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  • The Silent Key: Who Entered Gelang Baru That Quiet Morning?
    2026/07/09
    The Silent Key: Who Entered Gelang Baru That Quiet Morning?

    The silence in a crowded housing block became the only witness: four children dead in a one-room flat, no forced entry, a missing machete and a single drop of blood in the sink. The family had lost their house keys a month earlier and never changed the locks - who used that key, and why did no one hear anything on that January morning?

    In this episode, we tell the events of January 6, 1979, at Block 58, Gelang Baru, describing the timeline, the scene found by the parents, and the small details that still trouble investigators and neighbors. How does a densely populated building yield no sound, no witness, and a case that remains unsolved?

    Date: January 6, 1979
    Location: Block 58, Gelang Baru, Singapore
    Family: Tan Keng Chai and Lee Maying with four children
    Children ages: 10, 8, 6, and 5
    Weapon: Family chopper (machete), missing

    - Parents left the one-room flat at approximately 6:35 a.m. on a Saturday and locked the door behind them.
    - At 7:10 a.m. Lee Maying called home from the road; no one answered the phone.
    - The eldest child, Tan Kok Ping, was ten years old; the youngest, Tan Chini (Tani), was five.
    - When the parents returned after 10:00 a.m., all four children were found dead and arranged in the toilet.
    - Forensic notes recorded a single drop of blood in the kitchen sink and no signs of forced entry.

    To listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com.

    © 2026 OBOMEDIA. All rights reserved.
    This episode and its content (audio, text, and related materials) are the exclusive property of OBOMEDIA and are protected by applicable copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or commercial use, in whole or in part, without prior written permission from OBOMEDIA is prohibited. For permissions, licensing, and business inquiries: business@obomedia.com.
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    23 分
  • The Night the Hunter Stalked the City: Hunting Cops, 1995
    2026/07/09
    The Night the Hunter Stalked the City: Hunting Cops, 1995

    A cab ride lasted under ten minutes; five months later two officers and a federal agent were dead. The shooter walked away from a January 17, 1995 ambush two blocks from the White House, left a discarded ski mask with hair, and would eventually be linked to a pattern of targeted attacks - so why did Ralph McLean decide to hunt police?

    In this episode, we tell the chronological story of the attacks in Washington, D.C., the small physical clues that connected scenes across jurisdictions, and the investigative threads that followed from a taxicab to an apartment. What did a few strands of hair and a revolver traded from scene to scene reveal about the method and motive behind the killings?

    Person: Ralph McLean
    Date: January 17, 1995
    Location: Washington, D.C.
    Case: Attacks on police officers (1995)
    Agent: Special Agent Jay Abbott

    - Officer Eric Hayes was struck by four bullets (chest, legs, abdomen) on January 17, 1995 and survived after surgeons removed all rounds.
    - Seven days earlier Officer Vance Warren suffered two grazes to the back of his neck from a .32 caliber weapon and also survived.
    - Investigators recovered six spent casings at a scene where the shooter had dropped a revolver while fleeing.
    - A black ski mask discarded in an alley less than a quarter mile from the Hayes shooting contained a cluster of short dark hairs used by the FBI hair and fiber unit.
    - McLean's apartment later contained a second black ski mask, .32 caliber ammunition, and nine-millimeter cartridges matching the rounds that killed Officer John Novabilski.

    To listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com.

    © 2026 OBOMEDIA. All rights reserved.
    This episode and its content (audio, text, and related materials) are the exclusive property of OBOMEDIA and are protected by applicable copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or commercial use, in whole or in part, without prior written permission from OBOMEDIA is prohibited. For permissions, licensing, and business inquiries: business@obomedia.com.
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    24 分
  • He Lived on Their Street: The Ipswich Strangler's Quiet Path to Kill
    2026/07/09
    He Lived on Their Street: The Ipswich Strangler's Quiet Path to Kill

    The chill: five women vanished from Ipswich in less than six weeks and their bodies surfaced in fields and waterways while the man suspected of killing them lived on the same street where every victim worked. He drove a blue Ford Mondeo, had a DNA sample in the national database from a 2002 theft conviction, and witnesses later placed some victims getting into a dark-colored car - so how did he stay invisible for so long?

    In this episode, we follow the timeline of December 2006 and the surrounding months to show who the victims were, where their bodies were found, and how investigators narrowed a case that terrified a city. What links a flat on London Road, CCTV of a dark car, and a DNA hit from a petty crime?

