Black Crime File

About Crime

A true crime documentary podcast channel uncovering real criminal cases, from shocking events to hidden investigations. Each episode breaks down evidence, motives, and outcomes with clear storytelling and factual analysis. Focused on justice, psychology, and real-world lessons behind every crime. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/black-crime-file--6945625/support.

Episodes

  1. Murder Of Family //John List  Black Crime File

    May 29

    Murder Of Family //John List Black Crime File

    He lost his job. He told no one. Then he made a list and his family was on it. In November 1971, accountant and church elder John Emil List sat down and made a decision that would shock America for decades. Facing financial ruin and too proud too broken to admit the truth, List concluded that the most merciful thing he could do for his wife, his elderly mother, and his three children was to send them to heaven before poverty could corrupt their souls. So he did. He shot Helen List in the kitchen over breakfast. He climbed three flights of stairs to kill his 84-year-old mother Alma. He waited for his children to come home from school. And then before finishing the job he drove to his son's high school football match, stood on the sideline, and cheered. He came home. He shot John Junior in the chest. Then he made a sandwich. Slept in the house. Set the lights on timers. Left classical music playing in a ballroom full of bodies. And walked out the door the next morning into a brand new life. For eighteen years, John List vanished completely. He changed his name, moved to Colorado, found a new church, and remarried while the bodies of his family lay discovered in that New Jersey mansion and a nation searched for answers. It took a television programme, a forensic sculptor, and one sharp-eyed viewer to bring him back. This is the story of the List family murders one of the most chilling cases of domestic homicide in American true crime history. A case about financial shame, religious delusion, coercive control, and a man so certain he was right that he never once said sorry. Tonight on Black Crime File, we remember the people in that ballroom. Not the man who put them there. ⚠️DISCLAIMER⚠️ Content Warning & Disclaimer This episode of Black Crime File contains detailed discussion of homicide, domestic violence, child death, financial abuse, and religious extremism. Listener discretion is strongly advised. The content presented in this episode is based on publicly available court records, investigative reports, news archives, and documented historical sources. All information has been researched to the best of our ability for factual accuracy. Black Crime File does not sensationalise, glorify, or trivialise the actions of perpetrators or the suffering of victims and their families. Our primary purpose is to honour the memory of the victims — Helen List, Alma List, Patricia List, Frederick List, and John List Junior — and to examine the psychological, social, and criminal forces that led to their deaths. The views and motivations expressed by John Emil List, including his religious justifications for the murders, are presented solely for the purpose of understanding the case. Black Crime File does not endorse, validate, or defend these views in any form. If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic abuse, coercive control, or a mental health crisis, please reach out to the appropriate services in your country. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/black-crime-file--6945625/support.

    16 min
  2. The Monster Next Door

    May 28

    The Monster Next Door

    Step into the quiet suburban streets of Oakridge… where the biggest danger wasn’t hiding in the shadows — it was living right across the street. In this chilling true crime podcast episode, we uncover the terrifying disappearance of 24-year-old teacher Clara Evans, a young woman who vanished from her own home without a trace. At first, investigators believed they were searching for a stranger. But as the evidence unfolded, detectives discovered something far more disturbing: the people helping police solve the case were secretly the ones behind it. From eerie neighborhood surveillance footage and manipulated timelines to a hidden soundproof basement cell concealed behind a false wall, “The Monsters Next Door” exposes a horrifying story of deception, psychological manipulation, kidnapping, and predators hiding behind friendly smiles. This cinematic true crime story explores how Arthur and Eleanor Vance carefully blended into their suburban community while living a dark double life built on surveillance, obsession, and control. As detectives race against time, every clue reveals a deeper nightmare hiding in plain sight. If you enjoy dark investigative storytelling, suspenseful crime documentaries, psychological thrillers, unsolved mystery-style narration, and immersive true crime podcasts inspired by Netflix-style crime series, this episode will keep you on edge until the final moment. 🎙️ In this episode: • The disappearance of Clara Evans • The terrifying clue hidden behind a locked basement door • How neighbors manipulated an entire police investigation • The shocking discovery inside the Vance home • The trial that left an entire community traumatized Listen now to “The Monsters Next Door” — a haunting true crime podcast episode about the predators we never suspect, the secrets hidden behind perfect suburban homes, and the terrifying reality that evil sometimes lives closer than we think. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/black-crime-file--6945625/support.

    11 min

About

A true crime documentary podcast channel uncovering real criminal cases, from shocking events to hidden investigations. Each episode breaks down evidence, motives, and outcomes with clear storytelling and factual analysis. Focused on justice, psychology, and real-world lessons behind every crime. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/black-crime-file--6945625/support.