『True Crime with Good Wine』のカバーアート

True Crime with Good Wine

True Crime with Good Wine

著者: Roman's Stories
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True Crime With Good Wine is the show for people who want their murder served at room temperature. No rushed timelines. No dramatized reenactment music every thirty seconds. Just a single narrator, a glass of something worth drinking, and the kind of slow, unflinching storytelling that the worst cases in American crime history actually deserve. Each episode takes one case — one family, one town, one set of circumstances that spiraled into something unthinkable — and spends real time with it. The victims get their names said out loud. The evidence gets examined without shortcuts. The psychology gets explored without excuses. And the wine? The wine is just there to remind you that life, even when this podcast makes it feel very dark, is still worth savoring. These are real people, real places, and real failures of the human condition — and they deserve a narrator who slows down long enough to honor that. So pour yourself something good, get comfortable, and stay a while.Copyright Roman's Stories ノンフィクション犯罪
エピソード
  • The Man Who Needed an Audience: The BTK Killer
    2026/06/08
    The Man Who Needed an Audience: The BTK Killer

    Between 1974 and 1991, a man in Wichita, Kansas murdered ten people. He called himself BTK — Bind, Torture, Kill — and he gave himself that name in letters he sent to newspapers and police, because the murders alone were not enough. He needed to be known for them. He needed an audience. During those seventeen years, Dennis Rader was a compliance officer for the city of Park City, a president of his church council, a Cub Scout leader, a husband, and a father. Nobody suspected him. Nobody was close to catching him. In 2004, after more than a decade of silence, he made contact again — unable to tolerate a local news story suggesting he might be dead or imprisoned. He asked investigators, in one of his communications, whether a floppy disk could be traced. They lied and told him no. He used a floppy disk. The metadata led directly to his church and his name. He was arrested in February 2005, thirty-one years after his first murders, and pleaded guilty to all ten counts. He is currently serving ten consecutive life sentences in Kansas. One narrator. No shortcuts. Pour yourself something good.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    14 分
  • The Van Life That Ended in Wyoming: The Murder of Gabby Petito
    2026/06/08
    In the summer of 2021, twenty-two-year-old Gabby Petito and her fiancé Brian Laundrie set off on a cross-country van life road trip through America's national parks, documenting everything on social media. On September 1st, Brian drove the van home to North Port, Florida — alone. He said nothing. For ten days, he said nothing. When Gabby was reported missing, an explosive nationwide search followed — one that exposed a disturbing police encounter in Moab, Utah, six weeks earlier, where officers responded to a 911 call reporting a man hitting a woman and left without making an arrest. Gabby's remains were found in Wyoming on September 19th, 2021. Brian Laundrie was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in a Florida nature reserve five weeks later, leaving behind a notebook in which he admitted to killing her. The case sparked a national conversation about missing persons media coverage, domestic violence response, and the gap between which victims receive attention and which do not. One narrator. No shortcuts. Pour yourself something good.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    14 分
  • If It Doesn't Fit: The Murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman
    2026/06/08
    If It Doesn't Fit: The Murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman

    On the night of June 12th, 1994, Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman were stabbed to death outside Nicole's Brentwood condominium in Los Angeles. Her white Akita, with bloody paws, led a neighbor to the bodies. Within days, every piece of physical evidence pointed at one man — Nicole's ex-husband, O.J. Simpson, NFL legend, actor, and one of the most famous people in America. He was charged with two counts of first-degree murder. What followed was 252 days of live televised criminal proceedings that split the country along racial lines, produced the most quoted line in American legal history, and ended with a jury acquitting O.J. Simpson in less than four hours. Three years later, a civil jury found him liable and awarded thirty-three and a half million dollars to the victims' families. He never paid most of it. He died in April 2024. The murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman have never been prosecuted to conviction. One narrator. No shortcuts. Pour yourself something good.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    15 分
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