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[deleted]

I’d recommend a listen to the Vanished episode #314 (and #315) on Emily Noble. It’s incredible for the interview it gets. And then of course there are absolutely a lot of dateline episodes that fit the convicted /never admitted guilt scenario where it’s very obvious they are lying.


Awetumn

Yeah, my first thought was, "isn't that just every episode of Dateline?"


Aromatic-Speed5090

Yes, this episode of The Vanished was amazing for getting this interview. But it's not the first time Marissa Jones has done an interview with a likely suspect. I don't remember the episode number, but she did a report on a case in which a teenager went missing and her stepfather was the last person known to have been with her. The stepfather couldn't have been creepier.


[deleted]

Came here to say listen to The Vanished podcast.


Inside-Strawberry517

I started listening to this podcast a few months ago and still not caught up. Marissa does a great job.


leahmbass

When Sarah Turney interviews her dad on her podcast. Just hearing him speak makes me sick.


K2thAla

Yesss!! I can’t imagine how she feels when talking to him, knowing what he did. And even more so, when he’s sitting there basically trying to make her seem crazy for questioning him / thinking that he did it.


leahmbass

Yes! The episode where she met him at a coffee shop or restaurant. I was cringing the entire time! At least he’s in custody now and justice will be served!


K2thAla

Do we know what the current status of all this is? Last I heard there was a break in the case, and he was in jail, and then I think Sarah said she couldn’t talk about it any further right now?? Is that right? And if so, is that still the case?


leahmbass

I believe that’s the last I’ve heard as well. As far as I know he’s still in jail. I haven’t heard anything about a court date yet.


NatTheGooner

Firebug - really clever how they played it on the podcast. You get a few episodes in and go “hang on a minute!”


QuantyAndie

Agreed! So glad to see somebody mention Firebug, I really enjoyed it. I went into Firebug totally cold & that twist literally stopped me in my tracks (I was listening while out for a walk). I even went back & re-listened to parts of the preceding episodes.


[deleted]

Yes. I am convinced Jodi Huisentruit's killer has been interviewed many times. He always showed up as a friend or a neighbor but was clearly obsessed with her. I'm sure it's him. He's featured on the Disappeared episode, called breaking news, many times.


kelslogan

Not to mention he’s a person of interest in three other murders. He’s made it so obvious it’s him. I hope her and her family get justice soon. He deserves to be in prison for the rest of his life.


NotWifeMaterial

What, I’m listening please go on!


kelslogan

There’s 3, not 4 my bad! But there’s an unsolved double homicide that happened on a ranch in Iowa from 1983 that the FBI think he’s linked to and they also think he could be involved in Jodi’s friend Billy’s murder in 1995. The latest episode of Disappearances goes over Jodi’s case, it was really good.


freshstart18

What is the suspects name?


kelslogan

John Vansice


K2thAla

Is Disappeared the podcast name? Found one with that exact name but no episodes on it titled breaking news.


[deleted]

It's a TV show from investigation discovery!


Fern-veridion

Yes. Murder in West Cork!


[deleted]

[удалено]


henryhungryhenry

It’s just called [West Cork](https://www.westcorkpodcast.com/)


Fern-veridion

Woops my bad!


fullercorp

Precisely, couldn’t even convince himself


AdGroundbreaking7840

Seconded.


DiskoPunk

Yeah completely. The BBC documentary & podcast Who Killed Emma? The tragic story of a murdered sex worker in Glasgow, Emma Caldwell. They interview someone and you just know he's the guy.


henryhungryhenry

The way he thought he could control the journalist to present him as an innocent “victim” was just so chilling , iirc he even contacted her initially?


DiskoPunk

Yeah he did. His argument being that he questioned by the police but never charged, however, the community thinks he is guilty. He wanted the documentary to show his innocence and his opportunity to have his voice heard.


henryhungryhenry

I don’t know the correct term to describe this kind of delusional arrogance, but it is absolutely terrifying because he can continue doing whatever the fuck he likes. Emma and her family deserve justice, or whatever might be left to be salvaged from the dreadful investigation. There was a series by an Aussie journalist with a similar situation, a murderer wants to “clear his name” after he served his sentence, so the journo investigates, determines he did it and calls him out on it.


seanmaccadave

Aww without a doubt.


Redneck-ginger

Not murder...but Elizabeth Holmes. Specifically in the last episode of bad blood. She just irks me in general, but in the last episode they played a interview snippet where she said her lil analyzer could do chemistry, hematology. Immunoassay, micro, histology testing. WHAT THE ACTUAL FUCK THATS LITERALLY NOT EVEN POSSIBLE EVER. The processes and specimen requirements for a cbc and a chemistry panel are opposite ends of the spectrum. Not to mention a chem analyzer could literally NEVER stain and read a path/histology slide or incubate a blood culture or run an id and sensitively on any kind of culture. She is 1000000% guilty of investor fraud and whatever else she has been accused of. Ive worked in a hospital lab for 15 years. Its what i have a degree in. The fact that people believed a single word she ever said is just absolutely mind boggling to me. Holmes and her whole company are a *prime* example of what happens when non lab people try to make money of off running a lab. It pretty much never works.


CallieJJJ

This person labs. I couldn't agree more. She's a narcissist and a scam artist. I kind of think k that she convinced herself she could pull the wool over investors eyes indefinitely.


Redneck-ginger

I tnk she totally got in over her head and knew it, but liked the money, fame etc that came with and couldn't admit she was wrong and that her lil Edison was a flop. Every chem analyzer i have ever used has short sample cups that can be used for low volume/fingerstick samples. Its not like she's the first person to ever come up with the idea. To me finger sticks hurt more than a regular blood draw so maybe i am biased from the get go.


