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The Guilty Files

Paranormal World Productions

The Guilty Files is a true crime podcast hosted by former police officer and investigator Brian King-Sharp, delivering in-depth analysis of real criminal case files beyond the headlines.This isn’t sensationalized true crime. This is investigative true crime. Each case unfolds in two carefully structured parts — revealing not just what happened, but what may have been overlooked.True Crime: UncoveredThe factual foundation.In this segment, Brian reconstructs real murder investigations, cold cases, and high-profile criminal investigations step by step. Drawing on law enforcement training and real-world experience, he breaks down crime scenes, timelines, witness statements, forensic evidence, interrogations, and investigative decisions with clarity and precision. No speculation. No internet myths. No dramatic exaggeration. Just documented facts presented through a professional investigative lens. The Redacted Report is the story behind the official report.Once the facts are established, Brian examines the gaps that remain — abandoned leads, procedural missteps, overlooked evidence, prosecutorial decisions, and the unanswered questions that still raise concerns. Not conspiracy hype. Not sensational claims. Just careful analysis of where investigations may have veered off course — and why. The Guilty Files explores: • Murder investigations • Cold cases and unsolved crimes • Criminal psychology • Police procedure • Forensic evidence • Interrogation strategy • Wrongful convictions • Redacted documents • Hidden investigative details Because the truth is rarely simple — and the most important details are often buried inside the file. Follow The Guilty Files for in-depth true crime analysis from a former law enforcement perspective — and discover what the official report didn’t tell you.

  1. The Casey Anthony Murder Trial

    2 GG FA

    The Casey Anthony Murder Trial

    In the summer of 2008, a two-year-old girl named Caylee Marie Anthony vanished from her home in Orlando, Florida, and her mother Casey didn't tell a soul for thirty-one days. Instead of calling police, Casey went clubbing, got a tattoo that read "Bella Vita," stayed with her boyfriend, posted party photos on social media, and spun an elaborate web of lies about a fictional nanny named Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez who she claimed had taken her daughter. When Casey's mother Cindy finally forced the truth into the open with a frantic 911 call, investigators discovered that virtually everything Casey had told them was fabricated — the nanny didn't exist, the job at Universal Studios was fiction, and the coworkers she named were imaginary. Forensic evidence painted a devastating picture. Air samples from the trunk of Casey's Pontiac Sunfire revealed chemical markers of human decomposition and shockingly high levels of chloroform. Cadaver dogs alerted on the trunk and on a spot in the Anthony family's backyard. A hair with postmortem root banding consistent with Caylee's was recovered from the trunk. Computer searches on the family's home computer included terms like "chloroform," "neck breaking," and "fool-proof suffocation methods," the last of which was conducted on the very day Caylee was last seen alive. On December 11th, 2008, a meter reader named Roy Kronk discovered Caylee's skeletal remains in a wooded area on Suburban Drive, less than a quarter mile from her grandparents' home. Her body had been placed inside a black trash bag and a canvas laundry bag, and three overlapping pieces of duct tape were found adhered to the lower portion of her skull. The chief medical examiner ruled the death a homicide but could not determine an exact cause of death due to the advanced state of decomposition.Casey was charged with first-degree murder and faced the death penalty. The trial began in May of two thousand eleven and became a wall-to-wall media sensation rivaling the O.J. Simpson case.  The prosecution argued that Casey killed Caylee to free herself from the responsibilities of motherhood. The defense, led by Jose Baez, countered with a bombshell claim that Caylee had drowned accidentally in the family pool and that Casey's father George had helped cover it up. Baez also alleged that George had sexually abused Casey since childhood, conditioning her to hide trauma and maintain a facade — though no evidence was ever presented to support either claim. On July fifth, two thousand eleven, the jury returned verdicts of not guilty on all felony charges. Casey was convicted only of four misdemeanor counts of lying to law enforcement.  The verdict shocked the nation and ignited a firestorm of public outrage. Jurors later explained that while they found Casey's behavior deeply troubling, the prosecution could not establish a definitive cause of death, and the lack of direct physical evidence linking Casey to a murder created reasonable doubt they could not overcome. Casey was released from jail twelve days later and disappeared from public life. In the years that followed, she gave a handful of interviews in which she maintained her innocence, blamed her father, and expressed no clear remorse.  A Peacock documentary in two thousand twenty-two gave her a platform to tell her version of events, but it was met with widespread skepticism. The case led directly to the passage of "Caylee's Law" in Florida, making it a felony for a parent to fail to report a missing or deceased child. No one has ever been held criminally responsible for Caylee Marie Anthony's death. If you’re drawn to real criminal investigations, cold cases, and the details that don’t always make it into the official report, make sure you’re following The Guilty Files wherever you listen. Turn on automatic downloads so you never miss an episode — because each case unfolds in two parts, and the truth is rarely found in just one.If you value careful analysis, real law enforcement insight, and true crime without the sensationalism, consider leaving a five-star rating and written review. It helps more than you know and allows us to keep bringing these case files to light. Until next time —The facts matter. The details matter. And the truth is often redacted.

