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True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

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True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
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  • True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

    Nancy Guthrie: The Statute, the Loophole, and the April 7 Question

    06/04/2026 | 30min
    The legal question that will determine whether Sheriff Chris Nanos remains in charge of the Nancy Guthrie investigation comes down to a single word in a territorial-era statute: refusal.
    This week's look back at the most consequential legal developments examines the procedural mechanism the Pima County Board of Supervisors has invoked and why it may not accomplish what the public expects. Arizona Revised Statute § 11-253 empowers the board to require sworn reports from a county officer. The stated consequence for non-compliance is removal from office. The Board voted unanimously to invoke this provision, directing outside counsel to draft the legal language compelling Nanos to provide sworn statements regarding his employment history and the Guthrie investigation. Nanos has publicly stated he will comply.
    That compliance may be the loophole. The statute's removal trigger is refusal — not the content of the response. If Nanos submits sworn statements, even ones that contradict the documented record, the Board's path to forced removal under this specific mechanism may be legally foreclosed. County attorneys are working through that question. April 7 is the operative date.
    The broader accountability landscape includes the recall effort organized by congressional candidate Daniel Butierez, which requires petition signatures and faces its own procedural timeline. The no-confidence vote from the Pima County Deputies Organization — 241 voting to demand resignation, zero voting confidence, 65 abstaining — has no binding legal force but carries significant institutional weight. Supervisor Matt Heinz's public characterization of Nanos's career as "fruit of a poison tree" and his description of the December 2025 deposition testimony as disqualifying — in which Nanos reportedly testified he had never been suspended despite eight documented suspensions during his El Paso tenure — frames the political pressure but does not independently create a legal removal pathway.
    The Nancy Guthrie investigation enters its third month inside this institutional environment. No suspect has been named. No arrest has been made. The woman at the center of this case — a 30-year churchgoer whose single Sunday absence triggered the investigation, a University of Arizona professional who built programs and raised three children alone after losing her husband at 49 — remains missing.
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    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
    #NancyGuthrie #SheriffNanos #PimaCounty #TrueCrimeToday #SavannahGuthrie #NoConfidenceVote #NanosRecall #LawEnforcementAccountability #CriminalJustice #MissingPerson
  • True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

    Duggar Family: Federal Conviction, Active Charges, and the Accountability Ledger

    05/04/2026 | 34min
    The legal record of the Duggar family now spans federal conviction, active felony charges in a second case, misdemeanor charges against a spouse, and a documented history of institutional and familial failures to report that have produced no legal consequences for the individuals who made those choices.
    This week's look back at the most consequential legal developments examines the full procedural arc. Josh Duggar's federal case began with an April 2021 arrest on charges of receiving and possessing child sexual abuse material. At trial, the investigating agent testified the material recovered from Josh's work computer included images of children as young as eighteen months old, representing some of the most serious content the agent had encountered. December 2021: guilty on both counts. May 2022: sentenced to approximately twelve and a half years. Initial appeal denied. Currently incarcerated in a federal facility in Texas.
    Before the federal case, Josh's adult history included his role as executive director of FRC Action — the political arm of the Family Research Council — where he lobbied Congress on conservative family values. A 2015 civil lawsuit alleging serious misconduct was settled without court adjudication. That same year, public disclosure of his prior conduct toward minors forced his resignation from FRC Action. The Ashley Madison data breach subsequently revealed a paid account. Josh issued a public statement admitting infidelity and pornography addiction. While Josh awaited trial, Jim Bob Duggar launched a pro-family Arkansas State Senate campaign. He finished third out of four candidates with approximately 15 percent of the vote.
    Joseph Duggar's case is now active in two jurisdictions. In Florida, he faces charges of lewd and lascivious molestation on a child under 12 and lewd and lascivious contact, with bond set at $600,000 and arraignment scheduled for April 20. According to the Bay County arrest affidavit, the now-14-year-old victim disclosed alleged incidents during a 2020 family vacation, and Joseph allegedly admitted the conduct on two documented occasions. In Arkansas, both Joseph and his wife Kendra face four counts each of second-degree endangering the welfare of a minor and second-degree false imprisonment. Joseph is presumed innocent on all charges.
    The institutional ledger remains unresolved. Bill Gothard — more than 34 accusers, no criminal charges, 91 years old, denies all allegations. IBLP — never charged, continues to operate, with a 2025 Texas Supreme Court ruling allowing a civil action to proceed. Jim Bob Duggar — sworn testimony found not credible in a federal judicial finding, documented history of managing abuse allegations internally, no criminal charges or civil liability adjudicated. The legal system has convicted one person in this family. The question this series raises is whether that accounting is complete.
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    #JoshDuggar #JosephDuggar #DuggarFamily #TrueCrimeToday #FederalConviction #IBLP #BillGothard #JimBobDuggar #CriminalJustice #DuggarAccountability
  • True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

