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Author: WBUR

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Season 4: "Postmortem" is about the stolen bodies of Harvard and the gray market for human remains. Find out what happened at Harvard Medical School: how body parts were stolen and sold across the country. Who did this and why?
38 Episodes
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Introducing 'Last Seen'

Introducing 'Last Seen'

2018-07-1603:129

A look into the largest unsolved art heist in history: the theft of 13 irreplaceable artworks from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston. "Last Seen" begins Sept. 17.
Episode 1: '81 Minutes'

Episode 1: '81 Minutes'

2018-09-1436:4021

In 1990, two thieves stole 13 irreplaceable artworks from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. We take a closer look at what happened that night.
Episode 2: 'Inside Job?'

Episode 2: 'Inside Job?'

2018-09-2434:5013

On the night of the heist, security guard Rick Abath made the critical mistake of letting the thieves into the museum. In this episode, we ask if it was indeed a mistake.
Was the heist planned in the belly of Boston's criminal underworld operating out of a Dorchester auto body shop?
Episode 4: 'Two Bad Men'

Episode 4: 'Two Bad Men'

2018-10-0842:1012

Were George Reissfelder and David Turner involved in the Gardner heist?
Episode 5: 'The Bobbys'

Episode 5: 'The Bobbys'

2018-10-1534:229

We trace the art's possible path from Boston to Connecticut to Philadelphia.
This is a story about how to plot an art recovery, and then blow it entirely.
Was the world's greatest art thief the inspiration, or actually the mastermind, of the Gardner heist?
Episode 8: 'Flimflammer'

Episode 8: 'Flimflammer'

2018-11-0544:5910

After a parallel heist gone wrong, did Brian McDevitt succeed at the Gardner Museum?
Episode 9: 'The Big Dig'

Episode 9: 'The Big Dig'

2018-11-1239:289

We follow a mobster's tip to excavate a lot in Orlando.
Episode 10: 'Last Seen' Live

Episode 10: 'Last Seen' Live

2018-11-1901:02:216

A behind-the-scenes conversation about how we investigated the most sensational unsolved art heist in history.
WBUR’s popular true-crime podcast returns, with mysterious tales about people, places, ashes, planets, endangered species, feelings and much more.
The new season, coming out Feb. 1, has 10 new true-crime mysteries that you don’t want to miss.
Episode 1: Murph

Episode 1: Murph

2022-01-3138:48

In 1964, Jack Murphy, or "Murph the Surf," pulled off the biggest jewel heist in New York City history only to be caught 48 hours later. Amory Sivertson traces the enigmatic life of this folk hero and examines why men like him continue to be idolized.
Episode 2: Out of Time

Episode 2: Out of Time

2022-01-3139:331

Freeports are the most expensive and secretive warehouses in the world, which now hide some of the world’s cultural treasures from the public eye. Join Ben Brock Johnson as he traces the path of one lost Modigliani painting, "Seated Man with a Cane," and attempts to catch a glimpse inside these high-tech storage dungeons.
Every school kid learns that there are exactly eight planets in our solar system. But what if we told you there might be a ninth? A world that may be six times the size of Earth and take 12,000 years to orbit the Sun. The only thing is, while some scientists are convinced Planet Nine exists, no one has seen it. Yet. Science journalist and WBUR producer Dean Russell (Endless Thread) traces the lives of two astronomers, separated by a century, bound by their thirst for finding that missing planet. This Last Seen story of obsession reveals the unexpected reward when one astronomer gets it wrong — and the fallout when another gets it, seemingly, right.
In 1960, dubbed "The Year Of Africa", a pair of bold leaders fanned the flames of hope for a brighter future in the Belgian colony of Congo. But by the following year, that hope had been dashed by outside forces. Using traditional griot storytelling, writer Brenton Zola transports us to a turning point in Congo's path to independence, and remembers the future that almost was.
Episode 5: Belly Up

Episode 5: Belly Up

2022-02-2240:042

When three friends went on a rum-fueled rampage one night deep in the Nevada desert, they never expected the trouble they would find themselves in a week later. The men broke into a remote unit of Death Valley National Park known as Devil's Hole — a mysterious flooded cave that happens to be home to the one of the rarest fish on Earth, and one that's critically endangered too. This episode, based on Paige Blankenbuehler's High Country News feature, is a bite-size crime story starring an obscure species of tiny fish, and some hedonistic humans who stepped a little too far over the line, and suffered some big consequences. Last Seen host Nora Saks dives into the fraught relationship between humans and nature, and the long arm of the law intended to protect our most vulnerable species.
Spain has one of the highest number of forced disappearances in the world, second only to Cambodia. During the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) and General Francisco Franco's dictatorship, fascist troops killed tens of thousands of people and threw them into mass graves. For decades, few people knew this — and no one in Spain talked about it. But in the year 2000, a man in the middle of an identity crisis began digging into his family's past, searching for a grandfather who had gone missing in the war. What Emilio Silva discovered not only changed his own life - it inspired a social movement to recover Memoria Histórica, or historical memory, throughout Spain. In episode 6, audio producer and writer Isabel Cadenas Cañón (De eso no se habla) reveals the cultural transformation of a country through the personal transformation of one man.
When artist Alison Byrnes opened a package she had mailed to herself two years earlier, she was expecting to find a sealed box of her prints - but that's not what was inside. The United States Postal Service had made a rather serious mistake. Instead of artist prints, USPS delivered a little blue urn -- containing the ashes of a total stranger. Attempts at finding the family of the deceased failed, and the cremated remains of Jennings L. Heffelfinger sat abandoned and forgotten, year after year. That is, until 2019, when intrepid reporter Sophie Bearman took over the case. Determined to solve the mystery, Bearman embarks on a personal and professional journey to get the urn back where it belongs. But how much help is too much? Amid a pandemic that forces us to ponder mortality incessantly, Episode 7 offers a refreshing and unexpected take on life and loss.
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Comments (11)

Afifa Najnin Shetu

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Apr 19th
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Natalie Keller

What happened to the prints???

Mar 14th
Reply

Tracey Ferrell

The people in this episode are horrible, incl the reporter. How do you come into possession of someone's ashes & not move heaven & earth to get them to the family? The reporter lives up to the worst stereotype of reporters. And at a more prosaic level, no one seemed all that interested in finding out how it happened in the first place. THAT would have made an interesting story.

Mar 11th
Reply (1)

Jordan Cannon

Is there a way to sign up for updates. or let us know if there are more episodes?

Mar 2nd
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Lingua Nowhere Man

Love this story!

Feb 9th
Reply

Camie Snow

no more episodes?

Jan 15th
Reply (1)

Jamie Kuper

Very interesting story! What a shame these thieves got away with this...someone must know something! I think maybe the security supervisor 🤔

Dec 1st
Reply

Justin Faist

stay tuned with preet

Nov 12th
Reply

Bonni Wilbourne

love this podcast!

Oct 4th
Reply