    1 h 17 min
  2. The Casey Anthony Murder Trial

    2 GG FA • SOLO ABBONATI

    The Casey Anthony Murder Trial

    In the summer of 2008, a two-year-old girl named Caylee Marie Anthony vanished from her home in Orlando, Florida, and her mother Casey didn't tell a soul for thirty-one days. Instead of calling police, Casey went clubbing, got a tattoo that read "Bella Vita," stayed with her boyfriend, posted party photos on social media, and spun an elaborate web of lies about a fictional nanny named Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez who she claimed had taken her daughter. When Casey's mother Cindy finally forced the truth into the open with a frantic 911 call, investigators discovered that virtually everything Casey had told them was fabricated — the nanny didn't exist, the job at Universal Studios was fiction, and the coworkers she named were imaginary. Forensic evidence painted a devastating picture. Air samples from the trunk of Casey's Pontiac Sunfire revealed chemical markers of human decomposition and shockingly high levels of chloroform. Cadaver dogs alerted on the trunk and on a spot in the Anthony family's backyard. A hair with postmortem root banding consistent with Caylee's was recovered from the trunk. Computer searches on the family's home computer included terms like "chloroform," "neck breaking," and "fool-proof suffocation methods," the last of which was conducted on the very day Caylee was last seen alive. On December 11th, 2008, a meter reader named Roy Kronk discovered Caylee's skeletal remains in a wooded area on Suburban Drive, less than a quarter mile from her grandparents' home. Her body had been placed inside a black trash bag and a canvas laundry bag, and three overlapping pieces of duct tape were found adhered to the lower portion of her skull. The chief medical examiner ruled the death a homicide but could not determine an exact cause of death due to the advanced state of decomposition.Casey was charged with first-degree murder and faced the death penalty. The trial began in May of two thousand eleven and became a wall-to-wall media sensation rivaling the O.J. Simpson case.  The prosecution argued that Casey killed Caylee to free herself from the responsibilities of motherhood. The defense, led by Jose Baez, countered with a bombshell claim that Caylee had drowned accidentally in the family pool and that Casey's father George had helped cover it up. Baez also alleged that George had sexually abused Casey since childhood, conditioning her to hide trauma and maintain a facade — though no evidence was ever presented to support either claim. On July fifth, two thousand eleven, the jury returned verdicts of not guilty on all felony charges. Casey was convicted only of four misdemeanor counts of lying to law enforcement.  The verdict shocked the nation and ignited a firestorm of public outrage. Jurors later explained that while they found Casey's behavior deeply troubling, the prosecution could not establish a definitive cause of death, and the lack of direct physical evidence linking Casey to a murder created reasonable doubt they could not overcome. Casey was released from jail twelve days later and disappeared from public life. In the years that followed, she gave a handful of interviews in which she maintained her innocence, blamed her father, and expressed no clear remorse.  A Peacock documentary in two thousand twenty-two gave her a platform to tell her version of events, but it was met with widespread skepticism. The case led directly to the passage of "Caylee's Law" in Florida, making it a felony for a parent to fail to report a missing or deceased child. No one has ever been held criminally responsible for Caylee Marie Anthony's death.

