DEE – Just before Easter in 2003, one dead body and over $150 million in heroin came ashore in southern Australia.
JEFF – How did it get there?
JEFF – Where was it going?
JEFF – And what does a small town ice cream shop owner named Tubes have to do with it?
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JEFF – On a quiet Good Friday in 2019, on the coast of Wales, a man is shot with a crossbow.
DEE – There’s not much evidence, no witnesses, and no clear motive.
JEFF – Sounds like our kind of story.
DEE – It’s time to recap the BBC podcast, The Crossbow Killer, on this episode of So Much Crime, So Little Time.
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JEFF – It was Good Friday, April 19th, 2019.
JEFF – As he often did, retired lecturer Gerald Corrigan was at his isolated home in Wales, watching TV.
DEE – A bit after midnight, the TV signal went out, so he went to check on the satellite dish outside.
DEE – It was murder, with, of all things, a crossbow.
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DEE: This time we have the story of the first known Black serial killer.
JEFF: And then the story of a 12 year old girl who went missing when she was nine months pregnant.
DEE: We’re elevating stories that don’t often get told on this episode of So Much Crime, So Little Time.
JEFF: Welcome to So Much Crime, So Little Time.
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JEFF: On June 9th, 2016, a three year old girl was found wandering alone barefoot in a parking lot in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
DEE: Her mother, 40 year old Lyntell Washington, who was five months pregnant, was missing and her car was covered in blood.
JEFF: What happened to Lyntell and why?
DEE: It’s time to dig in to the true crime podcast, Black Girl Gone
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DEE: In 1982, the peaceful town of Sunnyvale, California, was rocked by the horrific rape and murder of 15-year-old Karen Stitt.
JEFF: For over 40 years, there was no justice or even a solid lead.
DEE: But then, Matt Hutchison, a Sunnyvale cold case detective, managed to bring the murderer to justice.
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JEFF: Dee, how many more episodes are we gonna do on West Cork?
DEE: We have to finish the series.
DEE: This is the last one, we’ll recap the final episodes here.
JEFF: So was this all like a big trick to get us to talk more about Ireland?
DEE: Maybe.
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DEE: There’s a brutal, shocking murder in a quiet town on the far edge of Ireland.
JEFF: The main suspect is a polarizing journalist that nobody seems to like.
DEE: So how did this case never get solved?
JEFF: We’re going back to West Cork on this episode of So Much Crime.
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JEFF: West Cork in Ireland isn’t just remote.
JEFF: It’s called the farthest place you can go and not get your feet wet.
DEE: People go there to get away from everything, to reinvent themselves and maybe also to commit murder.
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JEFF: We’re going back to 1982, Chicago.
DEE: Seven people are killed by Tylenol that’s filled with cyanide.
JEFF: For the past 40 years, the FBI, the police, and a couple of reporters at the Chicago Tribune have been trying to bring the killer to justice.
DEE: But so far, justice has eluded them.
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DEE: Your spouse has a bit of a headache, or maybe your back hurts, or your daughter’s running a small fever.
JEFF: You go grab some Tylenol, like you’ve done countless times before.
JEFF: But this time, this time, the Tylenol is laced with cyanide.
DEE: It’s time to preview one of America’s most famous unsolved cases, and So Much Crime, So Little Time.
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JEFF: While undergoing IVF at the Yale Fertility Clinic, hundreds of women reported extreme pain despite the drugs they should have been receiving.
JEFF: It turns out a nurse was swapping their fentanyl for saline.
JEFF: And when these women spoke up, their suffering was minimized and dismissed.
DEE: How did this happen at one of the most prestigious institutions in America?
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JEFF: Vulture named it the number one podcast of 2023 and said, The Retrievals is a nightmare, simply incredible.
DEE: I can’t stop thinking about it.
DEE: Formalistically intriguing, the dismissal of women’s pain takes the center stage in this story, but also present at its edges is what feels like thornier subject matter, the sometimes destructive tension between bodily autonomy and motherhood itself.
JEFF: Let’s preview The Retrievals on this episode of So Much Crime, So Little Time.
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JEFF: How did one of the most prolific con women in British history steal millions from the rich and maybe the famous in a swanky London neighborhood?
DEE: And how did the victims and their friends, especially one tireless nurse, bring her to justice?
JEFF: It’s time for a full recap of Filthy Rituals on this episode of So Much Crime, So Little Time.
Click here for the full transcript.
DEE: It’s the story of Juliette D’Souza.
DEE: She was one of the most prolific con artists in British history.
JEFF: So the podcast moves between Hampstead, which is a wealthy London suburb, and Suriname in South America. Click here for the full transcript.
Jeff: Hey Dee, you know that thing about me, how I allegedly staged a brutal murder that one time and scammed a family out of the insurance money and how I framed the spouse. But then he got out, so then I allegedly staged a second murder to frame him again and how all that murder and framing and insurance scam stuff wasn’t even the weirdest part of the thing about me. Click here for the full transcript.
Dee: Two days after Christmas, 2011, Russ Faria comes home to find his wife Betsy, dead. Betsy’s brutal murder would set off a chain of events that would leave another person dead and expose a diabolical scheme. On this episode of So Much Crime, So Little Time. We’re previewing the Dateline Podcast, The Thing about Pam. Click here for the full transcript.
DEE – On the last episode, we went back to 1971, to a farm town in County Meath, outside of Dublin, Ireland.
DEE – Una Linsky, a 19-year-old, on her way home from work, disappeared, and the investigation was just starting.
JEFF – In this episode, we’re going back to Porterstown Lane to review the rest of the story.
Dee: As day gave way tonight on a cold October evening in 1971, Una Lynskey stepped off a bus on the fairy house Road in County Meath. The walk down Porter Town Lane would usually take her no more than 15 minutes, but on that dark and damp evening, Una never made it home. What happened next caused deep and long-lasting Division in an otherwise tight-knit Community with the impact still being felt over 50 years later. At the heart of it all, however, is the unsolved murder of a 19-year-old girl. Click here to read the full transcript.