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The Guilty Files

Paranormal World Productions

The Guilty Files is a true crime podcast hosted by former police officer and investigator Brian King-Sharp, delivering in-depth analysis of real criminal case files beyond the headlines.This isn’t sensationalized true crime. This is investigative true crime. Each case unfolds in two carefully structured parts — revealing not just what happened, but what may have been overlooked.True Crime: UncoveredThe factual foundation.In this segment, Brian reconstructs real murder investigations, cold cases, and high-profile criminal investigations step by step. Drawing on law enforcement training and real-world experience, he breaks down crime scenes, timelines, witness statements, forensic evidence, interrogations, and investigative decisions with clarity and precision. No speculation. No internet myths. No dramatic exaggeration. Just documented facts presented through a professional investigative lens. The Redacted Report is the story behind the official report.Once the facts are established, Brian examines the gaps that remain — abandoned leads, procedural missteps, overlooked evidence, prosecutorial decisions, and the unanswered questions that still raise concerns. Not conspiracy hype. Not sensational claims. Just careful analysis of where investigations may have veered off course — and why. The Guilty Files explores: • Murder investigations • Cold cases and unsolved crimes • Criminal psychology • Police procedure • Forensic evidence • Interrogation strategy • Wrongful convictions • Redacted documents • Hidden investigative details Because the truth is rarely simple — and the most important details are often buried inside the file. Follow The Guilty Files for in-depth true crime analysis from a former law enforcement perspective — and discover what the official report didn’t tell you.

  1. TGF 090 Lewis Lent: The Redacted Report

    2D AGO

    TGF 090 Lewis Lent: The Redacted Report

    This episode of The Redacted Report is a companion piece to our full deep dive on the Lewis Lent case released earlier this week. If you haven't listened to that episode first, we strongly recommend starting there, as this isn't a recap. This is where we dig into the overlooked, lesser known, and rarely discussed facts surrounding Lewis Lent and the investigation that brought him down. We examine the disturbing specifics of Lent's so-called master plan as documented in Massachusetts court records, including his description of the multi-compartment confinement system he was constructing and the chillingly clinical victim profile he laid out for investigators.  We explore how his terminology for interim victims reveals the calculated progression of a predator who was actively transitioning from impulsive kills to long-term captivity.The episode also covers the remarkable coincidence involving Detective Owen Boyington and his daughter Amy, both of whom apprehended criminals on the same day in January of nineteen ninety four. We look at the lasting impact on the Shallies family, whose decades of scrutiny following Lent's arrest is a story that rarely gets told, and the twenty twenty four return to their property by investigators still searching for Sara Anne Wood. We discuss the evidentiary significance of the duct tape match that connected the Bernardo murder scene to Lent's vehicle three years later, the legal technicality that means Lent has never served a single day in New York for Sara Wood's murder, and the heartbreaking words of Jamie Lusher's father at the twenty thirteen press conference.  We also break down Lent's mental health defense strategy, including the alter ego he conveniently named after his own middle name, and why prosecution psychologists argued he was faking every bit of it.If you have any information regarding the whereabouts of Sara Anne Wood or Jamie Lusher, please contact the New York State Police Troop D Headquarters at 315-366-6000.  If you’re drawn to real criminal investigations, cold cases, and the details that don’t always make it into the official report, make sure you’re following The Guilty Files wherever you listen. Turn on automatic downloads so you never miss an episode — because each case unfolds in two parts, and the truth is rarely found in just one.If you value careful analysis, real law enforcement insight, and true crime without the sensationalism, consider leaving a five-star rating and written review. It helps more than you know and allows us to keep bringing these case files to light. Until next time —The facts matter. The details matter. And the truth is often redacted.

