Avsnitt
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In April 1989, the small community of Lakeville, Indiana woke to a crime that shattered its sense of safety. Inside the Pelley family home, four people were found dead. The murders would become one of the most debated cases in the Indiana’s history. Detectives took immediate interest in Jeff, the son. “Jeff was the only one unaccounted for. That made him our starting point.” Cold case investigator Martin Ryans explained. But a starting point is not evidence. And in this case, the gap between suspicion and proof would become the center of a debate that continues to this day.
Music by: Ashot Danielyan
Tiktok: @doubtinthedetails
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Tamla Horsford, a 40‑year‑old mother of five, attends a birthday sleepover in Forsyth County, Georgia, and never makes it home. When she is found dead the next morning, the investigation that follows raises immediate concerns: conflicting statements, missing photographs, uncollected evidence and a timeline that never quite holds together. In this episode, we examine the investigation, the inconsistencies and the broader context of Forsyth County, asking what it means when an official conclusion leaves behind more uncertainty than resolution.
Music by: Ashot Danielyan
Tiktok: @doubtinthedetails
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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What began as a series of infant deaths, became one of Australia’s infamous murder cases in 2003. Kathleen Folbigg was once labelled Australia’s worst female serial killer. But two decades later, science exposed a very different truth. A story of grief, genetics, and a justice system struggling to keep pace with emerging science.
Sources:
Report of the Inquiry into the convictions of Kathleen Megan Folbigg July 2019
2022 Inquiry into the convictions of Kathleen Megan Folbigg
A Timeline of Events from 1987 – 2003 and further
The Guardian: Kathleen Folbigg: science sheds new light on case of mother convicted of murdering her children
Genetics, truth and justice
Australian Journal of Forensic Sciences: The case of Kathleen Folbigg: how did justice and medicine fare?
Law Society of NSW Journal: Kathleen Folbigg and the fragility of the criminal justice system
British Medical Journal: Meadow faces GMC over evidence given in child death cases
BBC: Misogyny helped jail her, science freed her
Music by: Ashot Danielyan
Tiktok: @doubtinthedetails
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Part Two examines that aftermath: the police statements released in the immediate hours after the shooting, the contradictions that emerged, and the legal and institutional consequences that followed. We’ll look at the investigations, the inquest, and the long fight Jean’s family faced as they tried to understand how an innocent man could be killed by the police and why no individual officer was ever held personally responsible.
This is the part of the story where the focus shifts from the chaos of the operation to the systems behind it.
Sources:
The Killing of Jean Charles de Menezes: Hyper-Militarism in the Neoliberal Economic Free-Fire Zone
IPCC - Stockwell One (Investigation into the shooting)
IPCC - Stockwell Two (Investigation into complaints about the MET Police)
The Guardian: "Shot man was not bomber - police"
BBC: "No justice for de Menezes 'a travesty', say family"
Old Bailey Trial Verdict
Independent: "Menezes: Did the police lie?"
Eyewitnesses reveal Jean Charles De Menezes shot without warning
The Guardian: "Brazilian did not wear bulky jacket"
Music by: Ashot Danielyan
Tiktok: @doubtinthedetails
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This is the story of how an innocent man was followed into a crowded train where he was fatally shot in front of multiple witnesses.
In the tense weeks after the 7/7 London bombings, the city was on edge. Police were operating at the highest threat level the UK had ever seen, racing to identify the men behind a second wave of attempted attacks. In this atmosphere of fear and urgency, a surveillance operation began at a small block of flats in Tulse Hill. An operation that would spiral into one of the worst failures in modern British policing.
Part One traces the final hours of Jean Charles de Menezes, a 27‑year‑old Brazilian electrician on his way to meet a friend for work. As he left his home that morning, officers watching the building believed they might be looking at one of the failed bombers. What followed was a chain of misidentifications, missed opportunities, and escalating assumptions that pushed the operation further and further off course. -
In 2002, a house fire in Zeeland, Michigan leaves 14-year-old Robin Boes dead. Within hours, investigators suspect arson and attention turns to her mother, Karen Boes.
After a 10-hour interrogation and a failed polygraph, Karen confesses. But she repeatedly says she doesn’t remember starting the fire.
24 years later, in 2026, the question remains: Did Karen Boes kill her daughter — or was she broken into believing she did?
Sources:
Ottowa News Network - Pleading her case: Convicted killer Karen Boes granted hearing for potential retrial
Holland Sentinel - Fire expert speaks in defense of Karen Boes during evidentiary hearing
Holland Sentinel - Who is Karen Boes
State of Michigan Court of Appeal - People Of Mi V Karen Sue Boes (Per Curiam Opinion)
Innocence Project
International Network for Innocent Arson
mlive - Mom convicted in teen’s 2002 death in court alleging false confession
Music by: Ashot Danielyan
Tiktok: @doubtinthedetails