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Dragnet 1967
"The Subscription Racket"
Originally aired April 20, 1967
Tuesday, January 17 (1967 again!): Friday and Gannon are working the day watch out of Frauds Division, Bunco Section. Friday is substituting for another detective who's busy on another case in taping an appearance on a nighttime talk show. He's nervous about going on camera, but does fine, using props--a rubber snake and a bogus money-printing machine--to demonstrate some typical bunco scams. This appears to be a purely expository scene, but serves a purpose in setting up the story: after the taping, a film cutter in the studio tells Friday about how his wife has been buying a lot of magazine subscriptions, and asks Friday if it's a racket. From his description, Friday thinks it is, and goes to the man's home to question his wife.
At the Tate home, Gannon finds some code written on the picket fence to tip off other confidence men. At the door, Mrs. Tate (whom Friday calls Miss Tate for some reason) misidentifies Friday as Sgt. Sunday. She conveys how she's been buying subscriptions for herself and supposedly for servicemen, from a young man claiming to be a Congressional Medal of Honor-winning Marine and a lovely young nursing student.
Over the next few days, the detectives identify the male seller as Glenn Procustan (Brian Avery), a dishonorably discharged Marine with an arrest record whose father had won the medal posthumously. They also discover that he made out a check from Mrs. Tate that was supposed to be for $50, but was cashed for $500.
Friday and Gannon track down Procustan's former employer, Benson (Larry D. Mann), who'd pressed charges against Procustan. He's clearly a shady operator himself, but is willing to lead them to Procustan and his girlfriend, Norma Bryant (Marianne Gordon), the one who's been posing as a nursing student. When they find Procustan, he insists that Benson was framing him when he pressed the charges, and admits to stretching the truth in his sales, but not to raising the check; it turns out that Norma, now his wife, was the one who did that, so that they could get out of the racket that much sooner.



"The Big Gun"
Originally aired April 27, 1967
Tuesday, August 16 (1966): Friday and Gannon are working the day watch out of Homicide Division when they're assigned to investigate the murder of a 26-year-old woman named Reiko Hashimoto, who was shot in the head and heart. A neighbor wearing a nurse's uniform tells them that Reiko's Japanese-American husband was killed in Vietnam, and that Reiko has a 5-year-old daughter who's staying with Reiko's mother. As the investigation of the scene continues, Friday starts getting short with one of the investigators and Gannon accuses him of letting it get personal. Outside, Friday has a smoke while engaging in a reflective voiceover, but that's as far as the angle goes.
The detectives have been working the case for nearly two weeks when they spot a pickup truck at a neighboring home that matches the description of one whose driver had been reported as having raped a woman at gunpoint nearby on the day of the murder. They arrest the man but have nothing to connect him to the murder, so they search the home where he was living, whose owner is an outspokenly devout church-goer who supports her tenant as a repentant sinner, seems less concerned about the victims, and accuses the detectives of being the devil's disciples for searching her house. After several searches involving multiple pairs of detectives, Gannon finds a .45 caliber revolver that's been fired recently, hidden in a drawer with a false bottom.
The detectives return to the Hashimoto home to meet the victim's mother and daughter, who've just come back after learning of Reiko's death. Little Miko offers Friday her favorite doll, but Friday has to refuse it, saying that just the thought is enough.

