True Crime Central

True Crime Central

Welcome to True Crime Central: The Home of 100% Real, Unsolved, and Chilling Stories. Hosted by Max.If you’re looking for gripping true crime without the filler, small talk, or fiction, you’ve found it. True Crime Central dives deep into the most disturbing solved and unsolved mysteries, cold cases, unexplained disappearances, and shocking murders from around the world. We don't just read headlines—we tear apart the police reports, analyze the forensic evidence, and ask the questions the official files left unanswered. Every case we cover is 100% real. From crime scenes staged to look like art, to killers who hide in plain sight, to interrogations that unravel impossible lies. Whether it's a 40-year-old cold case finally cracked by DNA, or a modern digital mystery where the clues exist only on a deleted hard drive, we put you right at the center of the investigation. What to Expect on True Crime Central:Immersive Storytelling: No banter, no distractions. Just straight-to-the-point narratives that pull you into the timeline from minute one.Cinematic Details: We focus on the exact details that change everything—the missing zip ties, the silent dogs, the phone that posted after the victim was dead.Daily Uploads: Your daily true crime fix. New episodes drop every single day at 3:33 AM and 9:00 PM.True crime isn't just about who did it. It's about how they were caught, the mistakes made along the way, and the victims who deserve to have their stories told. Don't forget to follow the show and turn on notifications so you never miss a case. Recommended Listening:If you are a fan of deep-dive investigative podcasts and suspenseful storytelling like Crime Junkie, True Crime with Kendall Rae, Dateline NBC, 48 Hours, Morbid, 20/20, Betrayal Season 5, MrBallen Podcast: Strange Dark & Mysterious Stories, My Favorite Murder, Criminal, Murder at the U, Snapped: Women Who Murder, Serialously with Annie Elise, Casefile True Crime, or The Epstein Files, this will be your new favorite podcast. Topics Covered: True crime podcast, unsolved mysteries, cold cases, serial killers, missing persons, real crime stories, investigative journalism, homicide investigations, forensic science, interrogations, 911 calls, true crime daily, unexplained deaths, true crime stories English.

  1. He Walked Into That Bathroom and Never Came Out - Episode 73

    4H AGO

    He Walked Into That Bathroom and Never Came Out - Episode 73

    The Foot in the Adidas Shoe: The Disappearance and Death of Francesca Alvarado A fisherman pulled a size 5.5 black Adidas high-top from the water at Corson's Inlet State Park in August 2013. Inside it was a skeletal foot, toenails still showing traces of colored polish. Francesca Alvarado had been missing for seventeen months. The homicide investigation that followed exposed a trafficking network, a violent boyfriend, and a last witness who lawyered up within twenty-four hours and was never charged. In this episode, we explore the unexplained hotel room switch Tracy Williams requested the night Francesca vanished, the discovery of Francesca's ID and EBT card left behind in her bedroom after police had already searched it, and the deposition testimony suggesting a federal informant pointed investigators directly at Will Coit's involvement. Was Francesca's disappearance the result of a violent confrontation on a New Jersey beach, or did a trafficking network silence her before she could leave? The forensic science and the legal record pull in directions that have never been fully reconciled. Case Details Victim: Francesca Alvarado, 22, Philadelphia resident and mother of a 3-year-old daughter, approximately 8 weeks pregnant at the time of her disappearance. Date: March 18, 2012. Location: Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA. Case Status: Unsolved. Francesca was officially declared dead in January 2016 with cause of death listed as undetermined. No one has been charged in connection with her disappearance or death. The case remains active with the New Jersey State Police cold case unit. Episode Key Points - Tracy Williams refused a polygraph, hired an attorney, and went silent within twenty-four hours of Francesca's disappearance — before she was even officially reported missing. - Francesca's ID and EBT card were found in her bedroom by her sister Mia after police had already conducted their search of the room and cleared it. - Court deposition testimony in a civil trafficking lawsuit suggested that convicted sex trafficker Jarrell Jackson provided the FBI with evidence pointing to Will Coit's involvement in Francesca's death. - Three separate bones — a foot, a femur, and a tibia — washed ashore across fifteen miles of New Jersey coastline over a span of six months, each confirmed by DNA as Francesca's. Francesca Alvarado, Atlantic City New Jersey disappearance, Philadelphia missing person 2012, New Jersey cold case homicide, Corson's Inlet remains recovery, true crime, homicide, investigation, forensic science, murder, criminal minds, unsolved mysteries, true crime English.

