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A cold case that should never have gone cold.
One murdered professor. One shaken town. Eighty-six years of unanswered questions.
On May 7, 1940, Professor Louis B. Allyn was shot inside his own home in Westfield, Massachusetts. The killer entered through an unlocked door, fired five quiet shots, and disappeared. Nothing was taken. No one was convicted. The case became the town's only unsolved murder-and Bitter Proof reconstructs that crime as a gripping work of historical true crime, cold case investigation, and buried-evidence narrative.
Louis B. Allyn was not an ordinary victim. He was a chemistry professor, pure food crusader, investigative writer, and public-health advocate whose work exposed adulterated food, challenged local business interests, and helped carry the fight for consumer protection into public life. By 1940, he had built a career that earned admiration, resentment, and enemies in more than one direction. His execution-style killing did not silence a minor figure. It silenced a man who had spent years naming dangerous practices and confronting powerful interests.
Adrian Halden approaches this unsolved murder with factual rigor and narrative discipline. Drawing from police reports, court transcripts, crime scene photographs, contemporary news coverage, recovered physical evidence, and modern investigative review, he rebuilds the case piece by piece. The result is a true crime investigation that does not rely on invention or sensational shortcuts. Instead, it follows the record through conflicting theories, missing files, forensic clues, institutional failure, and the long shadow of a Massachusetts cold case that never fully closed.
Why did this small-town murder remain unsolved? Was it revenge tied to Allyn's pure food activism? A business grudge that lasted for decades? Organized crime retaliation linked to his Prohibition testimony? A personal scandal? International intrigue connected to his research? Bitter Proof does not flatten the mystery into a single easy answer. It shows how an unsolved mystery hardens over time-especially when evidence is buried, records vanish, and the truth is left to outlast the people who first held it.
This is also the story of aftermath. A widow who lived for decades without answers. Investigators who reopened the file years later. A town that never fully recovered from the crime that entered its civic memory and stayed there. The book follows not only the murder itself, but the long life of the case: the lost evidence, the revived interest, the modern forensic work, and the stubborn question that still hangs over Westfield.
What can readers expect? A serious, victim-centered account that blends historical true crime, forensic detail, investigative tension, and social context without pretending certainty where certainty no longer exists. This is true crime for readers who want more than spectacle-for readers drawn to cold cases, unsolved mysteries, institutional breakdown, and the human cost of justice delayed.
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Some crimes fade. Some stay in the walls.
Open Bitter Proof and step into a case that never stopped asking to be solved....