    1 h 17 min
  3. The Lost Women Of Alaska

    11 MAR

    The Lost Women Of Alaska

    Alaska is the largest state in the union. It is also one of the deadliest places in America to be an Indigenous woman. Alaska Native people make up roughly one-fifth of the state's population but account for more than sixty percent of its recorded homicide victims. Four of the ten American cities with the highest per-capita rates of missing and murdered Indigenous women are located in Alaska. And for decades, a quiet, unspoken policy within the Anchorage Police Department — known internally as NHI, or "no human involved" — ensured that the women most at risk received the least protection.This episode is the story of what that policy made possible, and what a community of determined women did about it. In 2017, Brian Steven Smith — a South African national living in Anchorage — was arrested after a woman brought a memory card to police containing footage of him torturing and murdering thirty-year-old Kathleen Jo Henry, an Alaska Native woman he'd picked up near a Walmart and brought to a midtown hotel where he had maintenance access.  During his interrogation, Smith voluntarily confessed to a second murder — that of Veronica Abouchuk, fifty-two, an Alaska Native woman from the village of Stebbins whose remains had been lying near Earthquake Park for more than a year. He was convicted in February of twenty-twenty-four on all fourteen counts and sentenced to two hundred and twenty-six years in July of twenty-twenty-four.But the case didn't end there. Photographs recovered from Smith's devices showed a third woman — appearing dead or unconscious, with blood visible, a man's foot standing over her body. Those photographs sat in a case file for five years. It took a community advocate digging through sentencing documents to find them and publish them. Within hours, the family of Cassandra Boskofsky, missing since August of twenty-nineteen, recognized her. Smith was never charged in her death. Her remains have never been found.  In September of 2024, her family held a presumptive death hearing and a civilian jury of six ruled her death a homicide — the only official acknowledgment her family has ever received.Also discussed in this episode: the NHI designation and the testimony of former APD officer Michael Livingston, who spent twenty-eight years on the force and is now a full-time MMIP advocate; the missed opportunity when a woman named Alicia Youngblood told police in 2019  that Smith had confessed a murder to her, and police did nothing; the question of Ian Calhoun, a man prosecutors believe probably knew about at least one of Smith's murders and who has never been charged; and the HBO and Investigation Discovery documentary series "Lost Women of Alaska," executive produced and narrated by Octavia Spencer, which premiered February twenty-fifth, twenty-twenty-six. There are two rewards currently outstanding. Five hundred dollars for information leading to the recovery of Cassandra Boskofsky's remains, and five hundred dollars for information leading to the arrest of Ian Calhoun. If you have information, contact the Anchorage Police Department or reach out through MMIP advocacy networks in Alaska. If this episode moved you, share it. Subscribe. Leave a review. And if you have a case you'd like us to cover, reach out at brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. If you’re drawn to real criminal investigations, cold cases, and the details that don’t always make it into the official report, make sure you’re following The Guilty Files wherever you listen. Turn on automatic downloads so you never miss an episode — because each case unfolds in two parts, and the truth is rarely found in just one.If you value careful analysis, real law enforcement insight, and true crime without the sensationalism, consider leaving a five-star rating and written review. It helps more than you know and allows us to keep bringing these case files to light. Until next time —The facts matter. The details matter. And the truth is often redacted.

