Whenever the police say that "it's too early to report them missing" makes my blood boil!! It's a known fact that the first 24 hours of a missing person's case is the most important hours!!
I OFTEN WONDER IF POLICE BLAME CRIMES IN THE DEAD BECAUSE THEY ARE TO LAZY TO FIND RIGHT PERSON. I'VE SEEN SO MANY CASES WHERE POLICE FABRICATE EVIDENCE TO FIT THEIR FIRST HUNCH
Remember that these scumbags don’t lead the same kinds of successful, happy lives with love and family and friends that the rest of us do. They’re in and out of prison, transient, failed relationships, poor, addicted etc. Not always, but most often. Their lives are a kind of punishment.
I feel so sorry for Jeff. Imagine your wife disappearing, and the police being so uncooperative in searching her. And then you yourself find her bloodied body and belongings, and then the police suspect you after their own incompetence led to all this.
It seems quite common throughout the world that if someone who knew the victim reports the crime, and there are no immediately obvious leads, that the police jump to the conclusion it must have been the person who reported it. Very lazy policing if you ask me. Imagine the damage done to Jeff's reputation as a result. To this day there will still be people who will suspect his involvment.
@@seanhuds229 that’s so ignorant to say it’s lazy policing. It’s statistics. It’s normally someone close to the victim. Stranger murders are much more rare. So they start closest and work their way out. I just love when people who have zero training in doing a job sit back and criticize like they know what the hell they’re talking about.
@@alexistexas9114 Not really. You're paying for a service with Uber/Lyft, not asking to ride for free. Not only that, your trip and driver are recorded, and you can share your active ride with others so they can see where you are. Also, you've got a cell phone on you so you could call 911 quickly if something seems fishy. So no, it's not even close to the same thing.
My friend got murdered in 1996 and today 25 (6-25-2021 )years later they arrested the person that was already in jail for a rape in the 90’s. R.I.P. J.S we love and miss you homie
@@Freelancer302 Ive seen that IS the case a lot of the time, the families must work at keeping their missing loved one in the media and in front of the police department.
@@mellovett5924 yeah it definitely did take a lot of work. i cant even remember how long my dad was trying to get the case reopened for before they finally did it.
I can't imagine finding your child naked and murdered on their own floor. That's got to be a special kind of torture... especially for a father. Gosh...it's horrible enough to lose a child in the first place...I can't imagine.
@@bulletsfordinner8307 right. I can only imagine what those poor parents must have thought afterwards with the “what if’s” like what if they came over earlier or things like that since they lived so close
Bobby and Jeff were really good friends of my mom's before I was born (Jeff still a good friend)... I'm so happy to hear Bobby's murder was finally solved! My mom will be shocked. Still can't believe this happened where I grew up.... You think being in the middle of nowhere would make you safe... Or safer-er...
@@DeezNuts-sx9jd she was very happy Jeffro got some closure on such a sad event. He had told her a few months ago after the case closed. Thanks for checkin ☺️
"You think being in the middle of nowhere would make you safe." Not too sure why you'd think that. Middle of nowhere equals no witnesses or anything. The middle of nowhere allows for opportunists to strike
@@anonymousperson3023 fair enough. The worst part is if something happens it's almost guaranteed that you know the person or people... Then again in a small town life tends to be very bored and in active. Good and bad I guess
It's one of the only reasons I want to take a DNA test. My father wasn't a murderer that I know of but he was a bad guy and a died having never paid for a lot of what he did. If there are murderers in my family I want them caught and held accountable. IDGAF if we share DNA if you take a life, you should pay the price. I mean I hope their aren't any of course 😂 but js if there are... And I can help... Count me in. I hope all this DNA testing and case solving will deter people from killing and/or murderers from breeding.
@@OMGSHEENA Hover your mouse over your comment after posting and you'll see three dots appear to the right. Click the dots and you'll see the options Edit and Delete. Just click edit and voila! 😁
@@OMGSHEENA I would even testify at their trial like yes I took that test knowing I could uncover secrets and I would do it again in a heart beat lock him up!
@@lilyt.4895 what? they said “family of the victim” not “victim.” they’re saying that in these cases, either the family is still alive but the killer has passed before being proven guilty, or the families of the victim’s are dead and the killer is still alive.
It warms my heart thinking about how the perpetrators in murders prior to the advent of DNA science must be shaking in their boots knowing that DNA could out them now.
b o o t s 👢 (I'm sorry, I have the tolerance of a child when it comes to scary things, but at the same time I'm interested by criminal cases, so I act foolish as a coping mechanism lmao)
Wyatt Althouse Very hard to avoid leaving DNA. Even attempting to scrub blood away with bleach doesn’t help much. Besides, DNA analysts would still know the secret, as would anyone in the judicial system.
@@wyattalthouse4596 all I can say is that maybe you should watch some Forensic Files and other true crime shows. There are steps that can he taken, like wearing a condom during a sexual assault, but it's pretty hard to altogether avoid leaving any sort of DNA at a scene.
@@Mysterious5s Most people on TH-cam are chatterboxes. They speak a mile a minute. You and another Zefrank have the best YT voices of my liking so far. You should seriously get into radio if you can or even reading parts for shows or movies. It is a rare skill these days. Also you dont suffer the dreadful ummm's.
I’m not going to pay $23 a month to skip ads, but I’m also not going to support channels that create content simply as an ad revenue payout either. Shame, shame.
@@valerief1231 Your account has been muted dear. Maybe someone else will offer you the attention you seek. *Goodbye, friend of Hagrid* 🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷👀🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷
She left the sock for clues ! She did not forget it ! AND Defense attorneys knowingly lying to get guilty people off should be put in prison with their scummy clients.
@@itsfreddi It's their job- everyone has a right to an attorney. Even those who have evidence contradicting their innocence. So of course there will be defense attorneys defending their clients however they can, including trying to excuse evidence in court. Again, it's their job lmao
Everyone has the right to a fair trial and a chance to defend themselves. That being said I'm not sure how some defense attorney's can sleep at night. I wouldn't be able to feel good about myself after calling kids that were victims of rape liars or trying to get evidence that would lock away a dangerous individual deemed inadmissable etc
Police should take missing persons investigations much faster. Adults can walk away but their family and friends know what’s normal and not normal. They always waste time focusing on just the family. I believe that’s why cases go unsolved for so long. Innocent families’ lives are ruined.
Every family wants that, but also they then spend a lot of time looking for people who are just passed out intoxicated sleeping it off somewhere... or people whose phones just died..
@@xDarkTrinityx They should have specific police offers that del with stuff like that! Family and friends shouldn’t have to go to bed knowing that their loved one could be in trouble or laying in a corner
I hate that! When they act like the person just ran off! Like no! Listen to their family, that’s who knows them best & if they know the person didn’t just run off then they didn’t! The first 48 hours are the most crucial so it so stupid that you have to wait a certain amount of time to file!
