Murder Mindset

Kelsey C

Dark. Investigative. Unflinching. Dive deep into the minds of killers with Murder Mindset, a true crime podcast exploring the psychological, social, and behavioral forces that turn ordinary people into murderers. Each season focuses on a distinct type of crime, from familicide and crimes of passion to deadly love triangles, unraveling the patterns, motives, and warning signs often hidden in plain sight. Through detailed case studies, expert insights, and survivor perspectives, Murder Mindset goes beyond sensational headlines to examine why these crimes happen—and the impact they leave behind

Tập

  1. The Powell Explosion

    22 THG 3

    The Powell Explosion

    In the snowy suburbs of West Valley City, Utah, 28-year-old Susan Cox Powell vanished on December 6, 2009, leaving behind two young sons, Charlie and Braden, and a husband, Josh Powell, who quickly became the prime person of interest. What began as a baffling missing-persons case spiraled into one of the most haunting family tragedies in modern true crime: a web of coercive control, financial strain, voyeuristic crimes by Josh's father Steve Powell, custody battles, and a deliberate 2012 explosion in Graham, Washington, that claimed the lives of Josh and his boys in a premeditated murder-suicide. Join host Kelsey Coffey for this single-narrator deep dive into the Powell family saga. Through verified timelines, court records, police investigations, and forensic details, we reconstruct Susan's documented fears—including her chilling 2008 letter warning of non-accidental death—the Utah probe into her disappearance, the Washington child-welfare crisis triggered by Steve Powell's child pornography conviction, and the supervised visit that ended in flames. Victim-centered and trauma-aware, this episode humanizes Susan as a devoted mother, Charlie and Braden as vibrant children caught in escalating danger, and exposes systemic gaps in risk assessment across law enforcement and courts. ​Explore the patterns of intimate partner abuse, the red flags in Josh's post-disappearance behavior—from implausible camping stories to evasive interviews—and the haunting question: how did so many warnings fail to save three lives? With no speculation, no audio clips, just public records and investigative reporting, we trace the fault lines of control, isolation, and accountability that define this unresolved case. Perfect for fans of methodical true crime narratives unpacking familicide, coercive dynamics, and justice system failures. Listen if you dare—but listener discretion advised for discussions of child victims, domestic homicide, and murder-suicide.

    33 phút
  2. Roadside Reckoning

    15 THG 3

    Roadside Reckoning

    In the pre-dawn darkness of June 14, 2007, a red Ford Expedition sat abandoned on a secluded frontage road off I-55 in Channahon, Illinois—inside, Kimberly Vaughn and her three young children lay dead from close-range gunshot wounds, while husband Christopher Vaughn limped away bloodied, claiming his wife had shot him and the kids before turning the gun on herself. What began as a promised family surprise trip to a Springfield waterpark ended in a forensic nightmare that divided investigators, tore apart a suburban Oswego family, and led to four life sentences without parole after a contentious 2012 trial. On this episode of Murder Mindset, I unravel the documented escalations—from strip club lies and Yukon escape fantasies to bloodstain clashes and dancer testimonies—probing the psychological unraveling behind a roadside reckoning that still sparks innocence claims today. Through verified trial records, autopsy details, and witness accounts, we trace the Vaughn family’s unraveling: a devoted mother’s criminal justice dreams, an “absent father’s” detachment, and evidence gaps—like Kimberly’s migraine meds with FDA-noted suicide risks—that fueled defense theories of her as perpetrator. Victim-centered and trauma-aware, this two-hour documentary honors Abigayle, Cassandra, and Blake’s stolen futures while dissecting prosecution proofs against Christopher: self-inflicted wounds, mismatched DNA on seatbelt latches, and a 9mm handgun practiced just days prior. No graphic sensationalism—just steady tension, forensic breakthroughs, and system reflections on belief, accountability, and familicide’s shadow. Listener discretion advised for discussions of intimate partner strain and child victims.

    38 phút
  3. Bodies on the Coast

    5 THG 3

    Bodies on the Coast

    In December 2001, the quiet Oregon coast became the stage for one of the most chilling family annihilations in modern true crime: Christian Longo strangled his wife Mary Jane and their three young children—Zachery (4), Sadie (3), and Madison (2)—before dumping their bodies in suitcases and coastal waters near Newport. What followed was a brazen flight to Mexico, where he posed as a New York Times reporter, weaving lies even as investigators pieced together his trail of discarded family belongings, stolen vehicles, and pre-planned alibis. Hosted by Kelsey Coffey, this single-narrator deep dive reconstructs the verified timeline from court records and contemporaneous reporting: the escalating deceptions, financial collapse, and identity-shifting that isolated Mary Jane and the kids; the precise recovery of bodies from Embarcadero Marina and Waldport's Highway 34 bridge; the Lincoln County Circuit Court trial (CC 016441) ending in guilty pleas, convictions, a 2003 death sentence (later commuted to life without parole in 2022), and the human cost that lingers for Mary Jane's family. Victim-centered and trauma-aware, we trace how image-management masked coercive control, why warning signs hid in plain sight, and the mechanics of an investigation that turned everyday witnesses into key evidence—without speculation, graphic details, or sensationalism. Perfect for fans of methodical escalation breakdowns and forensic timelines. Content Warning: Discussions of familicide, child victims, and intimate partner homicide.

    31 phút
  4. Easter Sunday Massacre

    14 THG 2 ·  NỘI DUNG TẶNG THÊM

    Easter Sunday Massacre

    Uncover the chilling truths behind one of America's most devastating family massacres—an event rooted in untreated mental illness, family secrets, and deadly calculations. How did normal holiday joy turn into horror? And more importantly, how can we recognize the warning signs before tragedy strikes? In this intense episode of Murder Mindset, we delve into the 1975 Easter Sunday massacre in Hamilton, Ohio—where James Rupert, a man crippled by childhood trauma and mental illness, murdered his entire family, including eight children, in cold precision. You'll explore the complex web of family dynamics, financial desperation, and paranoid delusions that led to this nightmare—details that reveal how grief, repression, and untreated mental illness can escalate into unimaginable violence. We break down: The dark history of James Rupert's childhood and how relentless family pressure fueled his fractured mindThe detailed forensic scene and what the blood spatter reveals about premeditation and calculationThe subtle warning signs the family missed—paranoia, financial withdrawal, obsession with weapons—that could have prevented the tragedyThe legal strategies and psychiatric defenses used in three trials spanning nearly a decade, revealing the blurred lines between insanity and intentCrucial lessons on recognizing family crises and intervening before it's too lateThis case is a stark reminder: violence often hides behind closed doors, masked by normalcy. Families in crisis can seem fine from the outside until the unthinkable happens. The story of James Rupert challenges us to listen more deeply, act more compassionately, and understand that mental health issues and warning signs are more common—and more dangerous—than most realize. Perfect for true crime enthusiasts, mental health advocates, and anyone haunted by the question: Could this happen in my own family? Because understanding this terrifying trajectory may be the key to preventing the next tragedy.

    12 phút

Giới Thiệu

Dark. Investigative. Unflinching. Dive deep into the minds of killers with Murder Mindset, a true crime podcast exploring the psychological, social, and behavioral forces that turn ordinary people into murderers. Each season focuses on a distinct type of crime, from familicide and crimes of passion to deadly love triangles, unraveling the patterns, motives, and warning signs often hidden in plain sight. Through detailed case studies, expert insights, and survivor perspectives, Murder Mindset goes beyond sensational headlines to examine why these crimes happen—and the impact they leave behind