Bonnie Moore is a semi-retired attorney, accountant, management consultant, who retired to Utah to be near family and pursue her dream of writing, resulting in her debut novel, "Buried Bones." Buried Bones is a slow-burn mystery wrapped in emotional complexity and carried by a deeply human cast of characters. It follows Maggie Anderson, a retired prosecutor who stumbles into the murder case of Audrey Stillman in a small Utah town. When the victim's ex-husband, Ben, is immediately seen as the likely killer by locals, Maggie is pulled into a vigilante-charged atmosphere that drags her back to her prosecutorial past—and her ghosts. As she digs deeper, with a small, tight-knit investigative team, what unfolds is not just a whodunit but a layered tale of justice, loss, love, and second chances.
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Cold cases sometime linger despite the help of DNA, confessions from the murderers as well as eleventh-hour plea deals. These are some of them | Host - M.P. Pellicer | www.MPPellicer.com
Retracing the investigations about two cases from the 1970s. The Main Line Murders involving the killing of Susan Reinert and the disappearance of her children. And the cold cases known as the Canal Murders and The Flat Tire Murders, suspected to be the work of a lone serial killer stalking the South Florida area.
Valerie Evans is an astrology instructor and consultant. She teaches astrology enthusiasts how to analyze the scene of a crime and how to find a missing person, using a timestamp and studying the energy of that minute in time as a method of investigation.
In 1922, William Desmond Taylor, 49, was found shot in the back, his body sprawled in front of his writing desk. Powder burns marked where the bullet entered his body by the left kidney, and stopped underneath his right shoulder. He died instantly. The police's problem is that they had too many suspects.
Keven is a professor and author of over two dozen books dealing with biography, history, folklore, ghostlore, natural disasters, and historical true crime. His latest books are titled, "Murderous Acts: 100 Years of Crime in the Midwest" and "Murder in Old Kentucky: True Crime Stories from the Bluegrass".
History and outcome of cold cases dating from the 1970s and 1980s.
COLD CASES:
On a beautiful spring day, in May 1924, two children wandering near Herrenhausen Castle on the banks of the Leine River, made a gruesome discovery. It was a human skull, later determined to belong to a male, age 18 to 20. This discovery proved to be one the of many victims claimed by Fritz Haarmann, dubbed the Butcher of Hanover.
Near the corner of St. Aubin Street and Mack in Detroit is a tract of land where a house once stood. In 1929 a horrific murder was committed under its roof. Not surprisingly there have been reports of a headless man seen wandering where this abode once stood. Could it be the fact that this murder was never solved that causes a tortured soul to be bound to the place it experienced its last horrific moments as a human being?
A young and pretty farm girl named Pearl Bryan was murdered in 1896. Her headless corpse was found in an orchard, and the trial of her accused killers made headlines across the country however, Pearl's name is so well known in modern times, because it is her spirit that is said to haunt Bobby Mackey's Music World. | Host – M.P. Pellicer
It all started on August 18th, 1944 when Sheila Fox a 6-year-old disappeared as she walked home from school. Within the next 4 years 7 other children were attacked or killed, and only one of these incidents was actually solved. The common description of the perpetrator in all the cases was a thin, pale-faced man. | Host – Marlene Pardo Pellicer
David Oman is the owner of the Oman House located on Cielo Dr. which is notorious due to the Tate-LaBianca murders committed by the Manson family in 1969. David describes his experiences living in this house for over 15 years, and the unique geomagnetic anomalies of the land where the structure is situated on and which appear to be the catalyst for the supernatural events produced, and witnessed by David and others who have come to experience contact with otherworldly beings. | Host - Marlene Pardo Pellicer
Marlene discusses with Henry, a retired law enforcement officer, the facts around some very disturbing cases starting with the massacre of a family of eleven on Easter 1975, and what went wrong, and also the supernatural angle to some of these terrible events, including how closely many of these cases are using the theory of 6 degrees of separation.
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