I am from the area but for the longest time did not know exactly where the murder took place.The hill is approx 200 ft across from Suffolk to the Business out the front... The bat was supposedly found 50 ft from body.<modsnip: Contacting case players is not allowed>
One would think the bat with those markings would be a very good piece of evidence and would help to narrow the suspects, but as far as I know, it has been a dead end as far as identifying the bat, who owned it, did anyone recognize it, who had used it, etc. Wood bats were often very cheap back then, not like bats today, so it may have been and old bat that was lying around somewhere.It would be useful to see other photos of the bat. It could be dated by the type of label it has. If it was in fact "pinned" or glued and taped to repair it, then it would no longer have been used for baseball games, but rather owned by a kid who picked it up after a game or practice in which it was broken. Today, wooden bats are only used in professional baseball - not in schools or little league.
Markings stamped on the end of the handle by the maker usually are only a single numeral. A "1" or "2" would indicate the weight of the bat, such as 31 ounces or 32 ounces respectively. Other markings scratched, carved, written, or stamped over the numeral would indicate that the bat was used by a specific ball player. Bat boys for the teams would know what the markings stood for.
It would appear that given that it was the 70s with local LE investigating and it had rained heavily before they found the bat, no other useful evidence, such as fingerprints, DNA (not known back then) was ever taken from the bat.
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