
Alberta O. Jones was breaking barriers in Louisville, Kentucky. She was the first Black woman prosecutor in the city’s history, she helped register some 6,000 Black citizens to vote, and she was a leader in the city’s civil rights movement. But on Aug. 5, 1965 – before she could make even more changes in the highly segregated city – Alberta was found dead floating in the Ohio River. The night before, she reluctantly went out late to visit a close friend, setting off a 60-year mystery that has led to more questions than answers.
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Britt
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Britt
Hi Crime Junkies, It's Britt and I have big news. One of my favorite seasonal shows, Counterclock, is back with a brand new season and it is wild. Host Delia D' Ambra is digging into the 2008 Lane Bryant murders. I mean, this isn't just a recap, it is a re investigation. She's talking to law enforcement, people from the community, even sources who have never spoken publicly until now. And you know I love a show that asks all the questions. We listen to Counterclock Season eight now, wherever you get your podcasts.
Ashley Flowers
Hi crime junkies. I'm your host, Ashley Flowers.
Britt
And I'm Britt.
Ashley Flowers
You guys, there's a story out of Louisville, Kentucky that I bet you've never heard of about a woman that you've probably never heard of, but I don't know why because it's one of the most mysterious cases I've ever come across. A call in the middle of the night lures a woman out of her home and hours later her body is found floating in a nearby river. The list of suspects is a mile long and evidence keeps showing up all over town, sometimes in suspiciously planted ways. Yet for 60 years, this case has remained unsolved. Our investigations set out to ask the question why? And the possibilities will surprise you. Maybe it's because evidence in the case mysteriously disappeared. It could be because some investigators on this case had ulterior motives. Or it could be because the very foundation that this story was built on Might be a lie. This is the story of a woman you should know about, A passionate attorney who made strides at the height of the civil rights movement. A woman who was brutally murdered before she could break even more barriers. This is the story of Alberta O. Jones. Alberta Jones didn't want to go out that Wednesday night on August 4, 1965. The truth is, things had gotten dangerous for her recently. She'd taken a new job, and she'd been doing civil rights work that put a target on her back. So she was being more cautious than she had ever been before. That's why when her friend Gladys Wykoff first called at around 11pm and asked her to come over, Alberta said no. But Gladys pushed. She was a hairstylist, too, and she practically begged Alberta to come over that night because the new wig that Alberta wanted was ready for her.
Britt
Okay, so get it any other time.
Ashley Flowers
Well, and maybe the real reason it had to be right then was that she wanted to chat about some legal trouble that she was in. Because, you see, Alberta is a lawyer. That new job that she had just gotten was as a prosecutor. Oh, so good friend to have free legal advice, right? So this is when Gladys laid it on really thick, like, gave her a bit of a guilt trip. She's telling Alberta, like, oh, well, you've gotten snobby since getting that new job. And that must have done it, because Alberta was at Gladys house by 11:30pm now, according to Gladys, they hang out at her salon that's in her house until about 12:15, when they decide to go grab a bite to eat at this local seafood restaurant called kingfisher. And then on the way back to Gladys's, they pick up the local newspaper, the Louisville defender, because there was this article in it that, like, one of Gladys employees was featured in. She was calling out racist double standards in the hairstyling industry. So once they got back, Gladys trimmed Alberta's wig, fitted it on her before Alberta left between 1:30 and 2am And Gladys said that she watched Alberta get into her car and. And then Gladys herself went back inside to go to bed. Now, it wasn't until the next morning that Alberta's sister Flora and her mom, Sadie realized that she hadn't made it home the night before. Like, they all lived together. And Flora and Sadie knew something was wrong pretty quickly. Like, they knew about Alberta's fears, knew that she went out last night anyway, and if she was gonna stay out, she Would have called. So they phoned Gladys house looking for Alberta. But Gladys daughter answered and told them that Alberta wasn't there. By the way, her car wasn't out front. And even when she looked down the street to the parking lot of Alberta's law office, she didn't see her car there either. Now what her family didn't know was that by the time they were making these calls, and by the time they were even beginning to worry, it was already too late. That same morning, a group of boys walking along the Ohio river South of the Sherman Mitten bridge Had found Alberta floating face down 15ft from the shore. A coroner later found lacerations on her head and her face and scrapes on her right arm and leg. But the trauma is not what killed her. They determined that after being beaten, Alberta was put into the river alive and she actually died of drowning sometime, they say, between 2:30 in the morning and, and 4:30 in the morning.
Britt
So pretty shortly after Gladys saw her leave.
Ashley Flowers
Yes. Now when she was found, she was still in the striped dress that she wore out that night. But her shoes and her purse were missing along with the dentures that she regularly wore. And most glaringly of all, her car is still nowhere to be found. But over the next few days, Missing items and clues begin to surface. The that painted a picture of Alberta's final hours first were her shoes. Now the police didn't get a call about the shoes until Friday. That's the day after Alberta was pulled from the river. But it turns out they had actually been found an hour before. Alberta's body was A man who worked at a golf course located just under the Sherman Mitten bridge on the bank of the Ohio river. Said that he found them kind of like scattered about, maybe like 10ft apart, just a few feet from the exit ramp coming off the bridge. And police thought that it looked like maybe the shoes could have been tossed from the bridge itself. Now luckily this guy at the course kept them like he did with anything valuable that he found, so he was able to turn them over to police. But there wasn't much notable about them. No like blood or anything like that.
Britt
And how far were the shoes from where her body was found?