    1 h 16 min
  4. The Lost Women Of Alaska

    11 MAR • SOLO ABBONATI

    The Lost Women Of Alaska

    Alaska is the largest state in the union. It is also one of the deadliest places in America to be an Indigenous woman. Alaska Native people make up roughly one-fifth of the state's population but account for more than sixty percent of its recorded homicide victims. Four of the ten American cities with the highest per-capita rates of missing and murdered Indigenous women are located in Alaska. And for decades, a quiet, unspoken policy within the Anchorage Police Department — known internally as NHI, or "no human involved" — ensured that the women most at risk received the least protection.This episode is the story of what that policy made possible, and what a community of determined women did about it. In 2017, Brian Steven Smith — a South African national living in Anchorage — was arrested after a woman brought a memory card to police containing footage of him torturing and murdering thirty-year-old Kathleen Jo Henry, an Alaska Native woman he'd picked up near a Walmart and brought to a midtown hotel where he had maintenance access.  During his interrogation, Smith voluntarily confessed to a second murder — that of Veronica Abouchuk, fifty-two, an Alaska Native woman from the village of Stebbins whose remains had been lying near Earthquake Park for more than a year. He was convicted in February of twenty-twenty-four on all fourteen counts and sentenced to two hundred and twenty-six years in July of twenty-twenty-four.But the case didn't end there. Photographs recovered from Smith's devices showed a third woman — appearing dead or unconscious, with blood visible, a man's foot standing over her body. Those photographs sat in a case file for five years. It took a community advocate digging through sentencing documents to find them and publish them. Within hours, the family of Cassandra Boskofsky, missing since August of twenty-nineteen, recognized her. Smith was never charged in her death. Her remains have never been found.  In September of 2024, her family held a presumptive death hearing and a civilian jury of six ruled her death a homicide — the only official acknowledgment her family has ever received.Also discussed in this episode: the NHI designation and the testimony of former APD officer Michael Livingston, who spent twenty-eight years on the force and is now a full-time MMIP advocate; the missed opportunity when a woman named Alicia Youngblood told police in 2019  that Smith had confessed a murder to her, and police did nothing; the question of Ian Calhoun, a man prosecutors believe probably knew about at least one of Smith's murders and who has never been charged; and the HBO and Investigation Discovery documentary series "Lost Women of Alaska," executive produced and narrated by Octavia Spencer, which premiered February twenty-fifth, twenty-twenty-six. There are two rewards currently outstanding. Five hundred dollars for information leading to the recovery of Cassandra Boskofsky's remains, and five hundred dollars for information leading to the arrest of Ian Calhoun. If you have information, contact the Anchorage Police Department or reach out through MMIP advocacy networks in Alaska. If this episode moved you, share it. Subscribe. Leave a review. And if you have a case you'd like us to cover, reach out at brian@paranormalworldproductions.com.

    1 h 16 min
  5. The Murder Of Gary Farris: The Redacted Report

    8 MAR

    The Murder Of Gary Farris: The Redacted Report

    If you listened to our full episode on the Gary Farris murder earlier this week, you got the whole story. The life, the marriage, the murder, the trial, the verdict. But this episode isn't a recap. This is The Redacted Report, and we're going deep into the lesser-known, verified details that most people never heard about. We break down how a three-hundred-pound man was reduced to just thirty-three pounds of remains on that burn pile, and what that destruction meant for the forensic team trying to build a murder case. We dig into the crime scene details that flew under the radar, including the smell of citronella and tire marks found near the smoldering pile, the nine separate DNA swab points collected from a Kubota tractor, and the fact that despite blood being found throughout the house, not a single drop was recovered at the burn pile itself. We cover the revolver a former daughter-in-law said Melody once showed her inside a basement credenza drawer, and the stunning moment mid-trial when a cousin called the sheriff's office to report a thirty-eight Special missing from her home after watching testimony on Court TV. We get into Scott Farris blaming his mother within thirteen minutes of law enforcement arriving, his six separate 911 calls on Melody in the year between the murder and the arrest, and the paramedic who recalled Scott telling her he knew what a burned body looked like from his service in Iraq.  We explore the secret beach trip Gary was planning without Melody's knowledge, Gary's own legal assistant testifying that the couple's marriage was visibly crumbling from the outside, and the revelation that Rusty Barton was dating another woman in Tennessee while carrying on his affair with Melody. We also cover the gunshot-decibel test investigators conducted by firing a thirty-eight caliber pistol at a mannequin, a juror's chilling theory that Melody marched Gary to the burn pile at gunpoint, and the fact that Gary Farris didn't receive a proper memorial until seven years after his death. Every detail in this episode is sourced from trial testimony, court records, and verified press reporting. No fiction. No speculation. Just the facts they left out of the headlines. If you’re drawn to real criminal investigations, cold cases, and the details that don’t always make it into the official report, make sure you’re following The Guilty Files wherever you listen. Turn on automatic downloads so you never miss an episode — because each case unfolds in two parts, and the truth is rarely found in just one.If you value careful analysis, real law enforcement insight, and true crime without the sensationalism, consider leaving a five-star rating and written review. It helps more than you know and allows us to keep bringing these case files to light. Until next time —The facts matter. The details matter. And the truth is often redacted.

