List of Dragnet (radio series) episodes

http://dbpedia.org/resource/List_of_Dragnet_(radio_series)_episodes

Dragnet, the radio series, premiered on NBC on June 3, 1949, and ended on February 26, 1957. A set of 314 original episodes aired between June 1949 and September 1955 with ".22 Rifle For Christmas" and "The Big Little Jesus" usually re-run during Christmas time.Re-runs were broadcast from the end of September 1955 to February 1957. The vast majority of the episodes are available free on various sites around the Internet. rdf:langString
rdf:langString List of Dragnet (radio series) episodes
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rdf:langString For seven months, Friday's been working with federal and state agents in breaking a narcotics ring. After returning to active duty from his undercover assignment , he helped apprehend a small fry in the narcotics trade. The police then turn their attention to the number one man in the narcotics business on the west coast, the big man, Arthur Z. Belmont. A stakeout begins in Manhattan Beach.
rdf:langString A police officer is shot down on the front steps of his home. There's no apparent motive for the shooting and the assailant escaped in a blue sedan. Jack Carver, just out of Folsom, is later suspected of killing the cop for revenge for sending him to prison. Friday poses as a criminal in jail to find the missing murder weapon.
rdf:langString A phone call comes into the police from a Mr. Gray, who tells them his wife Hazel has been murdered. He's not sure who the killer is, but when questioned he can't tell the same story twice about how it happened.
rdf:langString * Ben Romero passes away immediately before this episode opens. The show opens with a dedication to the memory of actor Barton Yarborough who had likewise died eight days before the episode aired. * Barney Phillips assumes the role as Joe Friday's partner, Ed Jacobs.
rdf:langString Walter Harrison crouches on the window ledge of a downtown building, thirteen stories above the street. He threatens to leap to his death within the hour.
rdf:langString A confessed murderer, Annie Johnson, is paroled from the state prison for women from a murder conviction. After seven months the parole office loses contact with her. She is then suspected of harming Laura Muller, the woman responsible for her parole and has since disappeared. Foul play is suspected.
rdf:langString Friday and Romero search for the murderer of an informant — small-time narcotics user Benny Trounsel — who was beaten to death shortly after tipping the authorities to a new narcotics ring stealing from doctor's offices and hospitals.
rdf:langString A wealthy businessman in the city drops from sight. His car is found on the dock—an apparent suicide scenario—but there's no body. Friday and Romero start to search for him, but after a lot of missing persons police work, no laws are broken and the man is found just trying to get away from it all.
rdf:langString A couple of unidentified thieves start a campaign of burglaries in the city. Homes are broken into and stripped of their furnishings, with the thieves selling all the furniture from the homes they break into to families out of town, starting with the house of a little girl and her grandfather.
rdf:langString Twenty one girls have been knifed while at a high school. So far there's only been assaults, no murders, but with a potential killer roaming the halls of the high school, the Police are called in.
rdf:langString Officer John Bemis is shot and mortally wounded. One of the suspects, the shooter, James Vickers, is apprehended by Friday and Romero, but the other is still at large. When the officer dies, and the suspect in custody is shot and killed while attempting to escape, the hunt for the other shooter intensifies.
rdf:langString A worried mother calls the police and reports her four-year-old twins girls as missing. Hours pass and the children fail to turn up. A neighborhood search commences but soon the girls come home and reveal they have been molested. Friday and the other cops become determined to convict the sick fiend.
rdf:langString The mysterious "Myra" has been using teams of youngsters to break into and steal valuables from parked automobiles. In three months, they have broken into 250 cars, and property mounting well over $1,000 has been stolen. Two useful members of the gang have been apprehended, and Friday and Romero interrogate them in an attempt to reveal the name of the operation's ringleader.
rdf:langString A gang of veteran dope peddlers moves into LA. They offer a hundred thousand dollars worth of heroin for sale. Sergeant Friday tries to trap Howard Scully, a careful narcotics wholesaler, who leads the gang. Friday goes undercover and poses as a buyer; he meets the leaders contacts and they're ready to do business.
rdf:langString Friday and new partner Frank Smith are after a trio of robbers who hijacked a Registered Mail truck for its cash. *This case marks the first appearance of Frank Smith, who would be Joe's partner for the rest of the radio series
rdf:langString * Unknown, Program not available.
rdf:langString Friday and Romero receive a complaint about an eight-year-old boy and his sister. A neighbour reports they've been going from door to door begging for food. Supposedly the children are from well to do parents. Friday and Romero investigate and find that the children's mother, Mrs. Kessler, is missing. Meanwhile, one of the children soon dies at only 22-months-old.
rdf:langString A man and his wife are found strangled to death in a rooming house, and the killer has set fire to the room to cover his tracks. Also a dead parrot, who's also been strangled, lies on the floor beside the bodies.
rdf:langString Three persons are shot down in a twelve thousand dollar hold up. One of the bandits, Stanley Turk Webber, is apprehended, convicted and sent to prison for life. The other one, Frank Chaney, is still at large. But thanks to a tip from Cheney's father, he is captured at a freighter loading dynamite in the harbor. Meanwhile, in an unrelated subplot, Friday calls fellow officer, Dorothy Rivers, about her lost purse and their date at the movies the previous night. Friday works up the courage to ask her to have dinner with him at his mother's next week.
rdf:langString Two armed bandits have robbed large jewelry stores in the city. One suspect escapes but one is apprehended and identified as a friend of Friday's, Max Tyler. However, Tyler escapes from jail, and shoots and injures Romero. It's up to Friday to recapture him again.
