
Hosted by Phillip Sams · EN

Six people were murdered on a remote German farm in 1922… but the killer may have never left.In this episode of the GITN Podcast, we explore the terrifying mystery of the Hinterkaifeck Murders — one of the most disturbing unsolved crimes in history. Evidence suggests the killer may have stayed on the farm for days after the murders, feeding the animals and living inside the house while the bodies remained on the property.We break down the strange events leading up to the killings, including footsteps in the attic, mysterious footprints in the snow that led to the farmhouse but never left, and the chilling theories about who could have committed the murders.More than 100 years later, the Hinterkaifeck murders remain one of the most haunting unsolved mysteries in true crime history.

You were told Apollo ended in 1972.Officially, Apollo 18, 19, and 20 were canceled because of budget cuts. The rockets existed. The crews were trained. The hardware was ready. Then suddenly, it stopped.But what if it didn’t?In this episode, we examine the Apollo 20 conspiracy — the claim that a classified mission launched in 1976 to investigate a massive structure on the Moon’s far side. A mission allegedly preceded by Apollo 19… a mission that may have failed.We break down:• The official history of the Apollo program• Why 18, 19, and 20 were canceled• The Apollo 19 crash narrative• William Rutledge and the whistleblower footage• The Delporte crater anomaly• The “Mona Lisa” humanoid entity claim• The logistical wall that challenges the story• And the gray areas that keep this theory aliveDid NASA walk away from the Moon because it was expensive?Or because something was discovered?This is not about believing or debunking.It’s about examining the gap between the official story… and the story people tell when something feels unfinished.This is GITN.

This episode is part of Mysteries in Limbo, a new series from the GITN Podcast exploring real cases that were never fully solved.In the late 1970s, four children vanished from quiet suburban neighborhoods in Oakland County, Michigan. They were missing for days. And when they were found, investigators were confronted with a detail that defied easy explanation.The children hadn’t been abandoned. They had been kept.In this episode of Mysteries in Limbo, we examine the Oakland County Child Killer investigation with strict attention to what can be proven and what still resists certainty. We trace the timeline of the abductions, the unprecedented task force response, and the investigative limits that prevented the case from ever reaching resolution.This is not a story built on speculation or sensational claims. It is a careful reconstruction of evidence, patterns, and unanswered questions told with the understanding that some mysteries persist not because the truth is hidden, but because it was never fully captured.More than four decades later, the case remains unsolved.And until the missing pieces surface, it remains exactly where it has always been—in limbo.

He wasn’t hiding.He was trusted.John Wayne Gacy was a successful businessman, active in local politics, and a familiar face in his community. Police interviewed him. Families named him. Investigators walked away.Meanwhile, young men were disappearing — and the truth was being buried beneath his house.In this episode, we break down the John Wayne Gacy case from start to finish, focusing less on the headlines and more on what actually allowed this to happen: credibility, comfort, and repeated investigative failures.We cover:Gacy’s early life, psychology, and first criminal convictionHow he used respectability, politics, and community involvement as coverThe victims whose families warned police — and were ignoredThe moments where Gacy was interviewed, suspected, and dismissedHow surveillance, search warrants, and mounting pressure finally cracked the caseWhat police found beneath the house — and why it took so long to lookThis isn’t just a serial killer story.It’s a case study in misplaced trust — and the cost of believing the wrong person.Content Warning: This episode contains discussion of violent crime and sexual assault. Listener discretion advised.

December 21, 2012 came and went without fire, collapse, or apocalypse.But for a growing number of people, that date still matters , not because the world ended, but because it changed.In this episode of the GITN Podcast, we explore the theory that the Mayan Long Count calendar didn’t predict destruction, but a transition and that modern science may have unknowingly collided with it. As CERN pushed the Large Hadron Collider to unprecedented energy levels, some believe reality itself may have shifted.We break down:• What the Mayans actually meant by the end of a baktun cycle• Why CERN and the Large Hadron Collider became central to timeline theories• The idea of a “soft apocalypse” where the world continues, but out of alignment• Why so many people say reality feels thinner, faster, and less stable• How the Mandela Effect fits into the timeline shift narrative• Why we’re still here and what that might actually meanThis isn’t about proving the world ended.It’s about why so many people feel like something quietly changed and why that feeling refuses to go away.

