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If you love stories where the truth hides just beneath the surface, then you need to listen to Chameleon. Hosted by journalist Josh Dean, Chameleon unravels unbelievable true stories about people who deceive, lie, and sometimes get away with it. From elaborate cons to flat out imposters, Chameleon pieces together the identities that were built and ultimately broken to uncover what's real and what's not. Listen to Chameleon wherever you get your podcasts. In April of 1976, an anonymous call to a sheriff's department in Maine alerted investigators to something almost impossible to imagine a burning station wagon hidden off a remote road and what looked like a body inside. What they found would open a case filled with contradictions. The victim was James Cassidy, a Massachusetts bank vice president, father of three, churchgoing family man, and by all accounts, someone living a quiet, ordinary life. But in the days before his death, Jim had vanished across state lines. Federal authorities were preparing to arrest him on embezzlement charges, and whispers of missing money, valuable stamps, and possible organized crime. Crime connections began to surface. Nearly 50 years later, his death remains unsolved. I'm Kylie Lowe and this is the Case of James Cassidy, Part 1 on Dark Down East. In the early spring of 1976, the woods of eastern Maine were still quiet from winter. Snow had mostly melted, but the ground was soft, the trees bare, and the long stretches of road that cut through the forests between Bangor and the coast were often empty for miles at a time. According to reporting by the Bangor Daily News. On the morning of April 7, that quiet was broken by a phone ringing at the Penobscot County Sheriff's Department. At 9:01am an unidentified man on the other end of the line told the dispatcher that he was heading out to go fishing out behind Parks Pond when he came across a disturbing sight along the side of the road. There was a gutted out station wagon on fire and it looked like there was a human body in the back of the vehicle, he said. The dispatcher tried to confirm what the caller had seen, where exactly it was located, and who he was, but before the conversation could go much further, the line went dead. The man hung up without identifying himself. Even with so little information and the anonymous nature, the call didn't feel like a prank. It was specific and concerning enough that the Sheriff's department acted on it. Deputies began searching the area described in the call, focusing on Route 9 and Route 180 on either side of Parks Pond in and around Clifton, Maine. They extended their search as far as Otis about seven miles away, scanning the roadside for any sign of a vehicle fire, smoke, burned wreckage, anything that might match the caller's description. But after a full day of searching, they found nothing. Route 9, which is often called the airline, was the only major road cutting through that stretch of rural eastern Maine. But the region was also laced with unnamed trails and tote roads, narrow logging routes that cut deep into the woods and were easy to miss from the main road. Though their search was unsuccessful, the sheriff's department still believed there might be something out there to find, so they made a public appeal through the media. Investigators asked the anonymous caller to contact them again and provide more specific directions so they could locate the car and the body he claimed was inside it. The request appeared in the Bangor daily news on April 8, and it was broadcast on local radio stations as well. Later that same day, the phone rang again at the sheriff's department. The anonymous man had called back, but this time the caller gave investigators information they had been missing. According to reporting in the Ellsworth American, the man told the Penobscot County Sheriff's Department that the burned station wagon was located about 600ft from a discontinued section of Route 9 near Debeck Point Pond, just over the Hancock county line. Because of the location, the investigation was turned over to the Hancock County Sheriff's Department. But the circumstances surrounding the discovery quickly drew in the Maine State Police as well. With those new details from the anonymous caller, investigators were finally able to find the scene. Hidden off the roadway was the wreckage of a 1971 Chrysler station wagon, burned and gutted by fire. Inside the vehicle, investigators confirmed the grim scene that the caller had described. There was a human body in the car. According to reporting by Jeff Strout in the Bangor Daily News, the remains were found in the front seat, not the back, as the caller had said. The registration for the station wagon indicated the owner was 43 year old James Arlington Cassidy III of Brookline, Massachusetts. At the scene, investigators began documenting what little evidence the fire had left behind. The vehicle itself offered a small but notable detail. The front right door was open when investigators arrived. There was a gas can nearby. Some reports described the container as empty, though police would not publicly confirm that detail. However, it made sense that the fire could have been started using an accelerant, like gasoline. Robert J. Anglin reports for the Boston Globe that the fire was so hot it melted the windshield glass. It ran down the dashboard in thick drops. Investigators also recovered a metal arch at the scene similar to an orthopedic device worn in a shoe to compensate for a difference in leg length, there was also a watch discovered along the road back in the direction the vehicle would have been traveling. One source mentions that the victim's leg was missing from his body, likely dragged off by animals. But there was no telling how much other evidence could have been lost in the lag time between the first report and the discovery. This was remote, secluded land. One thing investigators did not find at the scene was money. There was no paper currency or coins recovered from the car or the surrounding area. Maine State Police classified the case as a suspicious death pending the results of an autopsy. According to David Bright for the Bangor Daily News, family members arrived in Bangor to ID the body based on the tentative identification from the car's registration. But it wasn't possible due to the condition of the remains. Dental records later confirmed that the victim was in fact the registered owner, James Cassidy, who went by Jim. The autopsy was performed by Dr. Rudolph Eyrer. During the examination, X rays were taken to determine whether Jim had suffered any injuries prior to the fire. The images showed no evidence of gunshot wounds or stab wounds. There were signs of bruising. However, Dr. Eyrer also noted traces of brittle dried blood, which left room for multiple interpretations. According to the pathologist, the blood could have been caused by a blow from a blunt instrument. But similar findings could also result from the intense heat of a fire. What was not in doubt was the severity of the burns. Jim had suffered Burns over 95% of his body, and his remains were heavily charred, more evidence of an extremely hot fire. An early media report out of Boston stated that Jim's cause of death was strangulation. But Maine Assistant Attorney General Richard Cohen quickly refuted that claim. The official cause of death was determined to be burning. Evidence from the autopsy suggested that Jim may have still been alive when the fire began. Because of the damage to the body and the circumstances surrounding the fire, the pathologist struggled to determine an exact date or time of death. With unanswered questions at the end of the autopsy, Jim's death was officially classified as unattended. It was not conclusively labeled a homicide or a suicide at the time, though, investigators had ruled out an accident. Today, Maine State Police list Jim's case as an unsolved homicide. So somewhere along the line, his manner of death was officially determined to be murder. How had Jim ended up on a remote logging road in Maine? And what had happened in the days leading up to his death? Because by the time Jim Cassidy's car was discovered in the woods near Dubeck Pond, he had already Been missing for several days. The Cassidy family had been on edge ever since Jim left for work on Monday, April 5. Jim's son, Ken Cassidy, will always remember that morning at their home on Winslow Road in Brookline, Massachusetts.
