Investigators developed a reconstruction of what had happened.

On September 9th, 1966, Daniel returned home around 12:30 a.

m.

as confirmed by his driver.

He entered the mansion and was alone.

Patricia and Susan were in Los Angeles.

At some point shortly after arriving home, Daniel was in his study.

Perhaps he was having a drink and relaxing after a long day.

Perhaps he was working on papers or making phone calls.

Someone else was in the mansion, either someone who’d been waiting inside or someone who’d arrived shortly after Daniel.

This person had a key to the mansion or had been let in by Daniel because there was no forced entry.

This person approached Daniel from behind while Daniel was in his study and struck him in the back of the head with a heavy object, killing him.

The killer then faced the problem of disposing of Daniel’s body.

Simply leaving it to be found would immediately trigger a murder investigation and potentially identify the killer.

Taking the body elsewhere risked being seen.

The solution was to hide the body in place in the mansion in a way that it wouldn’t be discovered.

The killer moved Daniel’s body to the small room that adjoined the ED study.

This room had been a storage closet or small office.

The killer placed Daniel’s body in the leather armchair, perhaps staged the bourbon bottle and glass to make the scene appear peaceful, and then sealed the room.

The killer constructed a false wall across the doorway to the small room, creating the appearance that the study ended where the false wall stood.

This work would have taken several hours.

Framing the wall, installing drywall, attaching paneling.

The killer probably worked through the night and into Friday morning.

By the time Daniel’s staff at the Golden Sands began trying to reach him Friday morning, the false wall was complete and Daniel’s body was sealed away.

The killer then left the mansion, locking it behind them with keys they either had or had taken from Daniel.

When Robert Sullivan arrived Friday afternoon to check on Daniel, the mansion appeared empty and undisturbed because the false wall successfully concealed the hidden room and body.

Who killed Daniel Brown? After 57 years, with everyone involved long deceased, identifying the specific killer was impossible.

But investigators and forensic specialists developed several theories based on evidence and historical context.

The killer had to be someone with access to the mansion, someone who had keys or whom Daniel would admit at 12:30 a.

m.

without suspicion.

This suggested someone Daniel knew well.

family, close friend, employee, or business associate.

The killer had to have construction knowledge or skills sufficient to build a convincing false wall in several hours.

This suggested someone who’d worked in construction or had handy skills, or someone who’d sought help from such a person.

The killer had to have a motive to want Daniel dead.

The most obvious motive was the Golden Sands Casino.

Daniel had been resisting pressure to sell.

Various parties wanted to acquire it.

Killing Daniel would remove the obstacle and make the casino available for purchase.

The investigation in 1966 had never identified a strong suspect because police were looking for evidence that Daniel had left the mansion or been removed from it.

They searched for body disposal, for signs of abduction, for indications Daniel had fled voluntarily.

They never imagined Daniel had been killed inside the mansion and sealed into a hidden room within it.

For Daniel’s family, the discovery brought closure after 57 years of painful uncertainty.

Susan Brown, who’d been 10 years old when her father vanished and was now 67, was contacted by police when the remains were identified.

DNA comparison between Susan’s samples and the skeletal remains confirmed familial relationship consistent with parent child.

Susan, who’d spent her entire adult life not knowing what happened to her father, finally had answers.

Not complete answers, not the name of who killed him or why specifically, but at least she knew her father was dead, knew how he’d died, and could finally properly bury him.

Daniel Brown’s remains were released to the family in June 2023.

On June 24th, 56 years and 9 months after his murder, Daniel was buried in a Las Vegas cemetery in a plot Patricia had purchased decades earlier, hoping someday to bury her husband.

Patricia herself was buried in California, but the family arranged for a memorial marker in Las Vegas, noting both Daniel and Patricia’s names.

The gravestone erected for Daniel acknowledged his life and the strange circumstances of his death.

Daniel Robert Brown 1912 1966 casino pioneer found after 57 years finally at rest.

The mansion where Daniel was found was not immediately demolished as planned.

The discovery of the remains and the historical significance of the case led to delays while authorities and historical preservation groups debated the building’s fate.

Ultimately, in late 2023, the decision was made to demolish the mansion, but to preserve the eadi study where Daniel was found, and the false wall as part of a small museum exhibit about Las Vegas history.

The Rolex watch found on Daniel’s wrist was returned to Susan.

The gold wedding ring was also returned.

These items, perfectly preserved due to gold’s properties, were the only physical objects that connected Susan to her father across the 57 years of his concealment.

So, what really happened to Daniel Brown on September 9th, 1966? Based on available evidence, we know he returned home around 12:30 a.

m.

We know he was struck from behind and killed by blunt force trauma to the head.

We know his body was sealed in a hidden room in his own study and concealed behind a false wall that successfully hid him for nearly six decades.

What we cannot know with certainty is who specifically killed him or the exact motive.

Those details died with everyone involved decades ago.

We can only determine that someone with access to Daniel’s mansion and knowledge of his routines killed him and successfully concealed the crime for 57 years.

Daniel Brown’s story reminds us that houses can hold secrets in their walls, that mysteries can remain hidden in plain sight for generations, and that sometimes demolition and development reveal truths that seemed permanently lost.

It reminds us of Las Vegas’s golden age when independent casino owners could build fortunes and when organized crimes influence created an atmosphere where violence was sometimes the solution to business problems.

After 57 years sealed in darkness behind a false wall, Daniel Brown has been brought into the light.

His family finally knows what happened.

His grave is finally occupied.

The casino tycoon who entered his mansion on a September night in 1966 and never emerged has been found and laid to rest.

The false wall that concealed him for more than half a century has given up its secret.

And Las Vegas has given up one more piece of its hidden history.

Rest in peace, Daniel Robert Brown.

Your long wait behind that wall is over.

Your daughter knows what happened.

And you’re finally where you should have been all along.

in a marked grave with your name and story known, your memory preserved.

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