted, and she knew who could help her.
Starting point is 00:21:26 Someone who had a line on more than just good coke. Hello, ladies and gerbs, boys and girls. The Grinch is back again to ruin your Christmas season with Tis the Grinch Holiday Podcast. After last year, he's learned a thing or two about hosting, and he's ready to rant against Christmas cheer and roast his celebrity guests like chestnuts on an open fire. You can listen with the whole family as guest stars like Jon Hamm, Brittany Broski, and Danny DeVito try to persuade the mean old Grinch
Starting point is 00:22:00 that there's a lot to love about the insufferable holiday season. But that's not all. Somebody stole all the children of Whoville's letters to Santa, and everybody thinks the Grinch is responsible. It's a real Whoville whodunit. Can Cindy Lou and Max help clear the Grinch's name? Grab your hot cocoa and cozy slippers to find out. Follow Tis the Grinch holiday podcast on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:22:23 Unlock weekly Christmas mystery bonus content and listen to every episode ad-free by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app, Spotify, or Apple Podcasts. Harvard is the oldest and richest university in America. But when a social media-fueled fight over Harvard and its new president broke out last fall, that was no protection. Claudine Gay is now gone. We've exposed the DEI regime, and there's much more to come. This is The Harvard Plan, a special series from the Boston Globe and WNYC's On the Media. To listen, subscribe to On the Media wherever you get your podcasts. Saturday morning, June 11th, 1983.
Starting point is 00:23:24 Los Angeles Sheriff's Department headquarters downtown. A massive old stone building near the 101 freeway. Detective Carlos Avila takes another sip of lukewarm coffee. It's been 24 hours since the unidentified body of a man was discovered in Caswell Canyon. He'd been shot to death. Since then, the LAPD missing persons files coughed up a possible match. Roy Alexander Radin, a 33-year-old theatrical producer from New York, vanished Friday, May 13th. The clothes, the description, everything lines up with the body they found.
Starting point is 00:24:06 Their next step is getting dental records from New York, hopefully confirming the victim's identity. Avila turns his attention to the autopsy report. His partner, Willie Ahn, states the findings. Ten round perforations to the back of the head, starting at the crown and going down the base. Avila digests the information. Ten perforations didn't necessarily mean ten separate bullets. The body's poor condition may determine the exact number close to impossible. The report also indicates that the bullets are consistent with that of a large caliber shotgun.
Starting point is 00:24:39 One bullet penetrated through the left front side of the skull and exited through the left side of the scalp. That was the fatal wound. Ahn keeps reading. There are multiple fragments of facial bones, including the maxillary bone and lower jawbone, that are shattered and fragmented. Avila suspects that level of damage could be caused by an explosive device. Ahn offers alternative possibilities, blunt force trauma, or another shot to the face. Avila shrugs. For now, answers are elusive, just like the truth behind the victim's identity. But the next day, Sunday, the forensic dental report confirms what they suspected. The victim is Roy Radin. Now, they need to piece together how he ended up dead in a remote canyon.
Starting point is 00:25:49 Miami Beach, Friday, summer 1979. The Miami sunset was a thin line of red over the ocean as Lainey pulled into the parking lot of Club Mutiny. This was the best time of night, she thought, when all the excitement lay ahead. A line of people had already formed next to the velvet rope, but Lainey knew the bouncer. He grinned and waved her past the crowd. She glided up a staircase and showed the hostess a members-only card embossed with a winking pirate.
Starting point is 00:26:21 Inside the club, a kaleidoscope of lights bounced off mirrors. Bodies pulsated to the disco beat on the dance floor. The mutiny was the place to be. Here, celebrities and socialites mingled with drug lords and exiled politicians, and everyone dressed to kill. It had taken relentless networking, but each night, Laney edged a little closer to the real Miami power brokers, the ones who controlled the flow of the purest cocaine in North America. And that was what Laney wanted, to be a major player in the high-stakes world of drug smuggling. Nightclubs were Laneainey's classrooms, filled with men who held the answers she needed. And she wasn't shy about asking questions.