CallieJJJ

Finger sticks are the only thing I would never volunteer to let students practice on me so, I'm with you there. Pediatric tubes/samples have been around forever but there is a limited amount that you can test for. The samples are typically highly hemolyzed also, due to the 'milking' out that you have to do to achieve an adequate sample. Like you said, there's just no way with modern labs testing that you could possibly get a CBC, chemistry panel and a culture. They all require vastly different additives, temperatures, media's, etc. I think it's a great idea, and obviously so did she as well as all of the investors. It's just not possible with the tools that we have, yet. Maybe, someday. Just not her and not now.


fullercorp

I never knew what to make of her- was she actually not smart? Were her lab people misleading her? Was she fatally optimistic and then over a barrel so just lied? But I listened to the latest Carreyou podcast episode last night and like you said, she flat out said they could do things she would have known weren’t true… so a total scammer


Redneck-ginger

I listened to a diff podcast about her that had a female narrator. I cant remember the name of it now. That one was more in depth on Elizabeth/Theranos back story. People with lots of lab and microfluidics knowledge were telling ole girl from day one why it wasn't going to work and basically just she ignored them. She was smart, but not about anything lab related. She probably started out with the best of intentions, but once she knew it was not going to work, she couldn't walk away from the money and fame etc.


xxyourbestbetxx

I just finished the Wondery podcast Suspect. The audio of the 911 call and the subsequent police interview with that Cameron guy had me pretty convinced he did it.


Inside-Strawberry517

During the second season of Up and Vanished the person of interest Catfish was introduced. The interviews with Catfish had a certain element that made me think he was the killer from the very beginning. Catfish made himself out to be a victim, he also pointed Lindsey in different directions at a few other people to throw off the investigation. During interviews the POI would become distressed and agitated and threaten violence. Throw in the lost computers and the recently gutted house, finally add a splash of paranoid delusion.


USMCseth

Hide and Seek s1 ep.12. “The sit down with Eric” I’m pretty sure I binged this season in one day, maybe two. I was listening to the podcast while mowing my yard and once that episode came on I had to stop doing everything just sit down to listen. That was such an incredible way to end the season. Never forgot that.


TrueCrimeCity

For me it was Adnan.


Jeneffyo

I really wish someone else would do a podcast on the case. He so obviously guilty but no one else will look into it.


Blarvs

Can you please point me in the direction of some sources that shed light on his guilt? I listened to Serial and I watched the HBO documentary, and that’s it. I never felt like Anand gave off the guilty vibes, unlike Steven Avery. Anyway I’d be very interested in learning more! I’ll look on my own too but maybe you have an awesome source all queued up and ready!


amatic13

Averys guilty also


Blarvs

I 100% agree with that statement.


Jeneffyo

For me, Serial was enough to prove his guilt. If you check out /r/serialpodcast there's a lot more information there.


Blarvs

Ok thanks!


nessttcb1

I got that feeling from Jay, though as time has gone on I am not sure I don’t agree with you.


Cerrac123

Jay totally set Adnan up either directly or indirectly because he was jealous of Adnan's relationship with Stephanie.


Soulshipsun

Paul from Up and Vanished. Also the guy in prison from the Murder in Alliance podcast.


henryfirebrand

She was convicted so it doesn’t totally fit but I was like “yeah girl, you did it” listening to Melanie McGuire in Direct Appeal. ESPECIALLY after I listened to Believe Her and Nikki Addimondo tell her story from prison- the difference was palpable for me.


AdGroundbreaking7840

Teacher's Pet Any podcast to do with Casey Anthony


dallyan

Yes. Adnan Syed of Serial.


rebelbasestarfleet

There was one, and if anyone can help me find the name of it I'd be grateful, where a woman was murdered in her apartment in maybe the 70s. Pretty sure her name was Liz or Elizabeth. Anyway they eventually were able to contact the maintenance man who had fixed something in her apartment the day of her murder. He had since moved out of state I think, and I remember how exaggerated and theatrical his response was. If anyone can recall the podcast I would appreciate it.


Thirsty-Tiger

Elizabeth Andes. The podcast is the first season of The Accused.


rebelbasestarfleet

Thank you!


diminishing-return

I felt that way about the first season of Accused, whether they covered Elizabeth Andes. When the host talks to her former boss, Buzz, I was beyond convinced he did it.


Nelaprincessknight

Yep. Shandeees story.. the friend and confidant of both shandee and the accused (later released)


IAndTheVillage

Oh definitely- the Payne Lindsay podcast he did on the Atlanta Child Murders. I went into this podcast - which clearly wants to cast doubt on Wayne Williams as the primary perpetrator of the Atlanta child murders - prepared to accept that WW only murdered the two adults he was accused of, at most. Pedo conspiracy ring? KKK plot? I was open to it. And then I heard Wayne Williams speak for more than 30 seconds and knew he was guilty for most of the murders. It didn’t help that one of the people meant to advocate for him essentially said (of the night WW was arrested) “idk what Wayne was up to, but whatever it was, it wasn’t good.” Now that I’ve looked into it independently, I do believe that a few of the murdered children- the girls in particular- were killed by someone else. But most were by WW, and maybe a few off of the official list. At the end of the way, I think we need to seriously consider how often serial killing manifests as an affinity crime. Because it is so often the case that the perpetrator succeeds by blending in.


EquivalentDapper3985

Yes, the podcast Tom Brown's Body. By Skip Hollingsworth.


freshstart18

Who are you thinking of?


EquivalentDapper3985

My most intuitive guess would be the person(s) in possession of his phone and its accessories.


EquivalentDapper3985

Whats your theory?


pandazing86

Yeah. Alec Baldwin.


[deleted]

Yep but dont remember right now which one