    Lindsay Clancy: Malpractice Lawsuits, Prosecution Strategy, and a DSM Gap

    05/04/2026 | 39min
    The Lindsay Clancy case now operates on two legal tracks that directly contradict each other — and the collision between them will define her July 2026 trial. In January 2026, both Lindsay and her husband Patrick filed separate civil lawsuits in Norfolk Superior Court alleging medical malpractice by her psychiatric providers. Those lawsuits describe a woman in severe psychiatric crisis who sought help repeatedly and received what they characterize as a disorganized, uncoordinated course of polypharmacy that exacerbated her condition. The prosecution, meanwhile, is citing one of those providers' assessments — a December 2022 finding at Women & Infants Hospital that ruled out postpartum depression and bipolar disorder — as evidence that Lindsay was not mentally impaired at the time of the killings.
    This week's look back at the most consequential legal and medical developments examines the evidentiary foundation for both positions. According to the civil complaints, Lindsay Clancy's postpartum symptoms escalated across three pregnancies. Expert analysis by Columbia University psychiatry professor Dr. Margaret Spinelli, cited in Lindsay's lawsuit, concluded that bipolar symptoms first emerged after the birth of her second child and went undiagnosed. After her third child's birth in May 2022, approximately thirteen medications were prescribed in roughly four months. The lawsuits allege providers failed to coordinate care, conducted appointments via video that were too short to adequately assess her condition, and failed to involve family members despite clear warning signs.
    The December 2022 Women & Infants assessment — which the lawsuit attributes to an inadequate patient history — ruled out the diagnoses that Lindsay's defense now relies upon. The prosecution is treating that assessment as dispositive. The defense will argue it was negligent. The same medical record is simultaneously the foundation of a malpractice claim and the prosecution's key evidence of mental competence.
    Lindsay was admitted to McLean Hospital on New Year's Eve 2022. She reportedly waited three days to see a doctor and was discharged after five. Hallucinations returned eleven days later. Her final appointment — approximately 17 minutes on a video screen on January 23rd — ended with a dosage increase. She faces three counts of first-degree murder. Her insanity defense goes to trial in July. A judge recently denied her motion to bifurcate the proceedings.
    Postpartum psychosis is not included in the DSM. It occurs at an estimated rate of one to two per thousand births. That diagnostic gap affects every clinical decision, every insanity evaluation, and every question a jury will be asked to answer.
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    #LindsayClancy #TrueCrimeToday #PostpartumPsychosis #MedicalMalpractice #MaternalMentalHealth #DuxburyCase #InsanityDefense #CriminalJustice #MentalHealthAwareness #DSMGap
  • True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

    Duggar Family: Institutional Immunity, Generational Exposure, and Unanswered Legal Questions

    05/04/2026 | 30min
    The legal questions surrounding the Duggar family extend well beyond the individuals currently facing charges. They reach into the institutional framework that shaped the family's worldview and its documented approach to handling allegations of harm — and into the generational history that predates the television era entirely.
    This week's look back at the most consequential legal dimensions in our Duggar coverage examines two interconnected structures. The first is the Institute in Basic Life Principles, the organization the Duggar family called home. IBLP was founded in 1961 by Bill Gothard, who led it for approximately six decades. IBLP's published materials described departure from paternal authority as witchcraft. Their homeschool curriculum — utilized by the Duggar family — deliberately excluded sex education and abuse recognition instruction. More than 34 women have accused Gothard of harassment and abuse. A 2016 civil lawsuit by former employees and volunteers was voluntarily dismissed in 2018 due to statute of limitations issues and the threat of a countersuit. Gothard, now 91, has denied all allegations and has never faced a criminal charge. However, in 2025, the Texas Supreme Court ruled that a separate civil action alleging IBLP was part of a civil conspiracy that facilitated abuse could proceed — rejecting Gothard and IBLP's argument that the Ecclesiastical Abstention Doctrine barred the claims. That case remains active.
    The second structure is generational. Amy Duggar King's 2025 memoir "Holy Disruptor" documents that Jim Bob's father, Jimmy Lee Duggar, was identified within the family as someone who posed a danger to children. Amy was never allowed to be alone with him. Protective measures were enforced by her mother and grandmother throughout her childhood, though the reason was not disclosed until after Jimmy Lee's death in 2009. According to Amy, Jimmy Lee was also severely violent toward her mother Deanna — and Jim Bob was present during at least one of those incidents.
    Amy also describes discovering concerning material on Josh Duggar's old laptop, bringing it to Jim Bob's attention, and being dismissed. Federal investigators subsequently inquired about that device. Whether Jim Bob Duggar has any remaining legal exposure — through mandated reporting failures, potential obstruction, or civil liability for his documented role in managing abuse allegations internally — remains an open question. Amy named the generational pattern publicly in her memoir months before Joseph Duggar's arrest. Two family members now face criminal charges involving minors. One is serving a federal sentence.
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    #DuggarFamily #BillGothard #IBLP #TrueCrimeToday #JimBobDuggar #AmyDuggarKing #JimmyLeeDuggar #CriminalJustice #ReligiousAbuse #InstitutionalAccountability
  • True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

