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

    Why Nolan Wells' Friend Went Public Before Answers Came

    17/07/2026 | 17min
    Before the autopsy was finalized, before the FBI finished examining the digital evidence, before the investigation reached any conclusion, one of Nolan Wells' friends went on Good Morning America and then sat down with Rolling Stone to publicly tell his story. Defense attorney and former prosecutor Eric Faddis asks the question that matters: does an innocent person do a national media tour during an active investigation, or does that tell you something about what they're trying to control?
    The friends have attorneys. The family has Ben Crump. The family is running its own parallel investigation with private forensics examiners and a commissioned autopsy. And one detail that Crump has highlighted shifts the entire frame: the friends didn't voluntarily disclose that they had Nolan's phone and keys after his death. The family tracked the phone with Life360 and recovered it themselves.
    Faddis walks through every decision being made by every person connected to this case — what the friends should be doing if they genuinely want the truth, what the family's shadow investigation helps and hurts, and what everyone should be preparing for if the investigation ends without charges and a civil lawsuit follows. The Lauren Agee case provides the roadmap. Tony Brueski, Robin, and Eric Faddis on True Crime Today.


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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.
    #NolanWells #HornIsland #TrueCrimeToday #TrueCrime #EricFaddis #OceanSprings #Mississippi #JusticeForNolan #FourthOfJuly #Investigation
  • True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

    Why Nolan Wells' Sheriff Spoke Before the Evidence Did

    17/07/2026 | 22min
    A sheriff told the country no foul play was suspected in the death of an eighteen-year-old before the autopsy was finished, before toxicology existed, and before the FBI touched a single piece of digital evidence. Defense attorney and former prosecutor Eric Faddis explains exactly why that matters — and what it costs an investigation when the public call comes before the science.
    Nolan Wells went to Horn Island on the Fourth of July with friends. His body was found in the water two days later. The friends told investigators he chose to stay on the island to talk to a girl. The young woman reportedly told investigators something different. That contradiction has not been publicly reconciled, and a former prosecutor says the timeline on resolving it matters more than most people realize. Messages were allegedly deleted from Nolan's phone before the family recovered it. The FBI is examining the digital evidence now.
    Faddis addresses what the independent autopsy needs to show for the investigation to change direction, why the DA's commitment to a grand jury presentation may be the most significant signal in this case, and how an investigation built almost entirely on strangers' cell phone footage from a remote barrier island operates when the physical evidence barely exists. Tony Brueski, Robin, and Eric Faddis on True Crime Today.


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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.
    #NolanWells #HornIsland #TrueCrimeToday #TrueCrime #EricFaddis #OceanSprings #Mississippi #JusticeForNolan #FourthOfJuly #Investigation
  • True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

    16 Siders Kids: What If This Case Isn't Rare At All?

    17/07/2026 | 59min
    Every few years one of these cases surfaces — Turpin, Fritzl, now Siders — and every time, the coverage treats it as a once-in-a-generation aberration. Psychotherapist Shavaun Scott spends this full-length conversation dismantling that comfort. Her position is blunt: sealed families are not rare. Sealed families getting discovered is rare. And the Siders case proves it, because nothing discovered them — a misdemeanor warrant stumbled into them.
    The complete interview covers all three layers of the case. The perpetrator layer: compartmentalized double lives, a three-generation family system, and the disturbing arithmetic of Elizabeth Siders' pregnancies — possibly twenty of them, starting at thirteen. The child layer: what eighteen years in one room does to language, cognition, and identity, and what the Turpin children's rocky aftermath predicts for these sixteen. The community layer: the psychology of noticing-without-acting that let store employees catalogue warning signs for years while never dialing a number.
    If Scott is right — if these families exist in every county and the only rare event is the accident that exposes them — then the question this episode leaves behind isn't about the Siders family at all. It's about the house near you.
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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.
    #SidersFamily #ElizabethSiders #TrueCrimeToday #TrueCrime #OhioHouseOfHorrors #16KidsOhio #HiddenFamilies #Psychology #BystanderEffect #TurpinFamily
  • True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

    Siders' 16 Kids: Why Did NOBODY Go Looking?

    17/07/2026 | 15min
    Nobody in the state of Ohio went looking for these sixteen children. Not one person, for years.
    They were found in a house in Hamden by deputies who were not there for them. The warrant was for something else. Ohio's Attorney General has said there was no expectation that any children were inside that home. The school district had no record. The neighbors had no idea. Investigators believe the family had moved across more than one Ohio county while generating almost none of the ordinary paperwork the rest of us leave behind. And the oldest of the sixteen, an eighteen-year-old, could not write her own name, according to investigators.
    Ohio has that name. The state issued her a birth certificate the year she was born and put it in a county drawer, where it has sat untouched while the young woman it belongs to grew up in that house.
    Tony Brueski traces this out of Vinton County and into the machine that produced it. A mandated-reporter system with a duty and no teeth. A single comparison from Washington, D.C., where four girls were found dead by marshals inside a system a federal judge had run for nineteen years. And a ten-billion-dollar funding structure built to open the moment a child is taken, and to pay nobody, ever, for going out to look.
    Four adults have pleaded not guilty to sixteen counts each of second-degree felony child endangering. No grand jury has returned an indictment.
    This was not a family that outsmarted the system. There was nothing to outsmart.

    End Links

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    Disclaimer

    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.

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  • True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

    Did Tyler Robinson Really Kill Charlie Kirk?

    16/07/2026 | 28min
    A huge share of the internet has decided the answer is no — that Tyler Robinson didn't kill Charlie Kirk, that he was set up, that the real shooter got away. The theory has serious reach and serious money behind it. This episode takes it seriously too, and holds it up against everything that came out under oath.
    Tony works through the two theories that matter. First, the patsy claim: that Robinson was framed and wasn't even at Utah Valley University that day. He answers it with the confession note under Robinson's keyboard, the DNA on the rifle, the engraved casings tied to a tool in Robinson's home, and the surveillance footage that tracked him onto campus and into the woods where the weapon was found. Second, the second-shooter claim, and the three anomalies that fuel it — the missing casings, the second bullet on another roof, the bullet that couldn't be matched.
    Every anomaly gets one clean answer, delivered straight. And Tony is honest about the single loose end in this case that still hasn't been explained — while making clear it points at sloppy police work, not a second gunman.
    The fact that should settle the whole argument isn't forensic at all. It's what Robinson's own defense attorney did, and refused to do, across five days of testimony with her client facing execution.
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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.
    #CharlieKirk #TylerRobinson #TrueCrimeToday #TrueCrime #ConspiracyTheories #CandaceOwens #Patsy #SecondShooter #UVU #Justice
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Sobre True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
🔎 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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