PodcastsCrimes verdadeirosA Trial by Podcast

A Trial by Podcast

Askolta Media
A Trial by Podcast
Último episódio

120 episódios

  • A Trial by Podcast

    Ep. 118 | The Vanishing of the Springfield Three [Part 2 of 2]

    23/06/2026 | 53min
    On June 6, 1992, 19-year-old Suzie Streeter and 18-year-old Stacy McCall proudly walked across the stage and received their diplomas from Springfield, Missouri’s Kickapoo high school. Like any other teen on graduation day, the girls had a long night of party hopping ahead of them before they ended up back at Suzie’s house to spend the night before going to a waterpark with friends the next morning.
    However, when friends Janelle Kirby and Mike Henson came to get them the next morning, they found the house empty. Stacy, Suzie, and Suzie’s mom, 47-year-old Sherill Levitt, were gone, all three of the women’s cars, keys, and purses were at the house.
    Even stranger, the phone rang while they were there. Janelle answered, and a man's voice on the other end immediately launched into sexual remarks. To this day, the man remains unidentified, and Suzie, Stacy, and Sherill have never been seen again. This is the story of the Springfield Three.

    ⭐ Support the show on Patreon for bonus content & ad-free listening! ⭐
    https://www.patreon.com/c/ATRIALBYPODCAST

    🎙️Sponsors, special offers & discount codes: https://www.atrialbypodcast.com/sponsors

    Find us everywhere:
    🔗 All links: https://linktr.ee/atrialbypodcast
    🌐 Website: https://atrialbypodcast.com
    📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61558845693491
    📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/atrialbypodcast
    🎵 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@atrialbypodcast
    📧 Contact: atrialbypodcast@gmail.com

    Theme Music: https://uppbeat.io/t/all-good-folks/mr-mischief
    License code: MOYK9CTUWGH7BLCS

    Sources for this episode will be posted at atrialbypodcast.com within 30 days of the publish date.

    DISCLAIMER: This podcast is intended for entertainment purposes only. While we research thoroughly and use credible, publicly available information, it should not be considered a legal or definitive authority. We cannot guarantee veracity or completeness. Neither host is a lawyer, journalist, or investigator — views expressed are personal and should not be taken as fact. Listeners are encouraged to do their own research. This podcast is not intended to harm, slander, or defame any individual, group, or organization. All individuals discussed are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Questions or concerns? Reach us at atrialbypodcast@gmail.com.
    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
  • A Trial by Podcast

    Ep. 117 | The Vanishing of the Springfield Three [Part 1 of 2]

    16/06/2026 | 1h 24min
    On June 6, 1992, 19-year-old Suzie Streeter and 18-year-old Stacy McCall proudly walked across the stage and received their diplomas from Springfield, Missouri’s Kickapoo high school. Like any other teen on graduation day, the girls had a long night of party hopping ahead of them before they ended up back at Suzie’s house to spend the night before going to a waterpark with friends the next morning.
    However, when friends Janelle Kirby and Mike Henson came to get them the next morning, they found the house empty. Stacy, Suzie, and Suzie’s mom, 47-year-old Sherill Levitt, were gone, all three of the women’s cars, keys, and purses were at the house.
    Even stranger, the phone rang while they were there. Janelle answered, and a man's voice on the other end immediately launched into sexual remarks. To this day, the man remains unidentified, and Suzie, Stacy, and Sherill have never been seen again. This is the story of the Springfield Three.

    ⭐ Support the show on Patreon for bonus content & ad-free listening! ⭐
    https://www.patreon.com/c/ATRIALBYPODCAST

    🎙️Sponsors, special offers & discount codes: https://www.atrialbypodcast.com/sponsors

    Find us everywhere:
    🔗 All links: https://linktr.ee/atrialbypodcast
    🌐 Website: https://atrialbypodcast.com
    📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61558845693491
    📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/atrialbypodcast
    🎵 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@atrialbypodcast
    📧 Contact: atrialbypodcast@gmail.com

    Theme Music: https://uppbeat.io/t/all-good-folks/mr-mischief
    License code: MOYK9CTUWGH7BLCS

    Sources for this episode will be posted at atrialbypodcast.com within 30 days of the publish date.

