Dallas, TX
Rena Pederson’s ‘King of Diamonds’ follows jewel thief who terrorized Dallas’ uber-rich
It was a warm night downtown on April 4, and the sold-out audience inside the Dallas Museum of Art leaned in as Rena Pederson talked about her true-crime tour-de-force, King of Diamonds.
“An extremely talented jewel thief – Houdini-like – stole millions from the richest people in Dallas and got away with it,” she told the crowd in her West Texas accent, as she sat in an armchair under a giant overhead screen, her silver hair catching the light. “So who was he? How did he do it? And why couldn’t they catch him?”
I’d seen many literary bigwigs cast their spell at Arts & Letters Live – Chuck Klosterman, David Grann, Lauren Groff – but I’d never seen an audience slip inside the palm of a speaker so snugly. Like the author herself, a spry 76, many attendees lived on the AARP side of things. Gray hair and tortoise-shell glasses, silk wraps and pressed slacks.
Maybe it was because the drama of the book hit so close to home. The real-life King of Diamonds plagued Dallas high society from the late 1950s to 1970, grabbing headlines and confounding police as he rummaged through the drawers and private boudoirs of the city’s untouchable families on exclusive streets with names like Strait, Park and Beverly. The Murchisons, the Hunts, the Richardsons – families whose names are emblazoned on bridges and buildings – fell victim to the cunning cat burglar who moved to the beat of the city’s social calendar, slipping in side windows and back doors after debutante balls or charity galas to snatch rare diamond rings and showstopping necklaces worn to dazzle.
King of Diamonds, released earlier this month, unfolds this gripping saga, interspersed with Pederson’s own dogged quest to crack the 50-year cold case, but it was more than a local connection that ensnared the crowd. Drawing on 200 interviews conducted over six years, the former Dallas journalist ropes in some of the most legendary characters in Dallas’ pre-Kennedy glory days: Jack Ruby, Candy Barr, Carlos Campisi, the Dixie Mafia. Some names were unfamiliar to me but shouldn’t be, like Nancy Hamon, the society maven who once rode into one of her outré parties on an elephant.
Vivid photos flashed on the giant screen behind Pederson, though few elicited a gasp like the stunning interior of the Graf House, an early target of the jewel thief. A modernist mansion in Preston Hollow designed by Edward Durell Stone (the man behind New York’s Museum of Modern Art), the house boasted an only-in-Dallas opulence that included a dining table improbably situated on a circular slab in the middle of an indoor swimming pool, a dinner party on the world’s smallest island.
But as Pederson grew closer to the story, she also began touching the seedy underbelly of a city that still holds many secrets. Mafia, spies, celebrities, gambling dens, sex trafficking – all of it wrapped up in the glittering bow of high society.
“This is one of the best books about Dallas I’ve ever read,” bestselling author Bryan Burrough told me by email, and he’s quite the authority, since his 2009 book The Big Rich covers similar territory. Burrough, a longtime Vanity Fair contributor who lives in Austin, was the first person to tell me about Pederson’s new book, which sat in PDF form on my laptop until a journalist friend texted me about it. “I can’t tell you the last time I gobbled up a book like this,” she wrote, thus kickstarting my own obsession.
I was still on chapter 11 (of 41) when I stepped into a crowded elevator in the DMA’s parking garage earlier this month, where well-heeled ticket holders theorized about who did it, and I was so eager to avoid any spoilers that I literally covered my ears like a child around too much cussing.
Rumor had it, Pederson named the real-life King of Diamonds in the book. She cracked the case! Inside the bustling theater, stragglers heading to their seats, I passed true-crime great Skip Hollandsworth, arm draped casually over the wooden armrest of his chair.
“Why is this book so good?” I asked, and the author of more Texas Monthly barn burners than I care to name – at least of two of which, Bernie and the upcoming Hit Man, have been adapted for film – blinked a few times as though I’d asked a very simple question, and then said, “Because it was only her story to tell.”
I met Pederson inside the Statler, the mid-century hotel that features in her book and abuts The Dallas Morning News offices. These days, Pederson lives in Austin, closer to her grandchildren (the book is dedicated to them), but she spent much of her career in Dallas, where she was the first female editorial page director and then vice president of The News. I walked into Overeasy, an upscale diner on the first floor, to find her tapping on her phone.
