It's Murder, Y'all It's Murder, Y'all
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- True Crime
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Each week on the It's Murder, Y'all podcast, we're going to bring you lesser-known true crime cases from the Deep South. And if you like your southern true crime with a side of millennial pop culture references, ADHD-induced tangents, and a tasteful amount of spicy language, then this podcast is for you!
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Ep 34 - The Tanning Bed Murders
18-year-olds Melissa Chilton and Tiffany Campbell were young, beautiful girls with their whole lives ahead of them until the wrong person walked into the Exotic Tan for Men.
Come follow us on Instagram: @itsmurderyall
Check out our website (it's a work in progress): itsmurderyall.com
Sources
Highland, D. (1996, February 23). Two teen-age employees of tanning salon slain. The Tennessean.
Moore, L.A. (1996, February 24). Youth, hope die on the wild side. The Tennessean.
Moore, L.A. (1996, February 27). Police say slain dancers possibly knew assailant. The Tennessean.
CrimeStoppers. (1997, July 9). Exotic Tan slayings clues worth $1,000. The Tennessean.
Campos, A. (2002, March 29). Man held in spree was Jesuit coach. The Sacramento Bee.
Wilson, W. (2002, April 19). Guilty plea in robberies. The Sacramento Bee.
Ritter, F. (2006, February 21). Mom will pay for info in her slain daughter’s ‘cold case.’ The Tennessean.
Hass, B. (2013, February 23). Ex-football star charged in cold case. The Knoxville News-Sentinel.
Barchenger, S. (2015, August 28). After 19 years, mothers will face suspect in daughters’ slayings. The
Tennessean.
Barchenger, S. (2016, July 11). Judge denies lower bond in tanning bed slayings case. The Tennessean.
Barchenger, S. (2017, March 16). Man charged in 1996 deaths argues for case’s dismissal. The Tennessean.
Tamburin, A. (2017, November 30). Suspect in 1996 tanning bed killings will be released on bond. The
Tennessean.
Artnfield, M. (2018). Monster City: Murder, music, and mayhem in Nashville’s dark age. Little A.
Snopes – Tanning Bed Death. https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/brown-betty/
The Kentucky Bordello Murders - https://unsolved.com/gallery/candy-belt-gloria-ross/ -
Ep 33 - Tom Steeples Pt. 2 - The Computer Con Man?
Tom Steeples has been charged with the murders of Ronnie Bingham, Robb Phillips, and Kelli Phillips. Could he also be the missing link to a cold case from 1992?
Come follow us on Instagram: @itsmurderyall
And check out our website (it's a work in progress): itsmurderyall.com
Sources
Callow, J. (1992, October 26). MTSU coed murdered in Georgia. The Daily News-Journal.
Nociti, J. (1992, October 27). Woman beaten to death. Stewart-Houston Times.
Loupe, D. (1992, October 29). Town shocked by coed’s slaying here. The Atlanta Journal.
Cannon, A. (1992, December 20). Career, personal life crashes with beating. The Daily News-Journal.
Cannon, A. (1993, January 17). Scholarships honor slain student. The Daily News-Journal.
Cannon, A. (1994, February 27). Murder reward $10,000. The Daily News-Journal.
Cannon, A. (1994, April 28). TV show gets response on student murder. The Daily News-Journal.
Schmitt, B., & Thomas, S. (1994, May 29). Steeples’ past reveals evidence of troubled life. The Tennessean.
Cannon, A. (1994, June
8). Victim’s fiancé asks to see pic. The Daily News-Journal.
Cannon, A. (1994, June
11). Victim’s fiancé can’t see lineup. The Daily News-Journal.
Tran, T., & Sidime, A. (1994, August 12). Police trace downfall of a killer ego. The Tennessean.
Hobbs, B. (1994, August 20). Steeples died of cocaine overdose. The Tennessean.
Cannon, A. (1997, April 26). Ex-student killed in S. Africa wreck. The Daily News-Journal.
