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In December 1958, the Martin family left their home in Portland, Oregon to pick up Christmas decorations in the mountains. Ken and Barbara Martin packed their three daughters into the station wagon for what should have been a simple holiday outing. They never came home. For decades, the disappearance haunted Oregon. Investigators found strange tire tracks near the Columbia River, witnesses reported seeing unknown men around the family’s car, and theories ranging from kidnapping to murder spread across the country. But despite massive searches, the Martin family’s station wagon was never found. Then, 66 years later, a diver searching the Columbia River made a discovery buried deep beneath the sediment. Hidden inside was the answer to one of America’s oldest missing family mysteries. This is the chilling true story of the Martin family disappearance and the decades-long search that finally uncovered what happened that night. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

In 1997, the city of Kobe, Japan was shaken by one of the most horrifying crimes in modern history. A school caretaker arrived at a junior high school early in the morning and discovered the severed head of an 11-year-old boy placed at the front gate. Inside the child’s mouth was a handwritten letter taunting police and daring them to stop the killer. What investigators uncovered next shocked the entire country. The murderer turned out to be just fourteen years old. Known publicly only as “Boy A,” Shinichiro Azuma had already attacked multiple children before killing Jun Hase. As police pieced together the disturbing letters, violent assaults, and escalating behavior, they uncovered a teenager obsessed with death, violence, and control. His crimes would spark nationwide fear and forever change Japan’s juvenile justice laws. Years later, after his release from detention, the killer resurfaced again with a controversial memoir describing his crimes and thoughts in chilling detail. This is the terrifying true story of the Kobe child murders and the boy who became one of Japan’s most infamous killers. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

A quiet retired couple living on a rural farm near Erie, Illinois becomes the target of a carefully orchestrated home invasion that quickly escalates into something far more disturbing than a typical robbery. A masked intruder breaks into their home, restrains them, and forces them into a vehicle before transporting them to a second property. There, they discover a hidden trapdoor leading into a fortified underground bunker stocked with supplies, surveillance equipment, and restraints, clearly built to hold people for an extended period of time. As the investigation unfolds, authorities uncover that the attacker is Chad Schipper, a man deeply embedded in the victims’ own community. A former church elder and financial advisor, he had once shared social circles with the couple and even built trust within their church community. Behind this respectable image, however, he was struggling with severe financial instability and mounting debt, including money owed to family members and clients he had misled. The kidnapping plan begins to unravel after one critical mistake: the use of a cashier’s check tied directly to his own business. This leads investigators to quickly identify him, track his movements, and ultimately locate the bunker where the couple is being held. After a police pursuit, crash, and confession, Chad Schipper is arrested and later sentenced to 60 years in prison. Despite the brutality and planning behind the crime, the victims survive and later dedicate themselves to advocacy, sharing their story of survival, faith, and recovery in a published memoir and public speaking efforts. #TrueCrimeRecaps #Kidnapping #ChadSchipper #HiddenBasement #LarryVanOosten #ConnieVanOosten Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The case of Kouri Richins has become one of the most disturbing and complex true crime stories to emerge in recent years. What began as the sudden death of Utah businessman Eric Richins quickly spiraled into a multi-layered investigation involving alleged poisoning attempts, financial pressure, and life insurance policies tied directly to the accused. Prosecutors alleged that Kouri Richins poisoned her husband with fentanyl, pointing to prior suspicious incidents, financial motives, and communications suggesting a planned future without him. The defense, however, argued there was no definitive proof she administered the fatal dose and suggested alternative explanations, including questions about how the drug entered his system. After a high-profile trial filled with testimony, digital evidence, and emotional family statements, Kouri Richins was convicted of aggravated murder and related charges in 2026 and sentenced to life without parole. The case continues to spark debate due to its mix of alleged financial motive, relationship history, and the shocking post-death revelations that followed. #TrueCrimeRecaps #KouriRichins #EricRichins #BlackWidow Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

For years, the murders of Maggie and Paul Murdaugh seemed like a closed case. Alex Murdaugh, once part of one of South Carolina’s most powerful legal families, was convicted of killing his wife and son after jurors heard evidence prosecutors said they could not ignore, including the now infamous kennel video placing him near the crime scene minutes before the murders. But now, everything has changed. Alex Murdaugh’s murder conviction has officially been overturned after shocking allegations involving jury influence by former court clerk Becky Hill. The South Carolina Supreme Court ruled that comments allegedly made to jurors during the trial may have compromised the fairness of the proceedings, throwing one of the most high-profile murder convictions in recent history into chaos. In today’s recap, we break down the original murders, the financial crimes, the kennel video that changed everything, the misconduct allegations that overturned the conviction, and whether Alex Murdaugh could actually win a retrial. Because despite years of headlines, documentaries, and courtroom drama… the Murdaugh story may be far from over. #TrueCrimeRecaps AlexMurdaugh #MurdaughMurders #MurdaughTrial Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