    23 min
  2. TGF 090 Lewis Lent: The Redacted Report

    2D AGO • SUBSCRIBERS ONLY

    TGF 090 Lewis Lent: The Redacted Report

    This episode of The Redacted Report is a companion piece to our full deep dive on the Lewis Lent case released earlier this week. If you haven't listened to that episode first, we strongly recommend starting there, as this isn't a recap. This is where we dig into the overlooked, lesser known, and rarely discussed facts surrounding Lewis Lent and the investigation that brought him down. We examine the disturbing specifics of Lent's so-called master plan as documented in Massachusetts court records, including his description of the multi-compartment confinement system he was constructing and the chillingly clinical victim profile he laid out for investigators.  We explore how his terminology for interim victims reveals the calculated progression of a predator who was actively transitioning from impulsive kills to long-term captivity.The episode also covers the remarkable coincidence involving Detective Owen Boyington and his daughter Amy, both of whom apprehended criminals on the same day in January of nineteen ninety four. We look at the lasting impact on the Shallies family, whose decades of scrutiny following Lent's arrest is a story that rarely gets told, and the twenty twenty four return to their property by investigators still searching for Sara Anne Wood. We discuss the evidentiary significance of the duct tape match that connected the Bernardo murder scene to Lent's vehicle three years later, the legal technicality that means Lent has never served a single day in New York for Sara Wood's murder, and the heartbreaking words of Jamie Lusher's father at the twenty thirteen press conference.  We also break down Lent's mental health defense strategy, including the alter ego he conveniently named after his own middle name, and why prosecution psychologists argued he was faking every bit of it.If you have any information regarding the whereabouts of Sara Anne Wood or Jamie Lusher, please contact the New York State Police Troop D Headquarters at 315-366-6000.

    23 min
  3. TGF 089 Lewis Lent

    4D AGO

    TGF 089 Lewis Lent

    For seven years, Lewis Lent worked as a janitor at a movie theater in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. He volunteered his time helping the blind. He studied the Bible and became an ordained minister. He mentored neighborhood kids who called him "the Big Brother." And behind that mask of kindness, he was hunting, abducting, and murdering children across the northeastern United States.In this episode, we trace the full story of Lewis Lent from his troubled childhood in rural upstate New York through his nomadic years drifting across Florida, New Mexico, and the Northeast, to the horrific crimes that would eventually define him. We cover the nineteen ninety abduction and murder of twelve year old Jimmy Bernardo from a Pittsfield strip mall, the nineteen ninety two disappearance of sixteen year old Jamie Lusher in Westfield, Massachusetts, and the nineteen ninety three kidnapping, rape, and murder of twelve year old Sara Anne Wood in Sauquoit, New York.We also tell the story of the girl who stopped him. Twelve year old Becky Savarese, who faked losing her breath and slipped out of her backpack to escape Lent at gunpoint on a frozen January morning in nineteen ninety four. Her courage and quick thinking cracked open cases that had gone cold for years and ended a predator's reign of terror. This episode covers the massive multi-state investigation, the three day interrogation that produced Lent's chilling confessions, his so-called "master plan" to imprison children in a hidden room in his apartment, and the courtroom proceedings that put him away for life. We also examine the thirty year search for Sara Anne Wood's body, a search that continues to this day because Lewis Lent refuses to tell her family where he buried their daughter. If you have any information about the whereabouts of Sara Anne Wood or Jamie Lusher, please contact the New York State Police Troop D Headquarters at 315-366-6000. If you’re drawn to real criminal investigations, cold cases, and the details that don’t always make it into the official report, make sure you’re following The Guilty Files wherever you listen. Turn on automatic downloads so you never miss an episode — because each case unfolds in two parts, and the truth is rarely found in just one.If you value careful analysis, real law enforcement insight, and true crime without the sensationalism, consider leaving a five-star rating and written review. It helps more than you know and allows us to keep bringing these case files to light. Until next time —The facts matter. The details matter. And the truth is often redacted.