    38 min
  2. The Foot in the Adidas Shoe - Episode 72

    1D AGO

    The Foot in the Adidas Shoe - Episode 72

    The Clothes Were Folded Too Neatly: The Murder of Scott Johnson A naked body was found at the base of the cliffs at North Head, Sydney, on December 10, 1988. The clothes at the top were folded neatly, with a student ID, bank card, and bus ticket placed on top — but the wallet Scott Johnson always carried was never found. Police closed the case in hours. It would take thirty-two years, three inquests, and one ex-wife's letter to get to the truth. In this episode, we explore the eighteen-year gap between the first inquest ruling of suicide and the third inquest ruling of murder, a recorded undercover confession in which the suspect walked investigators to the exact point on the cliff where Scott Johnson went over the edge, and the forensic detail of neatly folded clothes that connected a pattern of crimes across the Manly area. Was the initial ruling a failure of evidence, or a failure of will? The homicide investigation and the documented police bias tell two stories that cannot both be true. Case Details Victim: Scott Johnson, 27, American doctoral student at Australian National University. Date: Body discovered December 10, 1988. Death estimated several days prior. Location: North Head cliffs, Manly, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Case Status: Scott White was convicted of manslaughter in February 2023 and sentenced to nine years. The murder charge was reduced following a successful appeal on the original guilty plea. White is currently serving his sentence. Episode Key Points - Scott's wallet, which he always carried, was never recovered at the scene or at the house where he was staying — despite all other personal items being left neatly folded at the cliff top. - Scott White, the convicted killer, told his then-wife as early as 2008 that "Scott Johnson ran off the cliff" when she asked him directly — but she did not come forward until 2019 because White had threatened to kill her. - During an undercover sting operation, White voluntarily walked two officers to the specific point on the cliff where Johnson went over the edge and described punching him — a confession recorded on tape. - Helen White, Scott White's ex-wife, described a separate incident in which White forced another man to remove all his clothes and fold them neatly before robbing him — a behavioral signature matching the Johnson crime scene. Scott Johnson, North Head Sydney homicide, Manly hate crime 1988, New South Wales cold case, gay hate crime Australia, true crime, murder, investigation, homicide, forensic science, criminal minds, unsolved mysteries, true crime English.

    40 min
  3. The Clothes Were Folded Too Neatly - Episode 71

    2D AGO

    The Clothes Were Folded Too Neatly - Episode 71

    The Search That Started Two Hours Too Early: The Murder Investigation of John O'Keefe A Boston police officer was found face-down in the snow outside a colleague's home, with six inches of snow packed on top of his body. The lead investigator had texted the homeowner's relative about babysitting just ten days before the death. One phone showed a search for "how long to die in cold" at 2:27 in the morning — more than three hours before anyone claims to have known something was wrong. In this episode, we explore the 2:27 a.m. search on Jennifer McCabe's phone that defense attorneys say proves foreknowledge of O'Keefe's condition, a broken taillight fragment bearing O'Keefe's DNA that wasn't found during the initial search of the scene, and Apple Health step data recorded on a dead man's phone after first responders arrived. Was Karen Reid a drunk driver who panicked, or is this a homicide investigation shaped by the very people it should have targeted? The forensic science and the digital timeline point in two directions that cannot both be true. In this episode, we explore the 2:27 a.m. phone search, a hair sample with no human DNA that was the prosecution's primary physical link, and why the house where O'Keefe's body was found was never searched. Was this a drunk driving accident, or a coordinated cover-up by people with badges and connections? The investigation, the investigator, and the evidence all raise questions that no one has answered under oath yet. Case Details Victim: John O'Keefe, 46, Boston Police Officer and guardian of his orphaned niece and nephew. Date: January 29–30, 2022. Location: Canton, Massachusetts, USA. Case Status: Karen Reid was charged with second-degree murder and leaving the scene of an accident. Her trial began with jury selection completed. No verdict has been reached. A simultaneous federal investigation remains active and ongoing. Episode Key Points - A search for "how long to die in cold" appeared on Jennifer McCabe's phone at 2:27 a.m. — roughly four hours before McCabe claims Reid woke her with a call about O'Keefe being missing. - The only physical link between O'Keefe and Reid's car was a single hair recovered from the rear quarter panel. Massachusetts State Lab testing found no human DNA in that hair. - Taillight fragments bearing O'Keefe's DNA were not recovered during the initial scene search — they were found on a subsequent search, after investigators had already formed their primary theory. - Lead investigator Michael Proctor had texted a relative of the homeowner about babysitting ten days before O'Keefe's death, and received a message offering a "thank you gift" two days after the body was found. John O'Keefe, Canton Massachusetts homicide, Karen Reid murder trial 2022, Brian Albert house Canton, Massachusetts State Police investigation, homicide, forensic science, criminal minds, true detective, investigation, murder, unsolved mysteries, true crime English.