Starting point is 00:27:10 What drove the price? How did the product flow through the city? Who pulled the strings in other countries? A flash of her smile and a sultry whisper could coax a secret out of any man. And Lainey was a quick study. Lainey climbed the stairs to the upper deck of the club. Tucked into a private booth,
Starting point is 00:27:33 she spotted a familiar figure in a white linen suit. Danny was a mid-level dealer she'd been cultivating. Her sweet-talking had scored a small-time gig. Danny arranged for some airline pilot to use her home phone number as a contact. She slid into the booth. A mirrored tray with lines of white powder sat on the table. Danny extended it to Laney, then plucked a gold spoon from his necklace chain. She leaned down and inhaled.
Starting point is 00:28:02 He reached into his suit pocket and took out a wad of cash. 500 bucks for doing me that favor. Lainey felt a spark of excitement. She grabbed the roll and stuffed it in her handbag. I can do more, you know. Danny lowered his head. I might have something else for you. More money, but a bigger risk.
Starting point is 00:28:25 Lainey said she was all ears. It's a little errand. A quick trip to the airport. Where am I flying? He pinched his nose and sniffed, then looked into her eyes. Who said you'd be flying? Lainey's pulse quickened. This was the break she'd been waiting for. It's a Monday morning at the Sheriff's Department headquarters.
Starting point is 00:28:57 Detectives Avila and Ahn huddle with two colleagues assigned to the Raiden homicide. There's already a file on Rain based on the missing person report. It also includes intel from a private investigator named John O'Grady. He was hired by Radin's mother. At least they're not starting from scratch. The details paint a conflicting picture. Money, success as a theatrical producer,
Starting point is 00:29:22 a fancy mansion back east, and an ugly scandal. A young actress claimed she was raped at one of his parties. Radin had been charged with possession of cocaine, illegal possession of a handgun, and threatening the woman. He was sentenced to probation and a fine. Another man was eventually charged with her assault. probation and a fine. Another man was eventually charged with her assault. In the month leading up to his death, Radin had been working on a movie deal with a woman named Elaine, or Lainey Jacobs. They don't know much about her or this deal. The details get even murkier on the night of his
Starting point is 00:29:59 disappearance. On Friday, May 13th, around 8.45 p.m., Raden was met by Jacobs at his hotel. They left in a limo and headed to La Scala Restaurant in Beverly Hills. But Raden and Jacobs never arrived. After that, police tried to track down Jacobs, but she had split town. She briefly talked to the investigators on the phone and said that Radin got out of the limo after an argument. Now she was nowhere to be found. There was more in the file. Radin had been taking meetings with a producer named Robert Evans. Avila knows who Evans is. He's the guy who produced Chinatown and a string of Hollywood hit movies.
Starting point is 00:30:48 A big shot in a town full of big shots. Detective Ahn mentions another detail from the report. Radin's assistant, Jonathan Lawson, claimed that 11 kilos of cocaine and $270,000 in cash had been stolen from Jacobs' residence. Together, it was worth almost a million bucks. Avila raises an eyebrow. The story just got a lot more interesting. O'Grady, the private eye who investigated the case, had his own opinion. He was quoted in the papers as saying,
Starting point is 00:31:23 I'm convinced that he's dead through organized crime trying to infiltrate the motion picture industry. Obviously doesn't know what to make of that. He thumbs through the rest of the file. With little evidence of foul play, the missing person's investigation had stalled out. He asks if there's any word on Lawson's whereabouts. A detective says they've tracked him down in New York City. Lawson says Radin was running scared
Starting point is 00:31:48 the last week of his life. Radin even arranged for a buddy to give him protection the night he vanished. Turns out the guys demand Wilson. Wilson is an actor. His claim to fame was playing the son on the 70s TV sitcom Sanford and Son. According to an interview with LAPD, Radin was his longtime friend and recently he'd become Wilson's manager.
