Mugshot Mysteries

Kathryn and Gabriel

Some cases are solved. Most aren’t. All of them are worth talking about. Mugshot Mysteries is a true crime, paranormal, and unsolved mysteries podcast hosted by Kathryn and Gabriel — two people who take the cases seriously but not themselves. Expect deep research, psychological analysis, dark humor, and two hosts who aren’t afraid to disagree, go down rabbit holes, or call each other out when one of them starts believing in ghost pirates. Ghost ships. Serial killers. Haunted houses. Healthcare scandals. Exorcisms. If it’s unsolved, unexplained, or unforgettable, we’re putting it in the lineup. New episodes every week.

  1. 9H AGO

    Waverly Hills Sanatorium: Inside America’s Most Haunted Hospital

    Six thousand people died in this building. The architecture was specifically designed so the living would never see the bodies leave. A five-hundred-foot underground tunnel. A motorized rail cart. A nickname nobody on staff gave it. They called it the body chute. Kathryn and Gabriel walk the full history of Waverly Hills Sanatorium, the tuberculosis epidemic that built it, the experimental treatments that defined it, and the sixty years of institutional suffering layered inside its walls. Then they lay out the actual science behind paranormal experience: infrasound, carbon monoxide, pareidolia, confirmation bias, terror management theory. Then they sit with the research that doesn't fully explain itself, Dr. Sam Parnia's AWARE studies on consciousness at clinical death, and the University of Virginia's fifty-seven-year database of verified past-life memory cases in children. Twenty-five hundred investigated. Seventy percent matched to a real deceased individual the child's family had never heard of. Then they walk the building. The chef still working the first-floor kitchen. The blonde woman on the second floor, described independently by strangers. Timmy on the third, who just wants to play. The fourth floor, where Troy Taylor saw his first ghost after hundreds of investigations. The Creeper, seven feet tall, no face, moves along the ceiling, never human. Room 502. The children on the roof, singing. The building was designed to hide death from the dying. Thousands of people now pay to walk inside it at night. Some of them find something. SOURCES: Jefferson County Board of Health death certificates, 1911–1961. Dr. J. Frank Stewart, former assistant medical director, on-record statements. Tandy, V. and Lawrence, T.R. "The Ghost in the Machine." JSPR, 1998. Wiseman, R. et al. British Journal of Psychology, 2003. Solomon, S. et al. Terror Management Theory. 1991. Parnia, S. et al. AWARE and AWARE II. Resuscitation, 2014 and 2023. Tucker, J.B. Explore, 2008. Sagan, C. The Demon-Haunted World. 1996. Taylor, Troy. American Ghost Society, 2002. Ghost Hunters, Syfy. Kindred Spirits, TLC. DISCLAIMER: This episode discusses tuberculosis, institutional death, experimental medical procedures, patient neglect, alleged suicide, and reported paranormal phenomena. The approximately 6,000 death figure is derived from filed death certificates and on-record medical staff statements. The 60,000 and 120,000 figures cited elsewhere are not supported by primary documentation. Room 502 details are presented as legend, with that distinction noted in the episode. Near-death and past-life research reflects peer-reviewed publication; inclusion does not constitute endorsement of any metaphysical position. No paranormal claim presented constitutes proven fact. If you visit Waverly Hills, book through the official property. Do not trespass. Do not touch Timmy's ball. Send us your theories Support the show 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok and Instagram for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

