エピソード

  • Sylvia Likens: The Murder Next Door
    2025/12/31

    In 1965, sixteen-year-old Sylvia Likens moved into a crowded Indianapolis home for twenty dollars a week. Within months, that house became the site of the most brutal child torture case in state history. What started as late payments and small punishments spiraled into a closed world of beatings, humiliation, and group violence that no one outside the door stopped.

    This episode strips the case down to its core: how ordinary people allowed cruelty to grow, how responsibility evaporated, and how Sylvia’s final days exposed a household—and a community—failing at every turn. Direct, unsentimental, and grounded in the record, it tells the story without excuses and without looking away.

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    42 分
  • Richard Chase: The Vampire of Sacramento
    2025/12/17

    He didn’t stalk. He turned doorknobs. Locked, he walked away. Unlocked, he walked in—and Sacramento became a hunting ground.

    This episode dives into the collapse of Richard Trenton Chase, the “Vampire of Sacramento”: a man convinced his organs were vanishing and his blood was turning to dust. From animal blood rituals and delusions about stolen arteries to random door checks that ended in slaughter, we follow how unchecked psychosis, a gun, and a city full of unlocked homes produced one of the most disturbing murder sprees in American crime.

    No heist. No master plan. Just a mind coming apart—and the bodies left behind.

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    38 分
  • Bob Crane: From sitcom hero to crime scene headline
    2025/12/03

    June 29th, 1978. Bob Crane—star of Hogan’s Heroes—was found bludgeoned to death in his Scottsdale apartment, a cord around his neck and severe head wounds from a blunt object. There was no sign of forced entry.

    Crane had been living a double life: beloved sitcom actor by day, consumed by his obsession with sex and videotaping by night. His friend, video technician John Carpenter, often joined him, helping record his encounters.

    Behind the laughter was a man consumed by obsession. Fame fed his ego. The camera fed his need for control.

    When Crane tried to walk away, the story turned deadly.

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    24 分
  • Heaven's Gate: The Cult That Aimed For The Stars
    2025/11/19

    March 26th, 1997. Rancho Santa Fe, California. Thirty-nine people are found dead in a mansion, lying neatly in rows. Black clothes. Matching Nike sneakers. Faces covered by purple shrouds. No signs of struggle. They called themselves Heaven’s Gate—and believed their souls had boarded a spacecraft trailing the Hale-Bopp comet. Their leader, Marshall Applewhite, promised they’d ascend to a higher existence, leaving their “human vehicles” behind. To them, this wasn’t suicide. It was graduation. The world saw tragedy; they saw salvation. Heaven’s Gate became proof of how devotion can eclipse reason, and how the need to belong can make even death feel like deliverance.

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    30 分
  • Jeffrey Dahmer: Feeding the Void
    2025/11/05

    Inside Apartment 213, loneliness took physical form. Jeffrey Dahmer wasn’t driven by rage or revenge—he was driven by the fear of being left alone. This episode of Splintered Minds peels back the myth of the “monster” to reveal the psychology beneath: how obsession with control twisted into ritual, how the hunger for connection became an act of possession. Through real case detail and clinical insight, we explore how a man trying to preserve love ended up preserving bodies. This is not a story about madness—it’s about the breaking point where the need to hold someone becomes the need to consume them.

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    34 分
  • Lizzie Borden: Eighty-One Whacks
    2025/11/01

    A quiet home. Two brutal murders. One daughter accused. More than a century later, the name Lizzie Borden still cuts deep. In this episode of Splintered Minds, we strip away the nursery rhyme and the myth to expose the psychology beneath the axe: power, repression, class, and the breaking point of a life lived under control.

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    31 分