Starting point is 00:32:15 The actor had been part of Radin's roadshow tour. Radin's funeral is June 16th in New York. Wilson will probably be out of town. Talk to him as soon as he gets back. Avila smiles thinly. A sitcom actor as a bodyguard? If Wilson was supposed to protect Raiden that night, he turned in one hell of a lousy performance.
Starting point is 00:32:49 Summer 1979. Lainey fiddled with the car radio, then tightened her grip on the steering wheel. Don't overthink it, she muttered. The instructions were simple. Pick up a suitcase from baggage claim. Deliver it to Danny. Her first big chance to prove herself.
Starting point is 00:33:09 A few minutes later, she arrived at Miami International Airport. Lainey snagged a spot in short-term parking. She rummaged through her purse and pulled out a claim ticket. On the back was a description of the suitcase. A quick swipe of lipstick and she stepped out of the car. Then she disappeared into the throng of travelers.
Starting point is 00:33:32 Lainey walked casually to the designated carousel. Her tailored skirt and crisp blouse helped her blend seamlessly with other business travelers. She waited, then checked her watch. Any minute now. The conveyor belt sputtered awake, dumping luggage, strollers, and backpacks. Laney scanned the carousel. After a few minutes, she spotted it.
Starting point is 00:33:58 A large, dark brown suitcase. A voice startled her. Need any help, ma'am? It was a porter. She forced a smile, hiding her nerves. No, thank you. I've got it. Lainey reached down and grabbed the suitcase handle. It was heavy. She tried to look nonchalant as she lugged the bag from the terminal past some security guards. Back at her car, she popped the trunk and heaved the suitcase in, then looked around. No one there.
Starting point is 00:34:31 Lainey unlocked the latches. A gasp escaped her mouth. The bag was packed with tightly wrapped bricks of cocaine. She'd never seen that much. Lainey exhaled when Miami International Airport was in her distant rear view. Twenty minutes later, she was cruising by the ocean with enough coke to land her in prison for a long time. She shuddered at the thought. Laney pulled into a parking lot near the beach.
Starting point is 00:35:02 She spotted Danny leaning against his sleek Jaguar. He strolled over to her VW while she opened the trunk. He unlocked the suitcase and checked the contents. Any problems? Laney shook her head. None whatsoever. Silently, he handed her a leather briefcase. Laney snapped open the flap. Inside were rows of crisp $100 bills. Her breath caught in her throat. Danny smiled. I'm feeling generous. 50 grand for your services. He promised there was more where that came from if she was game. Laney didn't hesitate. No more typing up endless legal briefs. No more 9 to 5. Laney had a new calling,
Starting point is 00:35:51 and it paid in cold, hard cash. She was swapping her title as a legal secretary for a new one. Coke dealer. They say Hollywood is where dreams are made. A seductive city where many flock to get rich, be adored, and capture America's heart. But when the spotlight turns off, fame, fortune, and lives can disappear in an instant. When TV producer Roy Radin was found dead in a canyon near L.A. in 1983, there were many questions surrounding his death. The last person seen with him was Lainey Jacobs,
Starting point is 00:36:33 a seductive cocaine dealer who desperately wanted to be part of the Hollywood elite. Together, they were trying to break into the movie industry. But things took a dark turn when a million dollars worth of cocaine and cash went missing. From Wondery comes a new season of the hit show Hollywood and Crime, The Cotton Club Murder. Follow Hollywood and Crime,
Starting point is 00:36:55 The Cotton Club Murder on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can binge all episodes of The Cotton Club Murder early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus. Two sheriff's detectives arrive at the gated home of actor Damond Wilson and Truesdale Estates, a tony neighborhood in Beverly Hills. It's June 19th, 1983, nine days since Roy
Starting point is 00:37:33 Radin's body was found. His funeral was held just three days ago in New York. The LAPD investigation into Radin's disappearance revealed that Wilson was the actor's manager and good friend. Close enough friends for Radin to share that he was scared and needed a bodyguard. The detectives are hoping Wilson can shed light on Radin's final night. An assistant meets them in the driveway and escorts them inside to the living room. A few seconds later, Damond Wilson walks in with a confident swagger. At 36, he still possesses an easy charm that made him so popular on his hit show, Sanford and Son. One of the detectives sets up a tape recorder.