    DISCLAIMER: This podcast is intended for entertainment purposes only. While we research thoroughly and use credible, publicly available information, it should not be considered a legal or definitive authority. We cannot guarantee veracity or completeness. Neither host is a lawyer, journalist, or investigator — views expressed are personal and should not be taken as fact. Listeners are encouraged to do their own research. This podcast is not intended to harm, slander, or defame any individual, group, or organization. All individuals discussed are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Questions or concerns? Reach us at atrialbypodcast@gmail.com.
    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
  • A Trial by Podcast

    Ep. 116 | The Disappearance of Cindy Anderson

    09/06/2026 | 47min
    On August 4, 1981, twenty-year-old Cindy Anderson went to work as a legal secretary at a Toledo, Ohio law office. With just ten days left before she was set to leave for Bible college, vanished from work that day without a trace. When her bosses arrived that afternoon, her car was in the parking lot, but Cindy was gone. The romance novel Cindy had been reading was left open on her desk, as if she had been interrupted while reading it. The page it was open to was the only violent scene in the book, where the female protagonist is abducted and knifepoint.
    In the weeks prior, she had been receiving deeply disturbing phone calls at the office and suffering from recurring nightmares about being attacked, prompting her employers to install an emergency buzzer at her desk and leading her to keep the office doors locked at all times, yet Cindy did not ring the buzzer the day she disappeared. To this day, Cindy has never been found.

    ⭐ Support the show on Patreon for bonus content & ad-free listening! ⭐
    https://www.patreon.com/c/ATRIALBYPODCAST

    🎙️Sponsors, special offers & discount codes: https://www.atrialbypodcast.com/sponsors

    Find us everywhere:
    🔗 All links: https://linktr.ee/atrialbypodcast
    🌐 Website: https://atrialbypodcast.com
    📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61558845693491
    📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/atrialbypodcast
    🎵 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@atrialbypodcast
    📧 Contact: atrialbypodcast@gmail.com

    Theme Music: https://uppbeat.io/t/all-good-folks/mr-mischief
    License code: MOYK9CTUWGH7BLCS

    Sources for this episode will be posted at atrialbypodcast.com within 30 days of the publish date.

    DISCLAIMER: This podcast is intended for entertainment purposes only. While we research thoroughly and use credible, publicly available information, it should not be considered a legal or definitive authority. We cannot guarantee veracity or completeness. Neither host is a lawyer, journalist, or investigator — views expressed are personal and should not be taken as fact. Listeners are encouraged to do their own research. This podcast is not intended to harm, slander, or defame any individual, group, or organization. All individuals discussed are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Questions or concerns? Reach us at atrialbypodcast@gmail.com.
    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
  • A Trial by Podcast

    Ep. 115 | The Camm Family Murders [Part 2 of 2]

    02/06/2026 | 1h 22min
    On the night of September 28th, 2000, former Indiana State Police trooper David Camm came home from a church basketball game to find his wife Kim and their two young children, Bradley and Jill, shot to death in the garage of their Georgetown, Indiana home.

    Some believed it was the husband — a serial cheater, with life insurance policies on his family and his daughter's blood on his shirt. Others believed it was a convicted predator who had walked out of prison three months before the murders, whose M.O. seemed to fit the crime.Prosecutors would eventually argue it was both men, working together — despite there not being a single piece of evidence proving they had ever met.

    There would be thirteen years of trials, convictions, appeals, and reversals. Alleged evidence suppression and fabricated expert credentials. Blood spatter evidence that experts would eventually call guesswork, used to convict a man twice. Jailhouse informants with violent criminal records of their own. A DNA database query that took two hours but wasn’t run for four years. A prosecutor who allegedly lied to the defense, pressured analysts to change their testimony, and threatened a witness with obstruction charges when she refused. Allegations of evidence tampering that reached into the police evidence room itself. And at the center of all of it, a man serving thirteen years in prison for murders the evidence had pointed away from him since the night they were committed.

