エピソード

  • The Eastbound Strangler: Atlantic City's Unsolved Murders
    2025/08/31

    On November 20, 2006, the bodies of four women were discovered in a drainage ditch behind the Golden Key Motel, a "cut-rate motel known for drugs and prostitution," on the Black Horse Pike in Egg Harbor Township, West Atlantic City, New Jersey. The women were:

    • Kim Raffo (35)
    • Tracy Ann Roberts (23)
    • Barbara Breidor (42)
    • Molly Jean Dilts (19)

    All four victims were known to be sex workers in the Atlantic City area and had struggles with drug addiction. The bodies were found "face down, in a row, facing east toward the casinos of Atlantic City, just a few hundred yards away." They were clothed but barefoot.

    The victims were likely dumped one by one over a period of five weeks. Autopsies revealed:

    • Kim Raffo: Strangled with a rope or cord, body in the ditch for a couple of days. She was last seen alive in the early morning hours of November 19, 2006, leaving a diner and getting into a car with out-of-state plates.
    • Tracy Ann Roberts: Asphyxiated.
    • Molly Jean Dilts: So badly decomposed that a cause of death could not be determined; she had been killed a month prior to being found.
    • Barbara Breidor: Cause of death could not be determined due to decomposition. She had been in the ditch for between two weeks and a month.
    続きを読む 一部表示
    18 分
  • The Disappearance of Jermain Charlo
    2025/08/31

    The disappearance of Jermain Charlo is one of Montana’s most heartbreaking and unresolved cases. In June 2018, the 23-year-old Indigenous mother of two vanished after a night out in downtown Missoula. Surveillance footage captured her leaving a local bar with her ex-boyfriend, but from that moment forward, Jermain was never seen again.For more than seven years, her family, community, and law enforcement have searched tirelessly for answers. Volunteers have combed through rugged Montana terrain, detectives have followed hundreds of leads, and advocates have raised awareness through billboards, marches, and social media campaigns. Yet, Jermain’s fate remains unknown.Her story is not just about one young woman. It represents a much larger crisis: the epidemic of Missing and Murdered Indigenous People (MMIP) across the United States. Native women go missing at rates far higher than the national average, and too often, their cases go unsolved. Jermain’s disappearance shines a light on the deep pain families face when justice feels out of reach.In this video, we take you through the timeline of Jermain’s disappearance, the investigation that followed, the legal challenges involving her ex-boyfriend, and the ongoing efforts by her family and community to keep her name alive. We also explore the broader MMIP movement and why Jermain’s story has become a symbol for change.If you have any information that could help bring closure to Jermain’s family, please contact local law enforcement. Every detail, no matter how small, could make a difference.🙏 Don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe to help spread awareness. Together, we can keep Jermain’s story alive and support the families still searching for their missing loved ones.#JermainCharlo #MMIP #TrueCrime #MissingPersons #Montana

    続きを読む 一部表示
    20 分