Starting point is 00:38:19 The officer asks Wilson to take them back to Friday, May 13th. What time did you go over to the park? It was about 2.45. And my secretary dropped me off. What was the end result of that meeting? He asked me to have dinner with him. He said, I got to meet some producers. I don't want you to act like you're with me.
Starting point is 00:38:40 I want you to see me. On the 13th, when he invited you to dinner, did he indicate who was going to dinner for him and how he was going to get there? He said that someone was picking him up. He didn't say who? No, sir. Not to me. Okay, ultimately...
Starting point is 00:38:55 Wilson lights a cigarette and casually mentions that his secretary, Amelia, joined him for dinner that night. After Amelia came, what'd you do then? We got in my Mercedes. Where did you go? We drove around. I stopped at the gas station, got a pack of cigarettes, marriage. We drove back around again, nothing.
Starting point is 00:39:12 So I drove back around and parked in the same spot, and the limousine pulled up. I saw a lady get out with a lot of flashy stuff. The detective leans in. Can you describe the woman for me? I cannot. I just saw her glittering. From that distance, I don't know. Do you describe the woman for me? I cannot. I just saw her glittery. From that distance, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:39:27 Do you know a girl named Elaine Jacobs? You ever heard that name? Have you ever met her? No, sir. He ever mentioned her name to you? No, sir. The detective pauses. If Wilson's account is accurate,
Starting point is 00:39:40 Radin might have been hesitant to share the full picture. At any rate, after the gal got out, she apparently looked like she was dressed. She went inside the hotel. Yes, sir. They came out. Yes. You saw them get in the limo? Not exactly.
Starting point is 00:39:54 Just the group take off, and I said, fine. And we started following. When they turned right on Fairfax, a car pulled out onto Sunset Boulevard. You turn out, it was about four or five car lanes behind them. The light caught me right there. At any rate, once you stopped at the signal, you never saw that car again. Watch this. Wilson inhales a cigarette and blows out a smoke ring.
Starting point is 00:40:17 What does that mean? Smoke. Disappeared. Sir. After losing the limo, Wilson says he went straight to the restaurant. Radin wasn't there. He and his secretary then dined on veal piccata and linguine.
Starting point is 00:40:33 A look of disbelief flickers between the detectives. Why was Wilson so unconcerned about Radin's absence? Let me just say one thing, sir. Roy Radin, he is not the most dependable person in the world. You know the story, the proverbial thing of the boy who cries wolf? You keep saying wolf, wolf, wolf, and then one day people go, oh, come on, we heard that crap before. The detectives thank the actor for his time and leave. Wilson's information helped, but there are still big gaps from that night.
Starting point is 00:41:04 Wilson's information helped, but there are still big gaps from that night. No limo driver ID, no clue about Laney Jacobs, and disbelief that Radin was in any real danger. They're back to square one. By 1980, the Miami drug trade had rolled out the red carpet for Laney Jacobs. In an exclusive club dominated by macho men, Laney was a star. Men like Danny, who were mid-level coke peddlers, worked for her now. Even the city's most notorious gangsters respected Lainey. They christened her La Rubia, Spanish for blondie. La Rubia was distributing at least 10 to 20 kilos of pure Colombian cocaine every week,
Starting point is 00:42:03 and she started pocketing millions in the process, a far cry from her secretary days, where she scraped by on 200 bucks a week. All that cash meant a new lifestyle. Lainey bought herself a house with a pool. The decor was worthy of a magazine spread. Stark white walls and plush white carpeting set off by black lacquered furniture.
