In the span of 6 months in 1994, three indigenous teenagers went missing in Northern British Columbia. All three would be found murdered. When a team of profilers looked at the cases and determined these three murders were possibly linked, the RCMP formed a task force that would change the way missing and murdered indigenous women cases were investigated.
Read MoreIn September 2019, 14-year-old Alicia Navarro left a note for her family saying she was running away. Seven months later, Alicia remains missing. Though she left her house freely, the strongest theory in this case is that Alicia left with someone she met online.
Read MoreRay and Faye Copeland raised 6 children and ran their modest family farm for decades. After their children were grown, Ray needed help on the farm. He began hiring transient men from cities hours away from his property. And one by one the men went missing.
Read MoreThere are few serial criminals who have committed the range of crimes as Franklin Delano Floyd. When he was finally arrested for kidnapping a boy he claimed was his son in the 1990s, decades of mysteries were uncovered.
Read MoreIn 1974, a girl walking to her family car on Cape Cod found the body of a woman in a grove of trees. Nearly 46 years later, the woman remains only known as Lady of the Dunes. Who was she? Who killed her? These are answers the Provincetown police continue to seek.
Read MoreIn August 2019, Kaysera Stops Pretty Places left her aunt’s home in Hardin, Montana. Where she went and what she did remain unknown to her family. In fact, most of the facts of her case have been withheld or misreported by the agencies tasked with investigating. Though her family has many questions, the one they want answered the most is what happened to 18-year-old Kaysera?
Read MoreWhen Nailah Franklin went missing in September 2007, police quickly narrowed in on a suspect. Less than three months later, he was arrested but it would take 8 years for the case to go to trial as he continued to proclaim his innocence and assert his right to defend himself in court. Would Nailah Franklin’s family ever find justice?
Read MoreIn December 2019, the Rexburg Idaho police department issued a press release about two missing children, Tylee Ryan and JJ Vallow. As the case rapidly unfolded in the media, people were drawn into a story of deaths, disappearances, and a doomsday cult. But the people who know where Tylee and JJ are aren’t talking.
Read MoreThis is a different sort of episode to tide everyone over until I'm back to work! Healthy vibes for my household, please. Two women were killed in the Birmingham suburb of Erdington and were dumped in what is now known as Pype Hayes Park. The main suspect in both cases was a man named Thornton. Only thing is, the women died 157 years apart.
Read MoreThis episode is part of our on-going Third Thursday series profiling the cases of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls. In 2009, 21-year-old Alyssa McLemore told her grandmother she would be home soon. Her family never heard from her again. A startling 911 call, a few tips, and 11 years have done nothing to bring Alyssa home.
Read MoreIn July 2001, Peter Falconio and Joanne Lees were taking a dream trip around the world. One night, in the middle of remote central Australia, the couple’s world was shattered and Peter has never been seen since. The questions of what happened on the side of Stuart Highway has been resolved in the courts but was it the right answer?
Read MoreIn September 2000, 8-year-old Zachary Bernhardt disappeared from his home in Clearwater, Florida. Though police never named a suspect, the media narrowed in on Zachary’s mother. For over 19 years, she has lived under a cloud of suspicion but is it justified?
Read More