Nadine, a demure young woman, confesses to her psychiatrist on tape under a truth serum that she poisoned her uncle. Evidence has been tampered with and planted, and Perry is in hot water as... Read allNadine, a demure young woman, confesses to her psychiatrist on tape under a truth serum that she poisoned her uncle. Evidence has been tampered with and planted, and Perry is in hot water as the police believe he is responsible.Nadine, a demure young woman, confesses to her psychiatrist on tape under a truth serum that she poisoned her uncle. Evidence has been tampered with and planted, and Perry is in hot water as the police believe he is responsible.
- Stand Owner
- (as Joe Mell)
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Ethical dilemma and evidence tampering
What does Atwater do. If he withholds evidence of a crime he could be arrested regardless of patient confidentiality. If he reports it and there wasn't a murder he could be sued. Those are the questions that would trouble Oliver Wendell Holmes let alone Perry Mason.
When he takes the case Burr finds himself accused of evidence tampering first by Ray Collins, second by William Talman. Now he has to find evidence and clear his name as well as White's.
He does find the murderer right at the very end and someone you'd least suspect. There were in fact any number of people who would like to have killed this particular victim who was Christine White's uncle.
I have a feeling that Perry Mason will take this murderer's case if that helps any in your guessing.
The defendant may be demure, but apparently she still has allure...
Later, when she visits her fiance's chemistry lab - he's a chemist himself - she steals some cyanide. Her uncle drops dead of cyanide poisoning shortly after she serves him some soup. She has a mental breakdown upon his sudden death, is hospitalized, and confesses to her uncle's murder, although she is in a distressed state. Perry is on the case.
Nadine is made up to be a rather plain young woman. She has a very short haircut that does not complement her and she wears clothes that don't complement her. She seems to have a problem with confidence and with helplessness. But in spite of these issues, her fiance does love her and apparently so does one of the other suspects, to the point that his wife is jealous of her.
This episode was a rather average one for Perry Mason, but even average Perry Mason is good viewing because of the cast. There is one humorous thread I see going on here. In this episode, as in "The Case of the Drowning Duck", Perry has to take a trip to the desert community of Logan City. In both episodes, each time the cast of Perry Mason is visiting there, they frequently wipe their brow with a handkerchief, I guess to underscore that it is hot there, just in case you forget that this is the desert. A rather pedestrian touch made cute by the fact that Perry Mason is usually such a subtle show.
Good who done it show..
It involves a sweet girl named Nadine (Christine White) who is a niece of a terrible old ogre named Uncle Martin Wellman (Alexander Campbell). When she tells her uncle that she is engaged to John Locke, he becomes upset basically telling her that she was no good and shows her some paperwork (we do not know what is in those papers at that time) but it makes her cry.
Her uncle has made her feel so bad that she is thinking about suicide and places some poison pills in her purse. However the poison gets into her uncle's milk and the old man dies. Later she goes to a shrink that gives her some 'truth serum' and she says she killed Uncle Martin. And Perry is defending her with a wide range of evidence against her.
There are bottles, tapes and lead shots all over the courtroom which makes the case interesting. Just when you think you know who killed Uncle Martin you find out that you were wrong.
This is a good watch for us Perry viewers. Even if we know that a confession under doctor induced drugs could never be introduced into evidence in any courtroom.
Should have aired on Father's Day.
Did you know
- TriviaAt least one of the issues raised here - the question of whether criminal tendencies can be passed down genetically - seems "inspired" by a popular play and film of the time, The Bad Seed (1956). Among the cast of the 1956 film version of Seed was William Hopper (Paul Drake).
- GoofsThe Paul Hahn character is officially credited as "Ballistic's Man"; there should be no apostrophe in "Ballistics".
- Quotes
[last lines]
Capt. Hugo: You don't owe me nothin', and I don't owe you nothin'. The way I look at it, I'll still come out ahead.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 52m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1