    28 min
  6. The Murder Of Gary Farris: The Redacted Report

    8 MAR • SOLO ABBONATI

    The Murder Of Gary Farris: The Redacted Report

    We break down how a three-hundred-pound man was reduced to just thirty-three pounds of remains on that burn pile, and what that destruction meant for the forensic team trying to build a murder case. We dig into the crime scene details that flew under the radar, including the smell of citronella and tire marks found near the smoldering pile, the nine separate DNA swab points collected from a Kubota tractor, and the fact that despite blood being found throughout the house, not a single drop was recovered at the burn pile itself. We cover the revolver a former daughter-in-law said Melody once showed her inside a basement credenza drawer, and the stunning moment mid-trial when a cousin called the sheriff's office to report a thirty-eight Special missing from her home after watching testimony on Court TV. We get into Scott Farris blaming his mother within thirteen minutes of law enforcement arriving, his six separate 911 calls on Melody in the year between the murder and the arrest, and the paramedic who recalled Scott telling her he knew what a burned body looked like from his service in Iraq.  We explore the secret beach trip Gary was planning without Melody's knowledge, Gary's own legal assistant testifying that the couple's marriage was visibly crumbling from the outside, and the revelation that Rusty Barton was dating another woman in Tennessee while carrying on his affair with Melody. We also cover the gunshot-decibel test investigators conducted by firing a thirty-eight caliber pistol at a mannequin, a juror's chilling theory that Melody marched Gary to the burn pile at gunpoint, and the fact that Gary Farris didn't receive a proper memorial until seven years after his death. Every detail in this episode is sourced from trial testimony, court records, and verified press reporting. No fiction. No speculation. Just the facts they left out of the headlines.

    28 min
  7. The Body On The Burn Pile

    3 MAR

    The Body On The Burn Pile

    He was a small-town kid from Tuscumbia, Alabama, who dreamed of becoming a lawyer and made it all the way to the top. Gary Wayne Farris built a thirty-year legal career, raised four children, and settled his family on a stunning ten-acre farm in Cherokee County, Georgia. His grandchildren called him "Big Daddy," and he was the kind of man who'd hand you his credit card before you even finished asking for help.But behind the beautiful farmhouse on Purcell Lane, a thirty-eight-year marriage was rotting from the inside out. Secret affairs. Financial warfare. A wife who texted a friend that she hoped her husband would die "alone and a gruesome death." And a family so fractured that when the unthinkable finally happened, a mother and her own son would point fingers at each other across a courtroom.On July 5, 2018, Gary's remains were found smoldering in a burn pile a hundred yards from his home. What started as a possible accident became a murder investigation the moment a .38 caliber bullet was found lodged in his rib cage. The gun was never recovered. The body was burned beyond recognition. And everyone in the family had a reason to want Big Daddy's money.In this episode, we cover the full story — Gary's rise from a middle-class Alabama household to managing partner at one of the South's most respected law firms, the slow collapse of his marriage to Melody Walker Farris, her affairs with at least two men, the damning cell phone evidence that placed her alone on the property when Gary's phone was moving between the house and the burn pile, and the chilling phone call where she told her lover "he's on the burn pile" before anyone had even discovered the body. We walk through the nearly year-long investigation, Melody's arrest in Tennessee where she'd fled to be with her boyfriend, the five-year wait for trial, and the explosive eighteen-day courtroom battle in October 2024 where the prosecution called thirty-six witnesses and introduced over twelve hundred pieces of evidence. We break down the defense's case that son Scott Farris was the real killer, the jury's initial deadlock, and the guilty verdict on all five counts that sent Melody Farris to prison for life. This one's got everything — money, betrayal, buried secrets, and a family destroyed beyond repair. If you’re drawn to real criminal investigations, cold cases, and the details that don’t always make it into the official report, make sure you’re following The Guilty Files wherever you listen. Turn on automatic downloads so you never miss an episode — because each case unfolds in two parts, and the truth is rarely found in just one.If you value careful analysis, real law enforcement insight, and true crime without the sensationalism, consider leaving a five-star rating and written review. It helps more than you know and allows us to keep bringing these case files to light. Until next time —The facts matter. The details matter. And the truth is often redacted.