    ⭐ Support the show on Patreon for bonus content & ad-free listening! ⭐
    https://www.patreon.com/c/ATRIALBYPODCAST

    Find us everywhere:
    🔗 All links: https://linktr.ee/atrialbypodcast
    🌐 Website: https://atrialbypodcast.com
    📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61558845693491
    📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/atrialbypodcast
    🎵 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@atrialbypodcast
    📧 Contact: atrialbypodcast@gmail.com

    Theme Music: https://uppbeat.io/t/all-good-folks/mr-mischief
    License code: MOYK9CTUWGH7BLCS

    Sources for this episode will be posted at atrialbypodcast.com within 30 days of the publish date.

    DISCLAIMER: This podcast is intended for entertainment purposes only. While we research thoroughly and use credible, publicly available information, it should not be considered a legal or definitive authority. We cannot guarantee veracity or completeness. Neither host is a lawyer, journalist, or investigator — views expressed are personal and should not be taken as fact. Listeners are encouraged to do their own research. This podcast is not intended to harm, slander, or defame any individual, group, or organization. All individuals discussed are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Questions or concerns? Reach us at atrialbypodcast@gmail.com.
    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
  • A Trial by Podcast

    Ep. 114 | The Camm Family Murders [Part 1 of 2]

    26/05/2026 | 1h 4min
    On the night of September 28th, 2000, former Indiana State Police trooper David Camm came home from a church basketball game to find his wife Kim and their two young children, Bradley and Jill, shot to death in the garage of their Georgetown, Indiana home.

    Some believed it was the husband — a serial cheater, with life insurance policies on his family and his daughter's blood on his shirt. Others believed it was a convicted predator who had walked out of prison three months before the murders, whose M.O. seemed to fit the crime.Prosecutors would eventually argue it was both men, working together — despite there not being a single piece of evidence proving they had ever met.

    There would be thirteen years of trials, convictions, appeals, and reversals. Alleged evidence suppression and fabricated expert credentials. Blood spatter evidence that experts would eventually call guesswork, used to convict a man twice. Jailhouse informants with violent criminal records of their own. A DNA database query that took two hours but wasn’t run for four years. A prosecutor who allegedly lied to the defense, pressured analysts to change their testimony, and threatened a witness with obstruction charges when she refused. Allegations of evidence tampering that reached into the police evidence room itself. And at the center of all of it, a man serving thirteen years in prison for murders the evidence had pointed away from him since the night they were committed.

    ⭐ Support the show on Patreon for bonus content & ad-free listening! ⭐
    https://www.patreon.com/c/ATRIALBYPODCAST

    Find us everywhere:
    🔗 All links: https://linktr.ee/atrialbypodcast
    🌐 Website: https://atrialbypodcast.com
    📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61558845693491
    📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/atrialbypodcast
    🎵 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@atrialbypodcast
    📧 Contact: atrialbypodcast@gmail.com

    Theme Music: https://uppbeat.io/t/all-good-folks/mr-mischief
    License code: MOYK9CTUWGH7BLCS

    Sources for this episode will be posted at atrialbypodcast.com within 30 days of the publish date.

    DISCLAIMER: This podcast is intended for entertainment purposes only. While we research thoroughly and use credible, publicly available information, it should not be considered a legal or definitive authority. We cannot guarantee veracity or completeness. Neither host is a lawyer, journalist, or investigator — views expressed are personal and should not be taken as fact. Listeners are encouraged to do their own research. This podcast is not intended to harm, slander, or defame any individual, group, or organization. All individuals discussed are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Questions or concerns? Reach us at atrialbypodcast@gmail.com.
    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Sobre A Trial by Podcast
Whether it's a true crime case or one of history's most unsettling stories, we understand that the devil is in the details. In each episode, we comb through the facts, scrutinize the suspects, and deliver the disturbing stories that keep you on the edge of your seat. If you enjoy evidence-driven storytelling with a dash of gallows humor to make the disturbing (somewhat) tolerable, we suspect this is the pod for you. But this is A Trial by Podcast, so we'll let you be the judge.
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