Starting point is 00:42:27 Silk pillows lined the sofa, all monogrammed with her initial L. She had a built-in safe under the floor to stash her money and kilos of coke. Her past was a hazy memory of struggle. One thing was clear,
Starting point is 00:42:43 she wouldn't go back. Her eyes were wide open to the risks. Murders fueled by drug cartels had unfolded across the city, everywhere from quiet, oceanside streets to shopping malls. Miami's courts were so clogged that 60% of first-degree murder cases had to be settled on lesser charges. Lainey was cautious. She had couriers deliver her goods under the radar. Once, a courier arrived in a second-hand vehicle with a TV repair sign. Another time, he delivered $300,000 in a beat-up duffel bag. But even she got into a jam during a routine traffic stop. The officer found coke, weed, and $30,000 in cash. Laney hired a slick lawyer who got her off clean. She felt unstoppable.
Starting point is 00:43:36 That feeling only intensified when she met Milan Belichossis, a kingpin in Miami's drug world. Milan Bellachossis, a kingpin in Miami's drug world. Bellachossis controlled a hefty chunk of the city's drug trade. He was shrouded in secrecy, always surrounded by thick-necked bodyguards. Everyone feared him. Rumors swirled about murders he'd arranged, bodies he had buried. A drug courier who met him would later say Bella Chossus styled himself after Al Pacino as Scarface. Dripping in gold chains, a collection of Rolexes, he favored Italian loafers, always worn without socks. Laney and Milan clicked. He slipped seamlessly into two roles, her sometime lover and her business partner. Milan provided the pure Colombian cocaine.
Starting point is 00:44:30 Laney distributed it. They laundered their expanding profits through a shell company in the Caribbean. Laney was soon jetting off to make their first deposit, $1.2 million stuffed inside a suitcase, millions stashed away. A life of luxury and no shortage of coke. Lainey Jacobs was living the American dream her way, but LaRubia was just getting started. It's June 28th, 1983. 18 days since the discovery of Roy Radin's body. Detectives Carlos Avila and Willie Ahn stand in front of the Mayflower Hotel in Manhattan. The two detectives have traveled 3,000 miles to interview Roy Radin's assistant, Jonathan Lawson.
Starting point is 00:45:35 He'd left L.A. after reporting Radin missing. Avila and Ahn cross the marble lobby and catch the elevator. A minute later, their door knocking room 18A. Jonathan Lawson ushers them in. Avila sizes him up. He's 32, tall and lanky, blonde hair, neatly dressed in a vest and dress slacks. There are worry lines etched around his eyes. For the detectives, Lawson is crucial to understanding Radin's final
Starting point is 00:46:07 months. The three men sit in a small living room suite and Lawson dives in. He and Radin arrived in LA on June 4th, 1983. He said Radin had been obsessed with breaking into the movies. Just a couple of days after their arrival, Radin met Lainey Jacobs. Lawson rubs his forehead. For the rest of January, they saw each other or spoke every day, either to go out to dinner, hang out, do drugs. Lainey was a party girl. She liked to go out to restaurants and discos. Roy liked to do all those things too. Avila isn't surprised. In Hollywood, the lines between business and pleasure always blurred. During that period of time, did you have any opportunity to meet some of Laney's friends? Lawson nods. He pulls a date book off the coffee table and flips through the pages. The week of January 10th, Laney brought by a man that I was introduced to as Tally Rogers.
Starting point is 00:47:07 Avila recognizes Tally Rogers' name from the private investigator's file. Did she say who he was to her? She said, this is my friend. He takes care of my business. I didn't ask any questions because I knew what they were doing. I saw the amounts of coke that was being laid out. I came to the conclusion that these people were in the coke business. This lines up with the intel they have on Laney. Drug deals, and not movie deals, were her thing. Detective Ahn leans in. Tell us more about this Tally Rogers.