    1h 14m
  4. TGF 089 Lewis Lent

    4D AGO • SUBSCRIBERS ONLY

    TGF 089 Lewis Lent

    For seven years, Lewis Lent worked as a janitor at a movie theater in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. He volunteered his time helping the blind. He studied the Bible and became an ordained minister. He mentored neighborhood kids who called him "the Big Brother." And behind that mask of kindness, he was hunting, abducting, and murdering children across the northeastern United States.In this episode, we trace the full story of Lewis Lent from his troubled childhood in rural upstate New York through his nomadic years drifting across Florida, New Mexico, and the Northeast, to the horrific crimes that would eventually define him. We cover the nineteen ninety abduction and murder of twelve year old Jimmy Bernardo from a Pittsfield strip mall, the nineteen ninety two disappearance of sixteen year old Jamie Lusher in Westfield, Massachusetts, and the nineteen ninety three kidnapping, rape, and murder of twelve year old Sara Anne Wood in Sauquoit, New York.We also tell the story of the girl who stopped him. Twelve year old Becky Savarese, who faked losing her breath and slipped out of her backpack to escape Lent at gunpoint on a frozen January morning in nineteen ninety four. Her courage and quick thinking cracked open cases that had gone cold for years and ended a predator's reign of terror. This episode covers the massive multi-state investigation, the three day interrogation that produced Lent's chilling confessions, his so-called "master plan" to imprison children in a hidden room in his apartment, and the courtroom proceedings that put him away for life. We also examine the thirty year search for Sara Anne Wood's body, a search that continues to this day because Lewis Lent refuses to tell her family where he buried their daughter. If you have any information about the whereabouts of Sara Anne Wood or Jamie Lusher, please contact the New York State Police Troop D Headquarters at 315-366-6000.

    1h 14m
  5. TGF 088 The Frenchman Bay Six: The Redacted Report

    FEB 20

    TGF 088 The Frenchman Bay Six: The Redacted Report

    Six teenage boys left a house party in Pickering, Ontario, in the early hours of March 17, 1995, and vanished without a trace. Durham Regional Police settled on a theory almost immediately — the boys stole a boat, went joyriding on the frigid waters of Lake Ontario, and drowned. Case closed. Except it wasn't. Not even close.In this episode, we go beyond the official narrative and dig into the facts that never made the headlines. The details that got buried, ignored, or actively suppressed.We examine why Jay Boyle called his girlfriend at 1:30 a.m. and told her he was coming to her apartment — only to never arrive. We break down the surveillance footage that only captured three of the six boys at the marina, while the other three were never seen on camera at all.  We look at evidence suggesting Danny Higgins, the youngest of the group, may not have even been with the others when they disappeared.We cover the two girlfriends who called police at 3:30 a.m. to report the boys missing — and were dismissed. The 36-hour delay before any real search began. The sidescan sonar contract that was lined up and then cancelled by Durham Police without explanation. The "unsinkable" boat that was never found. The gas can that turned up on the wrong side of the lake with no water inside it after nearly two weeks adrift. We reveal the three unidentified strangers caught on the marina's surveillance tape just minutes after the boys — who were never investigated. The critical dockside camera that went offline at 2:21 a.m. at the worst possible moment. And the surveillance footage that Durham Police told a private investigator didn't exist — until his third access to information request proved otherwise.We walk through the 1998 discovery of red jeans and human remains in the Niagara River that matched Jay Boyle's description — a discovery the Boyle family wasn't told about for 15 years. The bureaucratic nightmare that followed. The broken chain of evidence. And the forensic results that raised more questions than they answered. This episode is built on the 13-year investigation of private investigator Bruce Ricketts, who worked this case pro bono until his death in January 2024, and on the documented record he left behind. The boys: Jay Boyle (17), Chad Smith (18), Robbie Rumboldt (17), Jamie Lefebvre (17), Michael Cummins (17), and Danny Higgins (16).The case remains open.  The boys are still classified as missing persons.Anyone with information is asked to contact the Durham Regional Police Service at 1-888-579-1520, ext. 2511. If you’re drawn to real criminal investigations, cold cases, and the details that don’t always make it into the official report, make sure you’re following The Guilty Files wherever you listen. Turn on automatic downloads so you never miss an episode — because each case unfolds in two parts, and the truth is rarely found in just one.If you value careful analysis, real law enforcement insight, and true crime without the sensationalism, consider leaving a five-star rating and written review. It helps more than you know and allows us to keep bringing these case files to light. Until next time —The facts matter. The details matter. And the truth is often redacted.

