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True Crime Podcast 2024 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Police Stories Podcast

  • FULL Police Interrogation of Former Police Chief For Murder

    2 MAG 2024 · FULL Police Interrogation of Former Police Chief For Murder On October 2017, Hardin, then 50 years old, pleaded guilty to first-degree murder, admitting that he had killed James Appleton. Appleton pulled into a parking lot on Gann Ridge Road in Gateway, Arkansas on February 23, 2017, to talk with his coworker and brother-in-law on his cell phone. A passerby saw the pickup and a blue Chevrolet Malibu parked behind it. The driver of the Malibu waved him around, the passerby told police, and when he was a few hundred yards away, he heard a bang and saw the Malibu speed toward him, before turning onto the dirt road where Hardin lived. With his family. And his blue Malibu. His wife Linda thought he had been outside spreading grass seed, but the passerby knew Hardin all his life. He was sure it was him. Hardin was sentenced to 30 years in prison and was required to provide a DNA sample to the state. It was a match. Hardin had never even been a suspect, but on February 7, 2019 Hardin pleaded guilty to two counts of rape, finally closing the 1997 case. Hardin received 25 years on each of the two counts, which are running concurrently with his murder sentence. All in all, Hardin will serve at least 21 years of the 30-year murder sentence, and then another 14, before he is first eligible for parole at age 84. Hardin had worked for four police agencies. He was fired from one, allowed to resign from one rather than be fired and resigned from two, always claiming his separation was on higher ground. For example, he claimed to have left Fayetteville Police Department because other officers were stealing and his work environment became intolerably hostile after he reported their theft. He resigned after seven months from Huntsville, stating that he refused to treat people unfairly, as was expected of him. A couple of departments later, and he found himself filing for unemployment. And being denied. Hardin returned to the private sector, but kept his toe in law enforcement, serving two one-year terms as volunteer constable in Benton County. In 2016 Hardin became chief of police in Gateway, resigning after four months to earn an associate's degree in criminal justice at Northwest Arkansas Community College. Hardin was working in corrections when he was arrested for Appleton's murder. Hardin is now #168541 at Arkansas DOC's North Central Unit, where — apart from the whole murder and rape thing — he has no major disciplinary violations, has completed an anger management course, and in October 2017 was determined to be minimum risk classification. To this day no one knows why he killed Appleton. True Crime Podcast 2022 Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Police Stories Podcast
    1 h 31 min. 26 sec.
  • Best of David Paulides’ Missing 411 - Disappearances in National Parks, Coast to Coast AM

    1 MAG 2024 · Best of David Paulides’ Missing 411 - Disappearances in National Parks, Coast to Coast AM COAST TO COAST AM – Best of David Paulides’ Missing 411 - Disappearances in National Parks, Coast to Coast AM hosted by George Noory and George Knapp. Hunters have disappeared from wildlands without a trace for hundreds of years. David Paulides presents the haunting true stories of hunters experiencing the unexplainable in the woods of North America. Based on the book series by David Paulides, an investigation into the many disappearances that have occurred in National Parks and Forests of the United States and elsewhere over several decades.
    1 h 39 min. 24 sec.
  • Mother accused of killing children, putting them in oven FULL 911 CALL

