What They Hide: Hidden Crimes in Plain Sight. A True Crime Podcast

matt wray

What They Hide: Hidden Crimes in Plain Sight is a long-form investigative podcast exploring the crimes that went unnoticed — not because they were invisible, but because they were overlooked.Each episode examines a case where violence, abuse, or exploitation existed openly within families, communities, or institutions, hidden behind familiarity, routine, and disbelief. Through careful storytelling and factual analysis, the series looks beyond the perpetrators to examine the warning signs that were missed, the systems that failed, and the lives that were changed forever.This podcast is not about shock value.It is about understanding how harm survives in ordinary spaces — and what we must learn to prevent it from happening again. Hosted on Podbean. 

  1. The Essex Boys: Justice or Mystery

    1d ago

    The Essex Boys: Justice or Mystery

    ☕ Support the show: Buy Me A Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/whattheyhide   THE ESSEX BOYS – PART 2: JUSTICE OR MYSTERY? In December 1995, Tony Tucker, Pat Tate and Craig Rolfe were found murdered inside a blue Range Rover on a remote farm track near Rettendon, Essex. The murders shocked Britain. But the controversy that followed would prove every bit as enduring as the crime itself. In Part Two, we examine the investigation known as Operation Century, the emergence of key witness Darren Nicholls, the arrests of Michael Steele and Jack Whomes, and the trial that led to two life sentences. We explore the appeal challenges, disputes surrounding witness credibility, questions raised about mobile phone evidence, media payments, disclosure arguments and the alternative theories that continue to divide opinion nearly three decades later. We also examine the documentaries, books and investigations that transformed the Essex Boys murders from a criminal case into one of Britain’s most debated true crime stories. Throughout this episode, claims, allegations and theories are presented as claims and allegations unless established by court findings or official records. The convictions of Michael Steele and Jack Whomes remain in place. But the questions surrounding Rettendon have never completely disappeared. Was justice served? Or does one of Britain’s most notorious gangland murders still hold unanswered secrets?   CONTENT WARNING This episode contains discussion of murder, organised crime, drug trafficking, violence and criminal allegations. Listener discretion is advised.   SOURCES Primary Legal Sources Court of Appeal judgments relating to Michael Steele and Jack Whomes Contemporary reporting from the Old Bailey trial Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) reporting and statements Essex Police statements relating to Operation Century Documentaries The Essex Murders (Sky Documentaries) Essex Boys: The Truth Various Sky News investigations into the Rettendon murders Television documentaries examining the convictions and subsequent appeals Books & Long-Form Research Bernard O’Mahoney – Essex Murders Bernard O’Mahoney – Essex Boys Wensley Clarkson – organised crime reporting Published works examining the Rettendon murders and Essex organised crime during the 1990s News Archives BBC News Archive Sky News Archive The Guardian Archive The Independent Archive The Telegraph Archive Essex Echo Archive Press Association reporting Additional Research Reporting relating to Darren Nicholls and subsequent appeal arguments Reporting concerning media payment controversies discussed during appeal proceedings Reporting on mobile phone evidence disputes raised by campaigners Reporting on TM Eye investigations and claims made by former detectives and private investigators Historical reporting on organised crime and drug trafficking in Essex during the mid-1990s   DISCLAIMER This episode distinguishes between: • Facts established in court • Claims made by investigators • Allegations made by witnesses • Theories advanced by journalists, campaigners and documentary makers The inclusion of a claim or theory does not imply its accuracy or acceptance as fact.   Follow the show: Instagram: @whattheyhidepod Facebook: @whattheyhidepod TikTok: @whattheyhidepod X: @whattheyhidepod Email: whattheyhidepod@gmail.com Music by MUBERT What They Hide: Hidden Crimes in Plain Sight Because sometimes the truth isn’t hidden. It’s hiding in plain sight.

