WILDCIDE

Wildcidepodcast

Wildcide is a unique true crime podcast that blends the most outrageous real-life cases with expert insights from professionals across the criminal justice field. Hosted by sisters Chelsea, an allied health professional, and Bailey, an experienced therapist, the show delves deep into the psychological and sociological dimensions of each case. With their combined expertise, they aren’t afraid to tackle complex, hard-hitting topics while weaving in just enough light-heartedness to balance the intensity. This approach hopefully helps keep our show engaging and relatable, creating a close-knit community of listeners affectionately known as the Wildciders.

  1. 2월 18일

    Heist of the Century: The Brink's Robbery

    Boston, January 17, 1950. Just after 7 p.m., a group of masked men walked calmly into the Brink’s Armored Car Company building and carried out what would soon be called the “Crime of the Century.” There was no chaos. No gunfire. No panic. The robbers moved with precision — wearing disguises, speaking little, and tying up employees before disappearing into the night with nearly $2.8 million in cash, checks, and securities, the largest robbery in American history at the time. Within minutes, they were gone… leaving almost no evidence behind. What followed was one of the longest and most complex investigations the FBI had ever faced. Thousands of leads went nowhere, suspects stayed silent, and for years the robbery looked like the perfect crime. As the statute of limitations crept closer, the case finally cracked — not because of forensic breakthroughs, but because loyalty inside the group began to collapse. The Brink’s robbery wasn’t just a historic heist. It changed how law enforcement approached organized crime, insider planning, and long-term investigations — proving that even the most meticulous plans can unravel when human nature gets involved. Bailey explores the psychology of group loyalty, rationalization, and delayed guilt, while Chelsea examines postwar America, organized crime culture, and why this robbery captured the nation’s imagination. Because sometimes the real story isn’t how criminals escape… it’s why they eventually turn on each other.

    1시간 5분
  2. 1월 14일

    Nightmare in Albuquerque

    In the mid-2000s, Albuquerque, New Mexico was gripped by a fear it couldn’t quite name. People were being found dead inside their homes — with no connections and without clear motives. At first, the cases appeared unrelated. Different neighborhoods. Different victims. Different MO. No obvious pattern. Just a growing sense that something was wrong. It begins with Carlos Esquibel, a 37-year-old designer whose welcoming nature would prove fatal, followed just days later by Josephine Selvage, an 81-year-old retired schoolteacher with Alzheimer’s who was attacked inside the only place she knew as safe. Two years later, the city was shaken again by the brutal murders of Tak and Pung Yi — beloved elders in Albuquerque’s Korean American community — a case so desperate for answers that the wrong men were arrested and imprisoned. But the true turning point comes six days after a wedding. Scott Pierce and Katherine Bailey were newlyweds, settling into their first home together, building an ordinary, hopeful future. In the early hours of one June morning, that future was destroyed when a gunman entered their home looking for someone else. Scott was killed defending his wife. Katherine survived — and immediately became both a widow and a suspect. What followed was a rapid investigation, a seemingly neat explanation, and a case that appeared closed. Until it wasn’t. When long-untested DNA from the Yi murders was finally processed, it revealed a truth far more disturbing than anyone expected: all of these deaths were connected. The evidence pointed not to a single motive or moment of rage, but to a man who moved through homes at night, escalated without hesitation, and left devastation behind while systems lagged just long enough to fail. At the center of it all was Clifton Bloomfield — a man who blended into everyday life while committing serial violence, whose crimes reframed everything investigators thought they understood. Nightmare in Albuquerque is a case that forces an uncomfortable question to linger long after the episode ends: How many lives are shaped — or ended — not just by violence, but by when the truth finally arrives?

    57분
4.8
최고 5점
46개의 평가

소개

Wildcide is a unique true crime podcast that blends the most outrageous real-life cases with expert insights from professionals across the criminal justice field. Hosted by sisters Chelsea, an allied health professional, and Bailey, an experienced therapist, the show delves deep into the psychological and sociological dimensions of each case. With their combined expertise, they aren’t afraid to tackle complex, hard-hitting topics while weaving in just enough light-heartedness to balance the intensity. This approach hopefully helps keep our show engaging and relatable, creating a close-knit community of listeners affectionately known as the Wildciders.

좋아할 만한 다른 항목