Dancer in vaudeville and moving pictures; best known as the eighth wife of
Norman Selby, a prizefighter who fought under the name of "Kid McCoy." In 1924, McCoy was charged with first degree murder for the killing of Teresa Mora, a wealthy woman who was found dead with a picture of McCoy in her hand. McCoy, who received a package of jewelry from Mora prior to her death, contended Mora committed suicide. Dahlgren disputed one of McCoy's alibis during his trial for murder in Los Angeles. A jury sentenced McCoy on a compromise verdict of manslaughter.