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Lake Headley


Lake Wellington Headley (August 31, 1930 - May 15, 1992) was a private detective and writer. He developed a name for himself as supersleuth. He also wrote about much of the crime he investigated in a series of true crime books. Some of the evidence he uncovered caused convictions to be overturned.

Lake Headley was born in Indiana. He attended Goshen High School in Indiana. In the yearbook for 1948, at around age 16, he stated in that he wished to be a lawyer.

He began his career as a police officer in Las Vegas, but his killing of a suspect, as a young officer, prompted him to quit policing and become a p.i. In 1962, he left the force, where he was a detective, to become one of the first private detectives in Las Vegas. He went on to work for thirty years in the field, and was considered one of the best. Los Angeles prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi called Headley, "the best private investigator on earth."

During the Patty Hearst kidnapping saga, two of the families of SLA members, including Willie Wolfe's father, contracted Headley to investigate the matter.

Headley concluded his investigation, and filed a sworn affidavit of his findings. Among these included:

On May 4, 1974, Headley, along with freelance writer Donald Freed, held a press conference in San Francisco. They presented 400 pages of documentation of their findings, some of which included:

On May 17, 1974, The New York Times ran the story of DeFreeze and the Los Angeles Police Department. However, the story was largely overlooked due to this being the day of the shoot out and conflagration that killed DeFreeze and five other members of the SLA.

In a book he co-wrote with freelance writer, William Hoffman, Vegas P.I.: The Life and Times of America's Greatest Detective, he presented well-documented evidence that Donald DeFreeze, was a police informant and an agent provocateur.


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