Five men attend a basketball game in California in 1978 and expect to be home that night. Instead, they drive deep into the mountains, abandon a perfectly working car, and disappear into freezing wilderness.Months later, one of them is found dead inside a Forest Service trailer filled with food and heat he never used. Two others are found frozen miles away. Two are never found at all.This episode breaks down The Yuba County Five, one of the most disturbing and misunderstood unsolved mysteries in American true crime history. We examine who the five men were, the role of intellectual disabilities and mental illness, the strange decisions that led them into the mountains, and the psychological factors that may explain why they abandoned safety when survival was still possible.We also explore every major theory, including group panic, schizophrenia and medication withdrawal, learned helplessness, search failures, and the possibility that one man survived longer than anyone realized — then vanished.This case isn’t about monsters or murderers. It’s about fear, confusion, trust, and how quickly everything can fall apart when routine disappears

On January 2007, Chris Bledsoe wasn’t searching the sky for UFOs.He was praying by a river in rural North Carolina as his life unraveled.What followed wasn’t a single light or distant object, but a close-range encounter involving glowing orbs, repeated sightings, and long-term government interest. Over time, Bledsoe’s story drifted away from the usual alien narrative and into something far more controversial: a phenomenon tied to consciousness, religious symbolism, and what he describes as an ancient intelligence.In this episode of the GITN Podcast, we break down:What actually happened the night of the original encounterWhy Bledsoe never framed the experience as extraterrestrialHow U.S. government and military-linked officials became involvedThe emergence of “The Lady” and prophetic interpretationsWhy skeptics argue the case can be explained without invoking non-human intelligenceThis isn’t a story about spaceships.It’s about belief, crisis, control, and what happens when the unknown doesn’t fit cleanly into science or religion.

Tommy Silverstein was responsible for three confirmed murders while already incarcerated — two inmates and a federal correctional officer. His crimes forced the U.S. prison system to confront a terrifying reality: some inmates could not be controlled, only isolated.In this episode of the GITN Podcast, we break down the full, fact-based story of Thomas “Tommy” Silverstein, including:His early life and family influenceThe crime that first sent him to federal prisonHis rise inside the Aryan BrotherhoodThe two inmate murders that earned him multiple life sentencesThe 1983 killing of a correctional officer that changed prison policy foreverThe permanent lockdown of USP MarionThe creation of Supermax prisons like ADX FlorenceAnd the ethical debate surrounding 36 consecutive years in solitary confinementThis episode isn’t just about a violent man — it’s about what happens when the prison system decides control matters more than rehabilitation.

In late December 2025, residents across Cincinnati began reporting a strange sound in the night. High-pitched, oscillating, and seemingly coming from the sky. Officials suggested industrial causes. Rail yards were blamed. But the sound didn’t behave like normal machinery.Cincinnati wasn’t alone.From Indiana to Canada, from Germany to the United Kingdom, cities across the world have reported the same phenomenon for decades. They are known as The Hum or Sky Trumpets.In this episode of Ghosts in the Night, we investigate the Cincinnati incident, trace the global pattern, break down official explanations, and explore the unsettling possibility that the sound isn’t the source of the mystery, but a byproduct of something else entirely.

For nearly a century, the Murdaugh name carried unchecked power in South Carolina’s Lowcountry.Judges recognized it.Law enforcement deferred to it.And for decades, justice bent around it.In this episode of the GITN Podcast, we break down the rise and collapse of Alex Murdaugh, the privileged legal dynasty that seemed untouchable—until it wasn’t.This isn’t just a murder case.It’s a story about influence, money, and a system trained to look the other way.We examine:How the Murdaugh family built generational legal powerThe suspicious deaths that never quite added upFinancial crimes hiding in plain sightThe investigation that finally pulled the curtain backAnd the courtroom battle that brought a dynasty to its kneesThis case forces an uncomfortable question:How many crimes go unpunished when the people meant to stop them are part of the machine?Tonight, we trace the collapse from quiet favors… to public exposure… to a verdict that ended a reign of silence.Welcome to GITN Podcast.