Murder victims are usually killed by people they know, which is why they first look at the people closet to them. After that, they can start expanding their radius of suspects.
Could you imagine boing the boy in the third case? All dressed nice and exited to spend the day with your aunt at a theme park, only for her to not show up, and find out she’s dead- truly horrible. It must have been a weight on his poor little heart.
That would be hard. I hope he realizes that if it wasn't his birthday it could've been a couple of days before someone realized the aunt needed a welfare check.
no geneology has put the spanner in the works , what a relief, tracing folk from a family tree, watch out those unsolved will soon be solved! persistence pays
Last year in Sweden the Linköping double murders were solved by DNA geneology. It was a huge deal, because the murders had been Sweden's second biggest investigation (the first being the murder of the prime minister Olof Palme). The murders happened on an open street in 2004, and the victims where an 8 year old boy and a 56 year old female teacher. The teacher survived long enough to tell them a description of the murderer and how he'd done it unprovoked. He left behind blood and hair. Despite their efforts, for 16 years, nobody could catch this guy. I grew up reading paper articles about this crime, and it had a lot of media attention. Then all of a sudden last year the police just told everyone they'd caught him, by using DNA geneology and mapping his family tree back to like 1800's. I think they even got help from USA for this, and used some of their databases. Then last summer they arrested him and he immediately confessed. His name was Daniel Nyqvist, he was 21 at the time of the murders, and it was eventually determined he was mentally ill at the time of the murders.
I really wish that the police would shorten the time to log an official missing person report. It seems like every case I read or hear the family absolutely knows something is very wrong as they know it's so out of character not to hear from their loved ones for so long but they have to wait 24 hours. That 24 hours quite often means life or death. I just wish they'd listen to the families gut instinct.
There is no time to report a missing person's. It's a myth perpetrated by the media that some police accept as fact, despite their education and knowing after 72hrs it is near impossible to find them. Blame the media and the police that perpetuate the lie.
It should be case by case. Often when a teen or adult is known to disappear for days at a time. Then a time limit should go into effect. Because of people making reports and then not letting police know the person returned. Others who are truly missing pay the time limit price.
That exists because most people are found within or come home within 24 hours. There’s so many people who just don’t tell family where they are, are drunk or high etc that it would waste so much police time if they looked for every asshole who’s whereabouts are unknown.
Children can be reported missing immediately but adults are harder. Is someone's spouse missing or having a affair? Is the person gone away for a few days and didn't bother to tell anyone? People have the right not to be hunted down by the police because their ghosting their family or friends. If there is a reason to suspect something has happened though that's a different story. Signs of an abduction or suspicious circumstances will usually trigger a search. People often go missing in circumstances that don't even warrant initial suspicion.
I love seeing older cold cases solved. I think it can provide hope to those whose families have been altered by such a loss. My grandmother was murdered in Orange County, CA in 1985, but they never solved it.
Some of the family (she had 13 siblings so there's a lot) think it was him because it was mentioned but there wasn't enough evidence to tie it to him or there was an issue with jurisdictions. It's all been very jumbled. I do however hate seeing him or anything involved with him because of the tentative speculation of the "was it him or not".
I HATE HOW POLICE USE THE EXCUSE OF IT'S TOO SOON TO LOOK. WHEN FOSSETT WAS THIRTY MINUTES LATE THE NATIONAL GUARD WAS CALLED OUT. OUR COUNTRY IS SCREWED UP TO MUCH ABOUT MONEY TO MANY EXCUSES NOT TO HELP THE POOR.
@@IndianaJonas96 sure, and taxi’s are a business, with a company car, screened employees. Uber & Lyft have become a normalized service option where people use their own cars with little ‘employee’ screening... so, it leaves the door wide open for criminals.
@@IndianaJonas96 yeah but I assume they only existed in bigger towns and cities? Hitch hikers often travel longer distances in places that are less populated (thus don't have public transport, cabs etc)
In 1961 a friend of mine went missing after we walked part way home from school and she never made it home to her house! To this day she has never been found and I have never gotten over the trauma that it caused me! My father was a Sheriff's officer and he helped search for her and it affected him for a long time as well!
There could be another orange sock mystery solved. In 1979 a female victim was found in Williamson County Texas with nothing on but orange socks. She was known as the "Orange Bobby Sock Girl". She was finally identified in 2019. Henry Lee Lucas confessed to her murder but Police doubt he did it because records show he was in Florida at the time of her death. They have DNA but has not been tested. I wonder where Phillips was then. It's not everyday murder victims are found wearing only orange socks.
It wasn't any different then that decades before or after. It's just that we are only now finding the evidence. Most of us also don't search for all the murders and violent crimes even now. It's like I used to think the city I lived in was fairly safe as I wasn't aware of most of the crime until I started following the local news on fb and suddenly realized that it had been happening but I had just been oblivious to it,
@@nicolet8186 Actually the spike began in the 60s and peaked in the 80s. However, this is partly due to people being more mobile, traveling more, not knowing their neighbors as well, and when hitchhiking became a thing etc. It peaked in the 80s because we became aware of the risks after that. So, we stopped doing risky things associated with these outcomes, as often, such as hitchhiking. Plus technology was advancing and we were catching them sooner or caught potential serial killers before they achieved that status. The violence itself isn't/wasn't new. It's the accessibility, vulnerability, technology, and investigatory methods that changed before and after. The 80s just happened to be the point at which accessibility/vulnerability was highest, right before the technology and methodology caught up to it. So yeah the 80s were bloody, not because people were more violent in the 80s, but because people with violent tendencies had more opportunities to be violent and get away with it at that time. Before that, people weren't as mobile, and therefore were less accessible. Afterward the 80s it was either to risky to act on those violent urges or they got caught before it became as big of an issue. 🤷♀️
@@OMGSHEENA I always thought lead paint had something to do with it also. People in their 30s or 40s in the 80s would have been babies and even inside their mothers bellies around the 30s and 40s lead paint. It's a conspiracy theory of course but something I noted. I'll also say I've watched probably 100s of these cases lol.
I get rides from strangers if I'm flat broke but I know better. I definitely shouldn't ever get into a strangers car... But unfortunately desperate times call for desperate measures
@@juneannbrusie2042 it’s sad how much crime Happens through Uber and lyft. Getting a ride with a stranger is risky no matter what matter sadly... so much evil in this world.
I wonder if the women in the last case who made the phone call got any consequence? Peverting the course of justice or something similar? As she admitted to withholding information and cleaning their apartment before officers arrived?! Maybe she got a smack on the elbow as she did help solve a cold case coming foward years later.