    31 min
  6. TGF 088 The Frenchman Bay Six: The Redacted Report

    FEB 18 • SUBSCRIBERS ONLY

    TGF 088 The Frenchman Bay Six: The Redacted Report

    Six teenage boys left a house party in Pickering, Ontario, in the early hours of March 17, 1995, and vanished without a trace. Durham Regional Police settled on a theory almost immediately — the boys stole a boat, went joyriding on the frigid waters of Lake Ontario, and drowned. Case closed. Except it wasn't. Not even close.In this episode, we go beyond the official narrative and dig into the facts that never made the headlines. The details that got buried, ignored, or actively suppressed.We examine why Jay Boyle called his girlfriend at 1:30 a.m. and told her he was coming to her apartment — only to never arrive. We break down the surveillance footage that only captured three of the six boys at the marina, while the other three were never seen on camera at all.  We look at evidence suggesting Danny Higgins, the youngest of the group, may not have even been with the others when they disappeared.We cover the two girlfriends who called police at 3:30 a.m. to report the boys missing — and were dismissed. The 36-hour delay before any real search began. The sidescan sonar contract that was lined up and then cancelled by Durham Police without explanation. The "unsinkable" boat that was never found. The gas can that turned up on the wrong side of the lake with no water inside it after nearly two weeks adrift. We reveal the three unidentified strangers caught on the marina's surveillance tape just minutes after the boys — who were never investigated. The critical dockside camera that went offline at 2:21 a.m. at the worst possible moment. And the surveillance footage that Durham Police told a private investigator didn't exist — until his third access to information request proved otherwise.We walk through the 1998 discovery of red jeans and human remains in the Niagara River that matched Jay Boyle's description — a discovery the Boyle family wasn't told about for 15 years. The bureaucratic nightmare that followed. The broken chain of evidence. And the forensic results that raised more questions than they answered. This episode is built on the 13-year investigation of private investigator Bruce Ricketts, who worked this case pro bono until his death in January 2024, and on the documented record he left behind. The boys: Jay Boyle (17), Chad Smith (18), Robbie Rumboldt (17), Jamie Lefebvre (17), Michael Cummins (17), and Danny Higgins (16).The case remains open.  The boys are still classified as missing persons.Anyone with information is asked to contact the Durham Regional Police Service at 1-888-579-1520, ext. 2511.

    30 min
  7. TGF 087 The Frenchman Bay Six

    FEB 17

    TGF 087 The Frenchman Bay Six

    On the night of March 16, 1995, six teenage boys left a house party in Pickering, Ontario and headed toward the East Shore Marina at Frenchman's Bay. They told friends they'd be back before sunrise. None of them were ever seen again.Jay Boyle, 17. Chad Smith, 18. Robbie Rumboldt, 17. Jamie Lefebvre, 17. Michael Cummins, 17. Danny Higgins, 16. Known collectively as the Lost Boys of Pickering or the Frenchman Bay Six, their disappearance remains one of Canada's most baffling unsolved cases thirty years later.In this episode, we walk through the full timeline of that night, from the party to the marina, the surveillance footage that captured three of the boys entering the property at 1:48 a.m., and the unidentified individuals recorded on that same footage just minutes later. We examine the thirty-six-hour delay before police launched a search, the massive air, land, and water operation that followed, and the single piece of physical evidence ever recovered — a gas can found twelve days later on the American side of the lake near Wilson, New York. We dig into the official theory from the Durham Regional Police Service, that the boys stole a fourteen-foot Boston Whaler and capsized on the frigid waters of Lake Ontario, and we examine the serious questions raised by private investigator Bruce Ricketts, who spent over thirteen years working the case without pay before his death in January 2024. Ricketts challenged nearly every aspect of the investigation, from the cancelled sidescan sonar search to the surveillance video that police later claimed didn't exist in their records, to the human remains found in the Niagara River in 1998 that the Boyle family didn't learn about for fifteen years.No bodies. No boat. No wreckage. No clothing. No personal effects.  Six teenagers, gone without a trace. This is a case defined not by what was found, but by what wasn't, and by the questions that three decades of silence have never answered.If you have information about this case, contact the Durham Regional Police Service at 905-579-1520, extension 2511, or submit an anonymous tip to Durham Regional Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS. Case reference number 95-26936. If you’re drawn to real criminal investigations, cold cases, and the details that don’t always make it into the official report, make sure you’re following The Guilty Files wherever you listen. Turn on automatic downloads so you never miss an episode — because each case unfolds in two parts, and the truth is rarely found in just one.If you value careful analysis, real law enforcement insight, and true crime without the sensationalism, consider leaving a five-star rating and written review. It helps more than you know and allows us to keep bringing these case files to light. Until next time —The facts matter. The details matter. And the truth is often redacted.