On July 31, 2022, a horrific crash in Strongsville, Ohio left two young men dead and a teenage driver as the sole survivor. What initially appeared to be a tragic high-speed accident soon became one of the most controversial true crime cases in recent years: the case of Mackenzie Shirilla. Prosecutors argued that Shirilla deliberately drove her car off the main road and into a dead-end business park, accelerating to nearly 100 mph before slamming into a brick building. Key evidence presented at trial included cellphone location data, surveillance footage, and black box recordings that allegedly showed full throttle acceleration with no brake use. The defense, however, argued that a medical episode or blackout could explain the crash, pointing to her reported health condition and memory loss after the incident. Ultimately, the judge ruled the crash was intentional and sentenced Mackenzie Shirilla to life in prison with parole eligibility after 15 years. Years later the case continues to spark debate, especially following Netflix’s "The Crash" documentary, which brought renewed attention to the evidence, the victims, and the unanswered questions surrounding what truly happened that night. #TrueCrimeRecap #DominicRusso #DavionFlanagan #MackenzieShirilla #NetflixTheCrash #TheCrash Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

In April 1997, Judy Smith, a 23-year-old nurse from Newton, Massachusetts, vanished while on a sightseeing trip in Philadelphia with her husband. Initially, she was seen at the hotel, but when her husband returned from the conference, she was gone. Days of searching turned up no trace, and several confusing sightings suggested she may have traveled alone. Five months later, Judy’s remains were discovered in a shallow grave in Pisgah National Forest, near Asheville, North Carolina, over 600 miles from Philadelphia. She had been stabbed, and the clothing on her body indicated hiking gear, none of it hers. Her red backpack, a signature item she always carried, was missing. Investigators have never solved how she got there or who killed her. The case remains a haunting mystery. If you have any information that could help bring Judy’s family answers, contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS. Until then, the question remains: what happened to Judy Smith? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

When 63-year-old charity cyclist Tony Parsons vanished during a bike ride through the Scottish Highlands, his family feared the worst. For years, police searched the remote mountains and forests around Bridge of Orchy but found absolutely nothing. No bike. No body. No answers. Then, in a twist stranger than fiction, the case suddenly exploded open because of a confession. A man named Sandy McKellar allegedly admitted to his fiancée that he and his twin brother had hit Tony with their truck back in 2017… and instead of calling for help, they hid his body deep in the wilderness. In this video, we break down the full horrifying story behind Tony Parsons’ disappearance, the massive police search, the shocking role Sandy’s fiancée Caroline played in solving the case, and the heartbreaking truth investigators uncovered years later. We are going to be diving deep into this case in our Members video so keep your eyes peeled for that one as well! #TrueCrimeRecaps #TonyParsons #ShouldIMarryAMurderer #CarolineMuirhead #SandyMcKellar Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

On a quiet winter night in 1994, 23-year-old Tessa Van Hart leaves her job at a small pizza shop on Chincoteague Island, Virginia, to complete what seems like a routine delivery. The address leads her to an empty summer home in a secluded area, and after she leaves, she never returns. Hours later, her car is discovered parked behind a vacant house, and Tessa is found inside the back seat, shot twice in the head, with the undelivered pizza still sitting in the front.The small island community is left in shock. With no clear suspects and limited forensic technology at the time, the investigation stalls for years. Then, more than two years later, a local man named Brian Cherrix comes forward while in custody on unrelated charges. He initially offers secondhand information about the crime, but eventually gives a detailed confession describing how he lured Tessa, assaulted her, and ultimately killed her before later retracting his statement and claiming coercion.Despite inconsistencies, investigators recover a rifle linked to the murder, and other evidence helps secure a conviction. Brian Cherrix is sentenced to death, later executed in 2004 after years of appeals. Tessa’s murder remains one of the most disturbing cases in the island’s history, forever changing the belief that nothing violent could ever happen in such a quiet, close-knit place.#TrueCrimeRecaps #TessaVanHart #ChincoteagueIsland #BrianCherrix #DeathPenalty Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Wade Wilson was convicted of first degree murder. 13 days later, the death penalty was recommended. Wade doesn’t bat an eye. But he makes a bizarre hand signal that's got everyone talking!What do you think that was all about? And do you think the jury made the right decision?#TrueCrimeRecaps #WadeWilson #DeadpoolKiller #SerialKiller #Murders Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices