![]() ![]() ![]() Settled in the living room, they say they didn’t know of any plans Sadie had to go to New York. ![]() She confirms she is Blanche and then calls to her husband, Manross. Scotty recognizes the name of the man that bailed her out: Manross Delaney, ”The Candyman” - the owner of a highly successful candy franchise. At the storage facility, Lilly and Scotty find a police folder on Blanche, arrested for prostitution in 1940. At microfiche machines, detectives Jefferies and Vera learn that the company that used to deliver milk to the boarding house was hit by a severe fire in 1939. In a flashback of 1939, we see a close of up Sadie’s letter being written and, then, of Sadie reciting the letter. She reads part of the accompanying letter. They also ask if Sadie ever mentioned Blanche, and Sarah pulls out a photo of Blanche and Sadie. A ticket to New York City was also found among her possessions.Īt the granddaughter’s office, Lilly and Scotty ask permission to exhume Sadie’s body so they can test for DNA under her fingernails and she consents. The last to see Sadie alive was another boarder named Blanche. The records say that Sadie was a prostitute who died in a boarding house known to take in prostitutes as boarders. At the police station, the detectives examine the folder’s contents. It contains a close-up photo of Sadie’s broken fingernails. In a large storage facility filled with boxes of old files, Lilly and Scotty find the police case folder for Sadie Douglas. One of the letters said that Sadie was afraid that the ”milkman” would hurt her. ![]() While the police believed the killer to have been a random john, the granddaughter has found letters from Sadie to her daughter, which suggested otherwise. Her mother was ashamed of Sadie because she was working as a prostitute in Philadelphia when she was murdered. Sadie's daughter, this young woman's mother, had recently died. In the present day, an attractive young black woman in a business suit talks with Lilly and Scotty about the cold case of Sadie Douglas, her grandmother. But later that night, Sadie lies disheveled and dead on the kitchen floor. Sadie said that she would bring her daughter to Philadelphia when she has enough money. One of the other women, Blanche, waits for her date Manross, also called ”The Candyman.” After Sadie’s warm exchange with the young girl whose mother owns the house, Blanche asks about Sadie’s own 10-year-old daughter whom she had to leave behind in Virginia. Of the four young black women chatting in a kitchen at the end of the day, one is a stunningly beautiful lady named Sadie. The woman was assumed to be a prostitute murdered by a client, but letters written by the victim indicate that she was afraid of a milkman. The team reopens the case of a 25 year old black woman, who was murdered in 1939 after the woman's granddaughter comes forward with new information. ![]()
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