    50 min
  2. APR 20

    The Zodiac Killer: 2,500 Suspects Pt. 4

    Two thousand five hundred people formally investigated. Fifty new names proposed every year. Fifty-seven years. Not one charge. Not one conviction. Not one answer. That is where Part 4 begins. Kathryn and Gabriel finally get to the names. Arthur Leigh Allen, the gravitational center of the investigation, the man eight filing cabinets were built around, whose DNA and fingerprints still came back negative. Lawrence Kane, identified by the only officer known to have seen the Zodiac face-to-face. Earl Van Best Jr., named by his own son in a New York Times bestseller, and then largely debunked. Gary Francis Poste, named by forty former law enforcement officials who spent years on nothing else. And then December 2025 drops a connection nobody saw coming: the Zodiac Killer and the Black Dahlia murder, linked by cipher, by keyword, by a dying man's sketch titled Elizabeth with the word Zodiac hidden in the shading. Two investigators. Two completely different suspects. One theory they both agree on. The game has been running for fifty-seven years. This is what it looks like from the inside. SOURCES: A Current Affair. "Branded A Butcher: Arthur Leigh Allen." youtube.com/watch?v=z17Tsjnm5xQ. Baber, Alex. Cold Case Consultants of America. Margolis Investigation Findings. Los Angeles Times, December 2025. Hodel, Steve. Black Dahlia Avenger. Arcade Publishing, 2003. Hodel, Steve. Most Evil. Dutton, 2009. Stewart, Gary L. The Most Dangerous Animal of All. Harper Collins, 2014. Graysmith, Robert. Zodiac. Berkley Books, 1986. Graysmith, Robert. Zodiac Unmasked. Berkley Books, 2002. California Department of Justice. Zodiac Killer Case Files. 1969–2004. Fincher, David, dir. Zodiac. Paramount Pictures, 2007. Federal Bureau of Investigation. Zodiac Investigation Records. SFPD Homicide Division. Zodiac Case Files. 1969–1978. DISCLAIMER: This episode discusses murder, serial homicide, unsolved violent crimes, and the Black Dahlia homicide of 1947. All suspect discussions are strictly educational and do not constitute accusation, legal conclusion, or forensic finding of any kind regarding any living or deceased individual. Circumstantial evidence presented reflects established investigative record and published research only. The December 2025 developments connecting the Zodiac case to the Black Dahlia murder are based on emerging reporting and independent investigative claims and have not been confirmed by any law enforcement agency. Cipher analysis attributed to former NSA personnel reflects published claims and has not been officially confirmed. No theory presented constitutes proven fact. Psychological and cultural analysis is for educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical diagnosis or professional forensic assessment of any individual. Send us your theories Support the show 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok and Instagram for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

    50 min
  3. APR 13

    The Zodiac Killer: The Code Breakers Pt. 3

    December 11th, 2020. A software developer in Virginia, a mathematician in Melbourne, and a Belgian programmer get on a video call. Between them: a 340-character cipher unsolved since 1969. The FBI tried. The NSA tried. Fifty-one years of nothing. Then the characters begin to resolve. It says: "I hope you are having lots of fun trying to catch me." That is where Part 3 begins. Kathryn and Gabriel lay out the complete authenticated Zodiac communication record chronologically, go deep on what made the Z340 uncrackable for half a century, cover the Z13 cipher prefaced with "My name is" that has never been confirmed, and meet the people who tried to hold the investigation together. Detective Dave Toschi, eight filing cabinets and animal crackers in his jacket pocket. Cartoonist Robert Graysmith, who gave up his marriage to a book about someone never identified. The Zodiac did not have to threaten any of them. He just had to stay unsolved. Part 4 drops next Monday. The suspects. The names. Finally. SOURCES: Oranchak, David. Z340 Research and Decryption Documentation. zodiackillerciphers.com. Oranchak, David. "Let's Crack Zodiac: Episode 5, The 340 Is Solved!" YouTube, December 2020. youtube.com/watch?v=-1oQLPRE21o. Blake, Sam, and Van Eycke, Jarl. Z340 Cipher Solution. December 2020. Federal Bureau of Investigation. Confirmation of Z340 Solution. December 2020. Graysmith, Robert. Zodiac. Berkley Books, 1986. Graysmith, Robert. Zodiac Unmasked. Berkley Books, 2002. Toschi, Dave, and Armstrong, William. Zodiac Homicide Investigation Files. San Francisco Police Department, 1969–1978. California Department of Justice. Zodiac Killer Case Files. State of California, 1969–2004. Ziraoui, Faycal. Proposed Solutions to the Z13 and Z32 Ciphers. 2024. Fincher, David, dir. Zodiac. Paramount Pictures, 2007. Bullitt. Warner Brothers/Seven Arts, 1968. Dirty Harry. Warner Brothers, 1971.  DISCLAIMER: This episode discusses murder, serial homicide, threats against children, unsolved violent crimes across multiple California jurisdictions, and the psychological and behavioral profile of an unidentified perpetrator. Cipher analysis, letter reconstructions, and investigative timelines are based on authenticated correspondence, official police reports, survivor accounts, established investigative record, and published academic and journalistic research. No theory presented constitutes proven fact. Discussion of proposed cipher solutions, including the Z13 and Z32, reflects published claims by independent researchers and has not been confirmed by law enforcement. Discussion of potential suspects is strictly educational and does not constitute accusation, legal conclusion, or forensic finding of any kind regarding any living or deceased individual. Reference to the 2025 development connecting this case to additional crimes is based on emerging reporting and has not been confirmed by any law enforcement agency. Psychological and cultural framing is for educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical diagnosis or professional forensic analysis of any individual. Send us your theories Support the show 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok and Instagram for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