    Nancy Guthrie: Ransom Forensics and a Sheriff Under Oath

    05/04/2026 | 40min
    The evidentiary questions in the Nancy Guthrie case are now running on two separate tracks — and both demand legal scrutiny. The first involves ransom communications whose forensic profile doesn't behave like legitimate kidnapping-for-ransom demands. The second involves a sheriff whose documented history, according to reporting by the Arizona Republic and AZPM, may constitute fraud in his employment with Pima County — and whose handling of the investigation faces mounting procedural challenges.
    This week's look back at the most critical legal and procedural developments in true crime examines both tracks. Savannah Guthrie stated on the record that she believes two ransom notes her family received are authentic, citing specific details about Nancy's Apple Watch and a floodlight at the residence. The FBI's special agent in charge publicly characterized those details as available information. The Bitcoin wallet specified in the demand has never recorded a transaction. Both payment deadlines passed without consequence. No proof of life was provided despite repeated family pleas. One individual — Derrick Callella, 42, of California — has been arrested and federally charged with transmitting fraudulent ransom demands to the Guthrie family. The legal distinction between authentic and opportunistic ransom communications carries significant weight for charging decisions, and the pattern here — when compared against established case law from the Lindbergh and Getty kidnappings — raises questions the evidence has to answer.
    On the institutional track, Sheriff Chris Nanos faces legal exposure on multiple fronts. The Board of Supervisors has unanimously invoked Arizona Revised Statute § 11-253 — a territorial-era provision — to compel Nanos to provide sworn reports, with removal from office as the stated consequence for non-compliance. According to AZPM reporting, Supervisor Matt Heinz stated that when Nanos was asked in a December 2025 deposition whether he had ever been suspended, Nanos reportedly testified he had not. Records from the El Paso Police Department, according to the same reporting, show eight suspensions. His deputies voted 241 to zero for his resignation. A recall effort is active. He has faced criticism for prematurely releasing the crime scene, for reported friction with the FBI's evidence access, and for routing DNA evidence to a private lab rather than through federal channels.
    Retired FBI Special Agent Jennifer Coffindaffer assesses the procedural implications of both the ransom evidence and the institutional crisis — and what they mean for the trajectory of this investigation.
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    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
    #NancyGuthrie #SavannahGuthrie #TrueCrimeToday #SheriffNanos #PimaCounty #RansomNotes #FBIInvestigation #CriminalJustice #DerrickCallella #BringNancyHome

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🔎 Daily True Crime Stories | Unsolved Mysteries | Criminal Investigations | Cold Cases True Crime Today is your go-to daily true crime podcast, bringing you the latest murder cases, ongoing trials, criminal psychology insights, and shocking unsolved mysteries. Whether it’s breaking crime news, high-profile trials, serial killers, missing persons, or cold cases, we cover it all with expert analysis, investigative storytelling, and real-time updates. 🎙️ Hosted by leading crime analysts, we uncover the psychology of killers, forensic breakthroughs, police investigations, and courtroom drama—giving you the full story behind the headlines. From notorious cases to little-known crimes that deserve attention, we break down what really happened and why. If you're obsessed with true crime podcasts, criminal psychology, and investigative reporting, subscribe to True Crime Today on Apple Podcasts now! 🎧 New episodes daily.
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