Yeah why on earth would you call the cops for a murder and then proceed to clean up the crime scene? Either she had some involvement or she is the ultimate Karen
My grandmas murder case is still unsolved. Her name is Dorlinda Stiles. She was murdered in the 90s by a man named Jerry Rice. Jerry was arrested and charged for the murder since my aunt an uncle testified against since they had to bare witness to the murder. But even after all these years and Jerry being in jail this whole time they still haven't found my grandmas body. He died last year so we may never know where my grandmother ended up. This took place in Wyandotte County, Kansas
I just looked up genetic genealogy… apparently when you do DNA test they currently and legally ask if you want to opt in for FGG (forensic genetic genealogy) and currently only 1.5% of people opt in…. This is so thought provoking. I’m split between “this is a good thing, it makes our streets safer, saves tax payer money” and “this infringes on our freedoms” very very curious what everyone thinks
I would like to say I would agree to it. I may not be the one who did the wrong, but if I can help bring peace to someone or justice to another, it would be worth it.
I’ve done the dna test myself and I let them keep it stored for research and stuff. If someone related to me does something horrible I’m glad I could help catch them
I stop everything as soon as i come on TH-cam and see a notification from Mysterious 5. Thank You for making my night!! Always love the content of the videos!!!
Wow, that first one proves that just because someone seems guilty by circumstantial evidence and a shotty alibi, doesn't mean they are guilty. So glad the police didn't arrest him and try him for the murders. But sadly and unfortunately, there are still plenty of innocent people in jail for a crime they did not commit.
Back in the day not many people had means to travel, it was normal to help eachother out. Even a long time ago, you could go to a strangers house to ask for food or help in general. Not that you would always get it, but kindness was an important value.
My boyfriend asks me why I watch these. Yes, I have nightmares sometimes, but I prefer these, where eventually cases are solved and there is finally an answer. I pray for all families affected by loss, and thank my angels for getting home safely when we were not so smart in our college days
case 1- Her husband is like "nah, she wouldn't get in a car with a stranger especially since I offered to pick her up." 4 mins earlier in the video: "She told him she was gonna hitch hike to work like she usually did." ummm... Also you went through all of these suspects and then just finished on some old dude but no background. Was he a local, was he a drifter? Did he know the victims at all?
Perhaps they had regular drivers they hitchhiked with? If they are standing on the same spot pretty much the same time of the day, there are bound to be regular commuters passing by
There is something in the water there. Even in resent years horrible crimes have been committed, like the Watts family murders or Gannon Stauch's murder.
Alaska is the state with most serial killers. Not sure if the winter and living near nature makes it more easy for these animals to hide victims' bodies.
I wonder if they'll use the DNA method to reveal the identification in the Walker County Jane Doe Case? UPDATE. With tears in my eyes. I'm glad to know she's been Identified Sherri Ann Jarvis❤💖😢😭 Rest in peace Sherri soar with the Angels! Glad to know my prayers are Answered!
@@allyvaeeee42 it's heartbreaking what happened to her!😭 how the way she was severely assaulted, and dumped Like she didn't matter like a pile of Yesterday's rubbish😠 it upsets me greatly! She's with the Good Lord. All We need to do now, is discover her true name and identity!
“She was shot, stabbed multiple times, strangled and assaulted. It was determined that the loss of blood was the cause of death” Detective: THATS A LOT OF DAMAGE
This video popped up on my feed and I love this kind of stuff so naturally I clicked on it. Was not disappointed and I think I found a new unsolved crimes channel to watch!! Thank you!
I live in Breckenridge and my boyfriend’s dad used to drive Annette home each day since they both lived in South Park. He said he didn’t see her hitchhiking the day she was murdered and just assumed she had found another ride. I’ve met her husband- he still lives in Alma. Just so sad.
Finally someone who just tells the story instead of triying to do some stupid intro, then music and then “let’s dive right in.” Finally an original who carves his own path. Love it!
Neat! I used to work for Battle Creek PD. I've never actually known where the small town and roads were in one of these videos before. Scott Marshall is a great dude.
First video of yours I've came across. Definitely gonna be binge watching a ton of your other uploads today for sure. Thanks for such an accurate, detailed video. I love when cold case murders are solved. Makes me so happy 💯👏🙃🎉
I think it's pretty strange that the police know the likelihood of finding a missing person drops significantly after 48 hours why do they make you wait 24 hours before report someone missing?? If I saw the same person all the time and all of a sudden they were ridiculously late with absolutely no contact I don't think I'd need 24 hours to determine them missing..
Gabriel Santana There are hundreds of thousands of DNA samples that are backlogged because of lack of funding, that could put away or expose murderers, rapist and pedophiles.....
2021 is the year of all cold cases from decades to come to light and ended it by giving justice for the deceased. Hats off to all the officers take interest in finalizing the case by punishing all the culprits.
This video popped up on my feed and I love this kind of stuff so naturally I clicked on it. Was not disappointed and I think I found a new unsolved crimes channel to watch!! Thank you!
@Shroom Grizzley haha couldn't have said it better myself. My view from my porch is of the lovely abandoned open pit mine, and all the roads look like there was a massive artillery barrage. Honestly Im shocked there aren't more murders/body dumping happening around here.. It seems like it would be a pretty good place for that shit. I don't even see our 1 cop hardly ever, especially at night lol.
@@dylanhoyal3150 what do you do out there? Is it fun? I'm guessing there's a close knit community no? I'm just curious as a European city girl what life is like out there..
I remember some years back in Toronto, I was crossing the street to my hotel when a cabby stopped and said he would take me where ever I was going for free. I knew better, but have since wondered if I should've reported it as suspicious.
I was once walking to work and there was this curved road that went off the main stretch and just had other businesses along it that I could take as a sort of short cut if I went thru a parking lot on the other side. I didn't always take it but one night I did. I was working the night shift so it was already dark out. A car pulled up along side me, no other cars in sight and all businesses on that road were closed. The guy rolls down his window and starts talking to me as I walk, asking me if I want to hang out. I told him no, I'm on my way to work and I've got a man. He said, he just wanted to be friends so what did it matter if I was taken. I told him I have enough friends and I'm almost to work and don't want to be late and kept walking. He hassled me for The approx 5 min stretch of road but finally gave up and drove off, thankfully. It was scary and I always wonder if he was a rapist or murderer. I didn't think to report it either though.
I find it remarkable that detective in the 70s and 80s had the foresight to save evidence that could later be tested for DNA. How did they know that would be possible some day?
Great video .wonderful to hear those victims and families got justice. I lived in emmett, Michigan in 1988. And i remember when they found her. I always wondered who could do that. Im glad they got him back then .made the world much safer😄
I can’t imagine hitch hiking anywhere, like there are so many unsolved crimes with hitch hikers. I say this as I call an uber and have a stranger drive my drunk ass home.
