Sha Na Na was a doo-wop group from the 1950’s. According to
“The Great Pretender,” a piece that ran on CBS News’ 48 Hours,
a 27-year fugitive successfully posed as the group’s former
lead singer.
“Vinny Taylor,” a.k.a., Danny C (Catalano), moved into a
Florida beach community and let it be known that he had once worked in
the famous group. He had a jacket, a gold charm, and the right
way of talking. He put on a show and soon seduced everyone
around him into buying his story.
However, people close to Danny Catalano noticed some odd behavior.
He'd look out the window in the middle of the night and tell his
girlfriend not to talk about Sha Na Na.
Then people who claimed to know better called Catalano a fraud.
When someone checked with Sha Na Na, they learned that the band’s
lead singer had died in 1974. Yet Catalano had all kinds of
proof, including a birth certificate. He claimed that the 1974
death had been faked.
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Mugshot of Edmund Solly |
Of course, Calalano was not who he said he was. He was a man named
Edmund Solly, who had fled from New Jersey after killing a
two-year-old. Solly went to prison for the murder but took
advantage of a home visit program to disappear. His mother kept
his secret, but after she died, detectives who inherited the case
began asking questions anew.
New Jersey State Police Det. Louis Kinkle talked with Solly's
stepfather and learned that Edmund was a singer in Florida.
Kinkle then approached the U.S. Marshals Violent Crime Fugitive Task
Force in Philadelphia. The Marshals then called Bender and
Richard Walter to help them learn about Solly’s appearance and
habits three decades after he had escaped. Walter said Solly had
survived by being a manipulator.
“I did a drawing for them from a very old photograph that turned
out to match him perfectly. We got him in five months,” Bender
said.
On May 10, 2000, police found Solly, now 55, fishing on a St.
Petersburg pier. Solly was extradited to New Jersey and incarcerated
once again. Authorities learned later that Solly had created a Web
site, and on it were photographs of him with Florida police officers
and politicians.
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