    34 min
  4. The Search That Started Two Hours Too Early - Episode 70

    3D AGO

    The Search That Started Two Hours Too Early - Episode 70

    The Scam That Almost Worked Four Times: The Cases Behind America's Most Sophisticated Modern Fraud Wave A couple verified the sheriff's badge number online and still lost hundreds of dollars to a Bitcoin ATM. A news anchor recognized the misspelled name in the email and took the Zoom call anyway. Four real victims, four separate scams, and one detail in each case that should have stopped everything — but didn't. How does manufactured legitimacy override the instinct that something is wrong? In this episode, we explore a fake warrant call that collapsed the moment genuine gratitude disrupted the script, a PayPal screenshot that never became real money but still cost a young woman over a hundred dollars in gift cards, and a fraudulent check with one tilted number that nearly trapped a sound professional into wiring his own savings to a stranger. Was this targeted exploitation of specific vulnerabilities, or a numbers game designed to work on anyone under enough pressure? Case Details Victim: Multiple victims — Teresa and Colton (names changed), Ruth (name changed), Cody (name changed), Sophia Ojeda, news anchor. Date: 2019 – 2024 (multiple incidents across several years). Location: Indiana, Texas, and undisclosed U.S. locations. Case Status: No arrests confirmed in any of the four cases. The Bitcoin payment is unrecoverable. Gift card funds were never returned. The fraudulent check was reported to the FTC but no prosecution has been publicly disclosed. Episode Key Points - The scammer impersonating a sheriff's deputy had a scripted response for every objection except a sincere thank-you — that single unscripted moment broke his composure. - A PayPal screenshot showing fifteen hundred dollars in pending funds was used to psychologically reverse the victim's position, making her feel like the one committing fraud. - The fraudulent production company check arrived with a real tracking number, linked to a real IMDb page, and carried the correct dollar amount — only one tilted digit revealed it was fake. - A scammer posing as AudioChuck management conducted a full Zoom call from Dubai without ever showing his face, using a Facebook logo as his only on-screen identity. Sophia Ojeda, KPRC2 Houston fraud, Indiana job scam 2020, fake sheriff warrant call, gift card scam 2019, true crime, criminal minds, forensic science, investigation, homicide, morbid, casefile podcast, true crime English.

    36 min
  5. The Scam That Almost Worked Four Times - Episode 69

    4D AGO

    The Scam That Almost Worked Four Times - Episode 69

    The Two Minutes That Stole Everything: The Murder of Brittany Locklear A five-year-old girl in a red riding hood coat vanished from the end of her own driveway in the two minutes her mother stepped inside to use the bathroom. A neighbor watched a brown truck slow down and a man jump out — and didn't understand what she had witnessed until the school bus arrived without stopping. How does an entire community search for a killer for over twenty-five years and still come up empty? In this episode, we explore the eyewitness account that described a white male in a brown truck with non-standard overhead rack lights — a description the SBI publicly reversed a full year into the investigation — a DNA profile built from autopsy materials that has never produced a public match, and a Fort Bragg firefighter found with photographs of Brittany locked in his locker five years after her murder. Was this a predator who knew her routine, or a stranger who acted on opportunity in a two-minute window? The forensic science and the witness timeline produce two versions of events that cannot both hold. Case Details Victim: Brittany Locklear, age 5, member of the Lumbee tribe of North Carolina. Date: January 7–8, 1998. Location: Rural Hoke County, North Carolina, USA. Case Status: Unsolved. No arrests have ever been made. A DNA profile was built from autopsy materials and the case was formally restarted in 2009, but as of the recording date no public match has been confirmed and no charges have been filed. Episode Key Points - The neighbor who witnessed the abduction did not immediately recognize it as a kidnapping — she only understood what she had seen when the school bus arrived and Brittany was not on it. - The SBI publicly reversed the original suspect description one year into the investigation, stating the driver may not have been white and the truck may not have been brown. - A Fort Bragg firefighter who likely participated in the original 1998 ground search was found, five years later, with photographs of Brittany stored in his work locker. - A DNA profile buildable from medical examiner materials has existed since at least 1999, but genealogic testing has not been publicly pursued despite the technique being available for years. Brittany Locklear, Hoke County North Carolina homicide, Lumbee tribe MMIP, unsolved child murder 1998, Rayford NC abduction, true crime, murder, investigation, forensic science, homicide, unsolved mysteries, missing murdered indigenous persons, true crime English.