rdf:langString Twelve men drop completely from sight over a short period of time. One of them is Paul Davis. There's evidence of foul play. Four months pass before Friday and Romero finally locate the main suspect in the case. As they interview him, they realize they may have found a serial killer.
rdf:langString A lone bandit robs a jewelry store in broad daylight and takes five thousand dollars in precious stones. The bandit is reckless and well-armed but soon gets caught by the police after causing a traffic collision during his attempted escape. Then the robber escapes from the lockup and must be recaptured again.
rdf:langString A highway patrolman has disappeared from his cruiser, out in the countryside. His cruiser was found with the motor running and lights on.
rdf:langString A small bakery, "Stendahl's Bakery Shop", is held up. The perpetrator shot the shop owner and his daughter down without reason.
rdf:langString *Ed Jacobs becomes an instructor for the police academy, and Ben Romero's nephew, Officer Bill Lockwood , becomes Joe's new partner for the next few episodes.
rdf:langString *The episode is a remake of Episode 14 "Eric Kelby - Buried Body in Nursery" with new names, and Ed Jacobs as Joe's partner.
rdf:langString A sudden wave of jewel thefts is sweeping the city. In sixteen days, sixteen burglaries have been committed, one each night. The trail leads to Walter Tracy, but Friday and Romero soon realise that finding the loot is a lot harder than finding Tracy, who won't reveal the location of the stolen jewels.
rdf:langString A homicidal maniac wielding a brick-bat is loose in the city. In every instance he leaves the murder weapon behind and there are no fingerprints or clues for the police to identify him. A 1,000-man dragnet slowly gets him cornered, and it's up to Friday, Romero and the other members of the LAPD to get the killer before he strikes again.
rdf:langString Two criminals rob and beat up Myrtle Shaw, an elderly woman, who was on her way to the bank. The suspects are cruel and ruthless, so it's the police and Friday's job to find them.
rdf:langString A well-organized ring of car thieves comes to town. A 1949 Cadillac is stolen, Friday and Romero find it at Herman Lester's salvage yard. Plus Lester's salvage business is busy but shouldn't be due to the Korean War. Friday and Romero try to break the stolen car racket.
rdf:langString Unknown, Program not available.
rdf:langString * Due to technical difficulties at the time of its broadcast, we are not told what division Friday & Jacobs are working, but they mention that the culprit they are pursuing is a bunco suspect.
rdf:langString A new recording of the same story aired in the past 3 Christmases, with Frank Smith as Joe's partner.
rdf:langString Friday and Romero try and catch a kidnapper after a 21-year-old girl has disappeared and a letter has been received demanding $30,000 for the girl's return. The letter is signed "The Wolf."
rdf:langString A rash of thefts and robberies, have broken out across the city and suspicion points to an organized gang of juveniles hanging out on Spring Street, where a shady soda fountain owner is suspected of being their fence. One of the gang members has been wounded and another is shot by a night watchman while committing a robbery. Friday and Romero must try and round up and arrest the gang of youths before anyone else is killed.
rdf:langString A gang of vicious "Hitch-Hike Bandits" are committing assaults, robberies and attempted murders. Their victims are army officers stationed in the city. After one of the victims is killed by the gunmen, a manhunt is on.
rdf:langString A gang of holdup men have been running loose in Los Angeles they are heavily armed and quick to shoot. They have committed more than a dozen robberies, usually drugstores, but one night they rob and kill the manager of a dance hall. A stake-out in a garage yields some arrests and a total of twelve guns are recovered. After a trial, two of the gang break out of jail and have to be recaptured.
rdf:langString * Unknown, Program not available. * Though the Radio episode is unavailable, there has been a TV adaptation which is still available. In the TV adaptation a veteran thief is acquitted and a year later the police monitor him when he returns to LA.
rdf:langString A gang of four young hoodlums and their puppy have come to Los Angeles from San Francisco. They are already wanted for a series of robberies in San Francisco and are planning to pull a big job in Los Angeles. They're armed, reckless and cold-blooded, but a long stake-out with an alcoholic desk clerk might provide results.
rdf:langString Friday and Romero are on the trail of a psychotic homicidal maniac who has killed and mutilated several young women in Los Angeles. Special Note: This marks the first series appearance of Harry Morgan, who would later play Officer Bill Gannon in both the 1966 film and the subsequent TV series. He plays the hotel manager, Ford.
rdf:langString Friday has been off duty for two hours when he receives an emergency phone call from Chief of Detectives Ed Backstrand. An entire block in the heart of the city has been threatened with complete destruction by Vernon Carney. He is threatening to blow up City Hall with a bomb if his brother isn't freed from jail by nine o'clock. Friday and Romero are tasked with getting the bomb away from him before it is too late.
rdf:langString A gang of hijackers has started to work in Los Angeles and have stolen truckloads of $80,000 in valuable merchandise. The cops have a lead on a Thomas Laval, who admits to being involved in a truck hijacking. While in Friday and Romero's custody, he jumps out of a window, and both detectives are accused of pushing him to his death.
rdf:langString A well-liked 21-year-old waitress named Helen Corday is murdered with a steel pipe. With no known motive for the killing, Friday and Romero follow a perplexing trail of false leads in search of the truth. Later remade for television in Season 5 of the 1951 TV Series, episode #126, "The Big Pipe".
rdf:langString A potential killer is on the loose; he's robbed six people. Nicknamed "The Rattlesnake Bandit", he takes great pleasure in beating his victims senseless before shooting them. There's no reason at all for these senseless beatings, and he moves fast and is well armed.
rdf:langString A group of high-grade heroin traffickers come to town. Using a fake bindle to pass himself off as a dealer looking to make a big buy, Friday tries to go undercover and infiltrate the ring.