Ashley Flowers
Not a huge distance. So like from this hand drawn map in the case file, it looks like maybe her body was found about a C block down river. Which is interesting because it was theorized early on that maybe Alberta was thrown from the bridge into the water. So maybe her and her shoes were like tossed over at the same time and like she landed in the water, maybe her shoes didn't. But if she's in the water, she gets carried downstream. And the ohio river here separates Indiana from Kentucky. And, like, I'm sure you know this, but for people who don't, the bridge actually has two levels. So the top level goes from Kentucky to indiana, and the bottom level is from Indiana to Kentucky. So the exit ramp where her shoes were found, that is the ramp if you were coming in to Kentucky from Indiana. Right. Alberta went missing from louisville, Kentucky. Right. So if those were thrown from the bridge or from a moving vehicle, it was somebody who was left and then came back into that state. Now, it's possible that someone went onto the bridge from Kentucky to indiana. Maybe they dumped alberta over on that side. She would have floated downriver all the same as Even if she was thrown from the other side. And then maybe as they're driving back, they realize, like, oh, my gosh, we still have her shoes. Like, let's get rid of them. But I think that's unlikely because of two critical points. Number one, authorities consulted someone on the current of the river, and they said that if alberto would have gone in whatever side of the bridge, they would have expected her to end up on the Indiana side of the river. She was found on the Kentucky side, Meaning someone had to have put her in the water, Likely from the shore on the Kentucky side. So number two is even more bothersome. Who had her shoes, and why were they on the off ramp, like, going into Kentucky from indiana? Like, forget the directions for just a second, and let's just, like, focus on the shoes themselves. To me, getting rid of them implies that there was a reason you didn't want to leave them in the car if this was her car that they were in. Like, that doesn't make a whole lot of sense Based on what police end up finding in her car when that surfaces a day later. So that happens on Friday, August 6th. This turned out to be a huge curveball because everyone had been looking for Alberta's car. It was this distinctive pink thunderbird. Oh, hard to miss.
Britt
Yeah.
Ashley Flowers
Turns out, though, Alberta wasn't driving her own car that night. She was in a rental. Her thunderbird was in the shop. So that very evening of the fourth, this is the day that she would eventually go to gladys. That night, that very night, she picked up a white ford fairlane.
Britt
So she would have driven that to gladys's. Why didn't Gladys tell anyone? Like, she would have seen it when she left, Right.
Ashley Flowers
We don't know for sure if gladys did or didn't say anything. Like, I'm piecing this together from old reports, it seems like the first time everyone realizes that she's in this rental Is the day that her body is found. But if gladys didn't say anything, I mean, honestly, it could have just been because she assumed the family already knew. Like, she drove from her house to gladys's. So, like, I don't know. Anyways, once they knew it was a white ford that they were looking for, Police jumped on a report of a similar abandoned car that came in that Friday night. And it was alberta's. All right. Parked on a residential street Just a little over two miles from where she was found. And what was inside. Let police know that alberta's final moments were brutal. There were blood spots all over the car, but clearly alberta was in the back when she was bleeding because there was blood over more than half of the backseat. Now, police found her upper dentures on the backseat floorboard, along with a ripped piece of the newspaper that she had picked up that morning with gladys. It looked like the killer had actually, like, wiped their bloody hands on it. There were also small pieces of red brick back there, Some with blood on it. And there were fingerprints all over the car, Inside and out, along with pieces of short and long hair that were inside, too.
Britt
I mean, this feels like a gold mine of evidence.
Ashley Flowers
Exactly, which is why it is so puzzling to me that someone would take the time to ditch her shoes. She was clearly in the car. Leave them in the car like you
Britt
did her upper dentures.
Ashley Flowers
I don't know what it means, but it stands out to me.
Britt
And her purse was still missing.
Ashley Flowers
Yeah, her purse wasn't anywhere in the car. And her lower denture plate is still missing, too, though. I mean, like, that could have been, like, knocked out somewhere along the way, or maybe even at the bottom of the river for all they know at that point. Shoes or no shoes, with what is in the car alone, that could solve a case if it were present day. But in the mid-60s, all police could do was hone in on those fingerprints and the hair samples and compare them to people who pop up in the investigation. And most of their investigation Was pointing to the idea of some kind of robbery gone wrong, right?
Britt
Yeah, but where would the robbers have crossed paths with her? Like gladys saw her get into her car to go home.
Ashley Flowers
Yes, but it turns out that she didn't head straight home. She made at least one stop. At a convenience store A few blocks from gladys house. Apparently, she was a regular there. And according to her sister flora, who we spoke to for this episode. Alberta stopped there that night for a soda. And an employee said that he saw her talking to three teenagers. Now, he said nothing looked threatening, so he didn't think much of it. It's not like he's like focusing. He goes back to whatever he was doing before, but then when he looks up again, Alberta and the teens are gone.
Britt
And were they in a car or on foot?
Ashley Flowers
They're on. The teens are on foot.
Britt
Okay.
Ashley Flowers
Now those teenagers have never been identified. And if the account is accurate, it might not even be relevant. Right. But if alberta wasn't grabbed outside of Gladys's or outside of her own home, then to me, this has to be the point at which someone made contact with her. And putting these together with what we know about where her car was found and other tips that come in, this theory, at least to me, makes a lot of sense because when you look at a map, there is almost this like, trail leading west from gladys house to the spot in the river where alberta is ultimately found. Like one street over from gladys place is the convenience store that she stops at. Sometime around 2am Another street over from that, police get a concerning call from a couple who said they'd been woken up to screams at around like 2 or 2:15 in the morning. They say when they went to their front door to see what was going on, they saw a man dragging a woman from the middle of the street up to what they describe as a white or light colored ford where there was at least one other man waiting inside. And when that man pulled the woman close enough to the car, the other one, like reached out, pulled, pulled her inside, and then the guy outside the car grabbed what looked like either a purse or they said maybe a brick from the middle of the street before jumping into the car. Now unfortunately, this couple couldn't make out much about the men, but they said that the car sped off west through a viaduct that heads towards the river and the bridge.
Britt
I mean, this has to be Alberta.
Ashley Flowers
I think so too. Especially because this location where the couple saw this disturbance, this is only two blocks away from where Alberta's car ended up being found. Like, again, you just go a couple of blocks, Even farther west, there's the car, Go farther west, there's the bridge. But if this was Alberta, then where they went in the car is a big mystery because from Gladys's house to the bridge is only about four miles from the bridge to where the car is found, that's about three round trip. You're Talking seven or eight miles. Add a few miles to account for Alberta picking up the car. She picked that up at like 6pm that day. She picks it up, drives it home. She drives to Gladys's the same night they take that car to Kingfish. Back like fine. All told, say she did 15 to 20 miles, if you want to be like really generous. Interestingly, when police compare the odometer to the mileage log, when Alberta picked up the car, it said that 51 miles had been driven. So where did the car go and when?
Britt
And do we have any sense for when the car got dumped, where they eventually found it?
