Crime Junkie audiochuck
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- Crímenes reales
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If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people.
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INFAMOUS: The LaSalle Street Murders
When a couple of young Indianapolis businessmen fail to show up for work in December of 1971, their secretary grows concerned as the day goes on, and a friend volunteers to swing by their house to check up on them. He never could have expected the carnage he would find inside, or how it would set off one of the strangest investigations in Indiana history. Was the perp the jealous partner of one of the men's many romantic conquests? A businessman with a grudge? A contract killer hired by the Mob to send a message? Or even by the White House itself?
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SURVIVED: The Chowchilla Kidnapping
On a warm summer day in 1976, 26 children went missing from the town of Chowchilla, California, setting off one of the most bizarre kidnapping cases in U.S. history.
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MURDERED: Lisa Norell
When a 15-year-old girl vanishes on her way home from a friend’s quinceañera rehearsal in 1998, a California community holds its breath and hopes it’s a one-off. But when other young women in the community are targeted one by one, investigators have to ask if there’s a serial killer in their midst.
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MYSTERIOUS DEATH OF: Douglas Wagg, Jr.
Thirty-three years after Douglas Wagg, Jr. turned up on a lone stretch of railroad tracks in the middle of the night in rural Martin County and over a year since Delia took on the case the scope of what was really going on in the area during the 1990's has come into view. Who was Doug? How did he end up so far from home? Who was he last seen with? Was the train really what killed him? Why was his case never investigated?
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WANTED: Justice for MMIP
May is Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons Awareness Month, and we want to highlight some of the many cases involving members of Native American communities that so often go underreported and underserved, and thus unsolved. Today, we’re bringing you five stories that can be solved… if the right people come forward.
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MURDERED: Brittany Locklear
When a little girl goes missing from her bus stop in 1998, it’s just the start of one community’s decades-long search for justice.
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I LOVE IT!!!!!
This is the best podcast of true crime ever. The stories are perfectly told and super interesting.
I’m not from the United States, so I don’t know most of the stories they tell, but I can assure you that it is so well told that I’m able to see myself in the place where it occurred perfectly.
If you like true crime you will love these podcast and they hostages.
Plagiarism and lack of journalistic integrity
This podcast is in poor taste. Ashley Flowers is NOT a journalist and has plagiarized without apologizing to her victims. She collaborated with the police and allowed them to edit her podcast without disclosing (Red Ball) and in this series she reports on crimes that have already been solved so she is not helping any victims. She makes millions off of this podcast, her plagiarized content and revictimisation of families of victims is all monetised via ad revenue. Listener beware.
It’s addictive
This is new to me, my friend recommended it and honestly I must of been living under a rock- I am addicted it’s amazing. Such good story tellers and their take on stuff is like having a chat with friends, they ask the questions and answer them, they (Ashley mainly) is a fantastic reporter of all things crime junky! It’s honestly one of the best podcasts out there.