This is the first video of yours I've watched! I'm not disappointed and know what I'll be binge watching today!
Glad you like it
Same! Just found this channel!
👋👋me too I watched this is my first video I had to subscribe!
@@zensbleexperience3470 Same here!
Me too me too!!!!🥳🥳🥳
Whenever the police say that "it's too early to report them missing" makes my blood boil!! It's a known fact that the first 24 hours of a missing person's case is the most important hours!!
Yep. It does save them from finding them on time
Cops don't like actually helping, they choose to just harass people and extort more money for the state. Only good cop is a dead cop
@@DeezNuts-sx9jd Sure bud 😛
@@eloahnon4952 truth hurts, maybe if you got the boot out your mouth you'd see reality
@@DeezNuts-sx9jd so you’re saying if every single cop died the world would be a better place?
Its sad when the killers die before they are found guilty.
I OFTEN WONDER IF POLICE BLAME CRIMES IN THE DEAD BECAUSE THEY ARE TO LAZY TO FIND RIGHT PERSON. I'VE SEEN SO MANY CASES WHERE POLICE FABRICATE EVIDENCE TO FIT THEIR FIRST HUNCH
They died, they paid the final price. Why should we, pay taxes to keep them alive in Prison?
Remember that these scumbags don’t lead the same kinds of successful, happy lives with love and family and friends that the rest of us do. They’re in and out of prison, transient, failed relationships, poor, addicted etc. Not always, but most often. Their lives are a kind of punishment.
When they die, they receive their penalty for eternity.
IT'S EASIER TO DO TIME IN THIS WORLD THAN AFTER DEATH.
I feel so sorry for Jeff. Imagine your wife disappearing, and the police being so uncooperative in searching her. And then you yourself find her bloodied body and belongings, and then the police suspect you after their own incompetence led to all this.
It seems quite common throughout the world that if someone who knew the victim reports the crime, and there are no immediately obvious leads, that the police jump to the conclusion it must have been the person who reported it. Very lazy policing if you ask me. Imagine the damage done to Jeff's reputation as a result. To this day there will still be people who will suspect his involvment.
@@seanhuds229 that’s so ignorant to say it’s lazy policing. It’s statistics. It’s normally someone close to the victim. Stranger murders are much more rare. So they start closest and work their way out. I just love when people who have zero training in doing a job sit back and criticize like they know what the hell they’re talking about.
@@IratePuffin Ah yes, lets ignore my 18 years as a police officer.
I mean the spouse is always the first suspect that’s just common procedure unfortunately
@@monetmonroe4644 that clear how lazy and shit police actually is.
I know it was a different time and all but can you imagine hitchhiking to work???
Taking a cab/Uber with a stramger is about the same.
@@alexistexas9114 Not really. You're paying for a service with Uber/Lyft, not asking to ride for free. Not only that, your trip and driver are recorded, and you can share your active ride with others so they can see where you are. Also, you've got a cell phone on you so you could call 911 quickly if something seems fishy. So no, it's not even close to the same thing.
@@rebelbelle1388 still with a stranger
@@rebelbelle1388 how many Uber drivers have been convicted of rape, murder, etc.? Quite a damn few! It's no safer than hitchhiking.
@@rebelbelle1388 you're right, not even close to the same thing, lol,smh.
Forget ancestory web sites.. Im starting a new one.. "Submit your DNA today to find out who in your family is a murderer"
I have a great great uncle who murdered his wife….. found that out doing ancestry lists…..
@@Meipmeep omg!! What a way to find out..
@@properteaproperty my Mom remembered him as a very angry person and wasn’t surprised….
Please do. 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Just shut up and take my money!
This is such a great idea!
My friend got murdered in 1996 and today 25 (6-25-2021 )years later they arrested the person that was already in jail for a rape in the 90’s. R.I.P. J.S we love and miss you homie
❤❤❤ to you. It's hideous, the loss.
Thanks
Sorry for your loss 🙏🏾
Jeffrey smallock??
Liar
DNA will getcha, and detectives not giving up on these cases.
the detectives had actually completely given up on the 2nd case. they reopened it due to constant nagging pretty much.
@@Freelancer302 Ive seen that IS the case a lot of the time, the families must work at keeping their missing loved one in the media and in front of the police department.
@@mellovett5924 yeah it definitely did take a lot of work. i cant even remember how long my dad was trying to get the case reopened for before they finally did it.
@@Freelancer302 glad to hear it. I know sometimes police are not so easy to work with, not saying anything bad about them just sayin
Hallelujah! Lost of scum will be identified and punished.
I can't imagine finding your child naked and murdered on their own floor. That's got to be a special kind of torture... especially for a father. Gosh...it's horrible enough to lose a child in the first place...I can't imagine.
Specially when you live 150 feet from them
@@bulletsfordinner8307 right. I can only imagine what those poor parents must have thought afterwards with the “what if’s” like what if they came over earlier or things like that since they lived so close
That's exactly what I thought...
No friggen doubt - a special find of torture indeed🥺😭
It's heartbreaking 💔
Bobby and Jeff were really good friends of my mom's before I was born (Jeff still a good friend)... I'm so happy to hear Bobby's murder was finally solved! My mom will be shocked. Still can't believe this happened where I grew up.... You think being in the middle of nowhere would make you safe... Or safer-er...
That's sad that happened! Thank God they finally found out who it was.
What did she say?
@@DeezNuts-sx9jd she was very happy Jeffro got some closure on such a sad event. He had told her a few months ago after the case closed. Thanks for checkin ☺️
"You think being in the middle of nowhere would make you safe." Not too sure why you'd think that. Middle of nowhere equals no witnesses or anything. The middle of nowhere allows for opportunists to strike
@@anonymousperson3023 fair enough. The worst part is if something happens it's almost guaranteed that you know the person or people... Then again in a small town life tends to be very bored and in active. Good and bad I guess
all these kids doing 23 and me getting their grandparents caught for crimes lmaoooo they didnt anticipate that one did they
It's one of the only reasons I want to take a DNA test. My father wasn't a murderer that I know of but he was a bad guy and a died having never paid for a lot of what he did. If there are murderers in my family I want them caught and held accountable. IDGAF if we share DNA if you take a life, you should pay the price. I mean I hope their aren't any of course 😂 but js if there are... And I can help... Count me in. I hope all this DNA testing and case solving will deter people from killing and/or murderers from breeding.