Ashley Flowers
We do. So even though the car wasn't reported Until Friday the 6th, witnesses reported seeing the car at that same spot as early as Thursday morning. So we have somebody who puts it there the fifth at like 6am at the latest. And police docs say that it hadn't been moved after that. So really that gives us like a 12 hour window from when she picks up the car on the 4th at 6pm to when it's abandoned on the 5th at 6am in that 12 hour window, 51 miles had to have been driven. And we know she's last seen alive at around 2am I really don't think she drove all those miles. Like I said, unless there is a part of her night that's unaccounted for, I'm looking at like a high end of 20 for her up until she's seen at 2am yeah. Where else did the car go to put on the additional 20 plus miles? Somewhere in Indiana. Maybe. That would explain all the weird bridge stuff. But the thing is, like, all that's happening seems to be happening in this concentrated part of downtown Louisville. So it's no surprise that police really focused in on that area between where the couple heard screaming and where her car was found. And there was actually this pair of brothers that they latch onto, one of whom was rumored to rob people by jumping into their cars and beating them. Apparently, a tip gets called in to police that led them to these brothers in the first place. Someone told investigators that one of the brothers was seen driving Alberta's rental car. And I think the police, like, got blinded by this because in their mind, like, all the pieces fit almost too well. Right area, right mo her purse is still gone, right? Has to be it. And when police got the brothers hooked up to a polygraph, they end up failing. And so they're even more sure that they're on the right trail. But what it took to get the failed polygraph not on the up and up. The brothers denied having anything to do with Alberta's death. And one of them said that they failed because they took the polygraph after being beaten and interrogated. He said that he was driving a white car around the time Alberta died. But it wasn't Alberta's rental, which police confirmed to be true. And when they compare these brothers prints to all of the prints from Alberta's rental, neither of theirs match any of them. And when the tipster who offered them up in the first place ends up getting, like, really scrutinized, it came to light that they only gave these brothers names with some, like, weird scheme in mind about police helping a relative of theirs, like, get out of some legal trouble. Like, it was, like, all nonsense, like
Britt
quid pro quo for the tip.
Ashley Flowers
I guess it's very confusing logic, but it meant that any evidence of the brothers being involved fell apart, and then police had no choice but to rule them out. Problem was, there was no one else to rule in. A look at those closest to Alberta hadn't revealed a suspect. I mean, her boyfriend is ruled out. They had a good relationship, so there was, like, no motive. His prints didn't match the ones found in the Ford, and he was home with his mother in the early morning hours that Alberta was killed. Police also looked into people Alberta prosecuted or who were unsatisfied clients, thinking maybe someone held some kind of grudge against her. But that didn't lead anywhere either. So the theory that seemed the most plausible at the time was that this was a robbery gone wrong. Someone must have just spotted Alberta, pegged her as an easy target to take whatever money she had on her in her purse. And, you know, it's always hard to solve a stranger attack like that. But maybe one day the prints on her car would turn up a match. Or maybe they would find her missing purse. The truth was, both things would end up happening. But when they did, it didn't confirm their theories. It actually completely threw them on their head and introduced possibilities of conspiracy and cover up. Three years passed after Alberta's murder without an arrest or really any new updates. But then on July 16, 1968, a group of boys playing on the lower level of the Sherman Minton Bridge found something that changed this entire case. When they leaned over the ledge, they saw this black leather purse tucked into this, like, hole on one of the steel braces. And it wasn't even hard to get to or to grab. So they did. And inside was a check. Keyrings, lipstick, a lower dental plate. And the ID for Alberta O. Jones,
Britt
did they not search the bridge three years ago?
Ashley Flowers
I don't know how well they did or didn't search the bridge, but I don't think that matters because I actually don't think the purse had been there for three years. Years.
Britt
What do you mean?
Ashley Flowers
But where it was, it's not like in this enclosed area or anything. It's like right out there in the open, exposed to rain, to snow, every other flavor of unpredictable Midwest weather that you can think of. And this thing, the contents in it, like it did not seem weather worn, which makes me think someone put it there, someone wanted it to be found.
Britt
Was it by where her shoes were tossed off the bridge or where they like think they were tossed?
Ashley Flowers
So that's the thing too. Both are placed or thrown from the lower level. We know that the one that goes from Indiana to Kentucky, but the purse is placed closer to the Indiana side,
Britt
like the beginning of the bridge, like
Ashley Flowers
when you're getting on and then the shoes were tossed on like as you're getting off on the Kentucky side.
Britt
So if it was placed like why now?
Ashley Flowers
That's the question I can't answer. Like I said, there weren't many, many developments in this case. And honestly it wasn't even like major news anymore. So it's not like they were close to arresting someone or like, you know, someone's trying to like lead them somewhere. So yeah, why now? Was someone feeling guilty? Was this a clue? Was it possible that someone was trying to subtly tell people that they needed to look back at the bridge for answers? Because there was actually a clue early on that involved the bridge. In this case, a witness who saw something very strange that seemingly just got overlooked or maybe tossed aside as insignificant. But I have a hunch of why that was so. You see, within a week of Alberta's murder, Louisville police had set up roadblocks on both the Kentucky and Indiana. On ramps of the bridge they were stopping motorists asking if anyone had seen anything suspicious the night of Alberta's murder. They Talked to like 222 motorists in total. And one of them, a guy named Peter Baker, said that he actually was on the bridge that morning. He worked super early because Mr. Baker worked at a bakery. So he was in his truck on the bridge with a coworker at like 4:35am and he says that he saw a white car stopped at the center of the bridge. And his co worker, Robert Bostock, remembered it too, though he remembered it being a little closer to the exit. Ramp into Kentucky. Either way, they both remembered that the white car wasn't alone out there. Pulled up behind it was a marked louisville police car. Now, they didn't see anyone outside of the cars. And remember, it's estimated that Alberto went into the river between 2:30 and 4:30. So this was, like, just outside of that window. Okay.
Britt
By five minutes, though.
Ashley Flowers
I know, but there were two other people that they found who say that they were on the bridge that morning, too, from, like, 4 to 4:30, and they say that they didn't see any cars. So it seems to be concluded that alberta was already in the river at that point. And if this was her car, she wasn't in it.
Britt
Okay, well, who's that officer who was stopped on the bridge? Like, what do they have to say?
Ashley Flowers
No one ever cops to it being them if it's real. Right.