    1h 13m
  8. TGF 087 The Frenchman Bay Six

    FEB 17 • SUBSCRIBERS ONLY

    TGF 087 The Frenchman Bay Six

    On the night of March 16, 1995, six teenage boys left a house party in Pickering, Ontario and headed toward the East Shore Marina at Frenchman's Bay. They told friends they'd be back before sunrise. None of them were ever seen again.Jay Boyle, 17. Chad Smith, 18. Robbie Rumboldt, 17. Jamie Lefebvre, 17. Michael Cummins, 17. Danny Higgins, 16. Known collectively as the Lost Boys of Pickering or the Frenchman Bay Six, their disappearance remains one of Canada's most baffling unsolved cases thirty years later.In this episode, we walk through the full timeline of that night, from the party to the marina, the surveillance footage that captured three of the boys entering the property at 1:48 a.m., and the unidentified individuals recorded on that same footage just minutes later. We examine the thirty-six-hour delay before police launched a search, the massive air, land, and water operation that followed, and the single piece of physical evidence ever recovered — a gas can found twelve days later on the American side of the lake near Wilson, New York. We dig into the official theory from the Durham Regional Police Service, that the boys stole a fourteen-foot Boston Whaler and capsized on the frigid waters of Lake Ontario, and we examine the serious questions raised by private investigator Bruce Ricketts, who spent over thirteen years working the case without pay before his death in January 2024. Ricketts challenged nearly every aspect of the investigation, from the cancelled sidescan sonar search to the surveillance video that police later claimed didn't exist in their records, to the human remains found in the Niagara River in 1998 that the Boyle family didn't learn about for fifteen years.No bodies. No boat. No wreckage. No clothing. No personal effects.  Six teenagers, gone without a trace. This is a case defined not by what was found, but by what wasn't, and by the questions that three decades of silence have never answered.If you have information about this case, contact the Durham Regional Police Service at 905-579-1520, extension 2511, or submit an anonymous tip to Durham Regional Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS. Case reference number 95-26936.

    1h 12m
4.8
out of 5
77 Ratings

About

The Guilty Files is a true crime podcast hosted by former police officer and investigator Brian King-Sharp, delivering in-depth analysis of real criminal case files beyond the headlines.This isn’t sensationalized true crime. This is investigative true crime. Each case unfolds in two carefully structured parts — revealing not just what happened, but what may have been overlooked.True Crime: UncoveredThe factual foundation.In this segment, Brian reconstructs real murder investigations, cold cases, and high-profile criminal investigations step by step. Drawing on law enforcement training and real-world experience, he breaks down crime scenes, timelines, witness statements, forensic evidence, interrogations, and investigative decisions with clarity and precision. No speculation. No internet myths. No dramatic exaggeration. Just documented facts presented through a professional investigative lens. The Redacted Report is the story behind the official report.Once the facts are established, Brian examines the gaps that remain — abandoned leads, procedural missteps, overlooked evidence, prosecutorial decisions, and the unanswered questions that still raise concerns. Not conspiracy hype. Not sensational claims. Just careful analysis of where investigations may have veered off course — and why. The Guilty Files explores: • Murder investigations • Cold cases and unsolved crimes • Criminal psychology • Police procedure • Forensic evidence • Interrogation strategy • Wrongful convictions • Redacted documents • Hidden investigative details Because the truth is rarely simple — and the most important details are often buried inside the file. Follow The Guilty Files for in-depth true crime analysis from a former law enforcement perspective — and discover what the official report didn’t tell you.

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