    1h 4m
  2. The Essex Boys: The Last Ride

    4d ago

    The Essex Boys: The Last Ride

    ☕ Support the show: Buy Me A Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/whattheyhide   THE ESSEX BOYS – PART 1: THE LAST RIDE On a cold December morning in 1995, a farmer made a discovery that would shock Britain. Parked on a remote farm track near Rettendon, Essex, sat a blue Range Rover. Inside were the bodies of Tony Tucker, Pat Tate and Craig Rolfe. All three had been killed in what appeared to be a carefully planned execution. The murders would become one of the most infamous gangland killings in British history. But before the investigation, the arrests and the controversy, there were three men living in a rapidly changing world. In Part One, we travel back to the Essex of the 1990s. We explore the rise of rave culture, the explosion of the ecstasy trade and the criminal networks that flourished around Britain’s booming nightclub scene. We examine the lives of Tony Tucker, Pat Tate and Craig Rolfe, their reputations, their associations and the dangerous world they inhabited. And we follow the final weeks leading up to the night that ended in murder. This is the story before the investigation. Before the trial. Before the controversy. This is the road to Rettendon.   CONTENT WARNING This episode contains discussion of organised crime, drug trafficking, violence and murder. Listener discretion is advised.   SOURCES Court & Official Sources Court of Appeal judgment relating to Michael Steele and Jack Whomes Essex Police material relating to Operation Century Contemporary trial reporting from 1998 Books Bernard O’Mahoney – Essex Boys: The New Generation Bernard O’Mahoney – Essex Murders Wensley Clarkson – Gang Wars and related Essex crime reporting Various published works covering the Rettendon murders and Essex organised crime Documentaries The Essex Murders (Sky Documentaries) Essex Boys: The Truth Various Channel 4, ITV and Sky crime documentaries covering the Rettendon murders News & Archive Reporting BBC News archive The Guardian archive The Independent archive Daily Telegraph archive Essex Echo archive Press Association reports Background Research Reporting relating to the death of Leah Betts and the UK ecstasy panic of the mid-1990s Historical reporting on the UK rave scene and nightclub security industry Contemporary newspaper coverage from 1995–1998   Follow the show: Instagram: @whattheyhidepod Facebook: @whattheyhidepod TikTok: @whattheyhidepod X: @whattheyhidepod Email: whattheyhidepod@gmail.com   What They Hide: Hidden Crimes in Plain Sight Because sometimes the truth isn’t hidden. It’s hiding in plain sight. Music by MUBERT

    1h 11m
  3. The Tinder Date Murder

    May 30

    The Tinder Date Murder

    ☕ Support the podcast and help keep independent true crime storytelling alive: Buy Me A Coffee: http://buymeacoffee.com/Whattheyhidepod On the evening of 1 December 2018, 21-year-old British backpacker Grace Millane went on a Tinder date in Auckland, New Zealand. CCTV footage showed Grace laughing, drinking and enjoying a night out in the city centre before entering the CityLife Hotel with a man she had met only hours earlier. She was never seen alive again. What followed became one of the most high-profile murder investigations in New Zealand’s history. Through CCTV footage, forensic evidence, phone records and internet searches, detectives painstakingly reconstructed Grace’s final hours and uncovered a disturbing trail that led from a hotel room in central Auckland to a shallow grave in the Waitākere Ranges. In this episode of What They Hide: Hidden Crimes in Plain Sight, we examine: Grace’s life and world travels Her arrival in New Zealand The Tinder date that became a murder investigation The CCTV timeline of her final hours The disappearance that shocked two nations The suitcase and burial site The controversial “rough sex” defence The murder trial of Jesse Shane Kempson The verdict and sentencing The wider debate around violence against women and victim blaming This episode contains discussions of murder, sexual violence, coercive behaviour and themes some listeners may find distressing. Listener discretion is advised. Music by MUBERT  Follow the podcast: 📱 Instagram / X / TikTok: @whattheyhidepod 📧 Email: whattheyhidepod@gmail.com ⭐ If you enjoy the show, please consider leaving a rating and review. It really helps new listeners discover the podcast.   Sources Primary Reporting New Zealand Herald Coverage Archive – Grace Millane Case BBC News – Grace Millane Case Coverage The Guardian – Grace Millane Trial Coverage RNZ (Radio New Zealand) – Grace Millane Coverage Case Information Wikipedia – Murder of Grace Millane Court of Appeal of New Zealand Judgment (Kempson Appeal) Trial & Forensic Reporting The Guardian – Pathology Evidence During Trial BBC News – Jury Finds Kempson Guilty of Murder BBC News – Sentencing of Jesse Kempson Context & Analysis ABC News Australia – Later Convictions and Predator Allegations Revealed The Guardian – Debate Around Sexual History Evidence and the Rough Sex Defence   What They Hide: Hidden Crimes in Plain Sight Because sometimes the truth isn’t hidden at all. It’s hiding where nobody thinks to look.