There* oy how do people edit their comments? I never see an option to 🤷♀️
@@OMGSHEENA Hover your mouse over your comment after posting and you'll see three dots appear to the right. Click the dots and you'll see the options Edit and Delete. Just click edit and voila! 😁
It's awesome
@@OMGSHEENA I would even testify at their trial like yes I took that test knowing I could uncover secrets and I would do it again in a heart beat lock him up!
omg the kid waiting for his aunt to take him to six flags for his birthday but then shes dead 😭😭😭😭😭😭
💔
Rip
Happy birthday buddy! Welcome to the real world! 🎉😢
💀
Yeah that tore me apart on that one and what angered me was that the first case was that the police👮♂️ didn’t want to file a report on Bobbie💔
It’s stupid that when the killer is found he’s already dead, but if they’re still alive the family of the victim is dead
what
I mean yeah. Usually a cold case involves death.. it’s not like the victim can revive or likely lives
Yeah it bothers me when the killer outlives all family members
@@lilyt.4895 what? they said “family of the victim” not “victim.” they’re saying that in these cases, either the family is still alive but the killer has passed before being proven guilty, or the families of the victim’s are dead and the killer is still alive.
@@lilyt.4895 I meant family member or the killer you chip idiot
It warms my heart thinking about how the perpetrators in murders prior to the advent of DNA science must be shaking in their boots knowing that DNA could out them now.
Could you imagine if they never made it public how they were catching them. Now people are smart and can avoid leaving DNA
b o o t s 👢
(I'm sorry, I have the tolerance of a child when it comes to scary things, but at the same time I'm interested by criminal cases, so I act foolish as a coping mechanism lmao)
i agree. it's way harder to get away w murder now days
Wyatt Althouse Very hard to avoid leaving DNA. Even attempting to scrub blood away with bleach doesn’t help much. Besides, DNA analysts would still know the secret, as would anyone in the judicial system.
@@wyattalthouse4596 all I can say is that maybe you should watch some Forensic Files and other true crime shows. There are steps that can he taken, like wearing a condom during a sexual assault, but it's pretty hard to altogether avoid leaving any sort of DNA at a scene.
I can’t even fathom hitchhiking! Imagine this was the norm in like the 60’s, 70’s, and 80’s!? No thank you
And a lot of women missing and murdered because of it.
It's not like people wouldn't be murdered if no one hitchhiked
@@no_peace sounds like something murderer would say 🤔🤔🤔🤔
@@no_peace i was almost kidnapped the last time i hitchhiked. I only got out by chance. Noooo thank you lol
@@Pattys1967 a lot of people period
Great voice, well read, fast enough not to bore, but not too slow, well researched topics and well timed. 10/10
Thank you
@@Mysterious5s Most people on TH-cam are chatterboxes. They speak a mile a minute. You and another Zefrank have the best YT voices of my liking so far. You should seriously get into radio if you can or even reading parts for shows or movies. It is a rare skill these days. Also you dont suffer the dreadful ummm's.
Dont forget that background piano, it sets the mood just perfectly.
I’m not going to pay $23 a month to skip ads, but I’m also not going to support channels that create content simply as an ad revenue payout either. Shame, shame.
@@valerief1231 Your account has been muted dear. Maybe someone else will offer you the attention you seek.
*Goodbye, friend of Hagrid*
🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷👀🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷🕸🕷
She left the sock for clues ! She did not forget it ! AND Defense attorneys knowingly lying to get guilty people off should be put in prison with their scummy clients.
so lock up all defense attorneys? lol
@@speakerz74 no one forced them to take cases 🤷🏻♂️
@@itsfreddi It's their job- everyone has a right to an attorney. Even those who have evidence contradicting their innocence. So of course there will be defense attorneys defending their clients however they can, including trying to excuse evidence in court. Again, it's their job lmao
@@ODKBE kids don’t understand. Lol.
Everyone has the right to a fair trial and a chance to defend themselves. That being said I'm not sure how some defense attorney's can sleep at night. I wouldn't be able to feel good about myself after calling kids that were victims of rape liars or trying to get evidence that would lock away a dangerous individual deemed inadmissable etc
Police should take missing persons investigations much faster. Adults can walk away but their family and friends know what’s normal and not normal. They always waste time focusing on just the family. I believe that’s why cases go unsolved for so long. Innocent families’ lives are ruined.
Every family wants that, but also they then spend a lot of time looking for people who are just passed out intoxicated sleeping it off somewhere... or people whose phones just died..
@@xDarkTrinityx They should have specific police offers that del with stuff like that! Family and friends shouldn’t have to go to bed knowing that their loved one could be in trouble or laying in a corner
I hate that! When they act like the person just ran off! Like no! Listen to their family, that’s who knows them best & if they know the person didn’t just run off then they didn’t! The first 48 hours are the most crucial so it so stupid that you have to wait a certain amount of time to file!
Especially because they can possibly be found sooner if they start as soon as possible
Murder victims are usually killed by people they know, which is why they first look at the people closet to them. After that, they can start expanding their radius of suspects.
I feel so sad for the families that spend years wondering what happened.
Could you imagine boing the boy in the third case? All dressed nice and exited to spend the day with your aunt at a theme park, only for her to not show up, and find out she’s dead- truly horrible. It must have been a weight on his poor little heart.
That would be hard. I hope he realizes that if it wasn't his birthday it could've been a couple of days before someone realized the aunt needed a welfare check.
I’ve been following the Colorado cases for years - I honestly thought they’d never be solved! Amazing.
Me too!!!!!!!! I’m so glad it’s been solved!
Same! I heard about this case a few years ago. Super happy it got solved.
yes!! it's crazier living in colorado and knowing exactly where these cases took place too!
no geneology has put the spanner in the works , what a relief, tracing folk from a family tree, watch out those unsolved will soon be solved! persistence pays
Beth Miller
Last year in Sweden the Linköping double murders were solved by DNA geneology. It was a huge deal, because the murders had been Sweden's second biggest investigation (the first being the murder of the prime minister Olof Palme). The murders happened on an open street in 2004, and the victims where an 8 year old boy and a 56 year old female teacher. The teacher survived long enough to tell them a description of the murderer and how he'd done it unprovoked. He left behind blood and hair.
Despite their efforts, for 16 years, nobody could catch this guy. I grew up reading paper articles about this crime, and it had a lot of media attention. Then all of a sudden last year the police just told everyone they'd caught him, by using DNA geneology and mapping his family tree back to like 1800's. I think they even got help from USA for this, and used some of their databases. Then last summer they arrested him and he immediately confessed. His name was Daniel Nyqvist, he was 21 at the time of the murders, and it was eventually determined he was mentally ill at the time of the murders.
Wow! That is a good ending! I wish it would be covered by one of the TH-cam channels.
I really wish that the police would shorten the time to log an official missing person report. It seems like every case I read or hear the family absolutely knows something is very wrong as they know it's so out of character not to hear from their loved ones for so long but they have to wait 24 hours. That 24 hours quite often means life or death. I just wish they'd listen to the families gut instinct.