Britt
I mean, then they have something to hide.
Ashley Flowers
But what? Now, the timing is interesting to me, because if she went into the river before the car was on the bridge, Then why did they go into Indiana in the first place?
Britt
And why did they stop on the way back?
Ashley Flowers
Right. Like, throw the shoes anywhere. Like, surely there was a more inconspicuous way to get rid of them. Throw them.
Britt
Throw them in Indiana.
Ashley Flowers
Exactly.
Britt
And, like, two cars wouldn't necessarily need to stop, like, for that.
Ashley Flowers
Right, right, right. It's not like you can say, like, oh, the white car was, like, pulled over, and a police officer just, like, stopped to see what was going on because, like, it looked suspicious or whatever. Because, like, a, again, why isn't that officer come forward and be like, I actually pulled someone over on the bridge? B, if the officer stopped and had no idea of the situation, like, they would have, like, seen the bloody backseat, and that would have been cause for concern.
Britt
Yeah.
Ashley Flowers
Because if alberta is already dead, that backseat is covered in blood. If that was Alberta's car, and if there was a louisville police car stop behind it that morning, the only way this makes sense Is if whoever was in the police car Knows what happened
Britt
or was involved in what happened.
Ashley Flowers
And the more you dig into this angle, the more you'll realize that there is something that really stinks here, Going all the way back to the beginning, like, this car tip that was dismissed early in the investigation. So before police spoke to gladys or anyone in alberta's family, There was this senior louisville police officer who seemed to know, like, more than he should. So the missing person report that her family put in, it didn't name Gladys, and it didn't have any details about Alberta's movements with Gladys that night. Yet this guy somehow knows about Gladys, knows that Gladys called Alberta to come over, knows that they went out to eat before he had ever spoken to Gladys or anyone in Alberta's family. How nobody ever really explains this or even seems to think it's like, as weird as Alberta's family does.
Britt
I mean, I do same, but it's
Ashley Flowers
just like, glossed over.
Britt
So he's either involved or talking to the people who are involved.
Ashley Flowers
Or option C, someone was following Alberta that night, whether they were involved or not. And that is not a far fetched idea because people had been following Alberta in the time leading up to her death. So remember I told you that she had been scared recently because of her work. Well, there's a lot that went into that. Alberta had just become the first black female prosecutor in Louisville history. History. Remember, this is 1965, so I'm sure some people weren't too happy about that. And even before at that job, Alberta was heavily involved in the city's civil rights movement. She was breaking barrier after barrier. And she was one of the first black students who attended the University of Louisville. And she was considered the first black woman to pass the Kentucky bar exam. And importantly, she was passionate about registering black citizens to vote. So she co founded the independent voters association and helped register roughly 6,000 black voters in Louisville. And she was a major part of the group that helped oust Louisville's mayor in 1961 and establish new laws against racial discrimination. She had such a great reputation that Muhammad Ali relied on her to negotiate his first professional contract.
Britt
Wow.
Ashley Flowers
But all of that made her a target. Alberta's family noticed that Alberta was becoming paranoid in the months leading up to her death. And I honestly hate that word because like, paranoid makes it almost sound like this was like a all in her head or whatever. But like, these were very real things that were happening to her. Before her death, Alberta told her family about being followed and about people hitting her car, leaving scrapes. It felt really intentional to her. And Flora said she knew for a fact herself that Alberta wasn't just imagining things. Because one night in May of 1965, this is like three months before Alberta died. Flora was actually driving Alberta's car, Remember distinctive car. And she saw this car following her, like, making every turn, every stop. And Flora finally pulled over and confronted this other driver. And she said in the car were two white men. And they showed her a police badge, like Louisville pd. That's what she thought. And she said the men just laughed before speeding Off. But later, it occurred to Flora they weren't following her. They were following the pink Thunderbird. They thought she was Alberta. Yes, and Flora also remembered one day when Alberta was talking on the phone to one of her friends. And then when they hung up, the phone rang again. And when Alberta picked it up, it was a man's voice on the other end, joking about the conversation she had just been having. Like, he heard the entire thing. And so Alberta was convinced that someone had tapped her phone.
Britt
Okay, that feels like way bigger than the LPD.
Ashley Flowers
I mean, declassified records show that the CIA, along with other US agencies, spied on Martin Luther King Jr. There was a vested government interest in stopping equality movements that Alberta was a part of. And listen, the very night that Alberta went to see Gladys, Alberta was apparently reading about the Kennedy assassination. And Alberta said that very night she hoped that she wouldn't end up like him. After Alberta died, Flora said that the family learned Alberta had just gotten a burglar alarm put on her car. And she had apparently bought a gun
Britt
put on the car that was in the shop that one night.
Ashley Flowers
Yeah, and it's not lost on me that so much of this mystery surrounded the bridge connecting Kentucky to Indiana, because Indiana had a resurgence of the KKK in the 1960s. Remember, there's 51 miles on that car. The purse is found on the Indiana side. There seems to be some tie to Indiana. I just don't know what it is.
Britt
Were there any Indiana people that showed up in the case file at all?
Ashley Flowers
No, not in, like, a meaningful way, but, like, I don't know how much I actually trust the file. Because this idea that Alberta could have been targeted, the glaring reality that this, more than anything else, makes the most sense for a motive. It seems to have been, like, totally ignored. I mean, despite the deceptively large case file, I don't think this case was truly worked. I think a lot of work was done, but it all feels like a distraction. They spent so much time on art, a robbery, maybe even tried shady tactics early on to get a confession. I mean, there was a point when they accused Alberta of being Gladys Lover, but it was like, all nonsense, this. Running around in circles, addressing anything but the elephant in the room. It did. It led to a lot of work being done on this case. But for who? Because it didn't seem like it was for Alberta. Otherwise, why two days after she was found dead, did some of the prints lifted from her car get thrown away?
Britt
What?
Ashley Flowers
Oh, you heard me. And the story of how this even got found out is wild. So it's August 9, 1965. We're talking days after the murder. And this detective, Detective Lancaster, is working really early hours. He's there at like 4:30am and he gets this idea about how they can utilize, like, the most important physical evidence that they have in this case, the fingerprints taken from Alberta's rental car. He's like, you know what? We should be comparing these to everyone. Not just people in her life, but, like, every felon who gets brought in. Honestly, even people brought in on lesser charges. Like, this doesn't have to be a part of their record, but we should compare them to these, like, known suspect prints.