“Isn’t that the great thing about email?” she asked me, as the hostess led us to a long booth. “You always have a friend.”
In person, Pederson is 5′1″ and casually stylish. As she writes in King of Diamonds, “I was as unassuming as Agatha Christie’s rumpled Miss Marple, but without the hat and knitting.” Rumpled, no, but unassuming, yes. I couldn’t help thinking of Joan Didion’s line in Slouching Towards Bethlehem: “My only advantage as a reporter is that I am so physically small, so temperamentally unobtrusive, and so neurotically inarticulate that people tend to forget that my presence runs counter to their interests. And it always does. That is one last thing to remember: Writers are always selling somebody out.”
Pederson wasn’t inarticulate either. (I doubt Didion was, for that matter, but we never met for breakfast.) As Pederson and I chatted over lattes, she struck me exactly as she had in print: Texas-friendly and whip-smart. A copy of the hardback sat at the table’s edge, and the striking orange cover caught the eye of a random guy who stopped at the table.
“She wrote that,” I told him, and he did a double take at the little white-haired lady before saying, “Oh, snap.”
Rena Pederson first met the King of Diamonds the way most people did back then: through the headlines. She was 23 when she moved to Dallas in 1970, straight from grad school in New York to work for United Press International, better known as UPI. Back then, journalism was all teletype machines and chain-smoking at the desk, and Pederson was working the overnight shift when she read about the unsolved mystery of the burglar who, like Cary Grant in To Catch a Thief, had committed the perfect crime.
Whoever the King of Diamonds turned out to be – an architect, a society writer, the wayward son of a Las Vegas casino owner, there were theories aplenty – the trail went dead over the next decades as Pederson’s career caught fire. She became a heavyweight at The News and interviewed Margaret Thatcher, Fidel Castro and Princess Grace. During the Bush administration, she worked as a senior speechwriter and advisor at the U.S. Department of State. In 2001, she wrote her first book, What’s Next?, about women who reinvent themselves in midlife, and she landed on The Oprah Winfrey Show.
“Should I send her a note saying I finally followed my own advice?” Pederson wrote me later by email. “I think I will.”
Pederson had technically retired by the time she cracked her knuckles on King of Diamonds six years ago. But she was still a writer in her bones and had been ever since she was a teenager working at the San Angelo Standard-Times. She was too young to drive, so the cops stopped by the paper to pick her up if a crime hit. Hard to beat that kind of adventure, although the discovery at the heart of King of Diamonds might come close.
It’s bizarre the cops had never tracked down the culprit, though they got close. The book details the enormous lengths detectives went to catch the guy, but November 1963 did leave them with other mysteries to solve: the assassination of a president, for instance.
Half a century later, as the epic jewel thief’s story threatened to fade from memory, Pederson couldn’t stop tugging on the thread. “Since 1970, I had endured five publishers, one husband, two rambunctious sons, and a lifetime of newspaper deadlines,” she wrote in the book’s introduction. “I could look for the thief with seasoned eyes.”
And did she ever. King of Diamonds is a how-to-manual for aspiring gumshoe reporters. Strangers hang up on Pederson, sometimes angrily, she plumbs records and court transcripts, she sends flowers to subjects reluctant to speak with her (doesn’t work) and eats fried okra at the Golden Corral with reticent cops (does work). In other words, she displays the nimble fingers and sly entrées of the jewel thief himself, whose identity she reveals at the end of the book, and I would never dare spoil that. (Reasonable questions: Did he act alone? Was he even a he?)
It wasn’t all catch-me-if-you-can good times, however. The underbelly of Dallas has stayed unlit for decades, and there’s a reason. Pederson was nosing around mob ties when strange things started happening. “Look somewhere else,” said a message sent to her house. Her computer got mysteriously hacked. She decided to get a tattoo of a dagger on her right ankle. A talisman, a warning to anyone who underestimated her, though she also got a better alarm system.