There is no time to report a missing person's. It's a myth perpetrated by the media that some police accept as fact, despite their education and knowing after 72hrs it is near impossible to find them. Blame the media and the police that perpetuate the lie.
i heard it will change to 20 hours
It should be case by case. Often when a teen or adult is known to disappear for days at a time. Then a time limit should go into effect. Because of people making reports and then not letting police know the person returned. Others who are truly missing pay the time limit price.
That exists because most people are found within or come home within 24 hours. There’s so many people who just don’t tell family where they are, are drunk or high etc that it would waste so much police time if they looked for every asshole who’s whereabouts are unknown.
Children can be reported missing immediately but adults are harder. Is someone's spouse missing or having a affair? Is the person gone away for a few days and didn't bother to tell anyone? People have the right not to be hunted down by the police because their ghosting their family or friends. If there is a reason to suspect something has happened though that's a different story. Signs of an abduction or suspicious circumstances will usually trigger a search.
People often go missing in circumstances that don't even warrant initial suspicion.
Annette looked like a movie star! Poor girl lost her life before it began
She was really pretty. All of these women were attractive. Sad
@@rheamickens3128 so unfortunate
Unfortunately attractive women are preyed upon by sexual predators. That's just the way it goes mostly. Sad...
@@rheamickens3128 Yeah, if they were ugly nobody would care.
Was that guy a serial killer ? Any motive any background on him ? Not in depth enough.
All these women seem like such beautiful souls. It’s so heartbreaking.
I love seeing older cold cases solved. I think it can provide hope to those whose families have been altered by such a loss.
My grandmother was murdered in Orange County, CA in 1985, but they never solved it.
So sorry for your loss. 💜 Did they ever look into Ramirez?
Some of the family (she had 13 siblings so there's a lot) think it was him because it was mentioned but there wasn't enough evidence to tie it to him or there was an issue with jurisdictions. It's all been very jumbled.
I do however hate seeing him or anything involved with him because of the tentative speculation of the "was it him or not".
Who is ramirez
@@storyofeverything552 Richard Ramirez
@@storyofeverything552I think they’re talking about serial killer Richard Ramirez. Also, so sorry for the person who lost their grandma
I HATE HOW POLICE USE THE EXCUSE OF IT'S TOO SOON TO LOOK.
WHEN FOSSETT WAS THIRTY MINUTES LATE THE NATIONAL GUARD WAS CALLED OUT. OUR COUNTRY IS SCREWED UP TO MUCH ABOUT MONEY TO MANY EXCUSES NOT TO HELP THE POOR.
Fossett?
@@DeezNuts-sx9jd MAY BE MISS SPELLED. SOME POS BILLIONAIRE.
@@ronniewall1481 TURN YOUR CAPS LOCK OFF
@@orbcat1790 OK.
@@ronniewall1481 THANK YOU
people hitchhiked in the 70s like nbd, fast forward, now we pay to get in the car with a stranger
Taxis didnt exist in the 70s? 🤔
@@IndianaJonas96 sure, and taxi’s are a business, with a company car, screened employees. Uber & Lyft have become a normalized service option where people use their own cars with little ‘employee’ screening... so, it leaves the door wide open for criminals.
Guess you were never in NY back then.....they had taxi's or can services
Not me. I’ll never get in a car with a stranger.
@@IndianaJonas96 yeah but I assume they only existed in bigger towns and cities? Hitch hikers often travel longer distances in places that are less populated (thus don't have public transport, cabs etc)
I always get so upset whenever you say that the family members of the victim didn’t live to see justice/receive closure, it’s always so heartbreaking.
In 1961 a friend of mine went missing after we walked part way home from school and she never made it home to her house! To this day she has never been found and I have never gotten over the trauma that it caused me! My father was a Sheriff's officer and he helped search for her and it affected him for a long time as well!
I was 11 years old at the time!😭👮♂️
What was her name ?? 🥺
@@lindawild6568 Me too !!
Good narration by this pleasant Aussie chap - definitely a thumbs up
Thank you
The fact that the lawyer tried to make up some “romantically involved” story for the third one, ugh…
Imagine his dismay when her family and friends revealed that she’s gay.
They don’t call lawyers ‘shysters’ for nothing.
@@Sammy86Lynn She was sinning following Satan
@@sakuracardcaptor4709in your little book club maybe, but not to decent human beings.
I never thought the orange socks mystery would be solved!
There could be another orange sock mystery solved. In 1979 a female victim was found in Williamson County Texas with nothing on but orange socks. She was known as the "Orange Bobby Sock Girl". She was finally identified in 2019. Henry Lee Lucas confessed to her murder but Police doubt he did it because records show he was in Florida at the time of her death. They have DNA but has not been tested. I wonder where Phillips was then. It's not everyday murder victims are found wearing only orange socks.
me tooooo
Man the 80's is a lot more bloody than I remember
It wasn't any different then that decades before or after. It's just that we are only now finding the evidence. Most of us also don't search for all the murders and violent crimes even now. It's like I used to think the city I lived in was fairly safe as I wasn't aware of most of the crime until I started following the local news on fb and suddenly realized that it had been happening but I had just been oblivious to it,
@@OMGSHEENA there was a peak in serial killers in the 80s!
@@nicolet8186 Actually the spike began in the 60s and peaked in the 80s. However, this is partly due to people being more mobile, traveling more, not knowing their neighbors as well, and when hitchhiking became a thing etc. It peaked in the 80s because we became aware of the risks after that. So, we stopped doing risky things associated with these outcomes, as often, such as hitchhiking. Plus technology was advancing and we were catching them sooner or caught potential serial killers before they achieved that status. The violence itself isn't/wasn't new. It's the accessibility, vulnerability, technology, and investigatory methods that changed before and after. The 80s just happened to be the point at which accessibility/vulnerability was highest, right before the technology and methodology caught up to it. So yeah the 80s were bloody, not because people were more violent in the 80s, but because people with violent tendencies had more opportunities to be violent and get away with it at that time. Before that, people weren't as mobile, and therefore were less accessible. Afterward the 80s it was either to risky to act on those violent urges or they got caught before it became as big of an issue. 🤷♀️
@@OMGSHEENA I always thought lead paint had something to do with it also. People in their 30s or 40s in the 80s would have been babies and even inside their mothers bellies around the 30s and 40s lead paint. It's a conspiracy theory of course but something I noted. I'll also say I've watched probably 100s of these cases lol.
one video and you conflate everything. you must be easily led.
Shout out to all these hardworking men and women who never gave up, even after decades of going cold! Y’all the real MVP’s!!!
Please don't ever hitchhike. No matter what, just don't.
Pretty sure hitchhiking went out of fashion 30 yrs ago.
@@bdet313 now it's called Uber and the like.