    40 min
  6. The Two Minutes That Stole Everything - Episode 68

    5D AGO

    The Two Minutes That Stole Everything - Episode 68

    Five Women. Five Systems That Failed Them.: The Unsolved Disappearances of Terry McCulley, Alyssa McLemore, Kendra Botello, Kit Mora, and Abigail Andrews A teenage mother was found in a soybean field with a shotgun blast to the face — and police had a suspect with matching ammunition within months. A wellness check on a missing minor was closed in six sentences, with the body camera off. Across five cases and four decades, the same question keeps surfacing: who decides when a missing person is worth looking for? In this episode, we explore how a 20-gauge shotgun shell batch linked a named suspect to Terry McCulley's 1983 murder — yet no charges were ever filed, how Alyssa McLemore's FBI profile listed her race as Asian for seven years after she vanished, and how Kit Mora's school quietly dropped a missing teenager from the roster for unexcused absences without alerting a single authority. Five Indigenous women. Five separate systems. One pattern that refuses to stay quiet. Case Details Victim: Terry McCulley, 18; Alyssa McLemore, 21; Kendra Botello, 24; Kit Mora, minor; Abigail Andrews, 28 — all Indigenous women or girls reported missing across the United States and Canada. Date: Cases span September 1983 through July 2022. Location: Iowa, Washington State, Oklahoma, British Columbia, Canada. Case Status: All five cases remain unsolved as of the date of recording. No criminal charges have been filed in any of the five cases. Several are classified as cold cases with intermittent investigative activity. Episode Key Points - The 20-gauge shotgun shells found in Terry McCulley's suspect's car matched the same brand and batch as the pellets recovered from Terry's body — yet the county attorney declined to prosecute in 1984 and again circa 1990. - Alyssa McLemore's FBI NCIC missing persons profile misidentified her as Asian rather than Native American from 2009 until 2016 — seven years during which Jane Doe comparisons may have been wrongly excluded. - A wellness check at Kit Mora's mother's apartment was closed after six sentences with the officer's body camera off — and Kit's name never appeared once in records from a follow-up child welfare visit six months later. - Abigail Andrews' family received texts from her phone after she vanished that contained no correct answers to questions only Abigail would know — and RCMP has publicly stated they believe a specific suspect has spoken to others about what he did. Terry McCulley, Alyssa McLemore, Kendra Botello, Kit Mora, Abigail Andrews, MMIP unsolved cases, Missing Murdered Indigenous Women, Indigenous homicide investigation, cold case 1983 2009 2022, forensic science, homicide, investigation, true crime, criminal minds, true crime English.

    39 min
  7. Five Women. Five Systems That Failed Them. - Episode 67

    6D AGO

    Five Women. Five Systems That Failed Them. - Episode 67

    The Highway Nobody Watched Over: The Murder of Lisa Norrell On the night of November 6, 1998, fifteen-year-old Lisa Norrell walked alone down a poorly lit stretch of the Pittsburgh-Antioch Highway, and a witness reported seeing a man standing fifty yards ahead of her in the dark. Nine days later, her body was found at a property that search teams had already passed twice. A confession was reportedly delivered to police — and no charges were ever filed. In this episode, we explore how Lisa's body went undetected at the Navland property despite aerial searches and a bloodhound pass, why a fire captain's testimony about David Heneby's alleged confession never produced an arrest, and what forensic investigator Paul Holes meant when he said there are details about these crimes that investigators refuse to release. Was one person responsible for all five victims along this highway, or did the same stretch of road attract multiple predators? The evidence does not yet allow a definitive answer — and that is the most troubling part. Case Details Victim: Lisa Norrell, 15, student attending a quinceañera rehearsal the night she disappeared. Date: November 6–15, 1998. Location: Pittsburgh-Antioch Highway, Contra Costa County, California, USA. Case Status: Unsolved as of 2024. No charges have ever been filed in Lisa's murder. A 2018 forensic review by Lieutenant Jacob Stage produced no public results, and the case remains officially active. Episode Key Points - Lisa's body was found at the Navland industrial property nine days after her disappearance, in a location search teams had already physically and aerially covered — with no explanation for how she was missed. - A fire captain named Dwayne Shoemake, whose own child sexual assault charges were quietly dropped in a cooperation deal, told investigators that David Heneby confessed to abducting Lisa and holding her for days. - Paul Holes, the investigator who later identified the Golden State Killer, stated publicly that details about what was done to these victims are being deliberately withheld from the public. - David Heneby died in 2016 without ever being charged, and the confession relayed through Shoemake has never been publicly explained or officially ruled out. Lisa Norrell, Pittsburgh-Antioch Highway homicide, Contra Costa County California, unsolved murder 1998, Navland industrial site, true crime, homicide, forensic science, investigation, criminal minds, murder, unsolved mysteries, true crime English.

