Criminally Listed Presents: Into the Killing Criminally Listed Presents: Into the Killing
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- True Crime
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Into the Killing examines criminal cases that were unsolved and cold for years, in some cases decades. Then a break comes along and cracks the case wide open. Into the Killing will detail the crime, the investigation, and the resolution. Besides examining cold cases that are solved, Into the Killing will also take a look at the history of forensic science and how that has changed the world of criminology.
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Marcia Trimble and Sally Des Prez
In February 1975, 9-year-old Marcia Trimble was murdered in Nashville, Tennessee. For decades, the police had a suspect: a boy who was just 15 when the murder was committed. But do the police have the right person?
Sally Des Prez's murder was largely forgotten for decades. When her case was solved, it shocked the people of Nashville. -
Mary Silvani
In July 1982, the dead body of a woman was found in Washoe County, Nevada. No one knew who she was, and she became known as the Sheep's Flat Jane Doe. Decades later, not only was she identified, but so was her killer, and it was a darker truth than anyone expected.
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Sonia Herok-Stone
In 1981, Sonia Herok-Stone was brutally murdered in her own home. The police believed they caught the killer, but were they right?
Sources: https://pastebin.com/bAcbtQ8S -
Jacob Wetterling
In 1989, 11-year-old Jacob Wetterling went missing. His disappearance haunted a small city and changed American laws. After decades, it was finally solved.
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Norma, Samantha and Syretta Richards
In 1982, Norma Richards and her two young daughters were brutally murdered. Then, 27 years later, an unlikely source got the case reopened and eventually solved.
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DiAnne Keidel
When DiAnne Keidel went missing in September 1966, it was just the start of a tragic series of events for her family.
Sources: https://pastebin.com/fb4QTheD
Customer Reviews
oh.
50 decades
I think the narrator is in the wrong profession...
Other than being monotone he sounds like he's just rushing through whatever story he's telling... not a good quality in the podcast world especially true crime
Unsubscribing after listening to the Jacob Wettering episode
I used to listen religiously. He’s one of the few narrators that although monotone, actually has some interesting tidbits and facts about the cases and the years the events took place. However I just cannot stand the ads. Listen, I listen to plenty of podcasts. I know the creators want to put in ads throughout the episodes and I don’t mind! But I write this review as I just listened to the current episode about Jacob Wetterling. The promised as “quick” ad break was at 4 minutes into episode. The second promised “quick” ad was roughly 9 mins in. The third “quick” was 13 minutes. (Also the ads weren’t quick fyi). For an episode about a 13 year old, a minor of all cases, saying they’re quick ads and putting them so frequently into each other seems quite disrespectful, incessant and rushed. I couldn’t continue listening after that 13 minute third ad. I wasn’t even 1/4 of the way into the ep! I’m sure I can find his case on another channel. I’ll miss the narration but this episode really rubbed me the wrong way, all due to this channel’s selfishness for ad after ad, instead of telling the story about the 13 year old boy