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Dragnet 1967
"The Subscription Racket"
Originally aired April 20, 1967
Xfinity said:A swindling magazine-subscription salesman uses an authentic Congressional Medal of Honor for his credentials.
Sgt. Joe Friday said:This is the city: Los Angeles, California. It's a big city with a big heart, and it offers a lot: museums, libraries, galleries, playgrounds, beaches, valleys, and mountains. Angelenos are proud of our new Griffith Park Zoo, which houses animals from all over the world. The King of Beasts...and his jester [chimpanzee]; the proud [giraffe]...and the profane [jackal]. Not all of the wolves and jackals who come to Los Angeles are in the zoo. A lot of 'em wind up in the city jail; my job is to put 'em there. I carry a badge.
Tuesday, January 17 (1967 again!): Friday and Gannon are working the day watch out of Frauds Division, Bunco Section. Friday is substituting for another detective who's busy on another case in taping an appearance on a nighttime talk show. He's nervous about going on camera, but does fine, using props--a rubber snake and a bogus money-printing machine--to demonstrate some typical bunco scams. This appears to be a purely expository scene, but serves a purpose in setting up the story: after the taping, a film cutter in the studio tells Friday about how his wife has been buying a lot of magazine subscriptions, and asks Friday if it's a racket. From his description, Friday thinks it is, and goes to the man's home to question his wife.
At the Tate home, Gannon finds some code written on the picket fence to tip off other confidence men. At the door, Mrs. Tate (whom Friday calls Miss Tate for some reason) misidentifies Friday as Sgt. Sunday. She conveys how she's been buying subscriptions for herself and supposedly for servicemen, from a young man claiming to be a Congressional Medal of Honor-winning Marine and a lovely young nursing student.
Over the next few days, the detectives identify the male seller as Glenn Procustan (Brian Avery), a dishonorably discharged Marine with an arrest record whose father had won the medal posthumously. They also discover that he made out a check from Mrs. Tate that was supposed to be for $50, but was cashed for $500.
Friday and Gannon track down Procustan's former employer, Benson (Larry D. Mann), who'd pressed charges against Procustan. He's clearly a shady operator himself, but is willing to lead them to Procustan and his girlfriend, Norma Bryant (Marianne Gordon), the one who's been posing as a nursing student. When they find Procustan, he insists that Benson was framing him when he pressed the charges, and admits to stretching the truth in his sales, but not to raising the check; it turns out that Norma, now his wife, was the one who did that, so that they could get out of the racket that much sooner.
The Announcer said:The suspect was found guilty on three counts of grand theft. Grand theft is punishable by imprisonment in the county jail for not more than one year, or in the state prison for not more than ten years.

The suspect was found guilty on three counts of grand theft and one count of forgery.

Pete Benson and his magazine crew were tried in municipal court for the County of Los Angeles and were found guilty of fraudulent solicitation. Under the Los Angeles municipal code, fraudulent solicitation is a misdemeanor punishable by six months imprisonment or a $500 fine or both. Pete Benson received the maximum punishment. The sentences of his crew were suspended.

"The Big Gun"
Originally aired April 27, 1967
Xfinity said:Friday and Gannon investigate the death of a Japanese-born widow.
Sgt. Joe Friday said:This is the city: Los Angeles, California. In 1920 the population was 576,673. Today, Los Angeles is the third largest city in the United States--nearly three million people live here. From every nation Los Angeles draws its bloodline. When some of that blood is spilled, I go to work. I carry a badge.
Tuesday, August 16 (1966): Friday and Gannon are working the day watch out of Homicide Division when they're assigned to investigate the murder of a 26-year-old woman named Reiko Hashimoto, who was shot in the head and heart. A neighbor wearing a nurse's uniform tells them that Reiko's Japanese-American husband was killed in Vietnam, and that Reiko has a 5-year-old daughter who's staying with Reiko's mother. As the investigation of the scene continues, Friday starts getting short with one of the investigators and Gannon accuses him of letting it get personal. Outside, Friday has a smoke while engaging in a reflective voiceover, but that's as far as the angle goes.
The detectives have been working the case for nearly two weeks when they spot a pickup truck at a neighboring home that matches the description of one whose driver had been reported as having raped a woman at gunpoint nearby on the day of the murder. They arrest the man but have nothing to connect him to the murder, so they search the home where he was living, whose owner is an outspokenly devout church-goer who supports her tenant as a repentant sinner, seems less concerned about the victims, and accuses the detectives of being the devil's disciples for searching her house. After several searches involving multiple pairs of detectives, Gannon finds a .45 caliber revolver that's been fired recently, hidden in a drawer with a false bottom.
Back at HQ, the forensics man verifies that the gun matches a slug found at the crime scene.Friday said:Y'know, if you could cook, I'd marry ya.
The detectives return to the Hashimoto home to meet the victim's mother and daughter, who've just come back after learning of Reiko's death. Little Miko offers Friday her favorite doll, but Friday has to refuse it, saying that just the thought is enough.
The Announcer said:The suspect was found guilty of murder in the first degree. Murder in the first degree is punishable by death, or confinement in the state prison for life.

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Was just listening to those on the Essentials collection I bought...I can hear why "M'Lady" didn't do better...sounds a bit too much like a knockoff of "Dance to the Music".Surprising that Life and M'Lady didn't make Billboard's R&B charts.
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