    54 min
  4. APR 6

    The Zodiac Killer: Dear Editor Pt. 2

    August 8th, 1969. A schoolteacher named Donald Harden and his wife Bettye sit at their kitchen table in Salinas, California with a newspaper spread in front of them. On the front page is one-third of a 408-character coded message sent by a serial killer. The FBI has been staring at it for over a week. Bettye has a hunch: this man is an egomaniac, so the message probably starts with "I." And he is a killer, so the word "kill" is probably in there. Twenty hours later, a couple at a kitchen table has cracked what law enforcement, military codebreakers, and the NSA could not. The decoded message begins: "I like killing people because it is so much fun." That is where Part 2 begins. In this episode, Kathryn and Gabriel go deep on the letters. Over twenty pieces of correspondence sent to Bay Area newspapers, a celebrity attorney, and a journalist between 1969 and 1974. The Z408 and what it reveals about the Zodiac's psychology. The October 1969 letter containing a swatch of Paul Stine's bloody shirt and a threat to shoot children off a school bus, which put armed officers on Bay Area transit routes for weeks. The December 1969 Melvin Belli letter, in which the Zodiac appears to beg for help while simultaneously enclosing more bloody evidence. The Z13 cipher of April 1970, prefaced with the three words "My name is," which has never been definitively solved. Kathleen Johns and her infant daughter, two hours in a car with a man calmly announcing he planned to kill them. The Halloween card sent to Chronicle reporter Paul Avery: "Peek-a-boo, you are doomed." And then the silence. A postcard in 1971. A final authenticated letter in January 1974, praising The Exorcist as a satirical comedy and claiming a body count of thirty-seven. And then nothing. Part 3 drops next Monday. SOURCES: Graysmith, Robert. Zodiac. Berkley Books, 1986. Graysmith, Robert. Zodiac Unmasked. Berkley Books, 2002. Toschi, Dave, and Armstrong, William. Zodiac Homicide Investigation Files. San Francisco Police Department, 1969-1978. California Department of Justice. Zodiac Killer Case Files. State of California, 1969-2004. Harden, Donald and Bettye. Cipher Solution Submission. San Francisco Chronicle, August 1969. Connell, Richard. "The Most Dangerous Game." Collier's Weekly, 1924. Belli, Melvin. Personal Correspondence and Case Files. Melvin Belli Papers, Bancroft Library, University of California Berkeley. Zodiac Killer No-Show. KGO-TV News Broadcast, October 1973. youtube.com/watch?v=RpyKvbBdcbA. DISCLAIMER: This episode discusses murder, serial homicide, kidnapping, threats against children, and unsolved violent crimes across multiple California jurisdictions. Letter and attack reconstructions are based on official police reports, survivor accounts, authenticated correspondence, and established investigative record. No theory presented constitutes proven fact. Discussion of potential suspects is strictly educational and does not constitute accusation, legal conclusion, or forensic finding of any kind regarding any living or deceased individual. Psychological and cultural framing is for educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical d Send us your theories Support the show 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok and Instagram for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