Alligood, L. (2002, November 17). Mt. Juliet office called front for massive scam. The Tennessean.
Miller, M. (2003, January 24). The Rabi and Steeples fraud show. Law.com.
State of Tennessee v. Tillie Ruth Steeples
Heather Uffelman Obituary
Unsolved Mysteries – Tom Johnson - https://unsolvedmysteries.fandom.com/wiki/Tom_Johnson
FindaGrave.com - Jeremy Andrew Rolfs
FindaGrave.com - Heather Roxanne Uffelman
SEC Complaint: https://www.sec.gov/litigation/complaints/comp17835.htm -
Ep 32 - Tom Steeples Pt. 1 - The Dive Bar Murders
A popular bar owner is found dead in his burned-down bar. Months later, a young couple moved from California to pursue their dreams in Nashville but met foul play on their first night. Could a man the couple met at a bar be the connection between both of these cases?
Come follow us on Instagram: @itsmurderyall
And check out our website (it's a work in progress): itsmurderyall.com
Sources
Artnfield, M. (2018). Monster city: Murder, music, and mayhem in Nashville's dark age. Little A.
Deadly Recall - S1 Ep 4 - Closing Time
Dead of Night - S1 Ep 7 - I Die to Pieces
FindaGrave.com - Ronald Edward "Ducas" Bingham
Tran, T. (1993, October 18). Body found after suspicious fire. The Tennessean.
Cornell, T. (1993, October 23). Arson, murder believed to be debt cover-up. The Tennessean.
FindaGrave.com - Robert William "Robbie" Phillips
FindaGrave.com - Kelli Jean Gifford Phillips
Hicks, D. (1994, March 11). Police close in on suspect in homicides. North Country Times.
Schmitt, B., & Thomas, S. (1994, May 29). Steeples' past reveals evidence of troubled life. The Tennessean.
Thomas, S. (1994, June 5). Seeking truth to insanity: Mother left with questions. The Tennessean.
Loggins, K. (1994, August 12). TV tipped woman to flee Steeples' room. The Tennessean.
Leanna Shoulders - The Cinemaholic - The Cinemaholic - https://thecinemaholic.com/leanna-shoulders-murder-where-are-emmanuel-edwards-and-jason-clark-now/
Cornell, T. (1993, April 4). Motel's plan originally included bulletproof glass. The Tennessean.
Thien, M. (1993, April 6). 4 youths held in slaying. The Tennessean.
State v. Fernandez - January 14, 1998 - https://casetext.com/case/state-v-fernandez-65 -
Ep 31 - The Murder on Music Row
In 1999, George Strait and Alan Jackson released their song, "Murder on Music Row." While the song reflected a critique of mainstream country music, the opening lyrics (Nobody saw him running from Sixteenth Avenue. They never found the fingerprint or the weapon that was used...) were an eerie reminder of the real murder on Music Row--the 1989 unsolved murder of Kevin Hughes. Join us as we discuss who it was running away from Sixteenth Avenue.
Come follow us on Instagram: @itsmurderyall
And check out our website (it's a work-in-progress): itsmurderyall.com
Sources
Cold Case Files - The Hitmaker
CourtTV – A Hit With a Bullet
Unsolved Mysteries - https://unsolvedmysteries.fandom.com/wiki/Kevin_Hughes
Artnfield, M. (2018). Monster city: Murder, music, and mayhem in Nashville's dark age. Little A.
Richard Frank D'Antonio v. State of Tennessee (2012)
Wissner, S., Goldsmith, T., & Oermann, R.K. (1989, April 9). Chart fraud hinted in Music Row slaying. The
Tennessean.
Patterson, J. (2003, November 24). Witnesses cite despite over ‘Cash Box’ chart. The Tennessean.
Simbeck, R. (2002, August 8). With a bullet. Nashville Scene. https://www.nashvillescene.com/news/with-a-bullet/article_13e59932-25b7-5c66-bcf0- 0502031c8e9d.html
ABC News. (2006, January 6). The dark side of Nashville's music business.
