investigation
Whodunnit, and why? All about criminal investigations and the forensic methods used to search for clues and collect evidence to get to the bottom of the crime.
Inside the Sordid World of Jeffrey Epstein and What His Troubling Emails to Women Really Reveal
There’s something almost hypnotic about the Epstein document archive. Sitting down to explore it isn’t just research—it’s immersion. Hours disappear as you scroll through emails, attachments, and fragments of conversations that hint at a larger system operating behind the scenes. The sheer volume alone is overwhelming. And yet, paradoxically, what’s most striking isn’t what’s there. It’s the constant awareness that much more may still be missing.
By Lawrence Lease11 days ago in Criminal
A Breakup That Ended in Murder: The Dark Side of Emotional Dependency
In November 2016 a young relationship in Loxahatchee Florida ended in a tragedy that would leave an entire community searching for answers.At the center of the case were James Barry a 21-year-old college student, and his former girlfriend, Melanie Eam, who was 22 at the time.Their relationship, which began like many others between young adults navigating school and early adulthood, gradually took a troubling turn. According to accounts later presented in court, Melanie became increasingly fixated on James and on maintaining constant access to his life. What may have initially felt like devotion slowly transformed into something far more consuming.
By Kure Garba11 days ago in Criminal
Polygraphs, Border Questions, and the Long Wait: Inside the Latest Developments in the Nancy Guthrie Investigation
They line the front of the property in quiet rows, most of them yellow, placed there by neighbors and strangers alike. They represent something simple but powerful: hope. Even as the investigation moves forward behind closed doors, the physical presence of those flowers is a reminder that Nancy is not forgotten.
By Lawrence Lease12 days ago in Criminal
The Most Wanted Man in America: The Night I Served Coffee to John Dillinger. AI-Generated.
The Most Wanted Man Snow softened the city. It fell quietly over rooftops, streetlamps, and newspaper stands, covering the sharp edges of Manhattan in a fragile kind of peace — the kind that never lasted long in America anymore.Inside a narrow diner on Lexington Avenue, the air smelled of coffee, toast, and radiator heat. Midnight had passed. Only two customers remained: a tired taxi driver asleep in a booth… and the man who always sat by the window.
By shakir hamid12 days ago in Criminal
Buried Alive: A Retired Couple’s Kindness Turned Into a Deadly Betrayal
In July 2005 a shocking and deeply disturbing crime unfolded in the quiet city of Jacksonville Florida. A retired couple who had recently relocated there in search of a peaceful new chapter in life were brutally betrayed by someone they had once welcomed into their lives.The victims, Mr. and Mrs. Reggie Sumner had previously lived in South Carolina before making the decision to move to Florida in March 2005. By all accounts, the couple were kind, trusting, and generous people. While still living in South Carolina, they had formed a friendly relationship with a young woman named Tiffany Ann Cole, who was the daughter of one of their neighbors.
By Kure Garba13 days ago in Criminal
New Developments in the Nancy Guthrie Investigation: DNA Setbacks, Missing Footage, and Signs the Case Is Still Moving
New information released by the Pima County Sheriff’s Office and the FBI has provided a clearer picture of where the Nancy Guthrie investigation stands right now. While some of the most anticipated forensic tests have not produced immediate answers, investigators continue to pursue multiple avenues that could ultimately identify the person responsible.
By Lawrence Lease13 days ago in Criminal
A Carefully Timed Murder Behind Closed Doors
Robert Fratta a former police officer and firefighter believed he was clever enough to erase his tracks and escape responsibility for a carefully planned crime. What appeared, on the surface, to be an ordinary family outing to church would later become one of the most telling moments in a case that exposed how deeply calculated his actions were.On November 9, 1994, Robert Fratta attended a church service with his children in Missouri. To those around him, he seemed distracted and unsettled. During the service, he left the congregation twice to make phone calls. At the time, neither his children nor fellow worshippers had any reason to suspect that these calls had nothing to do with an emergency or family matter. What they did not know was that Fratta was attempting to construct an alibi for a crime that had already been set in motion.
By Kure Garba13 days ago in Criminal