    48 min
  5. MAR 30

    The Zodiac Killer: The Murders That Started It All Pt. 1

    September 27th, 1969. A man in a homemade black executioner hood walks out of the tree line at Lake Berryessa and approaches two college students picnicking on a small island. He ties them up. Then he stabs them. Then he drives 45 minutes to a payphone and calmly reports the crime to police. He was never identified. He was never caught. This was only attack number three. In Part 1 of their four-part series, Kathryn and Gabriel build the world the Zodiac operated in: the assassinations and riots that cracked America open in 1968, the Vietnam body count nobody could justify, and the Bay Area counterculture that turned San Francisco into the decade's pressure cooker. Then every confirmed attack, beginning to end. Two teenagers on their first ever date on Lake Herman Road. A Fourth of July ambush at Blue Rock Springs Park. The homemade hood, the pre-cut clothesline, and the twelve-inch knife at Berryessa. A cab driver shot in Presidio Heights while a single dispatcher error let the killer walk past two officers on foot. And the moment six words changed everything: "This is the Zodiac speaking." Part 2 drops next Monday. SOURCES: Graysmith, Robert. Zodiac. Berkley Books, 1986. Graysmith, Robert. Zodiac Unmasked. Berkley Books, 2002. Turner, Fred. From Counterculture to Cyberculture. University of Chicago Press, 2006. Toschi, Dave, and Armstrong, William. Zodiac Homicide Investigation Files. San Francisco Police Department, 1969-1978. California Department of Justice. Zodiac Killer Case Files. State of California, 1969-2004. Farber, David. Chicago '68. University of Chicago Press, 1988. Bugliosi, Vincent, and Gentry, Curt. Helter Skelter. W.W. Norton, 1974. Zodiac Killer No-Show. KGO-TV News Broadcast, October 1973. youtube.com/watch?v=RpyKvbBdcbA. DaRonch, Carol. Victim Interview Footage. ABC News, 1974. DISCLAIMER: This episode discusses murder, serial homicide, stabbing, shooting, graphic crime scene details, and unsolved violent crimes across multiple California jurisdictions. Historical context includes the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy, the Vietnam War, civil unrest, and the Manson Family murders. Attack reconstructions are based on official police reports, survivor accounts, and established investigative record. No theory presented constitutes proven fact. Discussion of potential suspects is strictly educational and does not constitute accusation, legal conclusion, or forensic finding of any kind regarding any living or deceased individual. Psychological and cultural framing is for educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical diagnosis of any person. Listener discretion is strongly advised. Educational and entertainment purposes only. Send us your theories Support the show 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok and Instagram for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

    47 min
  6. MAR 23

    Chicago Tylenol Murders 1982: Sealed for Your Protection

    September 29, 1982. A twelve-year-old girl takes one Tylenol for a sore throat and never wakes up. Six more strangers die across Chicago suburbs in three days. Same brand. Different stores. No connection except a bottle on a shelf. Someone replaced acetaminophen with potassium cyanide at three times the lethal dose and returned the capsules to store shelves. No manifesto. No motive ever proven. No arrest. No conviction. One of America's most infamous unsolved cold cases. Every tamper-evident seal in America exists because of this crime. The Federal Anti-Tampering Act. The Johnson and Johnson recall. The complete redesign of consumer product packaging. Kathryn and Gabriel investigate all three suspects: Ted Kaczynski, whose early bombings hit the same Chicago suburbs. Roger Arnold, the warehouse worker whose life imploded under suspicion until he shot an innocent man dead. And James William Lewis, the prime suspect who demanded a million dollars to stop the Tylenol poisonings and died in 2023 without ever being charged. The case is officially open. The primary suspect is dead. Every time you fight with a tamper-evident seal, you are holding the scar. SOURCES: FBI Chicago Division. Tylenol Murders Investigation Files, 1982-2009. FBI Records: The Vault. Federal Anti-Tampering Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1365, enacted 1983. FDA Tamper-Resistant Packaging Regulations, 21 CFR § 211.132, 1989. Beck, Ulrich. Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity. Sage Publications, 1986. Arendt, Hannah. Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. Viking Press, 1963. Bauman, Zygmunt. Liquid Fear. Polity Press, 2006. Mullainathan, Sendhil and Shafir, Eldar. Scarcity. Henry Holt, 2013. Douglas, John. Mindhunter. Scribner, 1995. Cold Case: The Tylenol Murders. Netflix docuseries, 2025. State v. Stella Nickell. Western District of Washington, 1988. Illinois v. Roger Arnold. Cook County Circuit Court, 1983. Johnson & Johnson Corporate Crisis Response Documentation, 1982-1983. Chicago Tribune. Tylenol murder coverage and investigative reporting, 1982-2023. DISCLAIMER: This episode discusses the poisoning deaths of seven people including a twelve-year-old child, criminal investigation methodology, product tampering, dismemberment, axe assault, sexual assault allegations, extortion, and wrongful suspicion resulting in an unrelated homicide. Three suspects are examined. James William Lewis was convicted of extortion only and maintained his innocence until his death in 2023. Ted Kaczynski and Roger Arnold are discussed as persons of interest only and no individual is definitively identified as the Tylenol killer. Roger Arnold was convicted of the unrelated murder of John Stanisha. Discussion of Reagan-era economic policy, the War on Drugs, Cold War anxiety, and corporate regulatory failure reflects the historical record only. Views expressed are solely those of the hosts and do not constitute legal conclusions, forensic findings, or professional analysis. Educational and entertainment purposes only. Listener discretion strongly advised. Send us your theories Support the show 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok and Instagram for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

