April 4, 1976. John Ball was a successful writer from the start. His first novel In The Heat Of The Night,
introduced his most successful character, Virgil Tibbs, won the Edgar
for Best First Novel, and was made into an Oscar-winning movie and a TV
series.
One thing he did with his new money was start collecting jade.
Unfortunately those precious stones collected unwanted attention. On
this date, early in the morning, Ball opened the door and found himself
looking at a huge man with a .38 automatic in his hand. Ball, with a
black belt in karate, decided not to fight. He was soon bound in
masking tape, barely able to breath. In less than twenty minutes the
precious jade figurines "some of which I had carried back from the
Orient on my lap to guard against breakage," had been dumped into a
pillow case and carried off.
The cops, using a variety of methods - including hypnosis! - identified the bad guy, who was caught and convicted.
You can read Ball's whole account of the ordeal (titled "211 Dossier") in I, Witness,
a remarkable collection of essays by mystery writers about their
experiences with true crimes. My favorite part of his essay is the TV reporter who
asked him to "please remove the bust of Hitler from the mantlepiece"
before they started filming. Ball explained that it was Poe not Hitler
(his Edgar award), and it wasn't going anywhere.
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