    1 MAG 2024 · Mother accused of killing children, putting them in oven FULL 911 CALL The disturbing 911 call from a mother now accused of murdering her two small children was released by police on Wednesday. Atlanta Police said Lamora Williams, 24, killed her two young children, Ja'Karter Penn, 1, and Ke-Yaunte Penn, 2, by placing them in an oven, but that’s not what she told dispatchers when she called 911. Warning: this article and attached videos contain content some may find disturbing “She just left my kids in the house when I came back from work, and my kids, two of my kids are dead. What do I… what do I… what do I got to do? They dead,” Williams told a dispatcher. The call starts with Williams telling the dispatch she came home from work and discovered her two young sons dead. The call quickly turned graphic. RELATED: Mother charged in murders of two children waives first appearance "When I came in, the stove was laying on my son, on my youngest son's head, and my other son was laid out on the floor with his brains laid out on the floor. I don't know what to do. I just came home from work," Williams was heard saying in the 911 call. Williams first telling the dispatcher that her cousin was babysitting and left the children alone, but then in a bizarre twist, she asked the operator to assure her she will not be blamed for their deaths MORE: Listen to the mother's full 911 call "Can you please help me? Like. Can you please tell me, like, I don't want to get locked up because this is not my fault? I had just came [sic] home from work," Williams said. But investigators said that is not what happened. The charges laid out in a warrant which stated the 24-year-old mother put Ja'Karter and Ke-Yaunte in the oven sometime between 11 p.m. Thursday and 1 a.m. Friday. RELATED: Warrant: Atlanta mother put toddlers in oven, turned it on "Both of my children are dead. Their head is burnt. Their... Their skull is laying under the floor. The stove... One of my babies is stuck, the stove is pulled over and everything," Williams told dispatchers. At the same time Williams was making her 911 call, the boy's father, Jameel Penn, was also calling 911 from his workplace. He told a dispatcher Williams had just video chatted with him, showing him the dead bodies of his sons. MORE: Listen to the father's full 911 call Penn: "She video called me and showed me this and I seen [sic] it." Dispatcher: "What's the address?" Penn: "And I really think they are really dead." Another child, later identified by police as 3-year-old Jameel Penn Jr., was found unharmed by officers inside the apartment that day. RELATED: Funeral home to pay for services for two toddlers William’s mother said her daughter suffers from severe mental illness. True Crime 411 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls, Police Stories and Missing Persons
    30 min. 13 sec.
  • Haunting 911 Emergency calls

    30 APR 2024 · Haunting 911 Emergency calls True Crime 411 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls, Police Stories and Missing Persons
    40 min. 9 sec.
  • The Murder Of Janet Abaroa AND David Crespi Murdered His Two Daughters - True Crime Documentary

    29 APR 2024 · The Murder Of Janet Abaroa AND David Crespi Murdered His Two Daughters - True Crime Documentary Janet Abaroa, 26, was brutally killed inside her house on the evening of April 26th, 2005, while her six-month-old son slept soundly in the next room. The brutal murder of a young mother stunned Durham and devastated her family and friends. Raven Abaroa, her worried husband, dialed 911 in a panic. Not long after her murder, he was the one who discovered her body. Raven and Janet were college sweethearts who married soon after graduation. On the surface, their relationship appeared to be great, but family and friends were concerned. Raven was caught embezzling from his work, which was the most surprising recent information leading up to Janet's death. Raven's knife collection was mysteriously missing from the house on the night of Janet's murder, and he stood to gain $500,000 from his wife's life insurance policy. Raven, on the other hand, had an alibi: he was at a soccer game in the evening. Janet was in bed watching TV when he departed, he said cops (her nightly routine). He had no idea that this minor detail would lead to a new finding in the case. The case remained unsolved for five years. Raven moved on with his life and married Vanessa Pond in Salt Lake City, Utah, with his kid. In 2013, Zwerling received the evidence package, which included dried contact lenses. The contact lenses rehydrated when he added a saline solution, demonstrating that they were in Janet's eyes at the time of her murder and after she was buried. While Raven maintains that he did not murder Janet, the rest of the world, including his second wife, believes he did.
    42 min. 19 sec.
  • Rodney Alcala Serial Killer Documentary - The Best True Crime Documentary Ever

    28 APR 2024 · Rodney Alcala Serial Killer Documentary - The Best True Crime Documentary Ever Rodney James Alcala is a convicted rapist and serial killer who was sentenced to death in California in 2017 for five murders committed between 1977 and 1979 . Rodney Alcala is a convicted rapist, torturer and serial killer who evaded justice for 40 years. Dubbed the Dating Game Killer Alcala was once a contestant on . Johann Jack Unterweger (16 1950 – 29 1994) was an Austrian serial killer who murdered prostitutes in several countries. True Crime Podcast Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Police Stories Podcast
    49 min. 27 sec.
  • Florida Deputy Fired After DUI Arrest

