The Two Million Dollar Stowaway
Thu, Dec 07, 1978
  • S1.E9
  • The Two Million Dollar Stowaway
Warren Custer (Bobby Van), a charming grifter, has managed to swindle various people out of over $2 million. While being arraigned in a Los Angeles courthouse, he "accidentally" bumps his guard into a charming lady and knocks over her purse, then gets on board the elevator with the lady while the guard is picking up the contents of the purse. Soon Custer is on board a Mexican-bound cruise ship -- not such a good idea, because the U.S. Marshal he duped, along with many of his other swindling victims, have also gotten tickets (as have Eddie and his girlfriend). Custer poses as an engine-room worker and looks for his chance to jump overboard, where a small craft piloted by a Mexican fortune hunter (Thom Christopher, with hair) will pick him up. Custer does jump, but a couple on the deck below see him fall and shout out an alarm along with another minor character, a sees-all tells-all assistant purser who's been following Custer around. The ship mounts a rescue effort, along with the fortune hunter (whose partner drove his boat away at the sign of trouble). When Custer is winched aboard, he's dead. It looks like drowning for a minute, but then the marshal (who's performing CPR) notices multiple stab wounds. The odds are that someone got to Custer just before his jump and let him have it (his "seabag," which was tied to his wrist and presumably contained the money, has been cut loose), but there's the chance that the Mexican man could have done it in the water. When the Mexican man confirms that Custer had converted the money to diamonds and had a key to a safety deposit box in Nicaragua, everybody starts looking for the key -- including multiple suspects. Ron Masak makes his first appearance on a Peter S. Fischer series (he plays the ex-football-player husband of the woman who helped Custer flee the courthouse); this appearance helped get him the long-running role of "Murder, She Wrote'"s Sheriff Mort Metzger. Filmed mostly aboard the Queen Mary.
8.6 /10
Nightmare at Pendragon Castle
Charles Pendragon models himself on King Arthur of Britain. At his mansion Camelot is a broadsword stuck into a huge stone. Only he can pull it out like Excalibur. One night, after abusing guests, he is murdered with it - all are suspects.
7.7 /10
Where There's Smoke
While on vacation, Eddie volunteers his services to a frightened young woman accused of arson and the murder of a prominent physician.
0 /10
Murder, Murder

Thu, Sep 28, 1978
Julie Heller, a nightclub singer, accused of murdering a wealthy industrialist claims she was busy killing someone else at the time.
0 /10
Murder on the Flip Side
A recording-company executive is murdered -- twice. At the beginning of the show, a young songwriter hears gunshots coming from the executive's office and hears him yell for help. She yanks open the door and he falls out dead, shot. But the bullet didn't kill him. To ease his pain, he had poured himself a drink of booze and THAT drink was poisoned! The plot thickens when the owner of the record label is found stabbed to death in her full bathtub. The songwriter is the unwitting main suspect in the executive's murder, but how could she have killed the boss (whose autopsy shows she was alive well after the death of the executive) when she was being interviewed by the cops? Something stinks besides the crooked record deals the two victims were feuding over.
7.5 /10
The Intimate Friends of Janet Wilde
Rich and beautiful model Janet Wilde walks out to a car, but when she starts it, it explodes. Drunken poet Andy Kilraine, one of her circle, is the main suspect, but Eddie, also agonising over his relationship with Lacey, has his doubts.
0 /10
Breakout to Murder
Young, disturbed Millie Greer stole a car to flee her hospital, but cannot see in the rain. Car lights blind her, and she hits and kills a man on the road. Eddie is tasked by her psychiatrist to prove her innocent, and aid in her recovery.
0 /10
The Two Million Dollar Stowaway
Warren Custer (Bobby Van), a charming grifter, has managed to swindle various people out of over $2 million. While being arraigned in a Los Angeles courthouse, he "accidentally" bumps his guard into a charming lady and knocks over her purse, then gets on board the elevator with the lady while the guard is picking up the contents of the purse. Soon Custer is on board a Mexican-bound cruise ship -- not such a good idea, because the U.S. Marshal he duped, along with many of his other swindling victims, have also gotten tickets (as have Eddie and his girlfriend). Custer poses as an engine-room worker and looks for his chance to jump overboard, where a small craft piloted by a Mexican fortune hunter (Thom Christopher, with hair) will pick him up. Custer does jump, but a couple on the deck below see him fall and shout out an alarm along with another minor character, a sees-all tells-all assistant purser who's been following Custer around. The ship mounts a rescue effort, along with the fortune hunter (whose partner drove his boat away at the sign of trouble). When Custer is winched aboard, he's dead. It looks like drowning for a minute, but then the marshal (who's performing CPR) notices multiple stab wounds. The odds are that someone got to Custer just before his jump and let him have it (his "seabag," which was tied to his wrist and presumably contained the money, has been cut loose), but there's the chance that the Mexican man could have done it in the water. When the Mexican man confirms that Custer had converted the money to diamonds and had a key to a safety deposit box in Nicaragua, everybody starts looking for the key -- including multiple suspects. Ron Masak makes his first appearance on a Peter S. Fischer series (he plays the ex-football-player husband of the woman who helped Custer flee the courthouse); this appearance helped get him the long-running role of "Murder, She Wrote'"s Sheriff Mort Metzger. Filmed mostly aboard the Queen Mary.
8.6 /10
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