Britt
Not bad ideas, right?
Ashley Flowers
Also, he says we should get prints from her Thunderbird that was in the shop, see if any of the prints match. Like maybe she knew the guy before. Maybe we can like, or like, rule
Britt
out people from the rental place.
Ashley Flowers
Precisely. So, crack of dawn, Lancaster pops into the fingerprint lab to talk to the officer who is in charge over there, Officer Elliot. And as far as I know, no one else is in the room when this happened. So I'm just left to imagine the way that the air was sucked out of this room, the look on Officer Elliot's face. And as he has to tell Detective Lancaster that they don't have all the prints anymore. And then he gives the reason why. He says that on the morning of Saturday, August 7, he was just finishing up his overnight shift when two people came into the lab. A Sergeant Miller with the department and a technician with the last name Patterson. Now, Technician Patterson had pulled the print cards from Alberta's case out and was going to go through them. But Sergeant Miller told him, you know what, Just leave the prints alone. I'm going to go grab coffee and then I want to look at them. Now, Officer Elliott is leaving as Sergeant Miller was going to get coffee. Well, fast forward to that night. Officer Elliot reports back for duty. It's still August 7th, 10pm Now. And he goes to pull the prints from Alberta's case. They're actively working this case. Like, now that he is there, Patterson is literally about to go get Alberta's prints so they can rule out whatever prints are hers. Like, that's how fresh this is. Like, that hasn't even happened yet. So Elliot goes to the envelope where the print cards are kept, and they're empty. Like, all of them are gone. So Elliot looks at Patterson and he's like, dude, like, where is our evidence? Patterson says he doesn't know. He stopped looking at the prints when Sergeant Miller Told him to. He said that Miller was the only one who had gone through them that night. So Eliot starts frantically looking around the lab. I'm sure he's, like, rifling through drawers, opening cabinets, like preserving prints is their main job. He cannot lose these. And that is when he sees them in a trash bin between desks, like, someone threw these prints away. And because of this, some of them were completely ruined. And even more concerning, some of them were still missing. The prints that were taken from the left door window were never recovered. And the magnitude of this cannot be understated because Detective Lancaster said that he was present when these prints were lifted. He knows they existed. And he states in his memorandum to Major Robert A. Gregory that those prints were. Were good prints and possibly the most important prints of the bunch. Of course, there were no photos taken of the prints, no negatives. And so all they had left was one slightly smeared print from the left door window instead of the actual really good ones that they know they collected. And Detective Lancaster ends his letter to the major saying they need to contact Sergeant Miller and find out what he did with the prince or contact the FBI and see if maybe they have them. And what is nuts here is that there is nothing in the file about anyone ever questioning Miller about the prints, about where the prints are or why he may have thrown them in the trash. Instead, he continued working the case and handling evidence even after those prints got thrown away. That wouldn't be the only time in this case that evidence was destroyed. No one knows exactly when this next thing happened, because no one caught it like Lancaster did. The prints or if they did. A memorandum about what happened didn't survive in the file. But in 1988, investigators decided to take another look at Alberta's case. They still weren't looking at the possibility that Alberta was targeted because of her civil rights work. They weren't trying to figure out if she was being followed or who was tapping her phone. And they weren't taking a good, hard look at their own department to see if the case was mismanaged. Instead, they were interested to know if Alberta's case could be connected to another woman's death. Her name was Decorah White, and she'd also been found dead in the river a year before Alberta. Except no autopsy was even done on her, and they just assumed that she fell in the river and drowned. So the theory went that maybe, like, Alberta was doing some legal estate work for Decora, but Alberta's family basically, like, shut that down. She was like. Not only was Alberta not working with Decora. They didn't even know each other personally. And long story short, police ended up saying that they couldn't connect the cases because none of the people in Decora's case matched the prints in Alberta's.
Britt
You mean the prints that were smudged and missing?
Ashley Flowers
Yeah, so, like, I wouldn't be using that as an excuse to write a theory off. Which is probably why they went looking to see if they could link other evidence to Decorah's case. But here in 1988 is when they find out. Oh, guess what? Almost all of it's gone. Photos, we know, the fingerprints are gone, the blood samples gone. Police had sent some of it off for testing. Some, I guess went to the FBI, but detectives were calling around and they just could not track this stuff down. Obviously, that 1988 investigation didn't get anywhere. And knowing that evidence was now mostly gone, destroyed, missing, whatever. It's not like there was much to go back and test over the years. Like we see with so many other cold cases, all they had were a couple of OK fingerprint cards. But Officer Elliott, saving those cards from the trash would turn out to be one of the most important moves in this whole case. Because more than 40 years after he pulled them out of the bin, thanks to new technology, one of the prints got a match.