Oh shi-
Im hitchhiking right now :o
I get rides from strangers if I'm flat broke but I know better. I definitely shouldn't ever get into a strangers car... But unfortunately desperate times call for desperate measures
@@juneannbrusie2042 it’s sad how much crime
Happens through Uber and lyft. Getting a ride with a stranger is risky no matter what matter sadly... so much evil in this world.
My heart goes out to all the cold cases out there. May you all find justice and let hope for detectives to find whoever killed you. Rest In Peace.
I wonder if the women in the last case who made the phone call got any consequence? Peverting the course of justice or something similar? As she admitted to withholding information and cleaning their apartment before officers arrived?! Maybe she got a smack on the elbow as she did help solve a cold case coming foward years later.
I bet she killed her in a fit of jealously and Perez covered for her
Yeah why on earth would you call the cops for a murder and then proceed to clean up the crime scene?
Either she had some involvement or she is the ultimate Karen
My grandmas murder case is still unsolved. Her name is Dorlinda Stiles. She was murdered in the 90s by a man named Jerry Rice. Jerry was arrested and charged for the murder since my aunt an uncle testified against since they had to bare witness to the murder. But even after all these years and Jerry being in jail this whole time they still haven't found my grandmas body. He died last year so we may never know where my grandmother ended up. This took place in Wyandotte County, Kansas
I just looked up genetic genealogy… apparently when you do DNA test they currently and legally ask if you want to opt in for FGG (forensic genetic genealogy) and currently only 1.5% of people opt in…. This is so thought provoking. I’m split between “this is a good thing, it makes our streets safer, saves tax payer money” and “this infringes on our freedoms” very very curious what everyone thinks
I would like to say I would agree to it. I may not be the one who did the wrong, but if I can help bring peace to someone or justice to another, it would be worth it.
I’ve done the dna test myself and I let them keep it stored for research and stuff. If someone related to me does something horrible I’m glad I could help catch them
They probably gonna use it anyway whether you opt in or out.
I have nothing to hide, I would love my DNA to be used for this and medical research. I have submitted it.
I opted in because if someone in my family killed someone and through me they could find closure or at least a sense of justice, I’m good with that.
I stop everything as soon as i come on TH-cam and see a notification from Mysterious 5. Thank You for making my night!! Always love the content of the videos!!!
You're the best!
Wow, that first one proves that just because someone seems guilty by circumstantial evidence and a shotty alibi, doesn't mean they are guilty. So glad the police didn't arrest him and try him for the murders. But sadly and unfortunately, there are still plenty of innocent people in jail for a crime they did not commit.
So crazy how hitchhiking to work was the normal thing...
Back in the day not many people had means to travel, it was normal to help eachother out. Even a long time ago, you could go to a strangers house to ask for food or help in general. Not that you would always get it, but kindness was an important value.
Life was different before the 90s
For all these killers to grow old or die naturally and free is those families a nightmare never to be forgotten or ended.
My boyfriend asks me why I watch these. Yes, I have nightmares sometimes, but I prefer these, where eventually cases are solved and there is finally an answer. I pray for all families affected by loss, and thank my angels for getting home safely when we were not so smart in our college days
My husband wonders the same thing, and I can't really explain it - can you ?
Thank you Sir Alec Jeffreys for DNA science.
@howard matts Humanity has bebefited from the genius of this man.Justice for the guilty; protection for the innocent.
I like how u don't even say how the first guy was caught. Just sudden 30 year time jump and bam we got him
He does explain in next sentence. Genetic genealogy :)
case 1- Her husband is like "nah, she wouldn't get in a car with a stranger especially since I offered to pick her up." 4 mins earlier in the video: "She told him she was gonna hitch hike to work like she usually did." ummm...
Also you went through all of these suspects and then just finished on some old dude but no background. Was he a local, was he a drifter? Did he know the victims at all?
Seems like it’s really new, because of DNA. The only connection was matching family DNA.
But I agree, it was out of left field.
That was the other girl (schnee) that hitch hiked, not the spouse
@@cloudysunsets They both did, apparently. About a minute in: "Her day had begun as usual and she hitchhiked to work."
Perhaps they had regular drivers they hitchhiked with? If they are standing on the same spot pretty much the same time of the day, there are bound to be regular commuters passing by
@@naturebehindglass6512 Possibly (maybe even probably, if it's a small town) but that's carpooling, not hitchhiking.
It's so odd how most of these senseless crimes happened in Colorado
Yes also colorado thursday and November all have the same energy
There is something in the water there. Even in resent years horrible crimes have been committed, like the Watts family murders or Gannon Stauch's murder.
Alaska is the state with most serial killers. Not sure if the winter and living near nature makes it more easy for these animals to hide victims' bodies.
Something in the water in Colorado I swear 😐
I hate the "it's too early to file a report" line.
Barrus was a triplet!? So sad for her surviving sisters, very, very upsetting RIP Gayle xx
I'm so glad that the people affected by these tragedies finally have answers and maybe some closure.
This is a great video, buddy!
Well researched and presented with good visuals. Tip: Don't put 'evidence' into the plural. It's uncountable.
Thank you
It's good to see these detectives not giving up on these cases.
I am still waiting for Jon Benet Ramsay to be solved.
SAME
It never will be if it is will be a surprise
@Bars for Biden Sacrifice for what?
@Bars for Biden In order to get what?
Im pretty sure they just solved it not too long ago
i’m so glad that dna and testing has evolved throughout the years 🥺
I love how the Detectives never give up. That's awesome. Great job by all of them.
It’s so weird how people dislike videos like this.
Those are just people that don't want to be caught......
Algorithm.
Their probably bots
Most likely the amount of ads
There are no dislikes. 😂
I wonder if they'll use the DNA method to reveal the identification in the Walker County Jane Doe Case? UPDATE. With tears in my eyes. I'm glad to know she's been Identified Sherri Ann Jarvis❤💖😢😭 Rest in peace Sherri soar with the Angels! Glad to know my prayers are Answered!
Imagine if they start filing all the DNA from unnamed people into databases like 21 and me and their family starts lighting up.
same. i hope one day it gets solved, i’m only 2 hours from there.
@@allyvaeeee42 it's heartbreaking what happened to her!😭 how the way she was severely assaulted, and dumped Like she didn't matter like a pile of Yesterday's rubbish😠 it upsets me greatly! She's with the Good Lord. All We need to do now, is discover her true name and identity!
“She was shot, stabbed multiple times, strangled and assaulted. It was determined that the loss of blood was the cause of death”
Detective: THATS A LOT OF DAMAGE
Inb4 some white girl takes personal offense to this
Unfortunately, no flex tape was found at the scene
This video popped up on my feed and I love this kind of stuff so naturally I clicked on it. Was not disappointed and I think I found a new unsolved crimes channel to watch!! Thank you!
