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True Crime Reporter
Robert Riggs
147 episodes
2 hours ago
Crime Stories You Won't Hear Anywhere Else
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Society & Culture,
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Crime Stories You Won't Hear Anywhere Else
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True Crime
Society & Culture,
News
Episodes (20/147)
True Crime Reporter
JigSaw & Jane 13 Years of Murder & Mayhem with Badge Number One
By Robert Riggs



LAPD Homicide Detective John St. John aka "JigSaw John" Badge #1



Legendary LAPD Homicide Detective John St. John walked among the dead for nearly a half-century.



Known as “JigSaw John,” he pursued monsters that had an insatiable appetite for blood and suffering.



Jane Howatt, a suburban housewife and aspiring writer, wanted to trade her tennis racket for something more meaningful.



St. John didn’t need company, and he sure didn’t want a young unpublished author in his way. 



But something about Howatt’s curiosity—earnest, unspoiled, insistent—broke down his guard.



St. John worked the evidence; Howatt worked the story. 



The result is “JigSaw and Jane: Thirteen Years of Murder & Mayhem with Badge Number One.” 



St.John empathized with crime victims because he was one of them.



As a young jailer, a prisoner ambushed him with an iron bar ripped from a bunk.



The prisoner savagely beat St. John to the brink of death, leaving him blind in one eye.



In another life, JigSaw and Jane would have barely noticed each other in a supermarket aisle. 



Instead, they found themselves peering into crime scenes of LA’s most brutal and sensational crimes together.



This is their story.
Show more...
3 hours ago
19 minutes 23 seconds

True Crime Reporter
Carbon Monoxide Poisoned Two Children’s Brains After Their Landlord Ignored the Danger
by Robert Riggs











This isn’t the kind of story I usually tell.



The police didn’t converge on the scene with sirens blaring and guns drawn.



But what happened inside a Dallas apartment complex was just as devastating and just as unforgivable as a cold-blooded murder.



In 2015, a silent killer slipped into the home of two young children. Not through malice, but through neglect, greed, and a rusted furnace exhaust pipe no one wanted to fix. 



The carbon monoxide gas that leaked out of it took their minds, leaving them permanently brain-damaged, trapped in silence.



For nine years, their mother fought a legal battle against apartment owners and their insurance company, which denied everything. 



What followed was a story of delay, deception, and courtroom drama that will outrage even the most hardened true crime listener.



This episode is a departure from my usual reporting, but it’s one I had to tell. 



Because sometimes, the deadliest crimes aren’t committed with a weapon. 



They’re committed with indifference.







Legal Resources Mentioned In This Story:



Ted B. Lyon Personal Injury Lawyer



Science Resources for Carbon Monoxide Poisoning



Dr. Lindell Weaver



Science.org
Show more...
2 weeks ago
1 hour 8 minutes 35 seconds

True Crime Reporter
Don’t Make It Easy for a Violent Predator to Choose You
Most predators don’t pounce—they pick.



They observe.



They wait.



And they choose the person who looks the easiest to catch.



In this episode, you’ll learn how to make sure you’re not the one they choose.



From FBI profilers to a former producer for CBS 48 Hours, I’ll walk you through the red flags predators look for and how to shut them down before they ever get a chance. 



This isn't about paranoia. It's about awareness. And once you know what to look for, you’ll make it very difficult to be chosen.



Because survival starts before the crime ever happens.







Links:



Robin Dreeke -- Stop Pause Observe



Katherine Schweit



Tase Bailey



Claire St Amant
Show more...
1 month ago
19 minutes 41 seconds

True Crime Reporter
Women Who Talk To The Dead
The Story of 200 Forgotten Murder Victims



By Robert Riggs







They were daughters. Mothers. Sisters. Strangers. Their lives ended violently—and their names were lost to time.



For more than half a century, Detroit’s forgotten dead lay buried beneath weeds and silence—unidentified murder victims dumped into paupers' graves, sometimes stacked in vaults three-deep, known only by numbers in crumbling cemetery logs. No names. No justice. No answers.



This is the remarkable five-year journey of a team of relentless female



investigators who pledged to identify more than 200 victims of Detroit’s



outstanding murder cases.



