Unsolved: A murder mystery podcast
Author: USA TODAY and Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Subscribed: 12,349Played: 167,792Description
More often than we’d like to believe, people get away with murder. In cold cases, cops have retired. Witnesses have died. Evidence has disappeared.
Unsolved: A murder mystery podcast is a true crime podcast series powered by investigative journalism from USA TODAY and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, guides listeners through these real-life cases, uncovering new clues along the way. The series features new unsolved cases and true crime cases each season.
Season four of Unsolved: A murder mystery podcast delves into the disappearance of Alexis Patterson, a 7-year-old girl who disappeared on her way to school in 2002. At first, there was a massive search and sympathy for her family, but that quickly changed as her parents became suspects. Over the years, there have been conspiracy theories and false leads and cases of mistaken identity. Still, her mom has never given up hope that Alexis will come home again someday.
Season three of Unsolved: A murder mystery podcast tells the story of Father Alfred Kunz, whose throat was slit inside St. Michael School in 1998. Some believe his death was linked to his battles against evil. Others believe his all-too-human flaws were to blame.
Season two of Unsolved: A murder mystery podcast, released in 2017, examines the case of toddler Michelle Manders, who vanished from her bedroom in the middle of the night in 1981. Did she wander alone into the darkness? Or was she kidnapped?
Season one of Unsolved: A murder mystery podcast, released in 2015, explores the circumstances surrounding the death of 14-year-old John Zera, who disappeared from Franklin High School in 1976. The seven episodes follow investigators through decades of dead ends as they hold on to hope of finding the killer. For more information on the series, visit http://usatoday.com/unsolved.
For more reporting on cold cases, unsolved cases and true crime detectives, as well as additional true crime stories and investigative journalism, visit witness.usatoday.com. Crime reporter and investigative reporter Gina Barton is also host of Untested: A true crime podcast. Subscribe here for the story of how Annie Harrison joined the ranks of true crime detectives and hunted a possible serial rapist.










Interesting that the man who went into the room knew that the light switch was across the room. Not a stranger then.
This story could be told in one sitting. The podcasts are half ads, 40% recap, and 10% story.
This story could be told in one sitting. The podcasts are half ads, 40% recap, and 10% story.
most excellent story. I don't listen to crime series. I prefer one story per episode. I'm glad I listened to all of your story. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
if you wanna get away with any crime at all...do it in Wisconsin ‼️
the police sure missed something... EVERY THING,‼️‼️🤬
SH##‼️‼️‼️
det quarmie?? I've got some quarmes there. what a sh## investigation!
very sad for mum 😢
Bloody hell ‼️ even Quincy was smarter than her and that show was in the 70s‼️😱
did they ever investigate Joe? he probably took michelle and used Terry to get her
This dude was a POS, a rapist, abuser etc. Glad he was investigated thoroughly.
This is why he was killed. Not for giving masses in Latin or anything like that. And the sexual "misconduct" type stuff goes back to the beginnings of the Church itself, it didn't start because of the '60's or whatever Catholics think.
I would hate to be this senior gentleman now, defending the utterly sh$%%y decision to classify this as an "accident". The one DA is just being common decent and ethical like we all should be, all the time, but right now he is looking like a mighty superhero in my eyes. Just for having common sense and decency and not wanting to be lazy about this child's death.
Abusers and baby killers can sure LOVE a SIDS diagnosis can't they? A lot of baby killers have gotten away with it because of a jumpy to the conclusion of SIDS, and lazy coroners are their accomplices. Joe is a POS. Why are there so many POS's in this "safe" little community? Why do half the local cops love these POS's so much?
I would like to remind the old lady that they do not convict people for no reason, for things like rape and child molestation and child abuse. The Courts in fact have a very weak will for getting justice in those kinds of crimes. So if this guy got any time at all, for these crimes, he did something to deserve it. Even with Courts that bend over backwards to see that guys like this never see any consequences for their actions, this guy did time -- and it wasn't his Lawyer's fault. He is a lying manipulative POS, too, and why not. People will believe any POS who claims he didn't do it.
Really difficult to listen to the old lady being an apologist for a convicted child molester.
I am appalled by the failures and the indifference of the Police involved here. They allowed petty interpersonal dislikes and departmental p@$$ing contest type stuff sabotage finding out what happened to this little girl. The fact that there was a local convicted child molester who resembled the sketch - that the detective they thought was a "nuisance" pushed to have released - is infuriating now. They were determined to rewrite the truth so that this little girl "ran away from home and fell in the river", and that scenario just isn't possible.
I regret but it needs saying: the father Mike was a DICK. Such a DICK. The Mom sure took a lot of Sh$& before she finally broke. Of course he finally "upgraded" to a "better" (likely much younger) wife.
if she did call Joe first I think that makes total sense.. she falls asleep with a friend over waiting for her husband to pick her up.. she wakes up to find her friend and daughter both gone.. it totally makes sense to call just to make sure her daughter didn't go with him for whatever reason