    42 min
  8. The Highway Nobody Watched Over - Episode 66

    MAY 1

    The Highway Nobody Watched Over - Episode 66

    Buried Alive: Buried Alive: The School Bus That Vanished: The Mass Kidnapping of 26 Children and Ed Ray Twenty-six children boarded a school bus for a routine summer afternoon and simply ceased to exist for thirty-six hours. The bus was found hidden in a thicket seven miles from town — engine off, no blood, no key, no trace of where twenty-seven people had gone. How do you make an entire school bus disappear, and who plans something like this eight months in advance? In this episode, we explore the eleven-hour van ride with no bathroom stops and no explanation given to the children, a buried moving trailer designed to hold twenty-seven people underground in a California rock quarry, and a ransom demand that was never delivered because the kidnappers' own crime drowned out their phone lines. Was this the work of desperate men, or a calculated scheme years in the making by people with the resources to pull it off? The forensic evidence and the physical planning tell a story that is harder to believe than fiction. Case Details Victim: 26 children ages 5–14 and bus driver Ed Ray, age 55, summer school program participants. Date: July 15–17, 1976. Location: Chowchilla, Madera County, California, USA. Case Status: All three perpetrators pleaded guilty in 1977 and were sentenced to life without parole. Richard Schoenfeld was paroled in 2012, James Schoenfeld in 2015, and Fred Woods was granted parole in 2022 after earlier denials. Episode Key Points - The kidnappers recorded each child's name and age on the back of a fast food bag — a detail recovered from Fred Woods' apartment during the search. - The ransom calls were never made because the media coverage of the crime overwhelmed the very phone lines the kidnappers planned to use. - Fred Woods' family trust was reportedly worth over one hundred million dollars at the time he was denied parole for running outside businesses from prison via cell phone. - The moving trailer used as a prison was purchased under a fake alias — Mark Hall — with a bogus San Jose address, and the vans had been acquired eight months before the kidnapping. Chowchilla kidnapping, Ed Ray bus driver, Madera County California 1976, mass kidnapping true crime, Fred Woods Richard Schoenfeld James Schoenfeld, homicide, investigation, forensic science, criminal minds, unsolved mysteries, true detective, murder, true crime English.

    36 min

About

Welcome to True Crime Central: The Home of 100% Real, Unsolved, and Chilling Stories. Hosted by Max.If you’re looking for gripping true crime without the filler, small talk, or fiction, you’ve found it. True Crime Central dives deep into the most disturbing solved and unsolved mysteries, cold cases, unexplained disappearances, and shocking murders from around the world. We don't just read headlines—we tear apart the police reports, analyze the forensic evidence, and ask the questions the official files left unanswered. Every case we cover is 100% real. From crime scenes staged to look like art, to killers who hide in plain sight, to interrogations that unravel impossible lies. Whether it's a 40-year-old cold case finally cracked by DNA, or a modern digital mystery where the clues exist only on a deleted hard drive, we put you right at the center of the investigation. What to Expect on True Crime Central:Immersive Storytelling: No banter, no distractions. Just straight-to-the-point narratives that pull you into the timeline from minute one.Cinematic Details: We focus on the exact details that change everything—the missing zip ties, the silent dogs, the phone that posted after the victim was dead.Daily Uploads: Your daily true crime fix. New episodes drop every single day at 3:33 AM and 9:00 PM.True crime isn't just about who did it. It's about how they were caught, the mistakes made along the way, and the victims who deserve to have their stories told. Don't forget to follow the show and turn on notifications so you never miss a case. Recommended Listening:If you are a fan of deep-dive investigative podcasts and suspenseful storytelling like Crime Junkie, True Crime with Kendall Rae, Dateline NBC, 48 Hours, Morbid, 20/20, Betrayal Season 5, MrBallen Podcast: Strange Dark & Mysterious Stories, My Favorite Murder, Criminal, Murder at the U, Snapped: Women Who Murder, Serialously with Annie Elise, Casefile True Crime, or The Epstein Files, this will be your new favorite podcast. Topics Covered: True crime podcast, unsolved mysteries, cold cases, serial killers, missing persons, real crime stories, investigative journalism, homicide investigations, forensic science, interrogations, 911 calls, true crime daily, unexplained deaths, true crime stories English.