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  • A few days before Christmas in 1984, 26-year-old David Dale Larson and 21-year-old Regina Suzanne Grover went out for a dinner date at The Keg Restaurant and Bar off Camp Bowie in Fort Worth, Texas. Service industry workers themselves, they knew folks at The Keg, and those folks saw Regina and David leave around 11 PM. It was the last time they were seen alive. The following afternoon, David Larson’s roommate discovered his nude and badly bludgeoned body in their apartment just southwest of downtown Fort Worth. Minutes later, a discovery was made in northwest Fort Worth. On the bank of a river under a bridge, covered with illegally dumped furniture, was the body of Regina Grover. She’d been strangled to death. Police lumped Regina’s murder in with several others that would eventually become known to locals as “The 80s Murders,” and David’s murder, which separated the case from the others in a major way, was often left out. Detectives never got a break on Regina and David’s case, but decades later, when a 1974 murder was solved, similarities never before noticed became hard to ignore.

    If you have any information about the murders of David Dale Larson and Regina Suzanne Grover, please contact the Fort Worth Police Cold Case Unit at (817)392-4307, or you can provide information by emailing [email protected]

    If you’d like to help fund testing that can solve cold cases in Fort Worth, go to fwpdcoldcasesupport.org and donate

    You can support gone cold – texas true crime at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

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    The Fort Worth Star-Telegram and KXAS TV video archives at UNT’s Portal to Texas History were used as sources for this episode

    #JusticeForReginaAndDavid #JusticeForReginaGrover #JusticeForDavidLarson #FortWorth #FortWorthTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #ColdCase #Unsolved #Murder #UnsolvedMurder #The80sMurders #TheFebruarySlayings

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  • On February 23rd, 1953, two men asked workers at the Lyles Buick Company Service Station in Sonora for help; they’d ran out of gas and were stranded just east of town, the strangers said. 17-year-old Raul Arevalo filled up a gas can, grabbed the keys to the company pickup, and drove the men back to their vehicle. But he never returned. For six days, Raul’s family searched for him, as did Texas Highway Patrol and the Sutton County Sheriff’s Office. On March 1st, 1953, six days after he disappeared, a young married couple found the body of Raul Arevalo. He’d been tortured and shot to death. The men who Raul sought to help have never been identified. At least, not officially.

    If you have any information about the murder of Raul Arevalo, please contact the Texas Rangers at (800) 346-3243, submit an electronic tip by visiting Raul’s page at dps.texas.gov/coldCase/Home/Details/261 and clicking on the “submit a tip online” link at the bottom of the page or remain anonymous and eligible for a reward of up to $3000 by calling Texas Crime Stoppers at (800)252-8477

    You can support gone cold – texas true crime at https://www.patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Find us on Facebook, Twitter or X or whatever, Threads, and Instagram by searching @gonecoldpodcast

    Find us on TikTok and YouTube, where we’ve finally released content and plan to continue producing more. Search @gonecoldpodcast at both

    The Devil’s River News, The San Angelo Standard-Times, The Del Rio News Herald, The Fort Worth Star-Telegram, and NBC Houston were used as sources for this episode

    #JusticeForRaulArevalo #Sonora #SonoraTX #SuttonCountyTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #Unsolved #UnsolvedMurder #ColdCase #MissingPerson #Disappearance #Vanished #UnsolvedMysteries

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  • On April 16th, 1968, in the Arellano’s packed in the family’s Buick and headed away from their Villa de Fuente, Mexico home to San Angelo, Texas to visit an expecting family member. The car was packed tight with a mother, a father, a young child, a toddler, a sister, and a baby. Though the trip wasn’t anything new to the family, they visited Texas and the US often, an unfortunate and horrific series of events took place. Vehicle issues led the Arellano Family directly into the path of a psychopathic devil who would prove to be no less than the annihilator of nearly the entire family. Remastered with 25+ minutes of updated material.

    If you have any information on the 1968 murders of the Arellano Family, please contact the Edwards County Sheriff’s Office at (830) 683-4104

    Please donate to help get #JusticeForLeonLaureles at gofundme.com/f/leon-laureles-private-detective-and-memorial

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    Find us on YouTube, where we are releasing content finally, at: youtube.com/c/gonecoldpodcast

    The Los Angeles Times, The Del Rio News-Herald, The San Antonio Express, The Austin Statesman, and the San Angelo Standard Times were used as sources for this episode.

    #Unsolved #JusticeForTheArellanoFamily #Arellano #Texas #LomaAlta #Sonora #DelRio #SanAngelo #SanAntonio #TexasTrueCrime#GoneCold #GoneColdPodcast #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast #ColdCase #UnsolvedMysteries #Murder

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  • Though El Paso’s homicide rate lags significantly behind the national average, murders in the West Texas desert city can be dark and gruesome. Not many compare in sheer brutality and violence, however, to the August 1994 slayings of Francisco Santoni Thornhill, Maria Concepcion Villa, and three-year-old Dante Santoni Villa. The murders didn’t see much press, but residents of El Paso, particularly the Montwood area, were shaken by the savage killings; they became fearful and stricken with paranoia. Though a theory as to what happened was imagined by detectives, a clear motive and suspect were never developed.

    You can support gone cold – texas true crime at https://www.patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

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    #JusticeForFrankConnieAndDante #ElPaso #ElPasoTX #ElPasoCountyTX #Texas #TX #TrueCrime #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Unsolved #UnsolvedMurder #ColdCase

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