“I may be short, but I’m a tough ol’ boot,” she told the crowd at the DMA while speaking with fellow Dallas media pioneer Lee Cullum in the interview portion of her Arts & Letters Live event.
“These women are so inspiring,” Arts & Letters Live director Michelle Witcher whispered to me as the show began. Tough, beautiful, brilliant, funny: Who could be scared of getting older when aging looked like this?
There was one question everyone wanted to know. “Any plans for a movie?” an audience member asked.
“God, I hope so,” Pederson said, never skipping a beat. “Know anyone?”
Dallas, TX
Maxx Crosby-Ravens Trade Dead, Opening Perfect Cowboys Opportunity
Dallas Cowboys Nation’s hopes of landing superstar pass rusher Maxx Crosby were dashed last weekend when it was announced that he was being traded to the Baltimore Ravens. However, less than 24 hours before the new year, the trade has fallen apart.
On Tuesday night, the Las Vegas Raiders announced that the Ravens have backed out of the trade.
“The Baltimore Ravens have backed out of our trade agreement for Maxx Crosby,” the statement read. “We will have no further comment at this time.”
The news sends a major ripple for the league, with the Crosby sweepstakes once again open. Before his trade to the Ravens, the Cowboys were considered one of the teams closely monitoring the situation and a team that made a legitimate offer for Crosby.
At this time, there is no word on why the trade between Las Vegas and Baltimore fell through. When the trade was first reported, the Raiders were set to receive a 2026 and 2027 first-round pick from the Ravens.
Now, his future is in limbo. Before he was traded to the Ravens, it was believed that the Cowboys, Chicago Bears, and Los Angeles Rams were the top candidates to land him. In fact, the Cowboys were “considered runner-ups” in the sweepstakes.
Dallas’ Original Trade Offer
According to ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler, the Cowboys initially offered the No. 12 overall pick in the 2026 draft, a 2027 second-round pick, and an unnamed veteran player.
“Dallas kept a hard line throughout. The franchise wasn’t willing to part with two first-round picks, hoping its 12th pick in April’s draft, plus a future second-rounder, would be enough to entice Las Vegas. Dallas was also willing to package a veteran player to sweeten the deal, but Vegas wasn’t interested in that. The Raiders prioritized picks,” Fowler wrote.
Last season, Crosby recorded 73 total tackles, 28 tackles for a loss, 20 quarterback hits, 10 sacks, two forced fumbles, and an interception.
We’ll have to see if Dallas ends up being his new home, now that the team has a second chance to make something special happen, but there will be some serious competition. The 2026 NFL calendar year officially begins on Wednesday, March 11, at 4:00 p.m. ET.
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Dallas, TX
Dallas weather: Severe storms bring hail and tornado threats | See timing
DALLAS – Severe thunderstorms are forecast to return to North Texas late Tuesday, bringing threats of damaging hail, high winds and localized flooding. While the primary concerns are wind and hail, a few tornadoes cannot be ruled out.
Tuesday Forecast
Dallas weather: Mar. 10 morning forecast
We have another chance of severe storms starting Tuesday afternoon. Meteorologist Ali Turiano has your forecast and everything you need to know ahead of the storms.
Scattered showers and storms are expected to develop as a dryline to the west moves into the region. Storm conditions are expected to intensify as the day progresses.
The greatest concerns remain damaging winds and large hail. The leading edge of the storm front will likely be the most intense, with the potential for straight-line winds and brief spin-up tornadoes.
LIVE Radar: Dallas-Fort Worth
Dallas Storms: Timing and Impact
The highest potential for severe weather in the Metroplex is from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m., though lingering activity could continue until 2 a.m. Wednesday. Residents are advised to seek shelter immediately if a warning is issued for their area.
7-Day Forecast
A final round of storms is expected Wednesday, primarily between noon and 7 p.m., according to the National Weather Service. These storms carry a threat of half-dollar-sized hail and damaging winds.
Behind this system, North Texas will dry out and briefly cool off. Sunny skies return Thursday with a high in the mid-60s. Temperatures will then warm into the upper 70s on Friday before a sunny weekend with highs in the low 80s.
The Source: Information in this article comes from the National Weather Service and FOX 4 forecasters.
Dallas, TX
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