    39 min
  4. The Man Who Vanished into Thin Air

    May 26

    The Man Who Vanished into Thin Air

    Support the podcast & help keep independent true crime storytelling alive: ☕ Buy Me A Coffee:  http://buymeacoffee.com/Whattheyhidepod In September 2016, 23-year-old RAF gunner Corrie McKeague vanished after a night out in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk. CCTV captured Corrie walking into a loading bay known as The Horseshoe at 3:25am. He was never definitively seen leaving. What followed became one of Britain’s strangest and most debated missing person investigations. As police traced Corrie’s final movements, theories of abduction, foul play and voluntary disappearance spread across the country — before investigators eventually arrived at a shocking conclusion involving a refuse lorry and a landfill site. In this episode of What They Hide: Hidden Crimes in Plain Sight, we examine: Corrie’s final night out the baffling CCTV mystery early police theories and media speculation the movement of Corrie’s phone after he disappeared the controversial bin-lorry theory the massive landfill search public criticism of the investigation the 2022 inquest findings and the unanswered questions that still haunt the case today. This episode contains discussions of death, traumatic injury and missing persons. Listener discretion is advised.   Follow the podcast: Instagram/X/TikTok: @whattheyhidepod Email: whattheyhidepod@gmail.com   Sources Suffolk Police – Corrie McKeague Investigation Archive BBC News Coverage – Corrie McKeague Case The Guardian – Inquest Findings (2022) ITV News – The Missing Airman and the Bin Theory Wikipedia – Death of Corrie McKeague The Independent – Corrie McKeague Inquest Reporting

    38 min
  5. The Honeymoon Murder

    May 24

    The Honeymoon Murder

    http://buymeacoffee.com/Whattheyhidepod A luxury honeymoon in South Africa. A late-night taxi ride through Cape Town. A sudden hijacking. And within hours, a young bride was dead. In November 2010, Anni Dewani travelled to South Africa with her new husband Shrien Dewani for what should have been the beginning of their married life together. Instead, the trip became one of the most controversial international murder cases of the modern era. As investigators dug deeper into the killing, prosecutors alleged the hijacking had been staged and that Anni’s murder was part of a planned conspiracy. But as the case moved through the courts, witness testimony began to unravel, contradictions emerged, and the prosecution’s case ultimately collapsed. In this episode of What They Hide: Hidden Crimes in Plain Sight, we examine the murder of Anni Dewani, the global media storm that followed, the extradition battle between Britain and South Africa, and the courtroom drama that left the public deeply divided for years. This episode contains discussion of murder, violent crime, mental health and distressing themes. Listener discretion is advised.   Sources Western Cape High Court proceedings: S v Dewani (2014) UK High Court extradition judgment: Government of South Africa v Dewani BBC News reporting (2010–2014) The Guardian coverage of the Dewani trial and acquittal BBC News archive – Anni Dewani case Reuters reporting on the Dewani case South African court reporting and trial transcripts Contemporary reporting from: Sky News Channel 4 News The Telegraph The Independent Documentary references: Anni: The Honeymoon Murder The Honeymoon Murder: Who Killed Anni Dewani Music by MUBERT   Whattheyhidepod@gmail.com

    44 min
  6. An Appointment with Mr Kipper

    May 19

    An Appointment with Mr Kipper

    http://buymeacoffee.com/Whattheyhidepod In July 1986, 25-year-old estate agent Suzy Lamplugh left her office in Fulham, London, for what should have been a routine property viewing. The client’s name was written in the appointment diary as: “Mr Kipper.” She never returned. Her white Ford Fiesta was later discovered abandoned several streets away. There were no signs of a struggle. No confirmed crime scene. And despite one of the largest missing person investigations in British history, Suzy Lamplugh has never been found. In this episode of What They Hide: Hidden Crimes in Plain Sight, we examine the timeline of Suzy’s final known movements, the massive police investigation that followed, the emergence of convicted killer John Cannan as prime suspect, and the unanswered questions that continue to haunt the case nearly four decades later. We also explore the wider impact of Suzy’s disappearance — from changes to lone-worker safety across Britain to speculation surrounding other violent offenders investigated over the years. Because sometimes people do not disappear in darkness. Sometimes they vanish in the middle of an ordinary afternoon.   Sources Suzy Lamplugh Trust Metropolitan Police – Suzy Lamplugh Appeal Archive BBC News Archive – Suzy Lamplugh Case Coverage The Guardian – Suzy Lamplugh Investigation Reporting The Independent – John Cannan and Suzy Lamplugh Reporting Crimewatch Archive – BBC Reconstructions and Appeals Wikipedia – Disappearance of Suzy Lamplugh Wikipedia – John Cannan Contemporary newspaper archives from 1986–2024 including reporting from: The Times Daily Telegraph Daily Mail The Observer Bristol Post