I live in Breckenridge and my boyfriend’s dad used to drive Annette home each day since they both lived in South Park. He said he didn’t see her hitchhiking the day she was murdered and just assumed she had found another ride. I’ve met her husband- he still lives in Alma. Just so sad.
I'm happy to see you posting regularly again.
😀
Finally someone who just tells the story instead of triying to do some stupid intro, then music and then “let’s dive right in.” Finally an original who carves his own path. Love it!
This is also my first video that I’ve watched of yours and I’ll be binging as well. Nice and to the point. Thanks 🙏🏻
Thank you
Glad they have been solved after all this time💖💖💖
Neat! I used to work for Battle Creek PD. I've never actually known where the small town and roads were in one of these videos before. Scott Marshall is a great dude.
I hope videos like this will inspire detectives to re-open cold cases like these to match DNA.
First video of yours I've came across. Definitely gonna be binge watching a ton of your other uploads today for sure. Thanks for such an accurate, detailed video. I love when cold case murders are solved. Makes me so happy 💯👏🙃🎉
Thank you for watching
@@Mysterious5s & thank YOU for creating such awesome content
00:25 "Two lifeless bodies of two different women..." Makes you wonder if there can be two lifeless bodies of two same women 🤔
LMAAAOO
Well...there was Black Dahlila
I think it's pretty strange that the police know the likelihood of finding a missing person drops significantly after 48 hours why do they make you wait 24 hours before report someone missing?? If I saw the same person all the time and all of a sudden they were ridiculously late with absolutely no contact I don't think I'd need 24 hours to determine them missing..
It’s actually not even a rule out late or anything. The media made it up and police use it as an excuse to waste man power
These killers basically got away with it cmon now. Getting away with murder for THIS LONG? Smh
Gabriel Santana
There are hundreds of thousands of DNA samples that are backlogged because of lack of funding, that could put away or expose murderers, rapist and pedophiles.....
Such a soothing narration wonderful job my guy:D
I'm so glad this showed up on my feed, first time in a LONG time since I've had a quality recommendation, I'm binge watching tonight, tgif!!
Thank you
I came across one cold case solved and I missed my 2020 cold case solved binge, thank you for this upload!
It's reassuring that there is hope even for these old cases to be solved. DNA technology is an incredible thing.
I live in Breckenridge- it was awesome to see him finally get caught!!
I heard 3 decades ago and I assumed it was the 70s or early 80s. Then I realised at 3 decades ago was the 90s and that makes me feel old
Shhhhhh!!!!! You stop that! Making me old with your math!
Your presentation of these cases are very well done. Thank you.
This gives me hope. In the future, I'm sure we'll solve more cold cases,
I wish they solved the watcher home
What’s with so much of the videos randomly having large portions of images blurred out? TH-cam’s detection system flagging it?
It’s sad how some of these family’s victims never got the chance to know the truth. I hope they rest in peace
2021 is the year of all cold cases from decades to come to light and ended it by giving justice for the deceased. Hats off to all the officers take interest in finalizing the case by punishing all the culprits.
This video popped up on my feed and I love this kind of stuff so naturally I clicked on it. Was not disappointed and I think I found a new unsolved crimes channel to watch!! Thank you!
I love solved cases! Thank for the video I am a new subscriber 😊❤
Thankyou for watching
HOLY SHIT! Finally someone's covering my neck of the woods! Breckenridge is awesome, and I live in little tiny Alma!
@Shroom Grizzley haha couldn't have said it better myself. My view from my porch is of the lovely abandoned open pit mine, and all the roads look like there was a massive artillery barrage. Honestly Im shocked there aren't more murders/body dumping happening around here.. It seems like it would be a pretty good place for that shit. I don't even see our 1 cop hardly ever, especially at night lol.
@@dylanhoyal3150 what do you do out there? Is it fun? I'm guessing there's a close knit community no?
I'm just curious as a European city girl what life is like out there..
@@dylanhoyal3150 another one here! Tell us ^^
How sad that the little boy had such a traumatic event happen to his aunt on the day they were going to celebrate his 11th birthday.
Would you prefer it was a different day?
@@lovecats6856 that’s a stupid question.
I remember the first case from Unsolved Mysteries back in the day, it was so tragic.
That was the first thing I thought about too.
I remember some years back in Toronto, I was crossing the street to my hotel when a cabby stopped and said he would take me where ever I was going for free. I knew better, but have since wondered if I should've reported it as suspicious.
I was once walking to work and there was this curved road that went off the main stretch and just had other businesses along it that I could take as a sort of short cut if I went thru a parking lot on the other side. I didn't always take it but one night I did. I was working the night shift so it was already dark out. A car pulled up along side me, no other cars in sight and all businesses on that road were closed. The guy rolls down his window and starts talking to me as I walk, asking me if I want to hang out. I told him no, I'm on my way to work and I've got a man. He said, he just wanted to be friends so what did it matter if I was taken. I told him I have enough friends and I'm almost to work and don't want to be late and kept walking. He hassled me for
The approx 5 min stretch of road but finally gave up and drove off, thankfully. It was scary and I always wonder if he was a rapist or murderer. I didn't think to report it either though.
Was this in Toronto, Ont......Canada.......what year ???????
@@cassidypresley3271 Yes, it was Canada. It was the early 2000s.
Good editing bro
I know it takes alot of ur time to mske these videos
But u nailed it everytime
👍👍🎉
Thank you appreciate the kind words
I find it remarkable that detective in the 70s and 80s had the foresight to save evidence that could later be tested for DNA. How did they know that would be possible some day?
They didn't know, they just saved all the evidence to solve the case any way they could, at anytime. Also it's all needed for court.
everything will be possible someday
Great video .wonderful to hear those victims and families got justice. I lived in emmett, Michigan in 1988. And i remember when they found her. I always wondered who could do that. Im glad they got him back then .made the world much safer😄
it’s too early to report someone missing? But the first 24 hours are the most important…….
Just found this channel and I'm about to binge watch the episodes. Great work!
Thanks man
Nice name lol,😁
@@timreynolds4252 🤣 😉 are you one of my fans? No one notices, glad someone finally has! Lol
@@alexistexas9114 lol sure am a fan keep up the good work lmao
@@timreynolds4252 always! And thanks.
great content and strong narration- thank you!
I can’t imagine hitch hiking anywhere, like there are so many unsolved crimes with hitch hikers. I say this as I call an uber and have a stranger drive my drunk ass home.
I'm so glad I've just discovered this channel.
I remember the cases with the two orange socks! I’m so glad it was finally solved!
That is good that they solved them and the families now have some closure .
What’s with the blurry screen that keeps appearing, 15:40