Wikipedia - Cashbox (magazine) -
Ep 30 - Lord I'm Comin' Home: The Murder of Stringbean Akeman
In this episode, we discuss the case that robbed country music of its innocence.
Come follow us on Instagram: @itsmurderyall
And check out our website (still working on getting it updated): itsmurderyall.com
Sources
Hagood, T. (2023). Stringbean: The life and murder of a country music legend. University of Illinois Press.
Hall, D. (1974, October 30). Opry star recounts discovery of bodies. The Tennessean.
Hall, D. (1974, October 31). Others involved in Akeman case? The Tennessean.
Hall, D. (1974, November 2). Told she begged, Brown kin says. The Tennessean.
Hall, D. (1974, November 3). Browns guilty, get 99-year terms. The Tennessean.
Lewis, D. (1974, November 5). John Brown discusses slayings. The Tennessean.
Paulson, D. (2019, August 26). How the Grand Ole Opry put country music (and Nashville) on the map. The Tennessean.
Benitez-Eves, T. (2022, December 1). 5 country artists who were banned from the Grand Ole Opry. American Songwriter. https://americansongwriter.com/5-country-artists-who-were-banned-from-the-grand-ole-opry/
Brown, L. (2022, December 29). Looking back at the rushed 1997 closure of Opryland USA. Nashville
Scene. https://www.nashvillescene.com/news/coverstory/looking-back-at-the-rushed-1997-closure-of-opryland-usa/article_5cad5fc4-8215-11ed-a845-1f29bb40b636.html
Taylor, T. (2023, August 12). David ‘Stringbean’ Akeman: The curious assassination of a country banjo player. Far Out. https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/david-stringbean-akeman-the-curious-assassination-of-a-country-banjo-player/
Cooper, P. (2023, November 10). How the 1973 Tennessee murder of David ‘Stringbean’ Akeman brought fear to Nashville. The Tennessean.
Paul, S. (2023, November 10). 50 years ago: Opry legend Stringbean Akeman is murdered. Savingcountrymusic.com. -
Ep 29 - Backwood Justice (or Lack Thereof)
This week's case takes us back over 70 years to discuss a case that involves a love triangle (or maybe a love hexagon?), some questionable life choices, and a heaping spoonful of backwoods "justice."
Episode Correction: I misspoke about when Judge Andrews retired--it was October 30, not April 30!!
Come follow us on Instagram: @itsmurderyall
And check out our website (currently trying to get it updated): itsmurderyall.com
Sources
Shout out to Crime Junkie, Bubba Shot the Podcast, and Bobby Russell (RIP).
Haralson County Historical Society - https://www.haralsoncountyhistory.com/
Wikipedia - M. Neil Andrews - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M._Neil_Andrews
Wikipedia - William Boyd Sloan - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Boyd_Sloan
Customer Reviews
Now this is a true crime podcast
Everything about this podcast to me makes it top tier true crime. Diving into specifically the Deep South, the crimes discussed, and the overall commentary make for a winning combination and every episode I’ve listened to so far has been entertaining and thought-provoking. - Clarissa, 30 D&D podcast cohost
Southern Bred, Cornbread Fed… Killers 😲
Fascinating podcast. I love learning the details & history of crimes from my own southern stomping grounds.
Listening to Amber & Rob talk True Crime feels like catching up on the latest town gossip from the front porch in a rocking chair with a glass of sweet tea.
Get ready to clutch those pearls, Grannies. This is a wild ride with a touch of Alabama humor & a pinch of profanity. A+
I love this show.
I love this show, partially because I’m from the southeast, so this is my stomping grounds in general, but also because I love the dynamic between Amber and Rob and I appreciate how Amber treats/discusses the victims as whole people. Murder isn’t funny, but people are absurd, and how they treat the absurdity is pretty freaking funny. *It’s a little NSFW if your work doesn’t allow swears.