    45 min
  7. Fred And Rose West- The House of Horrors Part 3: Monsters Next Door

    May 16

    Fred And Rose West- The House of Horrors Part 3: Monsters Next Door

    http://buymeacoffee.com/Whattheyhidepod In the final chapter of our three-part series on Fred West and Rose West, we examine the trial of Rose West, the psychological collapse of the Cromwell Street investigation, and the lasting impact left behind by one of Britain’s most disturbing criminal cases. We explore how hidden abuse survived for years behind an ordinary front door in Gloucester, the unanswered questions that still surround the case decades later, and the terrifying reality that some of the most dangerous people do not appear unusual at all. This episode contains references to murder, sexual violence, coercive control, abuse, torture, and crimes involving children. Listener discretion is strongly advised. Follow the podcast on all socials: @whattheyhidepod Contact the show: whattheyhidepod@gmail.com Support the show: Buy Me a Coffee link in description. # Sources - Court reporting and archival coverage from the trial of Rose West   - Gloucestershire Constabulary investigation materials and public case summaries   - Archived reporting from:   - BBC   - The Guardian   - The Independent   - The Times - Published criminology and criminal psychology analysis regarding coercive control, paired offenders and serial homicide   - Documentary research and retrospective interviews involving investigators, journalists and surviving family members   - Historical missing persons case reporting connected to victims associated with Cromwell Street   - Public records and verified timelines    Music by MUBERT

    1h 5m
  8. Fred And Rose West- The House of Horrors Part 2: Beneath the Floorboards

    May 12

    Fred And Rose West- The House of Horrors Part 2: Beneath the Floorboards

    http://buymeacoffee.com/Whattheyhidepod The excavation of 25 Cromwell Street has begun. As investigators dig beneath the house in Gloucester, the scale of the crimes connected to Fred West and Rose West slowly begins to emerge. In Part Two of this three-part series, we examine the victims linked to the Wests, the methods used to groom and control vulnerable young women, and the atmosphere of fear that existed inside one of Britain’s most infamous homes. We follow the forensic excavation of Cromwell Street, the mounting public horror surrounding the investigation, and the devastating realisation that the crimes may have continued for years unnoticed. This episode explores coercive control, sexual violence, serial offending, institutional blind spots and the long-term psychological impact of abuse within family environments. Listener discretion is strongly advised. ## Sources & Research Primary and secondary research for this episode included: - Official court records and investigative material relating to Fred West and Rose West - Gloucestershire Constabulary case files and archived forensic investigation reporting - Historical coverage and investigative journalism from:   - BBC News   - The Guardian   - The Independent   - The Times   - Channel 4 Documentaries - Archived television broadcasts and documentary interviews relating to the Cromwell Street excavation - Criminological and behavioural research concerning:   - serial homicide investigations   - paired offender psychology   - coercive domestic abuse   - victim selection and vulnerability targeting   - trauma within abusive family systems - Historical research into policing practices, missing persons investigations and institutional responses in Britain during the 1970s–1990s This series is produced for educational and documentary storytelling purposes with respect for victims, survivors and affected families.   Music by MUBERT   whattheyhidepod@gmail.com

    1h 13m

About

What They Hide: Hidden Crimes in Plain Sight is a long-form investigative podcast exploring the crimes that went unnoticed — not because they were invisible, but because they were overlooked.Each episode examines a case where violence, abuse, or exploitation existed openly within families, communities, or institutions, hidden behind familiarity, routine, and disbelief. Through careful storytelling and factual analysis, the series looks beyond the perpetrators to examine the warning signs that were missed, the systems that failed, and the lives that were changed forever.This podcast is not about shock value.It is about understanding how harm survives in ordinary spaces — and what we must learn to prevent it from happening again. Hosted on Podbean. 

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