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Ashley Flowers
By 2008, the FBI had an automated system to quickly match even low quality prints against a national database electronically. And when cold case investigators in Louisville asked the FBI to run prints in Alberta's case again, after more than four decades, they finally got some good news. One of the prints hit on a match. And it belonged to a man in California named Arthur Porter III. But Arthur wasn't a California native. Back in 1965, when he would have been just 17 years old, he was living in Louisville, Kentucky. His father owned a prominent black owned funeral home, the same one that Alberta's body went to. The Louisville detective now working Alberta's case wasted no time getting on a flight out to LA I mean, this was the biggest, best lead his department ever had. And whatever was done by his department before, he was charged with solving it now. And he wanted to talk to Arthur, who is now 61. And it's kind of a strange interview, because when he sits down with them, Arthur insists that he had nothing to do with what happened to Alberta Jones, while at the same time, like, seeming to kind of have a little more knowledge about the situation than I would expect if he was, like, really in the dark or hadn't thought about this woman in 40 years. Now, to be fair, when Detective Terry Jones starts this recording, he introduced himself as a homicide detective with the Louisville Police Department. So when Arthur is insisting that he doesn't even know why he's being talked to, but then in the same breath says he didn't kill anybody, he could very well be, like, putting the pieces together, making an assumption. Why else would a homicide detective fly across the country to meet with you unless it was about a homicide, right? When Detective Jones finally tells him what homicide he's investigating, Arthur says that he remembers Alberta. Even after 40 years. Now, he never met her personally, didn't hang in the same circle. Like, why would he. I he mean, he reminds the detective more than once that he was barely out of high school then and had no business hanging around a career woman like Alberta before he knows how his name was even brought up in this case. He comments to the detective, I've never been with her. And then the detective asks a cleverly worded question. Did you work anywhere that summer that she was killed that might have put you in contact with her? And Arthur says, no, he worked at his dad's funeral home. So the detective pushes again. Okay, so, like, no car lots. Like, you didn't detail cars, like, pumping gas, anything like that? And he says no to all of this. And in doing the questioning this way, basically, Detective Jones is backing him in to, like, a firm stance that there is no reasonable explanation for his prints to be on or in Alberta's rental car. But he never mentions Prince. He asks if any of his jobs would have put him in contact with her, specifically her, and the answer is no. So the next question the detective asks is, so, leading up to her death, what did you know about her? And this is where the answer is a little odd to me. Arthur said all he knows is that she got killed and she was a lawyer, and if they found his Prince, he doesn't know what they were doing with her because he was a good kid, a bookworm straight out of School who didn't get into any trouble. And Detective Jones doesn't miss a beat. He's like, you said Prince. Like, why are you talking about Prince? And to be fair, Arthur, like, he doesn't say it like this, but he's like, listen, I'm not dumb. You're clearly asking me if there's any reason for me to have, like, touched a car, Right? Like, he's putting the pieces together. But once the cat is out of the bag, the interview goes on and on, round and round. Arthur, at least in text, sounds pretty convincing to me, or reads pretty convincingly to me as he tells detectives that he had no idea how his prints ended up on her car.
Britt
Wear on her car.
Ashley Flowers
Well, so this is the catch. We don't actually know all these years later. So in the interview, Detective Jones tells Arthur they were in Alberta's vehicle. But actually, in the documents we have, police are never able to determine exactly what part of the car the prints are from. Like, they could be from the inside. Sure, but it's been so long. And the original case notes don't say so investigators in 2008 don't actually know for certain. Either way, Detective Jones is like, here, let me just show you the reports. And Arthur's like, listen, I don't need to see the reports. I don't care what is written in these reports. I didn't kill this woman.
Britt
But you were in her car, right?
Ashley Flowers
And Detective Jones isn't super confrontational. As he, like, pushes back. He's like, listen, this is why I'm here talking to you. I'm trying to figure this out. I'm not even saying all of these prints are yours. In fact, I know they're not all yours, but some are. Help me help you. How could they have gotten there? And Arthur says, okay, well, maybe if the prints are on the hood or something, it got there when him and his buddies were hanging out. So they start spending some time talking about where they used to hang out that summer. And this is where it gets really interesting again, because Arthur says that they're always on the west side by where his two buddies lived between Hale Avenue and River Park Drive. Mostly, they would hang out at Elliot park, which is really interesting when you look at the map again, Just to the east of the park is the convenience store that Alberta stops at at 2am just to the west of the park, like, right on the corner is where the couple saw a woman screaming and being pulled into a car. And then one street west of the park is where Alberta's car is ultimately found. Arthur just keeps saying, I was a good kid. I didn't hurt anybody. I didn't hang around with anybody who did. And he's even willing to take a polygraph to prove it. So they're, like, perfect, let's get this on the books for the next day. And they do, and Arthur shows up as promised for it, and he fails. In fact, the report found, quote, the highest level of deception possible. I think 2008 detectives probably thought they had their man, or at least they found a man with the answers that they were looking for. But they could not get Arthur to talk after that.
Britt
I mean, does he need to if they've got his prince?
Ashley Flowers
Yeah. But, like, not knowing where the prints are from leaves this door open to a million explanations. So even though they, it seems like, want to charge Arthur with something, the Kentucky commonwealth attorney refuses. In a letter that they sent to the Louisville Metro Police Department, it says. Says that the state would not prosecute Arthur then or ever, because the case wouldn't hold up in court.
Britt
Okay, so if Arthur was involved in some way, I guess I have all the questions, like, why?
Ashley Flowers
How? Well, I thought it was really interesting that Arthur mentioned two friends that he was with a lot that summer. Because I was thinking about that gas station sighting of Alberta.
Britt
There were three teens.
Ashley Flowers
What if that was them? Also, come down the rabbit hole with me real quick. There was another run in that Alberta had with teenagers that night, and I didn't mention it yet. So back when her and Gladys went to Kingfish to grab a bite, Gladys said that two white boys were yelling perverse things at them from their car. They actually drove off because of it. Now, she said that she didn't notice them following the car or anything, but is it possible that those two white boys met up with Arthur later? Remember, we don't know the race or have any descriptions for the three boys from the gas station. I was gonna ask, but I do suspect that Arthur's two friends were white. Because while their names are redacted from the transcript, what's not redacted is the part where Arthur tells police that his two friends, their dads worked for Louisville PD1 was a sergeant and one was a major. I know at the time that Louisville PD Was predominantly white. So that's what I'm basing my assumption off of.
Britt
Well, and is that the real reason the fingerprint cards disappeared?
Ashley Flowers
Makes you wonder, right? And listen, I went down a rabbit hole of yearbooks and obituaries trying to figure out who these guys could Be I could not pin it down. I will say that the sergeant Miller, the one who was last with the print cards before some magically went missing, I think I found the right Miller. Based on his obituary. He only had girls, so I don't think that was like him protecting his kid.
Britt
Okay, but someone else's.
Ashley Flowers
I don't know. Because this 2008 investigation feels a little like the 1965 one. Even though there are a lot of documents and work. The work I want to see is either missing or wasn't done. Because I can't find any records of them going and speaking to the friends that Arthur names to figure out if they know anything or had any connection to Alberta's case. The mention of them just kind of like goes away, just like the prince did. And listen, maybe Arthur's prints are a red herring. We couldn't ask Arthur about it ourselves because he passed away in 2024 maintaining his innocence.
Britt
If it was just like a group of teens, though, Arthur or not, do you think it really was just like some robbery gone wrong?
Ashley Flowers
So no matter who it was, I really don't think that that was the motive, because I don't think Alberta just randomly encountered her killer. Like, I actually think that she was set up from the beginning. I mean, think about. She didn't want to go out. She had been extra cautious lately. It would have been hard to get her in a vulnerable position. Unless she was lured out of the house, maybe by someone she trusted.