    1 h 10 min
  8. The Body On The Burn Pile

    3 MAR • SOLO ABBONATI

    The Body On The Burn Pile

    He was a small-town kid from Tuscumbia, Alabama, who dreamed of becoming a lawyer and made it all the way to the top. Gary Wayne Farris built a thirty-year legal career, raised four children, and settled his family on a stunning ten-acre farm in Cherokee County, Georgia. His grandchildren called him "Big Daddy," and he was the kind of man who'd hand you his credit card before you even finished asking for help.But behind the beautiful farmhouse on Purcell Lane, a thirty-eight-year marriage was rotting from the inside out. Secret affairs. Financial warfare. A wife who texted a friend that she hoped her husband would die "alone and a gruesome death." And a family so fractured that when the unthinkable finally happened, a mother and her own son would point fingers at each other across a courtroom.On July 5, 2018, Gary's remains were found smoldering in a burn pile a hundred yards from his home. What started as a possible accident became a murder investigation the moment a .38 caliber bullet was found lodged in his rib cage. The gun was never recovered. The body was burned beyond recognition. And everyone in the family had a reason to want Big Daddy's money.In this episode, we cover the full story — Gary's rise from a middle-class Alabama household to managing partner at one of the South's most respected law firms, the slow collapse of his marriage to Melody Walker Farris, her affairs with at least two men, the damning cell phone evidence that placed her alone on the property when Gary's phone was moving between the house and the burn pile, and the chilling phone call where she told her lover "he's on the burn pile" before anyone had even discovered the body. We walk through the nearly year-long investigation, Melody's arrest in Tennessee where she'd fled to be with her boyfriend, the five-year wait for trial, and the explosive eighteen-day courtroom battle in October 2024 where the prosecution called thirty-six witnesses and introduced over twelve hundred pieces of evidence. We break down the defense's case that son Scott Farris was the real killer, the jury's initial deadlock, and the guilty verdict on all five counts that sent Melody Farris to prison for life. This one's got everything — money, betrayal, buried secrets, and a family destroyed beyond repair.

    1 h 10 min

Descrizione

The Guilty Files is a true crime podcast hosted by former police officer and investigator Brian King-Sharp, delivering in-depth analysis of real criminal case files beyond the headlines.This isn’t sensationalized true crime. This is investigative true crime. Each case unfolds in two carefully structured parts — revealing not just what happened, but what may have been overlooked.True Crime: UncoveredThe factual foundation.In this segment, Brian reconstructs real murder investigations, cold cases, and high-profile criminal investigations step by step. Drawing on law enforcement training and real-world experience, he breaks down crime scenes, timelines, witness statements, forensic evidence, interrogations, and investigative decisions with clarity and precision. No speculation. No internet myths. No dramatic exaggeration. Just documented facts presented through a professional investigative lens. The Redacted Report is the story behind the official report.Once the facts are established, Brian examines the gaps that remain — abandoned leads, procedural missteps, overlooked evidence, prosecutorial decisions, and the unanswered questions that still raise concerns. Not conspiracy hype. Not sensational claims. Just careful analysis of where investigations may have veered off course — and why. The Guilty Files explores: • Murder investigations • Cold cases and unsolved crimes • Criminal psychology • Police procedure • Forensic evidence • Interrogation strategy • Wrongful convictions • Redacted documents • Hidden investigative details Because the truth is rarely simple — and the most important details are often buried inside the file. Follow The Guilty Files for in-depth true crime analysis from a former law enforcement perspective — and discover what the official report didn’t tell you.

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