The Casewalker Chronicles

Lacey and Nicolas

We examine Indiana’s most misunderstood cases with honesty, integrity, and evidence-first investigation, honoring victims while exposing the truths, patterns, and systemic failures hidden beneath the headlines. 

Episodes

  1. EPISODE 7 - THE DELPHI CASE: PART 1

    MAR 6

    EPISODE 7 - THE DELPHI CASE: PART 1

    In Episode 7 of The Casewalker Chronicles, we begin a multi-part examination of the murders of Liberty “Libby” German and Abigail “Abby” Williams, who disappeared while walking the Monon High Bridge Trail in Delphi, Indiana, on February 13, 2017. Their deaths would become one of the most widely followed criminal investigations in Indiana history. This episode does not attempt to resolve the case or reinterpret the outcome of the prosecution. Instead, Part 1 establishes the documented timeline of February 13, 2017, reconstructing the movements of Abby and Libby, the geography of the Monon High Bridge Trail system, the early search efforts, and the evidence that first entered the public record. Using the Casewalker Evidence Book Method, we examine the case through publicly documented information, including law-enforcement statements, publicly released materials, and the timeline reflected in investigative reporting. Throughout the episode, we clearly distinguish between documented facts, official summaries, and areas where the public record remains incomplete. This episode establishes the evidentiary foundation for the series that follows. Every timeline entry. Every released detail. Only what the record supports. ⚠️ Listener Note: This episode discusses the murders of two minors and the early stages of an active criminal investigation that has since resulted in a criminal prosecution. Listener discretion is advised. 🔦 Missing Person Spotlight: This episode includes a spotlight on Penelope McGowan, a 17-year-old missing from Plainfield, Indiana. Full documentation, sources, missing-person spotlights, and episode updates are available at: www.thecasewalkerchronicles.com Support The Casewalker Chronicles If you value independent investigative storytelling, you can support the research and production behind the show. Patreon (monthly support) https://www.patreon.com/cw/TheCasewalkerChronicles Ko-fi (one-time support) https://ko-fi.com/casewalkerchronicles Support helps fund: • research time • public records requests • document review • podcast production

    58 min
  2. EPISODE 6 - DISCRETION - A STRUCTURAL EXAMINATION

    FEB 27

    EPISODE 6 - DISCRETION - A STRUCTURAL EXAMINATION

    In Episode 6 of The Casewalker Chronicles, we conduct a structural examination of discretionary authority under Indiana’s Access to Public Records Act (APRA), focusing on investigatory-record exemptions and the legal architecture that permits indefinite withholding. This episode is not a case recap. It is not a personal dispute. It is not an allegation of misconduct. It is a statutory analysis. Using a recent public-records denial letter as a case study, we read the statute in full, examine the exemption cited (I.C. 5-14-3-4(b)(1)), and analyze the appellate decisions referenced to justify discretionary withholding, including: • Carroll County E911 v. Hasnie (2020) • Lane-El v. Spears (2014) • Indianapolis Newspapers, Inc. v. Trustees of Indiana University (2003) We define investigatory records, explain how classification determines access, and examine why permissive language (“may”) differs fundamentally from mandatory language (“shall”) in statutory construction. This episode explores how discretion functions structurally—how legality, judicial deference, economic friction, and informational asymmetry interact—and what happens when transparency is permitted but not compelled. No accusation. No speculation. No rhetoric. Only the statute. Only the record. Only what the documentation supports. ⚠️ Listener Note: This episode discusses public-records law, investigatory exemptions, and civic transparency. It includes a missing-person spotlight involving a juvenile.  Listener discretion is advised. Full documentation, statutory citations, case references, and missing-person updates are available at: www.thecasewalkerchronicles.com

    35 min
  3. EPISODE 4 - THE MURDERS OF KIMBERLY DOWELL & ETHAN DIXON

    JAN 30

    EPISODE 4 - THE MURDERS OF KIMBERLY DOWELL & ETHAN DIXON

    In Episode 4, we examine the unsolved 1985 murders of Kimberly Dowell (15) and Ethan Dixon (16), who were found shot inside a vehicle in Westside Park in Muncie, Indiana, shortly before midnight on September 28, 1985, as reported in public sources. Nearly forty years later, the case remains open. There has been no arrest, no trial, and no judicial resolution. Because the underlying investigative file is not publicly available, this episode carefully distinguishes between what has been publicly reported and what cannot be independently verified. We explain how long-unsolved cases become shaped not only by facts, but by access, including where records are held, how custody affects availability, and how public-records law governs disclosure decades after a crime. Using the Casewalker Evidence Book Method, we document the public record as it exists, identify where summaries replace primary documentation, and clearly mark where the record ends. This episode does not speculate, propose theories, or assign blame. It examines process, structure, and absence. This episode reflects our investigative commitment: Every record. Every limit. Only what the documentation supports. ⚠️ This episode discusses violent crime involving minors and an unsolved double homicide. Listener discretion is advised. Full documentation, sources, missing-person spotlights, and episode updates are available at: www.thecasewalkerchronicles.com

    57 min
  4. EPISODE 3B — JOSEPH WILLIAM SMEDLEY II: WHAT THE RECORDS SHOW —  AND WHAT THEY DO NOT

    JAN 23

    EPISODE 3B — JOSEPH WILLIAM SMEDLEY II: WHAT THE RECORDS SHOW — AND WHAT THEY DO NOT

    In Episode 3B, we continue our examination of the death investigation of Joseph William Smedley II, a 20-year-old Indiana University student whose body was recovered from Griffy Lake in Bloomington, Indiana, in October 2015. Joseph’s death was classified as suicide by drowning, and the case was administratively closed. This episode does not seek to overturn that determination. Instead, it examines what documentation is available to the public when a case is closed, what records were released in response to formal public-records requests, and what information remains unavailable under Indiana public-records law. Using the Casewalker Evidence Book Method, we review the released materials, distinguish between documented records and summary-level statements, and clearly identify where investigatory documentation is not accessible to the public. This episode focuses on structure rather than interpretation, showing how conclusions are communicated when underlying records are limited or withheld. Every record. Every gap. Only what the documentation supports. ⚠️ This episode discusses death investigation, suicide classification, public-records law, and the limits of documentation in closed cases. It also includes a missing-person spotlight involving a juvenile. Listener discretion is advised. Full documentation, sources, missing-person spotlights, and episode updates are available at: www.thecasewalkerchronicles.com

    47 min

About

We examine Indiana’s most misunderstood cases with honesty, integrity, and evidence-first investigation, honoring victims while exposing the truths, patterns, and systemic failures hidden beneath the headlines.