Britt
Are you saying Gladys was in on it?
Ashley Flowers
I don't know for sure, But I can tell you that Alberta's family always suspected that. Her sister Flora still suspects that, because there are some things that just don't add up. Like, for one, over the years, Gladys's story of what happened the night Alberta came over kind of changed. I mean, at first, she said that she watched Alberta get into her car before she went inside, right? But in a later interview, she said that she watched Alberta actually drive away. This isn't like a huge deal. I think it could be easy to misremember some things over years. But what is a huge deal is that in her original story, it was that Alberta came over, she fits the wig, they go to Kingfish, and then they come back. And Alberta said that she wanted the wig, like, trimmed up a little bit more. She didn't like the way that, like, the bangs fell or something. So they went back into Gladys house before Alberta left. But in one of the later interviews, Gladys said that Alberta didn't come back inside her house. At all after they went to Kingfish that night.
Britt
I mean, that's not, like, that huge. It's not saying she didn't come over at all, right?
Ashley Flowers
No. But this highlights the thing that I am obsessed over. Was or wasn't there a wig?
Britt
What do you mean?
Ashley Flowers
The whole reason Alberta supposedly goes to Gladys's that night is for this wig, right? Like, Gladys, Sure. She wanted to talk legal stuff, too. Whatever, Whatever. But she wanted Alberta to get this wig. Alberta gets the wig put on. Alberta is supposedly wearing the wig when she leaves. Where's the wig, Britt? Cause guess what? Alberta didn't have a wig on when she was pulled from the river. There wasn't a wig in her car or in her purse when that's found years later. And listen, admittedly, I don't know a lot about wearing wigs in general, much less the techniques of applying wigs back in 1965. But I did wear one wig for our Halloween photo shoot, and that baby was glued to my head. So I kept thinking, I doubt her wig wasn't, like, secured, right? Like, it's not just, like, sitting.
Britt
It's having her hairdresser, like, fitted on her.
Ashley Flowers
It didn't just float away in the river. So I did a lot of phoning a friend, talking to women in our office who have worn wigs, including the reporter for this case, Char Adams. And everyone said that the wig would have been secured, Likely not glued, though, because it seems that was kind of rare back in 1965. So I think that's important, too, because it's not like the water, like, loosened the glue. Right. It more than likely means that the wig was secured on with pins. So why wasn't the wig on her head when she was found? The autopsy said that Alberta had a cut on her forehead right near her hairline that looked like she was maybe jabbed with a stick. Other than that, there was nothing out of the ordinary about her hair. There wasn't a report of any pins or combs to hold down the wig. So, like, I keep coming back to, was there a wig? Gladys did provide a similar wig to police, so they knew what they were looking for. Now, to be clear, Flora said that the family never suspected that Gladys actually committed the murder, but they did know that she was in debt. So they. They think that someone maybe paid her to get Alberta out of the house that night, and she took the job to help pay off her debts, not thinking that anyone was going to kill Alberta.
Britt
I mean, wouldn't you think she would just say that? Though, like, if that's what happened.
Ashley Flowers
I think it depends on who's paying you, right? Like, who would you be pointing the finger at? Are they scary people? Are they powerful people? I mean, maybe that's not even what happened. There is actually one theory that the family heard about from a detective that could explain a lot, including the missing wig. In the year after Alberta died, there was supposedly this guy in a Chicago jail who was planning to confess to being involved in Alberta's murder along with two other people. And the man said that they were in Louisville to rob a bank around the time Alberta died. But then they got this better deal to kill an attorney. And according to Flora, the man said that they killed Alberta and then sold her wigs somewhere in Kentucky. But the detective who told the family about this came back later and said that the guy had been stabbed to death in jail before the detective could even go talk to him personally.
Britt
That seems convenient, right?
Ashley Flowers
Weird timing. And whether or not that story was true or connected, this whole case reeks of something bigger. Bigger than just who killed Alberta. The question for her family is who was behind her killing? Who might have helped cover it up? Because it feels like someone in power had a hand in this. And if that's the case, then it likely has to do with one or two places where Alberta was getting in the way for people. Either it had to do with her civil rights work, or it had to do with her work involving Muhammad Ali. So I told you earlier that Alberta negotiated his first professional contract, but she was also managing a lot of his money, like 15% of all the winnings at the height of his career. It was kept in a trust that he couldn't touch until he was 35. And if someone wanted that money, they had to go through Alberta. Now, this started to get explored a little in the 1980s investigation. A detective reported that Ali wanted some of his money to go to the Nation of Islam, but Alberta refused. And the detective said that they even argued about it. And Ali told Alberta that members of the NOI really wanted that money. But all lines of inquiry into this stopped when the detective's wife started receiving threats. Said that if her husband didn't back off, that they would put her in the river.
Britt
So he just backed off.
Ashley Flowers
So seems like he just backed off. Yeah. But this avenue is getting renewed attention now thanks to a professor at Bellarmine University in Louisville named Lee Remington. She has been studying this case for a book that she's writing about Alberta's life and death. And so far, she says this is the direction that seems most promising. She expects to lay out more evidence, like a potential money trail leading back to Alberta's killer when she publishes, though there is no published date quite yet. Like I mentioned, the book is about more than just Alberta's death. Alberta made a huge impact on her community in the 34 years of life that she had, and Flora and Lee have made sure that she won't be lost in history. In 2017, Louisville honored Alberta as a hometown hero and hung a banner with her picture on a massive bank building along a street named after Muhammad Ali. The city named a park after Alberta, and there is an annual Alberta O. Jones Park Day. Alberta's been gone for over 60 years, but it's never too late for justice, so if anyone out there has any information about her death, you can contact the Louisville Metro Police Department's Cold Case Squad at 502-574-7055 or you can email us directly tipsoudiochuck.com. You can find all the source material for this episode on our website crimejunkie.com
Britt
and you can follow us on Instagram rimejunkiepodcast.
Ashley Flowers
We'll be back next week with a brand new episode. Episode. Crime Junkie is an audio Chuck production. I think Chuck would approve.
