
Hosted by Angelica Sirois · EN

This episode is different from anything I’ve released before.Tonight, I’m sharing part of my own story.When I was nineteen, Jon Holyoke came into my life through MeetMe. What started as talking quickly became something that made me feel pressured, overwhelmed, and unsafe. After I said no, the contact didn’t stop. The calls, voicemails, accusations, blocks, and new accounts became something I carried for years.This episode is my personal account of what I experienced, what it left behind, and why hearing other people describe similar concerns made me realize I couldn’t keep making it smaller.This is not a court proceeding. It is not a conviction. It is not a diagnosis.It is my story.And it is about saying no, being ignored, and finally choosing to stop carrying it quietly.Please take care while listening. This episode includes discussion of stalking, harassment, threats, coercive behavior, alleged predatory behavior, and the emotional impact of repeated unwanted contact.#AngelicasMorbidMinutes #MorbidMinutes #SurvivorStory #StalkingAwareness #HarassmentAwareness #TrueCrimePodcast #MainePodcast #Maine

On February 11th, 2022, forty-one-year-old Nicholas Lang was last seen in Kittery, Maine.His vehicle was later found on the Memorial Bridge, left behind with the keys still inside. There were no signs of a crash, no clear indication of what went wrong, and no confirmed sightings of Nicholas after that moment.Despite the location being a public, highly visible place, no one has ever been able to explain what happened after he stepped away from his car.Years later, the case remains open.If you have any information about the disappearance of Nicholas Lang, please contact the Maine State Police.

Maine is quiet in a way that holds onto things.Memories.Places.And sometimes… people.This episode revisits cases we have talked about before. Because when a story is still open, or when something changes, we come back.Thirteen-year-old Stefanie Damron walked into the woods in New Sweden, Maine in 2024 and has never been seen again.Seventeen-year-old Kimberly Moreau left for a short drive in Jay, Maine in 1986 and never returned.And in Brunswick, Maine, a case that once held only questions has now changed. After months of searching, Rebecca Dorr was found deceased in March of 2026. Authorities have stated her death is not considered suspicious.Some families are still waiting.Some have answers, but not the kind they hoped for.Because missing does not always stay the same. And even when a story changes, it does not truly end.Listen now wherever you get your podcasts.Trigger Warning: Missing persons, death, unresolved cases, emotional traumaNew episodes every Tuesday (Missing in Maine) and Thursday (Mini Morbids Maine cases)#AngelicasMorbidMinutes #MissingInMaine #MaineTrueCrime #ColdCases #StefanieDamron #KimberlyMoreau #RebeccaDorr #MorbidMediaLLC

January 25, 2017 — Brewer, MaineTwenty-six-year-old Colin Arey was dropped off at Brewer Auditorium on what should have been the first day of a new job. He never arrived. He never returned home. He has not been heard from since.In this Missing in Maine episode, we walk through the confirmed timeline of Colin’s disappearance, what investigators know, and why the moment he stepped out of that car remains the last fixed point in his story.If you have any information regarding Colin Arey’s disappearance, contact the Maine State Police Major Crimes Unit.Angelica’s Morbid Minutes is committed to telling verified stories with care, accuracy, and respect for the people at their center. #MissingInMaine #Maine #TrueCrimePodcast #Unsolved #AngelicasMorbidMinutes

In the fall of 2016, seventy-one-year-old Diana Estey disappeared from her home in Medford, Maine.When someone went to check on her house, the scene inside raised immediate concern. The lights were on. The television was still running. Her purse and keys remained inside, and her vehicle sat outside. Nothing suggested she planned to leave, yet Diana was gone.Despite searches, investigations, and years of questions, Diana Estey has never been found. Her case remains open.This episode of Missing in Maine focuses on the verified facts, the challenges investigators faced in a remote rural landscape, and the unanswered questions that continue to surround her disappearance.If you have any information that could help bring clarity to Diana’s case, you are encouraged to contact the Maine State Police.Listener discretion is advised.#MissingInMaine #AngelicasMorbidMinutes #TrueCrimePodcast #Maine

Brunswick, Maine, winter 2026. A routine weekend quietly fractures into uncertainty.Rebecca Dorr, fifty-six, left her home on Maine Street sometime between the afternoon of January 25 and the morning of January 26. She did not return. She is missing, and she has not been found.In this episode of Missing in Maine, we walk through what is known about Rebecca’s disappearance, the verified timeline, the search efforts that followed, and the challenges winter conditions have placed on locating her. We focus on confirmed facts, the limits investigators are working within, and why careful attention matters when answers are still unfolding.If you have seen Rebecca Dorr or have information that could help locate her, please contact the Brunswick Police Department at 207-725-5521, extension 1.Trigger Warning: Discussion of a missing person and ongoing disappearance.

In the summer of 2021, a young mother in Auburn, Maine, stopped responding to calls, messages, and daily life. What followed was not an immediate search, but silence that stretched on for nearly two years before anyone realized she was gone.This episode traces the disappearance of Celeste Doghmi, the delays that complicated her case, and the warning signs that only became clear in hindsight. It is a story shaped by isolation, domestic violence, and the devastating cost of time.Celeste is still missing. Her case remains open.Trigger Warning: This episode contains discussion of a missing adult and domestic violence. New episodes release Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays. #AngelicasMorbidMinutes #MissingInMaine #CelesteDoghmi #TrueCrimePodcast #MaineTrueCrime

Joel Guy Jr. believed he was owed something. When those expectations went unmet, resentment hardened into a plan that ended in extreme violence against the people who trusted him most.This episode examines how entitlement, financial grievance, and deliberate planning culminated in a premeditated double homicide, and how accountability was ultimately delivered through the legal system.Rather than focusing on spectacle, this story confronts the patterns that allow violence to take root long before a crime is committed.Trigger warnings: This episode contains discussion of extreme violence, murder, and familial abuse.New episodes of Angelica’s Morbid Minutes are released on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays. #TrueCrimePodcast #FullMorbid #FamilyViolence #Accountability #CriminalJustice

September 2000. George Boardman was last seen in Bingham, Maine, a town shaped by riverbanks, logging roads, and long stretches of quiet. He did not leave a note. His vehicle stayed behind. No trace of him has ever been found.This episode explores the disappearance of George Boardman, the search that followed, and the questions that remain when someone vanishes from a place they know well.Trigger warnings: this episode contains discussion of a missing adult and unresolved disappearance.New episodes of Angelica’s Morbid Minutes release Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays at 5:00 AM EST.#AngelicasMorbidMinutes #MissingInMaine #MaineMissing #TrueCrimePodcast #Unresolved #GeorgeBoardman

On June 6, 2022, Graham Lacher walked away from a mental health facility in Bangor, Maine, and was never seen again. What followed was an extensive search, a growing silence, and questions that remain unanswered.Investigators confirmed Graham did not access transportation, communication, or shelter after leaving. Despite coordinated search efforts and public appeals, no physical evidence has ever been found to explain where he went.This episode examines the limits of investigation when someone disappears without witnesses or violence, and the weight carried by families who are left with uncertainty instead of closure.Trigger warnings: discussion of mental health, adult disappearance, unresolved loss. New episodes drop Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays. #MissingInMaine #MaineCases #TrueCrimePodcast #Unresolved #MissingPerson