Led by Detroit Police Detective Shannon Jones and FBI Special Agent Leslie Larsen, this group of dedicated women—detectives, agents, forensic anthropologists, and scientists—literally dug through



the past to bring closure to families and justice to the murdered.



Their quest became known as Operation UNITED, the largest coordinated exhumation of cold case murder victims in FBI history.



Katherine Schweit tells the story of this unprecedented, five-year mission in her book, Women Who Talk to the Dead.



Schweit is a former FBI Special Agent Executive, Chicago prosecutor, and journalist.



She wrote the FBI’s seminal report on mass shooters and is a recognized expert in crisis response and workplace violence.







If you or someone you know is searching for a missing loved one, there’s a tool that can help.



The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, or NamUs.
Show more...
3 months ago
43 minutes 34 seconds

True Crime Reporter
Widow Offers One Million Dollars To Crack Cold Case Murder Mystery
Unsolved Murder of Jim Grimes Haunts Quiet Tennessee Town



By Robert Riggs











A bold reward offers ONE MILLION DOLLARS to solve a cold case murder mystery.



Since the $25 million bounty on Osama bin Laden, few rewards have reached this level—yet a grieving widow in rural Tennessee is offering $1 million of her own money to find her husband’s killer.



A single shotgun blast shattered the life of a beloved husband, father, and grandfather.



Sixty-three-year-old Jim Grimes was ambushed while tending animals on his peaceful property on April 19, 2021.



No witnesses. No forensic evidence. Just shadows and silence.



Who knew Jim's routine? Who knew their way around the property at night? Who lay in wait?



And who’s finally ready to talk?



This is a true crime story of grief, grit, and the relentless pursuit of justice.















Link To Previous Cold Case Episodes With Joe Kennedy



Part 1: NCIS From Evidence to Arrest: Analyzing Murder Cases Step by Step



Part 2: NCIS Confidential: Solving Real-Life Cold Cases To Catch Killers
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5 months ago
36 minutes 32 seconds

True Crime Reporter
The Rock: Alcatraz’s Chilling True Crime Legacy
Alcatraz shut its cell doors more than 60 years ago, but its grip on the American imagination hasn’t loosened.



Each year, nearly a million and a half tourists ride the ferry across San Francisco Bay, through cold, choppy waters, to walk the crumbling corridors of the most infamous prison in U.S. history. 



Visitors today frequently cite the desire to see the cellblocks that once confined legendary outlaws,



Notorious gangsters such as Al Capone, George “Machine Gun” Kelly, and Robert “Birdman” Stroud were inmates here, cementing Alcatraz’s image as the end of the line for incorrigible criminal offenders.



I’ve included a link in the show notes to their “rap sheets” from the Warden’s records.



During its 29 years as a federal prison, Alcatraz gained a fearsome reputation for strict discipline and inescapable walls.



Now, President Donald Trump says he wants to reopen and expand Alcatraz as a high-security federal prison.



In this episode, I take a hard look at the history of The Rock—how it earned its reputation as escape-proof, the men it held, the myth it became, and why, even in ruins, it still casts a long shadow over American justice.







The Warden's "Rap Sheets" for Alcatraz's infamous convicts.
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6 months ago
47 minutes 49 seconds

True Crime Reporter
The Click That Opens The Door To Cyber Hell
You Just Thought Your Home Was Safe



By Robert Riggs







You lock your doors at night. You check on your kids. 



But what if the real threat is already inside—hiding in your phone, your smart TV, or your child's video game chat? 



In this episode of True Crime Reporter®, former federal probation officer Art Bowker takes us into the digital battlefield unfolding inside your home.



Bowker’s book Surviving a Cyberattack: Securing Social Media and Protecting Your Home warns how predators groom teenagers with flattery, how romance scammers bleed retirees dry, and how artificial intelligence is being weaponized to impersonate loved ones.



Bowker and his coauthor Todd Shipley call themselves “The Cyber Safety Guys”. 



This is the story about how cybercriminals not only bleed their victims but leave them emotionally devastated, isolated, and too ashamed to ask for help. 







FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center - (IC3.gov)
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6 months ago
34 minutes 46 seconds

True Crime Reporter
Why Do Women Love True Crime?
A Former 48 Hours Producer Reveals the Psychology and Power Behind the Genre



By Robert Riggs











When the curtain drops on everyday life, true crime shows like this podcast and especially those on television expose the darkest side of humanity.



Television relentlessly chases the latest trending crimes on police blotters and court dockets.



Claire St. Amant pursued those stories in the cutthroat world of prime-time television as a producer for CBS 48 Hours. She also produced segments for 60 Minutes.



She’s written a memoir about her experiences, Killer Story: The Truth Behind True Crime Televison.



Television executives have known for decades that the audience is overwhelmingly female. 



We’re talking 70-80 percent, sometimes more. Mothers and daughters. Best friends. 



Women of all ages coming together for what amounts to a girls’ night out… centered on murder.



You may want to go back and listen to my episode with Journalist Mike Cox.



He wrote a satire, Getting Away With Murder, Learning From Dateline and Other True Crime Shows. 



So what’s going on here? Why are women so drawn to true crime?



Claire St Amant, now a fellow true crime podcaster, shares her insights. 
Show more...
6 months ago
35 minutes 34 seconds

True Crime Reporter
This Is Not The Godfather – It’s the Brutal Truth About the Mob
By Robert Riggs







The Godfather. Goodfellas. The Sopranos.



Hollywood entertained us with polished fiction—honor among thieves, loyalty bound by blood, men of principle wrapped in tailored suits.



But the real mob? It was darker. Colder. Predatory. The smile came first. The knife came after.



This is the true story of how FBI Special Agent Mike Campi helped dismantle the Genovese crime family—the oldest, largest, and most insidious of New York’s five Mafia Families.



Founded by Charles “Lucky” Luciano in 1931. Consolidated under Vito Genovese in the late 1950s. The family once ruled Manhattan’s west side piers and the Fulton Fish Market on the East River with quiet brutality. Everything moved through their hands—money, muscle, silence.



Campi joined the FBI’s Organized Crime Squad in 1985, stepping into the heart of a sweeping federal assault on the American Mafia. Over the next two decades, he led investigations that exposed the rot behind the façade.



His new book, Mafia Takedown, pulls back the curtain on what really happened.



Not the Hollywood version. The truth.
Show more...
6 months ago
27 minutes 10 seconds

True Crime Reporter
CIA Mafia Spies Plot To Kill Castro Hidden From JFK Probe
Mobsters Hit Tony Soprano Style Before They Can Testify







By Robert Riggs



The JFK assassination files recently released by President Trump shed more light on the secret plot by the CIA to use Mafia gangsters to kill Cuban dictator Fidel Castro.



Investigative reporter Thomas Maier, the author of Mafia Spies, his book about the unlikely alliance between the CIA and mobsters, is back to discuss the latest revelations.



This is the second part of my True Crime Reporter® series about the Mafia Spies.



Two Chicago gangsters, Sam Giancana and Johnny Roselli, were central to a Congressional investigation by Senator Frank Church in the mid-1970s 



Both were murdered shortly before they could testify.



I was an investigator for another committee working on a related inquiry at the time. 



The mob-style hit sent a chill through Senators digging into CIA abuses.



Speculation continues about whether the CIA or a Mafia kingpin silenced the mobsters.



Maier and I discuss the murders and revelations from his new book, “The Invisible Spy.”



His dogged investigation uncovered how former CIA Director Allen Dulles steered the Warren Commission’s investigation of President Kennedy’s assassination in Dallas away from the plot to kill Castro.



Here's a link to the cast of characters.
Show more...
7 months ago
33 minutes 19 seconds

True Crime Reporter
The James Bondesque Mafia Spies Plot To Kill Castro With A Poison Cigar
The story sounds like something straight out of a spy thriller. 



A plot by America’s most feared criminal syndicate and its most secretive intelligence agency to assassinate a foreign leader using poison cigars and other James Bond-inspired schemes. 



But this isn’t fiction. This is the true story of how the CIA joined forces with Mafia hitmen to assassinate Fidel Castro.