Britt
Okay, Crime Junkies. You know, I absolutely love a twist and a turn, especially when it comes to people who turn out to be someone they're not. That's why I have been obsessed with the podcast Chameleon. Every Thursday, host Josh Dean deep dives into a scam so bizarre it will leave you wondering, how did they get away with that? It is truly one of my favorite podcasts right now and I've been listening for years. I think you'll love it too. Listen to Chameleon wherever you get your podcasts.
Episode Date: June 15, 2026
Host: Ashley Flowers (with Britt Prawat)
Podcast: Crime Junkie
Episode Theme:
This episode centers on the mysterious and underreported murder of Alberta O. Jones—a groundbreaking Black attorney, civil rights activist, and the first Black female prosecutor in Louisville, Kentucky. Ashley and Britt retrace the steps of Alberta’s last night in August 1965, the baffling clues, and a decades-long investigation that points to lost evidence, a possible cover-up, and questions that go far beyond a simple robbery.
Ashley and Britt guide listeners through the chilling, unsolved murder of Alberta O. Jones, drawing attention to a case steeped in racial tensions, lost or destroyed evidence, and the ongoing shadow of possible police or systemic involvement. The episode not only recounts the events and investigation but also elevates Alberta’s life as an activist, attorney, and community leader, while questioning why her murder remains unsolved 60 years later.
“Alberta was heavily involved in the city’s civil rights movement. She was breaking barrier after barrier… and she was passionate about registering Black citizens to vote.” —Ashley Flowers [28:14]
Alberta was lured out late at night by her friend and hairstylist, Gladys, to pick up a wig and possibly discuss legal trouble.
Timeline of Alberta’s last night:
Quote:
“If Alberta wasn’t grabbed outside of Gladys’s or outside of her own home, then to me, this has to be the point at which someone made contact with her.” —Ashley Flowers [13:54]
Police originally focused on a robbery-gone-wrong; two local brothers were suspects due to a tip but were ruled out by fingerprints and motive [16:41–19:25].
Strangers and close associates (her boyfriend, prosecuted clients) are cleared, unable to match fingerprints or alibis.
The “car mileage mystery:” The rental car had 51 miles on it during the critical window; Alberta would account for far less, suggesting trips to Indiana/the bridge [16:46].
A police officer inexplicably knew details about Alberta’s night before speaking with family or Gladys, raising suspicions of surveillance or involvement [26:15].
Alberta’s sister, Flora, recalls being followed by men with a police badge in Alberta’s signature car months before the murder [28:39].
Surveillance and paranoia: Alberta believed her phone was tapped; civil rights leaders at the time (like MLK) were known to be monitored by US agencies [30:09].
Quote:
“Paranoid makes it almost sound like this was… all in her head, but these were very real things that were happening to her.” —Ashley Flowers [28:39]
“Days after she was found dead, did some of the prints lifted from her car get thrown away?” —Ashley Flowers [32:24]
In 2008, FBI systems matched a salvageable print to Arthur Porter III, who, in 1965, was a 17-year-old Louisvillian whose father owned the funeral home where Alberta’s body went.
Police interviewed Porter—who denied knowing Alberta, but expressed more knowledge than expected. Under polygraph, he failed “with the highest level of deception possible” [44:17, 46:02].
Limitation: Investigators never ascertained where Porter’s print was located on the car (inside, outside, etc.), nor did they thoroughly pursue two friends he named—whose fathers were Louisville PD officers [43:43, 47:58].
No arrest or prosecution resulted; the prosecutor cited insufficient evidence [46:31].
Porter died in 2024, maintaining his innocence [48:29].
Quote:
“I was a good kid. I didn’t hurt anybody. I didn’t hang around with anybody who did… I don’t know how my prints ended up on her car.” —Arthur Porter III (paraphrased by Ashley Flowers) [43:43–44:17]
Robbery Theory: Early focus, but evidence, such as the missing and staged items and destroyed evidence, doesn’t add up.
Targeted Hit: Strong suspicion Alberta was drawn out on purpose by someone she knew (potentially Gladys), with inside help. Her family long suspected Gladys may have been paid to get Alberta out as bait, perhaps for debt relief—not to kill her directly [49:47, 53:09].
Civil Rights/Political Motive: Alberta’s legal and voting rights activism (especially in a city with KKK presence and documented state surveillance) could have made her a target of police and state actors [30:09–30:49].
Muhammad Ali/Nation of Islam Motive: In the 1980s, investigators considered if fights over Ali’s money (managed by Alberta) and conflicts with the Nation of Islam were behind the murder. The detective’s family received threats when he probed this angle [54:06–55:39].
Quote:
“There is something that really stinks here… all the way back to the beginning.” —Ashley Flowers [26:15]
“This whole case reeks of something bigger. Bigger than just who killed Alberta.” —Ashley Flowers [54:08]
| Time | Content/Discussion | |----------|--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 01:33 | Introduction to Alberta O. Jones and summary of case | | 06:30 | Discovery of Alberta’s body and initial investigation | | 10:44 | Uncovering the rental car and inside evidence | | 13:18 | Alberta’s stop at the convenience store and witness sightings | | 16:41 | Discussion of car mileage and timeline problem | | 26:15 | Suspicious knowledge by a Louisville PD officer | | 32:24 | Loss and destruction of fingerprint evidence | | 43:43 | 2008 fingerprint match to Arthur Porter III and subsequent interview | | 46:31 | Prosecutor declines charges due to insufficient evidence | | 49:47 | Ongoing family suspicions regarding Gladys’s involvement | | 54:08 | Motive discussion: political, civil rights, Muhammad Ali/Nation of Islam angles | | 55:39 | Alberta’s legacy, new book, and call for information |
Throughout the episode, Ashley and Britt maintain their signature conversational, investigative style—balancing detailed reconstruction, empathy for Alberta and her family, and a sharp skepticism toward official accounts and lost evidence. Their rapport, hypothetical explorations, and focus on overlooked facts create a compelling, accessible true crime narrative.
This episode brings overdue attention to Alberta O. Jones, underlining the systematic failures in her case: possible police involvement, lost and destroyed evidence, uninvestigated suspects, and a city’s reluctance to face its past. Alberta’s family and community continue to seek answers and justice after more than half a century—her legacy both a story of hope and a call for accountability.
If you have any information, contact:
Louisville Metro Police Department’s Cold Case Squad: 502-574-7055
Or email tips@audiochuck.com