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For True Crime Junkies, what's your favorite cold case?
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:15 am
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:15 am
I'm always looking fo new crime stuff to read or explore on YouTube and podcasts.
Recently started the Keepers on Netflix about Sister Catherine Cesnik's murder, not sure how I'd missed this one before.
What ya got?
Recently started the Keepers on Netflix about Sister Catherine Cesnik's murder, not sure how I'd missed this one before.
What ya got?
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:17 am to NATidefan
Is the Idaho case officially cold yet?
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:18 am to Commandeaux
quote:
Is the Idaho case officially cold yet?
Don't think so, I am following that though.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:23 am to NATidefan
JonBenet....has to have been family involved yet they are going to get away with it and now that the guys is in for life for murder in Peru, why does he not admit and tell details of N Holloway?
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:24 am to NATidefan
probably Nicole Simpson. but I dont think that one will ever be solved.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:24 am to NATidefan
The Black Dahlia, then Zodiac, then the Texarkana murders. The Idaho murders are quickly moving up the list.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:25 am to NATidefan
One that hits close to home is the Eleanor Parker case. I think she was related to Edwin Edwards, and we had some mutual friends.
This post was edited on 12/7/22 at 12:01 pm
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:26 am to NATidefan
The local ones that I'm most interested in are Nanette Krentel's murder in Lacombe, LA, Margaret Coons in Mandeville, LA, and Eugenie Boisfontaine in Baton Rouge.
There's a podcast called The Vanished Podcast that does a weekly story about a missing person. There have been some very interesting cases they've reviewed (Jerrod Green, Jake Latiolais, Sandra Eckert, and Jason Landry).
There's a podcast called The Vanished Podcast that does a weekly story about a missing person. There have been some very interesting cases they've reviewed (Jerrod Green, Jake Latiolais, Sandra Eckert, and Jason Landry).
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:26 am to tonydtigr
The local one here in ST Tammany is Margaret Coon.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:30 am to NATidefan
This situation in Idaho is shaping up to be one for the ages.
Probably JonBenet Ramsey, mainly because I was just a young kid when it happened and remember so many parents and teachers talking about it so even at such a young age it hit home.
Probably JonBenet Ramsey, mainly because I was just a young kid when it happened and remember so many parents and teachers talking about it so even at such a young age it hit home.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:31 am to NATidefan
Asha Degree was a little girl who supposedly just walked away from her home in the middle of the night in a thunderstorm about 20 years ago, never to be seen again.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:33 am to NATidefan
Zodiac Killer for me. The Elisa Lam case is pretty crazy too IMO.
This post was edited on 12/7/22 at 11:35 am
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:33 am to tonydtigr
quote:
One that hit's close to home is the Eleanor Parker case. I think she was related to Edwin Edwards, and we had some mutual friends.
She was his neice.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:34 am to Zap Rowsdower
Jon Benet for me too.
The Kristin Smart case just got closed in court so that one’s off the list.
The Delphi murders are on their way too.
The Kristin Smart case just got closed in court so that one’s off the list.
The Delphi murders are on their way too.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:35 am to WylieTiger
quote:
The local one here in ST Tammany is Margaret Coon.
is this the one that happened in Beau Chene
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:38 am to Sam Quint
There were always rumors as well that ID's of several missing women were found in the possession of Brandon Scott Lavergne. I guess it was all just rumor since he was never charged in another case.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:43 am to NATidefan
Killing of Judy Smith
Brief rundown:
Supposedly, she was involved with horses in her younger days. I believe horse racing/breeding is a high dollar industry. This is an angle I've never seen talked about publicly with this case but it's one that I think makes sense.
Brief rundown:
quote:
Dental records and the arthritic knee soon led the body to be identified as that of Judy Smith (born Judith Eldredge; December 15, 1946, in Hyannis, Massachusetts), a 50-year-old nurse from Newton, Massachusetts, who had last been positively seen alive by her husband Jeffrey at a hotel in Philadelphia almost five months earlier. When she had not shown up after a day purportedly spent sightseeing in the city, he had reported her missing. Until the bones were found, the search for her had been concentrated in the Philadelphia area, where several sightings had been reported, although some of them may have been of a homeless woman who strongly resembled Smith.[2]
The investigation into the killing has been complicated by the unresolved question of how Smith got to North Carolina from Philadelphia, 600 miles (970 km) away, in the first place.[1] She and her husband planned to stay in the Philadelphia area and visit friends after the conference he was attending ended; she had not expressed any desire to visit the Asheville area where her body was found. Yet when found she was wearing clothes more appropriate for hiking than those she had on when last seen in Philadelphia. It has been speculated that she might have been a victim of serial killer Gary Michael Hilton, who had left one of his victims in a similar condition near where Smith's body was discovered.
Supposedly, she was involved with horses in her younger days. I believe horse racing/breeding is a high dollar industry. This is an angle I've never seen talked about publicly with this case but it's one that I think makes sense.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:44 am to jdd48
quote:
The Elisa Lam case is pretty crazy too IMO.
This one became a lot more simple when the maintenance man said that the lid to the water tank was open when he found it and not closed. That made all of the difference in that case and I think it's pretty much solved now.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:47 am to NATidefan
A case of cold Budweiser is pretty good to me..
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