    27 APR 2024 · Florida Deputy Fired After DUI Arrest On May 17, 2022, now-former Pinellas County Deputy Sheriff Shelby Alyse Coniglio was stopped by Officer Kristin Higgins with the St. Petersburg Police Department. Despite pleading to her status as a deputy sheriff, to having been assembling furniture, and to wearing contact lenses, Coniglio was ultimately cited for careless driving and arrested on suspicion of driving while under the influence. Even after she invited an officer into her dad's car with her. 'Cause that's something sober people do. Coniglio submitted to a breath alcohol test; her BAC registered as .206% and .219%. She was fired. Coniglio's next court date is scheduled for January 19, 2023. Did you know she is Italiano?
    40 min. 37 sec.
  • FULL Police Body Cam: American Fork police find two of Ruby Franke's daughters during her arrest

    23 NOV 2023 · Police Body Cam: American Fork police find two of Ruby Franke's daughters during her arrest Body camera footage reveals the moments when American Fork police find two of Ruby Franke’s daughters miles away from their mother and her associate Jodi Hildebrandt as they were being arrested.
    1 h 26 min. 28 sec.
  • Mother accused of killing children, putting them in oven FULL 911 CALL

    12 NOV 2023 · Mother accused of killing children, putting them in oven FULL 911 CALL The disturbing 911 call from a mother now accused of murdering her two small children was released by police on Wednesday. Atlanta Police said Lamora Williams, 24, killed her two young children, Ja'Karter Penn, 1, and Ke-Yaunte Penn, 2, by placing them in an oven, but that’s not what she told dispatchers when she called 911. Warning: this article and attached videos contain content some may find disturbing “She just left my kids in the house when I came back from work, and my kids, two of my kids are dead. What do I… what do I… what do I got to do? They dead,” Williams told a dispatcher. The call starts with Williams telling the dispatch she came home from work and discovered her two young sons dead. The call quickly turned graphic. RELATED: Mother charged in murders of two children waives first appearance "When I came in, the stove was laying on my son, on my youngest son's head, and my other son was laid out on the floor with his brains laid out on the floor. I don't know what to do. I just came home from work," Williams was heard saying in the 911 call. Williams first telling the dispatcher that her cousin was babysitting and left the children alone, but then in a bizarre twist, she asked the operator to assure her she will not be blamed for their deaths MORE: Listen to the mother's full 911 call "Can you please help me? Like. Can you please tell me, like, I don't want to get locked up because this is not my fault? I had just came [sic] home from work," Williams said. But investigators said that is not what happened. The charges laid out in a warrant which stated the 24-year-old mother put Ja'Karter and Ke-Yaunte in the oven sometime between 11 p.m. Thursday and 1 a.m. Friday. RELATED: Warrant: Atlanta mother put toddlers in oven, turned it on "Both of my children are dead. Their head is burnt. Their... Their skull is laying under the floor. The stove... One of my babies is stuck, the stove is pulled over and everything," Williams told dispatchers. At the same time Williams was making her 911 call, the boy's father, Jameel Penn, was also calling 911 from his workplace. He told a dispatcher Williams had just video chatted with him, showing him the dead bodies of his sons. MORE: Listen to the father's full 911 call Penn: "She video called me and showed me this and I seen [sic] it." Dispatcher: "What's the address?" Penn: "And I really think they are really dead." Another child, later identified by police as 3-year-old Jameel Penn Jr., was found unharmed by officers inside the apartment that day. RELATED: Funeral home to pay for services for two toddlers William’s mother said her daughter suffers from severe mental illness. True Crime 411 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls, Police Stories and Missing Persons
    30 min. 13 sec.
  • The Ken And Barbie Killers [True Crime Documentary]

    8 NOV 2023 · The Ken And Barbie Killers [True Crime Documentary] Karla Homolka, 17, and Paul Bernardo, 23, better known as the Ken and Barbie Killers, first met in Scarborough, Ontario, Canada, in October 1987. Bernardo had already started his rape spree back in May. They were so drawn to each other that they had sex within hours of meeting. Two days before Christmas a year later, the couple drugged and assaulted Homolka's younger sister, Tammy, in the basement of her family's house. Homolka gave Bernardo this as a Christmas gift because she couldn't give him her virginity since she had lost it before they met. Tammy died by coughing on her own vomit as a result of the medication, but her death was considered an accident. Bernardo kidnapped and killed Leslie Mahaffy on June 15, 1991, and her dismembered body is discovered a few days later on June 29, 1991, the same day the killers marry. Kristen French, the third teenager, was kidnapped on April 16, 1992, and her nude body was discovered four days later on April 30th. She died as a result of strangulation. Bernardo was not charged with being the Scarborough rapist until February of 1993. More evidence linking the two of them to the murders was discovered, and Homolka agreed to a plea deal, and both of them are charged with the murders of the three girls. In June of 1993, Homolka was found guilty and sentenced to 12 years in prison. Homolka testified against Bernardo in court after the couple divorced in 1994. Bernardo was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison in 1995. Homolka is now out of prison and has three children. She and her second husband are currently residing in Quebec, after spending many years in the Caribbean following Homolka's release. Bernardo, meanwhile, has filed for parole in Toronto, Canada. At the same time, it was revealed that he was planning to marry a Toronto woman whom he had charmed through letters written in his cell. It's unclear if the wedding arrangements are still on. The Ken And Barbie Killers True Crime Documentary
    45 min. 46 sec.

