Joseph W. Randall is the managing editor of the
New York Evening Gazette tabloid newspaper, who has been trying to legitimize the paper by reducing
sensationalism and improving the reporting, but circulation has dropped dramatically. When publisher Bernard Hinchecliffe plans to boost sales by running a retrospective series on a 20-year-old murder, hoping to thereby revive the scandal, Randall reluctantly agrees. He had covered the original story about stenographer Nancy Voorhees, who shot her boss after he impregnated her and then
reneged on his promise to marry her. Her pregnancy won the jury's sympathy, and she was acquitted. Unaware of impending doom, Nancy is now married to Michael Townsend, an upstanding member of society, and her daughter Jenny, who believes that Townsend is her father, is about to marry the son of a socially prominent family, Philip Weeks. Randall throws himself into the assignment. To dig up dirt on Nancy, he assigns unscrupulous reporter T. Vernon Isopod, who masquerades as a minister and wins the confidence of the bride's parents on the eve of the wedding. They, having read the headlines promising a new series on the murder, are horrified at the renewed interest in the scandal, and confess their concerns to Isopod, whom they mistake for a church representative, and give him a photo of Jenny. Michael realizes the horrible mistake just as Isopod leaves, and he phones the church. Randall's secretary Miss Taylor is so disgusted that she gets drunk at a local
speakeasy and then tells Randall what she thinks of the whole affair. Isopod comes in late, drunk and brimming with information. Randall swings into action, mocking up a photo layout. Randall sends reporters Ziggie and Carmody to cover the Townsend apartment. Nancy and Michael, hoping to prevent the revelation of the full story and save the marriage, make separate appeals for help: Michael visits the church
rector, who promises support; Nancy phones Randall, begging him to drop the story, but he refuses, telling her that it is too late. Nancy kills herself by taking poison, and Michael comes home and discovers her body in the bathroom. When Jenny and Philip visit soon afterward, Michael does not inform them of the suicide, feigning a phone conversation with Nancy. After sending Jenny and Philip away, telling him he and Nancy will meet the at the church, he enters the bathroom and also commits suicide. Carmody and Ziggie climb into the apartment from the fire escape. When they open the bathroom door, they take a photograph and call the information into Randall, who wants the story for the five-star final. The next day, Phillip's parents tell Jenny that the wedding will be called off, but Phillip arrives and defies them. Randall gets drunk and feels like a murderer. He tells the night desk to drop the story. Hinchecliff is leery of the bad publicity that may result from the inquest, but his underlings are thrilled at the upsurge in numbers and want to offer Jenny $1,200 for the rights to tell her mother's story. Randall opposes the idea. Jenny visits the paper and demands that the men tell her why they killed her mother. A guilt-ridden and disgusted Randall tells her that they were killed for the purpose of circulation. Jenny points a gun at Randall but Philip appears just in time to prevent her from pulling the trigger. Phillip then angrily delivers a chilling speech that ends: "You've grown rich on filth and no one's ever dared rise up and crush you out." He threatens to hunt them down and kill them if his wife's name is ever mentioned in the paper again. Randall denounces Hinchecliffe and resigns. He runs out and Miss Taylor follows him. A copy of the
New York Evening Gazette trumpeting the news that the suicide victims have been buried is shown swept away in the rain. ==Cast==