rdf:langString Friday and Romero go searching for a criminal dubbed "The Werewolf" by the media, who has beaten up and robbed eighteen young women in LA's Central district. The nickname for the criminal caught on because he is big, hairy, and ugly. He always seems to be one step ahead of the LAPD.
rdf:langString Scores of lone women have been beaten and robbed by two young purse-snatchers working in a downtown neighbourhood. The victims have been unable to identify the two young hoodlums.
rdf:langString A cop on a stake-out is killed by a shotgun blast from three quick-trigger gunmen in a bar. Friday's boss wants the killers caught before the next sunrise; soon, Friday, Romero, and other members of the LAPD trap the killers in an apartment house.
rdf:langString A woman is knifed to death, and her body bears the mark of a brutally slain attack. The Police are called in by the woman's son who had found the body. During the investigation, it's revealed the mom had several boyfriends, and one of her current boyfriends was jealous of her having other boyfriends. As the Dragnet closes in on the killer, his sister arranges for the suspect to surrender.
rdf:langString A new member of the congregation receives anonymous letters and phone calls threatening her with murder. The notes bear the mark of a fanatic, but police suspect fraud until a faked attack confirms their suspicion. * The Second Reformed Church of the Holy Book is the name of the church.
rdf:langString An expert confidence man, "Gentleman Wallace", has resumed operations in Los Angeles. His criminal record dates back thirty-five years. He's a born con-man, a master in the art of the gentle swindle whose taken advantage of two used-car dealers, and many others.
rdf:langString St. Christopher's Hospital pharmacy is held up and $10,000 worth of high grade narcotics are stolen. The Police are called but the bandits escape.
rdf:langString A dead body is found in the streets in the early hours of the morning. He is later identified as Edward Stokes, a victim of a hit and run driver.
rdf:langString Attempts have been made on the life of a notorious gangster, Gus Valentine. If he dies, it could mean an open gang war. Even though he is on the wrong side of the law, the cops must protect him.
rdf:langString For the past eighteen weeks, a gang of safe men have been breaking into large grocery stores, the Wilson Bros Markets, all over the city. They work fast and have stolen over $100,000, and the police can't localize their operations. Friday and Romero are assigned to bring them in.
rdf:langString A bunco gang of petty swindlers have set up operations in the city. They work the obituary racket, selling worthless merchandise to the relatives of the deceased. They're experienced, cunning and they work fast.
rdf:langString A man named Harvey Kimbrel is on his way to work when he is pulled from his car on a deserted street, robbed, and beaten viciously before his car is stolen. The criminal makes good his escape. In the course of the investigation, Friday is shot by the main suspect. * Romero takes over the narration for Friday after he is shot. * In the TV adaption of this episode "The Big Frank" it is Friday's then-partner Sergeant Frank Smith that is shot and not Friday.
rdf:langString For the past year a confidence man named Benton has been cheating women in LA by proposing marriage to them and then stealing their money. Mrs. Harris is the latest victim of his crime and was fleeced out of $100. She reports it to Friday and Romero who try to get a lead on him.
rdf:langString A man posing as a doctor is burglarizing homes in the city. Marla Hutchins commits suicide after being robbed by the phony Dr. Schulte, owner of the Los Angeles College of Psychotherapeutics. The police have his description and must find him.
rdf:langString A vicious criminal has resumed his narcotics operations in the city. The police know his name and know he's guilty, so Friday goes undercover to try to get evidence on him by infiltrating a Flats gang of narcotics pushers.
rdf:langString A hold-up has been committed in a neighbouring city where a bystander is shot to death and two others are wounded. The bandits are ruthless, well armed and currently known to be in the area. Friday and Romero identify one of them as Frank Cheney, The Gentleman Bandit, a rich man who robs and kills for fun, even after an eighteen year stay in Folsom State Prison. Soon, Stanley Turk Webber, Cheney's partner in crime, is captured, but Cheney remains at large.
rdf:langString A nickel-plated .44 caliber Smith & Wesson is used to shoot two officers, but conflicting descriptions of the assailants from multiple witnesses create a unique challenge, further complicated when it turns out there are two guns involved.
rdf:langString A socially prominent man decides to plot to kill his wife and hires Joe Friday for the job.
rdf:langString In the early hours of the morning Sheila Gordon is struck down by a hit-and-run driver. After three months of grueling police work, she takes a payoff not to show up for the trial of the guy who struck her down. Friday and Romero have to chase her down.
rdf:langString Agnes Kelby has suddenly disappeared from her home; on the surface, it appears only as a routine missing persons case. Friday and Romero investigate and find that Eric Kelby, Agnes's husband, is acting very suspiciously by Insisting that his wife isn't missing.
rdf:langString A vicious case of wanton and willful destruction of private property occurs to a lawyers office and suspicion points to a juvenile. The police try to find out who did it and why. Meanwhile, a young boy named Arnold Waterman confesses to a murder. When no body is found, Waterman is suspected of being the vandal Friday is looking for.
rdf:langString The Police receive information that an escaped criminal, called Alfred Garvey, is hiding out in the City. While searching for him at a hotel Garvey shoots an off-duty cop, and friend of Friday and Romero, John Maxwell. He was about to go on vacation but decided to visit Friday and Romero first. Soon a Police manhunt is launched to find Garvey.
rdf:langString A young narcotics addict pistol-whips a doctor leaving him in critical condition, he also steals a large quantity of narcotics from him. Meanwhile, Sergeant Friday is asked by his old high school to give a talk. After the young addict is caught, Friday delivers a speech about the use of narcotics by teenagers. * We find out in this episode that Friday lives at 1456 Collis Avenue, Los Angeles.