    1 hr
  7. MAR 16

    The Price of Beauty: The Assassination of Gianni Versace & the Making of a Serial Killer Pt. 2

    July 15th, 1997. Gianni Versace, the man who dressed Princess Diana, Madonna, and Tupac, who built the supermodel era, who chose the face of Medusa as his logo, is shot twice on the steps of his Miami Beach mansion by a 27-year-old serial killer from San Diego named Andrew Cunanan.  Cunanan was already four murders deep into the most sensational FBI manhunt of the 1990s. And the bureau had completely failed to stop him.  In Part One, Kathryn and Gabriel built the world before the crime: Versace's rise from Reggio di Calabria to global fashion empire, the 1990s celebrity worship culture that made both men possible, Andrew Cunanan's psychological unraveling, and what Baudrillard's simulacra theory has to do with a murder on Ocean Drive.  In Part Two, the killing begins. Five victims in three months. A hammer, a handgun, and a hacksaw. An architect shot at a lake. A real estate tycoon tortured in his home. A cemetery caretaker executed for his truck. And then Versace, gunned down on his own doorstep while the FBI had a thousand agents and still could not catch a man paying $29 a night under his real name. The murders, the escalation, the narcissistic envy framework, the manhunt failure, the houseboat, the final bullet, the autopsy result that reframes everything, and what the summer of 1997 did to those who survived long enough to bury him.  SOURCES: Orth, Maureen. Vulgar Favors: The Hunt for Andrew Cunanan. Delacorte Press, 1999. Ball, Deborah. House of Versace. Crown Publishers, 2010. Baudrillard, Jean. Simulacra and Simulation. Trans. Sheila Glaser. University of Michigan Press, 1994. Cushman, Philip. "Why the Self Is Empty." American Psychologist 45, no. 5 (1990): 599-611. McCutcheon, Lynn E., et al. "Conceptualization and Measurement of Celebrity Worship." British Journal of Psychology 93 (2002): 67-87. Rousseau, Danielle. "From Gigolo to Spree Killer." Boston University, 2009. FBI Andrew Cunanan Fugitive File. vault.fbi.gov. Sawyer, Diane. Cunanan Family Interview. ABC News, 1997. CBS 8 San Diego. "The Murder of Fashion Icon Gianni Versace by Andrew Cunanan." CBS 8 San Diego, 1997. youtube.com/watch?v=hpD_q2wIUV8. WCCO - CBS Minnesota. "25 Years Ago, Andrew Cunanan's Killing Spree Began in Minneapolis." WCCO - CBS Minnesota, 2022. youtube.com/watch?v=qxrXwfi-zsw. AP Archive. "USA: Miami: Reaction to Andrew Cunanan's Suicide Update." Associated Press Archive, 1997. youtube.com/watch?v=QRyhe8mdYCQ. Defense of Marriage Act, Pub. L. 104-199, 110 Stat. 2419 (1996). 10 U.S.C. § 654 (1993).  DISCLAIMER: This episode discusses murder, serial homicide, torture, the HIV/AIDS crisis, suicide, substance abuse, child abuse, financial fraud, narcissistic personality disorder, and systemic discrimination against LGBTQ+ Americans. Psychological and philosophical frameworks are presented for educational purposes only and do not constitute clinical diagnosis of any living or deceased individual. Andrew Cunanan died by suicide on July 23, 1997, before facing trial. No theory presented constitutes proven fact. Views expressed are solely those of the hosts and do not represent legal conclusions, forensic findings, or professional analysis Send us your theories Support the show 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok and Instagram for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