Starting point is 00:47:39 Lawson reveals that in February, Rogers moved into the hotel they were staying in. He and Roy hit it off and spent a lot of time partying. Then over the Easter holiday in April, Lainey had 11 kilos of Coke and $270,000 stolen, and Rogers disappeared. She became suspicious that Roy was involved since he and Rogers had gotten so tight. Avila and Ann exchanged looks. They asked Lawson if it could have been true, but he's adamant. Roy loved to use coke,
Starting point is 00:48:13 not deal it. Avila nods. Let's back up. Tell us about this alleged movie deal that Lainey and Roy were working on. In April, Lainey came to the apartment and introduced the whole idea about Robert Evans. He was looking for somebody to finance his movie about the Cotton Club. Roy's thing was to get the money together. Robert Evans, the famous producer. The detectives knew Evans had met with Radin in his final months.
Starting point is 00:48:42 Now the reason why is clear. Avila asks if Lainey was a partner in this deal. Lawson lets out a sarcastic laugh. He says Lainey wanted in, but Roy didn't want her involved. He thought she was just a glorified drug dealer. Avila connects the dots. Radin meets Lainey. She turns him on to lots of coke, introduces him to Evans. But it all goes south after this robbery. Then Radin tries to cut ties with her. Avila turns to Radin's last night alive. In a shaky voice, Lawson recounts an incident right before Laney and Raiden left for the restaurant.
Starting point is 00:49:32 She wanted me to go to her car and get some coke. It was parked a couple miles away. I said, no, I won't do that. She didn't understand why and kept insisting. She got really upset. What did you think would happen? It was a trap. I figured somebody was going to kidnap me or kill me. Avila's eyes narrow. So Lawson thinks he cheated death that night. Maybe. Laney Jacobs dealt drugs. Asking Lawson to get some from her car didn't sound that unusual. Then there was the crime scene.
Starting point is 00:50:03 It points to a violent confrontation, not a calculated takedown by a lone woman. And Tally Rogers, the missing drug courier, added another layer to this convoluted story. Laney might be one person of interest, but who else wanted Roy Radin dead? all episodes early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts. Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at wondery.com slash survey. This is episode one of six from Hollywood and Crime, The Cotton Club Murder. This podcast is based on historical research, but some dialogue has been dramatized. In this episode, we use an alias because the real person's identity is unknown. We utilized many resources when researching this story, but ones we found exceptionally helpful
Starting point is 00:51:20 are Bad Company, Drugs, Hollywood, and the Cotton Club Murder by Steve Wick, and the Los Angeles Superior Court Archives and Record Center. Our show was produced by Tracy Patton, Rebecca Reynolds, and Jim Carpenter for Hollywood and Crime. Our writer is Matt Marinovich. Our managing producer is Sophia Martins, and our coordinating producer is Taylor Sniffen. Our story editor is Michaela Bly. Research by Adam Mellion. Sound design is by Kyle Randall. Our audio engineers are Sergio Enriquez and Augustine Lim. Audio assembly by Daniel Gonzalez.
Starting point is 00:51:55 Additional audio assistance from Adrian Tapia. Fact-checking by Will Tavlin. For Wondery, our producer is Yasmin Ward, and our senior producer is Laura Donna Palavoda. Executive producers are Aaron O'Flaherty, Marsha Louis, and Jen Sargent. He was hip-hop's biggest mogul, the man who redefined fame, fortune, and the music industry. The first male rapper to be honored on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Sean Diddy Cone. Diddy built an empire and lived a life most people only dream about.
Starting point is 00:52:39 Everybody know ain't no party like a Diddy party, so. Yeah, that's what's up. But just as quickly as his empire rose, it came crashing down. Today I'm announcing the unsealing of a three-count indictment, charging Sean Combs with racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking,
Starting point is 00:52:55 interstate transportation for prostitution. I was f***ed up. I hit rock bottom, but I made no excuses. I'm disgusted. I'm so sorry. Until you're wearing an orange jumpsuit, it's not real. Now it's real. From his meteoric rise to his shocking fall from grace,
Starting point is 00:53:12 from law and crime, this is The Rise and Fall of Diddy. Listen to The Rise and Fall of Diddy exclusively with Wondery Plus.

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