rdf:langString A gang of "blitz bandits" have started to rob liquor stores and restaurants around Los Angeles. They are fast and efficient, with three to four and even five robberies each night. While Friday and Romero search for this gang of robbers, one of Joe's Army buddies joins the police force.
rdf:langString For three months Friday's been tracking a pair of hold-up men, "The Kid Bandits", who are robbing and beating their victims. There is no pattern to their operation. They're young and they're brutal, but a pack of matches leads Friday to Fred Guenther.
rdf:langString The cops search for a big blonde who shoots her victims in cold blood. So far sixteen persons have been robbed and beaten senseless. The victims describe the assailant as a tall, beautiful woman, but there is a possibility it could be a man wearing woman's clothing.
rdf:langString Friday and Romero have been tracking a hold up man for months. They finally get a line on where he's hiding but he's dangerous and well armed. After a shoot-out, the criminal, George Hoffman, is arrested but escapes at his arraignment by climbing down the side of a building.
rdf:langString Two little girls, aged seven and eleven, are reported missing at about 3:45pm. Somewhere between their homes and the neighbourhood grocery store they dropped from sight. Foul play is suspected when their pet Collie is later found beaten to death. * Jack Webb gives a disclaimer about this episode not being suitable for children.
rdf:langString A robber disguised as a police officer goes on a crime spree over several months. Helpless citizens are kidnapped, robbed, and beaten senseless by the fake cop. He usually strikes when his victims pull up to a red traffic light; when one of his victims dies, the LAPD turns up the heat, especially when Friday and Romero realize the killer has been taunting them the entire time without them realizing it.
rdf:langString The owner of a fur store, Albert Criver, has been shot and killed; his wife found the body. The only lead is a missing mink fur coat which had been taken before the murder. Albert's 1940 Oldsmobile is also missing and his wife mentions the license keychain tag distributed by the Veteran's Administration.
rdf:langString A young woman named Laura Barkley has been murdered—strangled with a lamp cord—and her body was discovered behind locked doors. The killer seems to have entered through an unused garbage chute and is still at large.
rdf:langString Mr. Reynard's mother has been murdered and his wife is suspected of being the killer. But the clear cut case of a woman murdering her mother-in-law to hide an affair soon falls apart, leaving Joe and Ben to search for the real killer.
rdf:langString Joe's friend confesses that his teenage son is a heroin addict.
rdf:langString An attractive divorcée named Josephine Allen disappears from her home. She was last seen hanging up clothes in her back yard. There's no lead to her whereabouts and there's evidence of foul play.
rdf:langString A pair of fake talent scouts are at work in the city; their victims are young girls seeking careers in Hollywood. The criminals are vicious and relentless.
rdf:langString In four months, fifteen food markets in Los Angeles have been held up and robbed. The bandit is well-dressed and well-armed, and a bright red Pontiac looks like a clue for the police.
rdf:langString An elderly woman has been passing bad checks for the last nine years. She is an accomplished forger and looks like everyone's grandmother, and never passes a bad check between May and October. She's written more than twenty thousand dollars in bad checks.
rdf:langString For two months, "The Badge Bandit", a depraved criminal who pretends to be a police officer, has struck fifteen times. Men and women have been robbed, brutally attacked. Friday and Policewoman Dorothy Rivers go on a stakeout to catch him, along with several other members of the LAPD.
rdf:langString A woman, Mrs. Kessell, has been kidnapped, taken from her home by a man posing as a police officer. Friday, Romero, and Brown join Professor Kessell for a Passover Seder.
rdf:langString In the series' first episode, LAPD Sergeant Joe Friday and his partner Ben Romero must keep an eye on George Slocum, a known thief who has escaped prosecution before.
rdf:langString A middle-aged businessman, Louis Butler, is robbed and beaten senseless. The hold-up men escape but Mr. Butler doesn't want to tell the police about it, and even refuses to report the crime because of threats against his family.
rdf:langString Friday and Romero must track down an accomplished check forger who passes dozens of small checks—all of them bad. He has started working the city and his victims are small businessmen. The police know his MO but not his identity; soon they get a name Harry Johansson and the Dragnet closes in.
rdf:langString Friday and Romero search for a suspect who beat a Chinese man, using a handful of buckshot's in a handkerchief and stole $8,000 in rare Chinese jade. The only witness is an observant six-year-old boy with a wild imagination.
rdf:langString A high school boy named Kenneth Morrow is killed in an auto accident. He had been using marijuana. It looks as if a band of dope peddlers have launched a full-scale operation in the city and are selling their merchandise to high school students. Friday and the cops have to track down the man known as "The Big Tomato."
rdf:langString As the Christmas season approaches, Friday and Romero receive a call from Utah from the mother of a woman named Juanita Laskey, who tells them that her daughter has stopped writing to her and is calling to report her missing. Friday and Romero must try and bring her home for a Christmas reunion.
rdf:langString Elizabeth Benham has been shot to death. The apparent motive, according to her husband, was a robbery. The killer, Jack Morrison, also known as Tommy Kane, is suspected to have committed the murder, but it is believed that he had help.
rdf:langString Maria Comacho is found murdered in a churchyard; her body shows the marks of a savage attack. The clues are meager: a key, a pen, and some shoe polish smear.
rdf:langString It's New Year's Eve in Los Angeles and Friday's on special duty. Thousands of people crowd the downtown streets and one of them is a killer after a veteran cop is found murdered. Friday notifies his wife, and a club owner later identifies a drug addict as the probable suspect. The killer is convicted of manslaughter and paroled in 6 years.