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True Crime Podcast 2023 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Police Stories Podcast

Welcome to the Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Police Stories Podcast.

This podcast will feature real-life stories from police officers, crime scene investigators, survivors of violent crimes and more. We'll share stories about how police investigate, assess and solve criminal cases, how 911 calls can provide valuable information to police and how crime victims can seek justice. Every episode will feature a different story, providing a unique insight into the world of law enforcement and crime.

We'll bring you interviews with experts from the police force, crime scene investigation teams, prosecutors, defense attorneys, victims and more. We'll explore the impact of crime on individuals and communities. We'll also examine the ethical and legal issues that arise in criminal cases, and the efforts of police to protect the public and bring criminals to justice.

We'll be discussing the latest news and developments in the criminal justice system, and the implications of new laws and policies on the safety of communities. We'll also provide valuable resources to help those affected by crime, and look at the impact of crime on the mental health of communities.

We hope you'll join us as we explore the world of crime and justice, one episode at a time.




true crime is a nonfiction literary, podcast, and film genre in which the author examines an actual crime and details the actions of real people. The crimes most commonly include murder; about 40 percent focus on tales of serial killers.

As much as we love listening to a celebrity interview or cultural discussion, there’s nothing quite like a true crime podcast to keep you hooked for hours on end.

There’s a reason why so many true crime series have climbed the podcast charts over the years – from the genre-defining brilliance of Serial to the unexpected twists and turns of Sweet Bobby, true crime is the genre that just keeps on giving.

True crime has never been more popular than it is today, as evidenced by the astonishing number of podcasts, TV shows, and documentaries dedicated to the genre. At its core, however, true crime is a type of nonfiction literature. From influential works like Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood (1966) to modern-day investigations such as Michelle McNamara’s I’ll Be Gone in the Dark (2018) or Elon Green’s Last Call (2021), such narratives are unique in the way they connect with their readers, precisely because they explore harrowing real-life events that could happen to anyone.

Want to know more about true crime? Here we define the genre, take a fascinating look at its origins, and cover some of its common themes.

The Definition of “True Crime”
It seems like the definition of true crime would be obvious: A story about a crime that actually occurred. Indeed, most true crime books explore dark and distressing subject matter, and reader discretion is advised. Granted, the first rule of true crime is that the narrative must include as many nitty-gritty facts about the case as possible: Readers expect the actual names of people involved and the correct time and place, information about what they did, and as many details of the crime and its investigation as the author can dig up.

True crime books can be about a single event, like a kidnapping. They can also be about the collective crimes of serial killers, thieves, or cult leaders. However narrow or broad the focus, the best true crime books deliver well-researched, finely written examinations of the case at hand.

But the wealth of details is just half of what makes true crime so popular with readers. The most talented true crime authors excel at presenting the facts of a case while vividly re-creating the atmosphere that surrounded the crime. They put criminals and their victims in context by establishing elements like the political climate of the day, the history of a town, or the struggles faced by a particular community. They dig into everyone’s motives, then weigh these motives against the actions and developments they document. They re-create dialogue as faithfully as possible, although of course sometimes it’s necessary to take artistic liberties.

In other words, the most popular true crime authors transport readers to the scene of the crime, with all senses fully engaged. Without an author’s narrative talents, the details of the crime would simply read like a legal report.

Best True Crime Stories Podcast 2022 Police Interrogations, True Crime Investigations and MORE!
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