The revelations with ties to the Watergate scandal in the 1970s have fueled conspiracy theories about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. 



In this episode of True Crime Reporter®, I sit down with fellow investigative reporter Thomas Maier, whose book Mafia Spies pulls back the curtain on a chilling chapter of American history. 



Together, we trace how the mob lost its Cuban gambling empire after Castro’s revolution and how, in Cold War fear, U.S. intelligence agents turned its gangsters to eliminate Castro.



Maier says the challenge of his investigation was figuring how out to tell a story in which everyone lies. 



Here's a link to the cast of characters in the episode.
Show more...
7 months ago
33 minutes 13 seconds

True Crime Reporter
How To Read People To Protect Yourself From Crime Part 2
In this episode, we continue our deep dive with retired FBI Special Agent Robin Dreeke—a man whose job wasn’t just catching spies but recruiting them.



Dreeke led the FBI’s elite Counterintelligence Behavioral Analysis Program, where he mastered the art of predicting human behavior. He turned foreign operatives into informants—not with force, but with trust. 



Now, he’s sharing the same tools that can help you avoid fraud, betrayal, and toxic relationships in everyday life.



In part one, we peeled back the curtain on his high-stakes career in counter espionage against Russian operatives in the United States. 



Now, in part two, Dreeke reveals how you can learn to think like an FBI behavioral analyst. How to see the red flags before they wave. How to spot manipulation before it wraps around your life. And how to use behavior patterns—what he calls “behavior arcs”—to make better decisions about who you can trust.



If you’ve ever been lied to, blindsided, or left asking how did I not see that coming?—this episode is for you.



Dreeke is the author of “Sizing People Up”, a book I recommend every listener study and underline. 



His short guide, “It’s Not All About Me”, offers a crash course in building rapport in any situation.



Let’s get into it—here’s part two of my conversation with Robin Dreeke.
Show more...
7 months ago
33 minutes 24 seconds

True Crime Reporter
How To Size People Up Like An FBI Behavioral Analyst
Whether walking through a dimly lit parking lot, meeting someone new, or even evaluating the behavior of people close to you, the ability to read people and size them up could mean the difference between safety and danger.



This episode teaches you how to think like an FBI Behavioral Analyst.



Robin Dreeke, who headed the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Program, joins me to discuss his framework for predicting human behavior.



Dreeke wrote the book, “Sizzling People Up”, based on his years in counterespionage. 



His unit was part of the Behavioral Analysis Unit that focuses on violent crime—popularly known as the serial killer unit.



Now, in private consulting, Dreeke teaches how anyone can learn to predict what others will do in the most important situations. 



Robin Dreeke is here to help keep you safe in public and online by learning to read people.







PLEASE SUPPORT OUR WORK







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Please support me by purchasing my books.







Click here to purchase my "Texas Crime Stories" audiobook. It downloads into your podcast app.



Click here to purchase the Paperback & Kindle editions on Amazon.







Subscribe to the True Crime Reporter® podcast.







Subscribe to the "Stories To Keep You Safe" Newsletter on the True Crime Reporter® website.







Schedule me to speak at your social meeting or corporate event.



My presentation, "Evil Walks Among Us," features stories about serial killers and notorious criminals and personal safety tips.







Step into the storied halls of the Texas Prison Museum and uncover the gripping tales of infamous inmates, daring escapes, and the history of justice in the Lone Star State.
Show more...
7 months ago
31 minutes 40 seconds

True Crime Reporter
A Terrifying New Scam Bringing Fraudsters to Your Home
Beware of the Fraudster Knocking At Your Door



Scammers don’t just lurk online—they may be coming straight to your front door.



For centuries, con artists have refined their craft, using deception and misdirection to separate victims from their money.



But today’s fraudsters have more sophisticated tools than ever before.



The worst part? You won’t even realize you’ve been conned until it’s too late.



In this episode, I break down the playbook of modern swindlers with Jim Grinstead, veteran newspaperman and host of the Scams and Cons podcast. 



Grinstead studies the psychology of deception—and what he’s uncovered should concern us all.