    Person: Steve Wright
    Location: London Road, Ipswich
    Date: December 2006
    Case: five women disappeared in 43 days
    Vehicle: blue Ford Mondeo

    - Approximately 70 women worked on London Road on any given night in autumn 2006.
    - Gemma Adams, age 25, was found in a shallow stream near Hintlesham after being missing since November 15.
    - Tanya Nicol, age 19, was captured on supermarket CCTV climbing into a dark-colored car in October.
    - Annalise Alderton, age 24 and three months pregnant, was found strangled in dry woodland near Nacton with both arms extended outward.
    - Over 2,000 drivers were interviewed and Commander David Johnson from Scotland Yard was sent after the second body was discovered.

    To listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com.

    © 2026 OBOMEDIA. All rights reserved.
    This episode and its content (audio, text, and related materials) are the exclusive property of OBOMEDIA and are protected by applicable copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or commercial use, in whole or in part, without prior written permission from OBOMEDIA is prohibited. For permissions, licensing, and business inquiries: business@obomedia.com.
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    22 分
  • He Was Shot Inside a Bulletproof Van-No One Heard a Thing
    2026/07/09
    He Was Shot Inside a Bulletproof Van-No One Heard a Thing

    A silenced rifle, an eight-inch-open door, and a crowded mall where no one noticed a dying driver: John McGosh was shot through the left side of the head inside a fully bulletproof Wells Fargo van while shoppers and security kept moving. How did three former law-enforcement men steal nearly $920,000 and move a wounded courier in under four minutes without a sound or a trace?

    In this episode, we lay out the timeline from the November 28, 1994 parking lot pickup to the discovery of the idling van in a Sun City church lot, following how investigators pieced together surveillance, witness gaps, and the suspects' law-enforcement backgrounds to answer the central question: who planned a crime designed to leave no scene?

    Date: November 28, 1994
    Location: Arrowhead Mall parking lot, Glendale, Arizona
    Person: John McGosh, 61
    Amount: $920,000 approximate total transferred
    Time gap: Approximately 4 minutes between partner stepping away and van missing

    - The Wells Fargo armored van arrived at 1:30 p.m. on the busiest pickup day of the year.
    - McGosh left the van door cracked about eight inches to smoke, a habit observed by colleagues.
    - Ring fired one shot from roughly 50 feet with a suppressed small-caliber rifle; no one in the parking lot reported hearing it.
    - $920,000 in cash and checks were moved from the armored van into Ring’s truck; $132,000 in coin rolls remained.
    - Parishioners found the van idling with rear doors open at a Sun City church parking lot minutes later.

    To listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com.

    © 2026 OBOMEDIA. All rights reserved.
    This episode and its content (audio, text, and related materials) are the exclusive property of OBOMEDIA and are protected by applicable copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or commercial use, in whole or in part, without prior written permission from OBOMEDIA is prohibited. For permissions, licensing, and business inquiries: business@obomedia.com.
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    23 分
  • Aimed Through the Fence: The Night Port Hills Became a Crime Scene
    2026/07/09
    Aimed Through the Fence: The Night Port Hills Became a Crime Scene

    A shirtless, shoeless man stumbles onto a dark Port Hills road claiming "an accident" while a car lies more than 100 meters below - but the fence was cut at a perfect right angle, as if the vehicle had been aimed. How did a supposedly parked Honda Prelude end up breaching the fence perpendicularly, and who was responsible for what happened in the ninety minutes before the wreck was found?

    In this episode, we follow the timeline from the Lamar Track car park through the first on-scene sightings to the forensic work that upended the initial accident theory, asking whether the crash was truly accidental or something else.

    Person: Shiping Yu
    Person: Kai Gee
    Location: Port Hills, above Christchurch
    Event: Operation Lamar
    Vehicle: 1985 Honda Prelude resprayed white

    - The car was more than 100 meters below the road, crumpled against the hillside.
    - The fence was breached at a perfect right angle to the road, not a grazing or diagonal exit.
    - Shiping Yu was a 22-year-old Chinese international student and registered owner of the car.
    - Kai Gee was a 23-year-old Chinese international student and Shiping's ex-boyfriend who picked her up that night.
    - Forensic reconstruction found trace evidence of a low-speed rear impact around 30 km/h and a single strand of hair caught in the grille.

    To listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com.

    © 2026 OBOMEDIA. All rights reserved.
    This episode and its content (audio, text, and related materials) are the exclusive property of OBOMEDIA and are protected by applicable copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or commercial use, in whole or in part, without prior written permission from OBOMEDIA is prohibited. For permissions, licensing, and business inquiries: business@obomedia.com.
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    22 分
  • He Lived as a Dead Child: The Man Who Erased Himself
    2026/07/09
    He Lived as a Dead Child: The Man Who Erased Himself

    The corpse in the apartment matched a prepaid funeral card; every official document named Michael DeBusschere - a man who, according to records, had been a four-year-old killed in 1973. How do you explain a grown man who borrowed the identity of a dead child, scheduled his own burial a week before a natural death, and left instructions to contact no next of kin?