    38 min
  8. MAR 9

    The Price of Beauty: The Assassination of Gianni Versace & the Making of a Serial Killer Pt. 1

    July 15th, 1997. Gianni Versace, the man who dressed Princess Diana, Madonna, and Tupac, who built the supermodel era, who chose the face of Medusa as his logo, is shot twice on the steps of his Miami Beach mansion by a 27-year-old serial killer from San Diego named Andrew Cunanan. Cunanan was already four murders deep into the most sensational FBI manhunt of the 1990s. And the bureau had completely failed to stop him. In Part One, Kathryn and Gabriel build the world before the crime: Versace's rise from Reggio di Calabria to global fashion empire, the 1990s celebrity worship culture that made both men possible, Andrew Cunanan's psychological unraveling (IQ of 147, a fraudster father who fled to the Philippines, a decade of performing a life built entirely on lies), and what Baudrillard's simulacra theory has to do with a murder on Ocean Drive. Part Two drops next Monday. SOURCES: Orth, Maureen. Vulgar Favors: The Hunt for Andrew Cunanan. Delacorte Press, 1999. Versace, Gianni. Rock and Royalty. Abbeville Press, 1996. Baudrillard, Jean. Simulacra and Simulation. Trans. Sheila Glaser. University of Michigan Press, 1994. Cushman, Philip. "Why the Self Is Empty." American Psychologist 45, no. 5 (1990): 599-611. McCutcheon, Lynn E., et al. "Conceptualization and Measurement of Celebrity Worship." British Journal of Psychology 93 (2002): 67-87. Shilts, Randy. And the Band Played On. St. Martin's Press, 1987. Fukuyama, Francis. The End of History and the Last Man. Free Press, 1992. Vanderbilt, Amy. Complete Book of Etiquette. Doubleday, 1952. Defense of Marriage Act, Pub. L. 104-199, 110 Stat. 2419 (1996). 10 U.S.C. § 654 (1993). FBI Andrew Cunanan Fugitive File. vault.fbi.gov. Sawyer, Diane. Cunanan Family Interview. ABC News, 1997. DISCLAIMER: This episode discusses murder, serial homicide, the HIV/AIDS crisis, suicide, substance abuse, child abuse, financial fraud, narcissistic personality disorder, and systemic discrimination against LGBTQ+ Americans. Psychological and philosophical frameworks are presented for educational purposes only and do not constitute clinical diagnosis of any living or deceased individual. Andrew Cunanan died by suicide on July 23, 1997, before facing trial. No theory presented constitutes proven fact. Views expressed are solely those of the hosts and do not represent legal conclusions, forensic findings, or professional analysis of any kind. Educational and entertainment purposes only. Send us your theories Support the show 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok and Instagram for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

    53 min
5
out of 5
16 Ratings

About

Some cases are solved. Most aren’t. All of them are worth talking about. Mugshot Mysteries is a true crime, paranormal, and unsolved mysteries podcast hosted by Kathryn and Gabriel — two people who take the cases seriously but not themselves. Expect deep research, psychological analysis, dark humor, and two hosts who aren’t afraid to disagree, go down rabbit holes, or call each other out when one of them starts believing in ghost pirates. Ghost ships. Serial killers. Haunted houses. Healthcare scandals. Exorcisms. If it’s unsolved, unexplained, or unforgettable, we’re putting it in the lineup. New episodes every week.

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