rdf:langString Mr. and Mrs. Apperson, an elderly couple, living in a fashionable neighborhood of the city, have disappeared. There is no trace of them; not a clue to their whereabouts. Foul play is suspected and soon a bottle of cyanide points to a grim conclusion, involving the live-in nephew.
rdf:langString Friday and Romero go to an apartment house in answer to a shooting and dead body call. The woman, Marie Robertson, has been shot dead with a .45 automatic. Her husband, Andrew, tells them it's suicide but it looks more like murder. Friday and Romero investigate the truth.
rdf:langString High schools have been flooded with obscene, filthy, pornographic "comic" book literature. The Police stamp out one source and a dozen more spring up. Friday and Romero make a presentation to the local PTA and a lead brings them to a cigar stand downtown and a man called "Barney" and then eventually to the printer.
rdf:langString A drunk files a report of robbery and assault against a rookie police officer. The Rookie cop denies the accusations.
rdf:langString A newborn, one of the three-day-old Striker baby twins, has been stolen from Mercy Hospital nursery. There is no trace of the infant and there is no trace of the abductor.
rdf:langString Notorious gangster Gus Valentine has been shot to death, a gang war is threatened, and his gang members seek revenge. It is Friday and Romero's job to find his killers before the other gangsters do.
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rdf:langString Burglary
rdf:langString Cold
rdf:langString Forgery
rdf:langString Homicide
rdf:langString Robbery
rdf:langString N/A
rdf:langString Stormy
rdf:langString Unassigned
rdf:langString Unknown
rdf:langString Cloudy
rdf:langString Windy
rdf:langString Frank Smith
rdf:langString Hot
rdf:langString Warm
rdf:langString Fair
rdf:langString Overcast
rdf:langString Mild
rdf:langString Cool
rdf:langString Vice
rdf:langString Ed Jacobs
rdf:langString Raining
rdf:langString Damp
rdf:langString Bill Lockwood
rdf:langString Juvenile
rdf:langString Personnel
rdf:langString Missing Persons
rdf:langString Chilly
rdf:langString Bunco
rdf:langString Captain Steve
rdf:langString Ed Walker
rdf:langString Narcotics
rdf:langString Ben Romero
rdf:langString Captain Walker
rdf:langString Captain Nelson
rdf:langString Foggy
rdf:langString Smoggy
rdf:langString Sultry
rdf:langString Bill Lockwood *
rdf:langString Bunco Fugitive Detail
rdf:langString Bunco Fugitive Pickpocket Detail
rdf:langString Bunco*
rdf:langString Bunco-Fugitive
rdf:langString Burglary-Safe Detail
rdf:langString Captain Benny Cowell
rdf:langString Captain Bernard
rdf:langString Captain Blain Steve
rdf:langString Captain Blane Steve
rdf:langString Captain Bowling
rdf:langString Captain Calfey
rdf:langString Captain Curney
rdf:langString Captain Didan
rdf:langString Captain Didian
rdf:langString Captain Didion
rdf:langString Captain Donahoe
rdf:langString Captain Ed Walker
rdf:langString Captain Elliot
rdf:langString Captain Harry Didian
rdf:langString Captain Harry Elliot
rdf:langString Captain Hayes
rdf:langString Captain Kinslin
rdf:langString Captain Lohrman
rdf:langString Captain McCally
rdf:langString Captain McCully
rdf:langString Captain Powers
rdf:langString Captain Steed
rdf:langString Captain Stien
rdf:langString Captain Stilson
rdf:langString Captain Sullivan
rdf:langString Captain Welsh
rdf:langString Captain Wisdom
rdf:langString Chief of Detectives Ed Backstrand
rdf:langString Chief of Detectives Thad Brown
rdf:langString Chief of Detectives Thadd Brown
rdf:langString Deputy Chief Coldwell
rdf:langString Deputy Chief Coleman
rdf:langString Deputy Chief Lin White
rdf:langString Foggy and Raining
rdf:langString Hit and Run Felony Detail
rdf:langString Inspector Bowling
rdf:langString Inspector Lester
rdf:langString Lieutenant Bingham
rdf:langString Lieutenant Calfy
rdf:langString Lieutenant Jesop
rdf:langString Not Assigned
rdf:langString Rainy and Windy
rdf:langString Traffic: Accident Investigation
rdf:langString Traffic: Accident Investigation -
rdf:langString Traffic: Accident Investigation-
rdf:langString Traffic: Accident investigation -
rdf:langString Traffic: Auto Theft
xsd:double 0.22
rdf:langString The Big Break
rdf:langString The Big Impression
rdf:langString The Big Bull
rdf:langString The Big Grab
rdf:langString The Big Boys
rdf:langString The Big Dig
rdf:langString The Big Dog
rdf:langString The Big Picture
rdf:langString The Big Cat
rdf:langString The Big Jump
rdf:langString The Big Dance
rdf:langString The Big Search
rdf:langString The Big Show
rdf:langString The Big Lie
rdf:langString The Big Test
rdf:langString The Big Blast
rdf:langString The Big Deal