    In this episode, we follow the discovery that ordinary paperwork masked a twelve-year unraveling: a coworker told, a detective called, a private investigator traced forgeries, and a librarian could find no record of the name on a diploma. Who was the person everyone knew as Mike, and why did he construct a life that could not be traced back to anyone?

    Person: Michael DeBusschere
    Date found: April 10, 2002
    Cause of death: Cardiac event (natural causes)
    Investigator: Dave Perry, former Toronto homicide detective
    School checked: Goderich Collegiate Institute

    - The body was discovered in advanced decomposition and fingerprints could not be recovered.
    - A funeral home card with a prepaid arrangement was found in the man's wallet; he had booked his own burial one week before he died.
    - All documents in the apartment (health card, driver's license, social insurance number) bore the name Michael DeBusschere but were false.
    - A birth certificate and a death certificate were found showing a four-year-old Michael DeBusschere killed in a traffic accident in Port Hardy in 1973.
    - Dylan had known "Mike" for two years at a Toronto startup and became the only person contacted because no next of kin was listed.

    To listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com.

    © 2026 OBOMEDIA. All rights reserved.
    This episode and its content (audio, text, and related materials) are the exclusive property of OBOMEDIA and are protected by applicable copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or commercial use, in whole or in part, without prior written permission from OBOMEDIA is prohibited. For permissions, licensing, and business inquiries: business@obomedia.com.
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    23 分
  • She Won the Lottery - He Left Her in a Burning Truck
    2026/07/09
    She Won the Lottery - He Left Her in a Burning Truck

    A truck set ablaze in a Van Nuys hospital parking lot hid a quieter, more brutal crime: a woman crushed to death before the flames, her lungs free of smoke, and a silhouette with long blond hair seen running away. How did a single earring, a lottery win, and a man who kept using his real name become the only threads linking four women killed across five states?

    In this episode, we tell the sequence of events from the night Sandra Gallagher won a $1,200 scratch-off to the discovery of her body the next morning and the unusual trail investigators followed, asking how someone could move through five states and leave so little hidden.

    Person: Sandra Gallagher
    Date: September 29, 1995
    Location: Van Nuys, California
    Person: Glenn Rogers
    Amount: $1,200

    - Sandra Gallagher won a $1,200 lottery scratch-off at McRad's bar on the night of September 28, 1995.
    - Her body was found inside her own truck in a hospital parking lot the morning of September 29, 1995.
    - The medical examiner determined her windpipe had been manually crushed and her lungs had no soot.
    - A nurse reported seeing a long-blond-haired figure running from the burning truck but did not see a face.
    - Glenn Rogers was 33 years old in fall 1995 and killed four women across five states in less than seven weeks while checking into motels under his real name.

    To listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com.

    © 2026 OBOMEDIA. All rights reserved.
    This episode and its content (audio, text, and related materials) are the exclusive property of OBOMEDIA and are protected by applicable copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or commercial use, in whole or in part, without prior written permission from OBOMEDIA is prohibited. For permissions, licensing, and business inquiries: business@obomedia.com.
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    23 分
  • He Asked "Are You Nick?" - The Chippendales Hitman Secret
    2026/07/09
    He Asked "Are You Nick?" - The Chippendales Hitman Secret

    A quiet midtown office, a single gunshot, and a killer who only asked four words: "Are you Nick?" The man who answered yes was already dead, and that question haunted investigators for six years-so who pointed the killer to his target?

    In this episode, we follow the timeline from April 7, 1987 through the cold years that followed, tracing Nick DeNoia's split life as an Emmy-winning children's TV producer and the touring force behind Chippendales, and we ask how a business dispute grew into a murder-for-hire that left a tidy scene and a long shadow.

    Person: Nick DeNoia
    Date: April 7, 1987
    Location: 40 West 40th Street, 15th floor, Midtown Manhattan
    Weapon: 9mm semi-automatic (one shell casing recovered)
    Suspected Fixer: Ray Colon

    - Nick DeNoia was shot once at close range at his desk on April 7, 1987 at approximately 3:30 PM.
    - The killer asked "Are you Nick?" before killing the person who answered, indicating he had never met his target.
    - A single 9mm shell casing was recovered on the office floor; the killer used the stairwell to exit.
    - Ray Colon had carried out at least two arson attempts for Steve Banerjee in 1979 and circa 1984 before the 1987 murder.
    - The composite sketch circulated by NYPD Detective Michael Gettys after the crime was never identified by anyone in the building.

    To listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com.

    © 2026 OBOMEDIA. All rights reserved.
    This episode and its content (audio, text, and related materials) are the exclusive property of OBOMEDIA and are protected by applicable copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or commercial use, in whole or in part, without prior written permission from OBOMEDIA is prohibited. For permissions, licensing, and business inquiries: business@obomedia.com.
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    21 分