Click the Promo Code for your exclusive 20% discount at Eric Javits Designer Hats.



We wear these hats and receive a sales commission to keep producing stories.







Please support me by purchasing my books on the True Crime Reporter® website.



Click here to purchase my "Texas Crime Stories" audiobook. It downloads into your podcast app.



Click here to purchase the text version on Amazon Kindle.







Subscribe to the True Crime Reporter® Podcast.







Schedule Robert Riggs to speak at your social meeting or corporate event.



His presentation, "Evil Walks Among Us," features his true crime stories and "Stories To Keep You Safe."







Step into the storied halls of the Texas Prison Museum and uncover the gripping tales of infamous inmates, daring escapes, and the history of justice in the Lone Star State.
Show more...
7 months ago
20 minutes 12 seconds

True Crime Reporter
The $30 Billion Secret The Government Doesn’t Want You To Know
This true crime story is not about a heist pulled off by a notorious bank robber or a cunning scam artist—but an audacious act of bureaucratic theft that spans generations. 



It’s an audacious act of bureaucratic theft that spans generations. 



Picture this: over $30 billion in matured U.S. savings bonds, investments made with trust and patriotism, are sitting unclaimed. 



The rightful heirs, families like mine and maybe even yours, are stonewalled by the very institution that promised to safeguard these assets. 



The U.S. Treasury, armed with meticulous records of bondholders, holds fast to those names while demanding impossible proof—a serial number—to claim what’s rightfully ours.



It’s a $30 billion heist orchestrated through silence and red tape. 



Join me as I unravel this true crime story of broken promises, frustrated heirs, and the relentless pursuit of justice. 



Because sometimes, the biggest heists don’t happen in the dead of night—they happen in plain sight, sanctioned by those who are supposed to protect us.







Make Your Voice Heard! Write, Call, or Email



Mike Crapo (R-ID)



Chair - Senate Finance Committee



239 Dirksen Senate Office Building



Washington, D.C. 20510



202-224-6142



https://www.crapo.senate.gov/contact/email-me



Jason Smith (R-Mo.)



Chair - House Ways and Means Committee



1011 Longworth House Office Building



Washington, DC 20515



Phone: 202-225-4404



https://jasonsmith.house.gov/contact



Help end this bureaucratic theft and ensure justice for millions of American families.







CLICK TO READ THE STORY







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Step into the storied halls of the Texas Prison Museum and uncover the gripping tales of infamous inmates, daring escapes, and the history of justice in the Lone Star State.
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11 months ago
36 minutes 55 seconds

True Crime Reporter
Baby Face Nelson: The Boy Who Became America’s Most Ruthless Killer
In the blood-soaked pantheon of Depression-era gangsters, one killer stood apart - not for his height, but for his face. 



Witnesses consistently described him as looking like "an angel," with bright blue eyes and features so youthful that bank tellers often mistook him for a teenage messenger boy. 



That angelic countenance masked the soul of perhaps the most efficient killer in gangster history. 



Baby Face Nelson didn't just rob banks - he hunted FBI agents for sport, kept a list of their license plates, and giggled like a schoolboy while gunning them down. 



He was a member of John Dillinger’s gang and replaced him as Public Enemy Number One.



This isn't the story of another charming outlaw like Bonnie and Clyde - it's the tale of a cherub-faced psychopath who turned Depression-era America into his personal killing ground.







FOLLOW the True Crime Reporter® Podcast 



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Step into the storied halls of the Texas Prison Museum and uncover the gripping tales of infamous inmates, daring escapes, and the history of justice in the Lone Star State.
Show more...
1 year ago
56 minutes 43 seconds

True Crime Reporter
Sextortion Is Why Social Media Scares Me For The Safety Of Our Children
We used to fear sexual predators stalking our neighborhoods, ready to snatch our children off the streets.  We called it “Stranger Danger”.



But “Stranger Danger” has moved online with Sextortion schemes on the social media platforms and gaming apps our children use daily. 



Organized crime rings now prowl the internet, tricking teenagers into sharing explicit images through these familiar channels. 



Once they have those images, the nightmare begins. These criminals blackmail their victims, threatening to expose the photos and videos to friends, family, and the public unless they pay the extortion demand.