rdf:langString The Big Light
rdf:langString The Big Shot
rdf:langString The Big Speech
rdf:langString The Big Bounce
rdf:langString The Big Switch
rdf:langString Attempted City Hall Bombing
rdf:langString Auto Burglaries - Myra the Redhead
rdf:langString Benny Trounsel - Narcotics
rdf:langString Brick-Bat Slayer
rdf:langString Bunco - Harry Girard
rdf:langString Casco And Breen
rdf:langString Claude Jimmerson - Child Killer
rdf:langString Eric Kelby - Buried Body in Nursery
rdf:langString George Quan – The Jade Thumb Rings
rdf:langString James Vickers - Cop Killing
rdf:langString Maniac Murderer
rdf:langString Max Tyler – Escaped Convict
rdf:langString Missing Persons - Juanita Lasky
rdf:langString Mrs. Rinard, Albert Barry – Mother-in-Law Murder
rdf:langString Police Academy - Mario Koski
rdf:langString Production #1 Robbery
rdf:langString Production #2 Homicide
rdf:langString Production #4 Robbery
rdf:langString Production 4 Homicide
rdf:langString Second Hand Killer
rdf:langString Sixteen Days of Jewel Thefts
rdf:langString Spring Street Gang - Juveniles
rdf:langString Sullivan Kidnapping - The Wolf
rdf:langString The Big 38
rdf:langString The Big Actor
rdf:langString The Big Affair
rdf:langString The Big Almost No-Show
rdf:langString The Big Badge
rdf:langString The Big Bar
rdf:langString The Big Beer
rdf:langString The Big Ben
rdf:langString The Big Betty
rdf:langString The Big Bible
rdf:langString The Big Bid
rdf:langString The Big Bill
rdf:langString The Big Bindle
rdf:langString The Big Bird
rdf:langString The Big Blonde
rdf:langString The Big Bobo
rdf:langString The Big Bomb
rdf:langString The Big Book
rdf:langString The Big Bop
rdf:langString The Big Border
rdf:langString The Big Brain
rdf:langString The Big Brink
rdf:langString The Big Broad
rdf:langString The Big Building
rdf:langString The Big Bunco
rdf:langString The Big Bungalow
rdf:langString The Big Buy - Narcotics
rdf:langString The Big Cab
rdf:langString The Big Cad
rdf:langString The Big Canaries
rdf:langString The Big Car
rdf:langString The Big Carney
rdf:langString The Big Casing
rdf:langString The Big Cast
rdf:langString The Big Chance
rdf:langString The Big Check
rdf:langString The Big Chet
rdf:langString The Big Chick
rdf:langString The Big Child
rdf:langString The Big Children
rdf:langString The Big Church
rdf:langString The Big Cliff
rdf:langString The Big Close
rdf:langString The Big Coins
rdf:langString The Big Complex
rdf:langString The Big Compulsion
rdf:langString The Big Confession
rdf:langString The Big Convertible
rdf:langString The Big Cop
rdf:langString The Big Couple
rdf:langString The Big Court
rdf:langString The Big Cowboy
rdf:langString The Big Crazy
rdf:langString The Big Crime
rdf:langString The Big Cup
rdf:langString The Big Customer
rdf:langString The Big Cut
rdf:langString The Big Dare
rdf:langString The Big Daughter
rdf:langString The Big Death
rdf:langString The Big Dive
rdf:langString The Big Donation
rdf:langString The Big Dream
rdf:langString The Big Drills
rdf:langString The Big Drink
rdf:langString The Big Drive
rdf:langString The Big Eavesdrop
rdf:langString The Big Elevator
rdf:langString The Big Evans
rdf:langString The Big Fake
rdf:langString The Big Fall Guy
rdf:langString The Big False Make
rdf:langString The Big False Move
rdf:langString The Big Family
rdf:langString The Big Father
rdf:langString The Big Fellow
rdf:langString The Big Filth
rdf:langString The Big Fire
rdf:langString The Big Flight
rdf:langString The Big Fourth
rdf:langString The Big Frame
rdf:langString The Big Fraud
rdf:langString The Big Friend
rdf:langString The Big Gamble
rdf:langString The Big Gangster Part 1
rdf:langString The Big Gangster Part 2
rdf:langString The Big Gap
rdf:langString The Big Genius
rdf:langString The Big Gent Part 1
rdf:langString The Big Gent Part 2
rdf:langString The Big Girl
rdf:langString The Big Gone
rdf:langString The Big Grandma
rdf:langString The Big Grifter
rdf:langString The Big Guilt
rdf:langString The Big Gun Part 1
rdf:langString The Big Gun Part 2
rdf:langString The Big Ham
rdf:langString The Big Hands
rdf:langString The Big Handsome Bandit
rdf:langString The Big Hat
rdf:langString The Big Hate
rdf:langString The Big Heel
rdf:langString The Big Help
rdf:langString The Big Hit and Run Killer
rdf:langString The Big Holdup
rdf:langString The Big Honeymoon
rdf:langString The Big Housemaid
rdf:langString The Big Impossible
rdf:langString The Big Imposter
rdf:langString The Big In-Laws
rdf:langString The Big Informant
rdf:langString The Big Job
rdf:langString The Big Joke
rdf:langString The Big Jolt
rdf:langString The Big Jules
rdf:langString The Big Juvenile Division
rdf:langString The Big Key
rdf:langString The Big Kid
