SAM COOKE CHECKED INTO A $3 MOTEL ROOM — AND NEVER CHECKED OUT.On December 11, 1964, Sam Cooke — the man who invented soul music — was shot dead at the Hacienda Motel in Los Angeles. He was 33. The manager, Bertha Franklin, claimed self-defense. The police closed the case in weeks. But nothing added up. Sam had 30 Top 40 hits, owned his own record label, and had just recorded “A Change Is Gonna Come” — a song that would become the anthem of the civil rights movement. His friend Muhammad Ali said: “Sam was the best singer — and the bravest Black man in the music business.” Over 200,000 fans lined the streets of Chicago for his funeral. Sixty years later, the case remains unsolved… and those who were in that motel have never told the same story twice.
Sam Cooke Entered a Cheap Motel Room and Left Behind One of Music’s Greatest Mysteries On the night of December 11, 1964, Sam Cooke checked into the Hacienda Motel in…