Fear and shame overwhelm the teenage victims, driving some to suicide.



In response, a pair of Texas Detectives known as the “Catfish Cops” troll these dangerous waters, sinking their hooks into predators before they can destroy more lives. 







True Crime Reporter® Security Libary: Sextortion Safety Resources For Parents







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1 year ago
27 minutes 21 seconds

True Crime Reporter
Getting Away with Murder: Learning from Dateline and Other True Crime Shows
Mike Cox’s name is synonymous with Texas crime reporting. 



Cox spent decades covering grisly crimes, working as a police beat reporter and later as the Chief of Media Relations for the Texas Department of Public Safety and authoring books about the Texas Rangers. 



His latest book, Getting Away with Murder: Learning from Dateline and Other True Crime Shows, blends his sharp wit with his vast experience in law enforcement, offering readers a tongue-in-cheek take on crime and the often bizarre ways criminals get caught. 



As an enterprising police beat reporter for the Austin American Statesman, Mike broke the story about serial killer Henry Lee Lucas' courtroom confession to 100 murders. Mike extensively interviewed Lucas in jail and wrote the definitive book about the case, The Confessions of Henry Lee Lucas.



During our interview, Cox reflects on his lifelong immersion in storytelling, his family’s deep connection to journalism, and how true crime shows like Dateline rekindled his passion for the subject.







FOLLOW the True Crime Reporter® Podcast 



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1 year ago
24 minutes 27 seconds

True Crime Reporter
Blood And Ink On The Police Beat Covering Serial Killer Henry Lee Lucas
True Crime Reporter® presents a story that straddles the line between horror and history. Mike Cox, a veteran police beat reporter and former chief of media relations for the Texas Department of Public Safety, spent his life documenting murder cases and bringing clarity to chaos. 



From unraveling the disturbing confessions of serial killer Henry Lee Lucas to sorting out the facts for the press at the Luby’s Cafeteria massacre, Cox's career has been one immersed in blood and ink. 



In this episode, we examine one of Cox’s most sensational stories: serial killer Henry Lee Lucas. 



Lucas, a drifter with an off-kilter gaze and a chilling demeanor, shocked the world by confessing to over 600 murders. His admissions sent law enforcement agencies scrambling, but as Mike Cox discovered, the truth was far more elusive.



Join us as we revisit the courtroom where Lucas dropped his bombshell confession, follow Cox's journey from crime scenes to interviews with Lucas inside prison, and explore the fine line between fact and fiction in one of the most bizarre cases in true crime history.







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1 year ago
17 minutes 29 seconds

True Crime Reporter
A Funeral Home Murder Mystery: Joe Pulizzi’s Bold Leap into Crime Writing
Joe Pulizzi, the Godfather of Content Marketing, takes an audacious leap into crime fiction, delivering a story that is as mesmerizing as it is chilling. 



Set within the haunting confines of a funeral home, "The Will To Die" unravels a dark and twisted narrative brimming with suspense, secrets, and a touch of macabre.



Pulizzi's protagonist, a marketing professional, finds himself entangled in a web of deceit and danger. He is compelled to uncover the mysteries buried deep within the family-run funeral home he unexpectedly inherits.



Since I grew up in East Texas, I was drawn to Pulizzi’s crime novel because of the real-life case of Bernie Tiede.



The chubby-cheeked mortician befriended the widow of a wealthy oilman at his funeral. 



Bernie became her personal assistant and sole heir to her multi-million dollar estate.



And in 1996, he carried out one of the most bizarre murders in Texas history. 



Pulizzi is on to something by incorporating the morticians and embalmers into his story.



They are typically seen as caretakers of the dead, but their presence confronts the unnerving possibility that death has taken on a new, more sinister dimension within their midst.







JOE PULIZZI - LINKS



"The Will To Die"



"The Content Entrepreneur"



The Orange Effect Foundation - Help children with speech disorders receive the speech therapy and technology they need.







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Read The Story
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1 year ago
36 minutes 19 seconds

True Crime Reporter
Crime Stories You Won't Hear Anywhere Else