rdf:langString The Big Kill
rdf:langString The Big Knife
rdf:langString The Big Lamp
rdf:langString The Big Late Script
rdf:langString The Big Laugh
rdf:langString The Big Lay-Out
rdf:langString The Big Lease
rdf:langString The Big Lens
rdf:langString The Big Lift
rdf:langString The Big Lilly
rdf:langString The Big Limp
rdf:langString The Big Listen
rdf:langString The Big Little Jesus
rdf:langString The Big Little Mother
rdf:langString The Big Locker
rdf:langString The Big Look
rdf:langString The Big Love
rdf:langString The Big Lover
rdf:langString The Big Mail
rdf:langString The Big Mailman
rdf:langString The Big Make
rdf:langString The Big Man Part 1
rdf:langString The Big Man Part 2
rdf:langString The Big Mannequin
rdf:langString The Big Market
rdf:langString The Big Mask Part 1
rdf:langString The Big Mask Part 2
rdf:langString The Big Match
rdf:langString The Big Meet
rdf:langString The Big Mink
rdf:langString The Big Missus
rdf:langString The Big Mole
rdf:langString The Big Momma
rdf:langString The Big Mother
rdf:langString The Big Mug
rdf:langString The Big Mustache
rdf:langString The Big Net
rdf:langString The Big New Years
rdf:langString The Big No Tooth
rdf:langString The Big Note
rdf:langString The Big Number
rdf:langString The Big Odd
rdf:langString The Big Office
rdf:langString The Big Overtime
rdf:langString The Big Paint
rdf:langString The Big Pair
rdf:langString The Big Paper
rdf:langString The Big Parrot
rdf:langString The Big Partner
rdf:langString The Big Phone Call
rdf:langString The Big Pick
rdf:langString The Big Pill
rdf:langString The Big Pipe
rdf:langString The Big Plant
rdf:langString The Big Plea
rdf:langString The Big Poison
rdf:langString The Big Present
rdf:langString The Big Press
rdf:langString The Big Producer
rdf:langString The Big Pug
rdf:langString The Big Purse
rdf:langString The Big Quack
rdf:langString The Big Rain
rdf:langString The Big Ray
rdf:langString The Big Red Part 1
rdf:langString The Big Red Part 2
rdf:langString The Big Rescue
rdf:langString The Big Revision
rdf:langString The Big Revolt
rdf:langString The Big Rip
rdf:langString The Big Rod
rdf:langString The Big Roll
rdf:langString The Big Rose
rdf:langString The Big Ruling
rdf:langString The Big Run
rdf:langString The Big Rush
rdf:langString The Big Safe
rdf:langString The Big Saint
rdf:langString The Big Saw
rdf:langString The Big Scrapbook
rdf:langString The Big Screen
rdf:langString The Big September Man
rdf:langString The Big Set
rdf:langString The Big Set-Up
rdf:langString The Big Seventeen
rdf:langString The Big Shakedown
rdf:langString The Big Sheet
rdf:langString The Big Shirt
rdf:langString The Big Shock
rdf:langString The Big Shoplift
rdf:langString The Big Siege
rdf:langString The Big Signet
rdf:langString The Big Sisters
rdf:langString The Big Slip
rdf:langString The Big Slug
rdf:langString The Big Small
rdf:langString The Big Smart Guy
rdf:langString The Big Smoke
rdf:langString The Big Sophomore
rdf:langString The Big Sorrow
rdf:langString The Big Sour
rdf:langString The Big Squealer
rdf:langString The Big Stand
rdf:langString The Big Steal
rdf:langString The Big Stop
rdf:langString The Big Story Man
rdf:langString The Big Streetcar
rdf:langString The Big String
rdf:langString The Big Strip
rdf:langString The Big Student
rdf:langString The Big Sucker
rdf:langString The Big TV
rdf:langString The Big Talk
rdf:langString The Big Tar Baby
rdf:langString The Big Tear
rdf:langString The Big Thank You
rdf:langString The Big Threat
rdf:langString The Big Tie
rdf:langString The Big Token
rdf:langString The Big Tomato
rdf:langString The Big Tooth
rdf:langString The Big Trial
rdf:langString The Big Trio
rdf:langString The Big Trunk
rdf:langString The Big Try
rdf:langString The Big Underground
rdf:langString The Big Waiter
rdf:langString The Big Walk
rdf:langString The Big Want
rdf:langString The Big Want Ad
rdf:langString The Big Watch
rdf:langString The Big Whiff
rdf:langString The Big Will
rdf:langString The Big Winchester
rdf:langString The Big Wish
rdf:langString The Big Youngster
rdf:langString The Garbage Chute Murder – Laura Barkley
rdf:langString The Helen Corday Murder
rdf:langString The Red Light Bandit
rdf:langString The Roseland Roof Murders
rdf:langString Tom Laval - Truck Hi-jackers
rdf:langString Dragnet, the radio series, premiered on NBC on June 3, 1949, and ended on February 26, 1957. A set of 314 original episodes aired between June 1949 and September 1955 with ".22 Rifle For Christmas" and "The Big Little Jesus" usually re-run during Christmas time.Re-runs were broadcast from the end of September 1955 to February 1957. The vast majority of the episodes are available free on various sites around the Internet.
xsd:date 1954-01-05
xsd:date 1954-01-12
xsd:date 1954-01-19
xsd:date 1954-01-26
xsd:date 1954-02-02
xsd:date 1954-02-09
xsd:date 1954-02-16
xsd:date 1954-02-23
xsd:date 1954-03-02
xsd:date 1954-03-09
xsd:date 1954-03-16
xsd:date 1954-03-23
xsd:date 1954-03-30
xsd:date 1954-04-06
xsd:date 1954-04-13
xsd:date 1954-04-20
xsd:date 1954-04-27
xsd:date 1954-05-04
xsd:date 1954-05-11
xsd:date 1954-05-18
xsd:date 1954-05-25
xsd:date 1954-06-01
xsd:date 1954-06-08
xsd:date 1954-06-15
xsd:date 1954-06-22
xsd:date 1954-06-29
xsd:date 1954-07-06
xsd:date 1954-07-13
xsd:date 1954-07-20
xsd:date 1954-07-27
xsd:date 1954-08-03
xsd:date 1954-08-10
xsd:date 1954-08-17
xsd:date 1954-08-24
xsd:date 1954-08-31
xsd:date 1954-09-07
xsd:date 1954-09-14
xsd:date 1954-09-21
xsd:date 1954-09-28
xsd:date 1954-10-05
xsd:date 1954-10-12
xsd:date 1954-10-19
xsd:date 1954-10-26
xsd:date 1954-11-02
xsd:date 1954-11-09
xsd:date 1954-11-16
xsd:date 1954-11-23
xsd:date 1954-11-30
xsd:date 1954-12-07
xsd:date 1954-12-14
xsd:date 1954-12-21
xsd:date 1954-12-28
xsd:date 1955-01-04
xsd:date 1955-01-11
xsd:date 1955-01-18
xsd:date 1955-01-25
xsd:date 1955-02-01
xsd:date 1955-02-08
xsd:date 1955-02-15
xsd:date 1955-02-22
xsd:date 1955-03-01
xsd:date 1955-03-08
xsd:date 1955-03-15
xsd:date 1955-03-22
xsd:date 1955-03-29
xsd:date 1955-04-05
xsd:date 1955-04-12
xsd:date 1955-04-19
xsd:date 1955-04-26
xsd:date 1955-05-03
xsd:date 1955-05-10
xsd:date 1955-05-17
xsd:date 1955-05-24
xsd:date 1955-05-31
xsd:date 1955-06-07
xsd:date 1955-06-14
xsd:date 1955-06-21
xsd:date 1955-06-28
xsd:date 1955-07-05
xsd:date 1955-07-12
xsd:date 1955-07-19
xsd:date 1955-07-26
xsd:date 1955-08-02
xsd:date 1955-08-09
xsd:date 1955-08-16
xsd:date 1955-08-23
xsd:date 1955-08-30
xsd:date 1955-09-06
xsd:date 1955-09-13
xsd:date 1955-09-20
xsd:date 1955-09-27
xsd:date 1955-10-04
xsd:date 1955-10-11
xsd:date 1955-10-18
xsd:date 1955-10-25
xsd:date 1955-11-01
xsd:date 1955-11-08
xsd:date 1955-11-15
xsd:date 1955-11-22
xsd:date 1955-11-29
xsd:date 1955-12-06
xsd:date 1955-12-13
xsd:date 1955-12-20
xsd:date 1955-12-27
xsd:date 1956-01-03
xsd:date 1956-01-10
xsd:date 1956-01-17
xsd:date 1956-01-24
xsd:date 1956-01-31
xsd:date 1956-02-07
xsd:date 1956-02-14
xsd:date 1956-02-21
xsd:date 1956-02-28
xsd:date 1956-03-06
xsd:date 1956-03-13
xsd:date 1956-03-20
xsd:date 1956-03-27
xsd:date 1956-04-03
xsd:date 1956-04-10
xsd:date 1956-04-17
xsd:date 1956-04-24
xsd:date 1956-05-01
xsd:date 1956-05-08
xsd:date 1956-05-15
xsd:date 1956-05-22
xsd:date 1956-05-29
xsd:date 1956-06-05
xsd:date 1956-06-12
xsd:date 1956-06-19
xsd:date 1956-06-26
xsd:date 1956-09-18
xsd:date 1956-09-25
xsd:date 1956-10-02
xsd:date 1956-10-09
xsd:date 1956-10-16
xsd:date 1956-10-23
xsd:date 1956-10-30
xsd:date 1956-11-06
xsd:date 1956-11-13
xsd:date 1956-11-20
xsd:date 1956-11-27
xsd:date 1956-12-04
xsd:date 1956-12-11
xsd:date 1956-12-18
xsd:date 1956-12-25
xsd:date 1957-01-01
xsd:date 1957-01-08
xsd:date 1957-01-15
xsd:date 1957-01-22
xsd:date 1957-01-29
xsd:date 1957-02-05
xsd:date 1957-02-12
xsd:date 1957-02-19
xsd:date 1957-02-26
rdf:langString The Big Escape
rdf:langString The Werewolf
rdf:langString The Impostor
rdf:langString Missing Woman
rdf:langString A Mad Killer at Large
rdf:langString Conrad Buckley - Anthracene
rdf:langString Forgery - Johnny Casco, Marty Breen
rdf:langString Frank Chaney - The Gentleman Bandit: Part 1
rdf:langString Frank Chaney - The Gentleman Bandit: Part 2
rdf:langString George Slocum, Thief
rdf:langString Hugh Taylor - Wife Murderer
rdf:langString Master Jewel Thief
rdf:langString Quick Trigger Gunmen
rdf:langString Robbery-Murder - Juan Pedillo, Wesley Guttridge
rdf:langString The Big Missing
rdf:langString The Big Smut Press
rdf:langString The Blitz Bandits
rdf:langString The Nickel Plated Gun
rdf:langString Who Killed Helen Corday?
xsd:integer 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318
xsd:date 1949-06-03
xsd:date 1949-06-10
xsd:date 1949-06-17
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xsd:date 1949-07-28
xsd:date 1949-08-04
xsd:date 1949-08-11
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xsd:date 1949-09-01
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xsd:date 1949-11-03
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xsd:date 1949-12-01
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xsd:date 1949-12-22
xsd:date 1949-12-29
xsd:date 1950-01-05
xsd:date 1950-01-12
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xsd:date 1950-10-26
xsd:date 1950-11-02
xsd:date 1950-11-09
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xsd:date 1950-11-23
xsd:date 1950-11-30
xsd:date 1950-12-07
xsd:date 1950-12-14
xsd:date 1950-12-21
xsd:date 1950-12-28
xsd:date 1951-01-04
xsd:date 1951-01-11
xsd:date 1951-01-18
xsd:date 1951-01-25
xsd:date 1951-02-01
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rdf:langString
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 107204

data from the linked data cloud