True Crime Podcast 2024 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Police Stories Podcast

True Crime Podcast 2022

Reddit True Crime Podcasts 2024 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls, Police Stories and Unsolved Mysteries Reddit Podcast

r/TrueCrimePodcasts: Reddit True Crime Podcasts 2022 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls,


Reddit True Crime Podcasts 2024 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls, Police Stories and Unsolved Mysteries Reddit Podcast

True Crime 411 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls, Police Stories and Unsolved Mysteries Reddit Podcast

True Crime Podcast 2023 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Police Stories Podcast

Welcome to the Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Police Stories Podcast.

This podcast will feature real-life stories from police officers, crime scene investigators, survivors of violent crimes and more. We'll share stories about how police investigate, assess and solve criminal cases, how 911 calls can provide valuable information to police and how crime victims can seek justice. Every episode will feature a different story, providing a unique insight into the world of law enforcement and crime.

We'll bring you interviews with experts from the police force, crime scene investigation teams, prosecutors, defense attorneys, victims and more. We'll explore the impact of crime on individuals and communities. We'll also examine the ethical and legal issues that arise in criminal cases, and the efforts of police to protect the public and bring criminals to justice.

We'll be discussing the latest news and developments in the criminal justice system, and the implications of new laws and policies on the safety of communities. We'll also provide valuable resources to help those affected by crime, and look at the impact of crime on the mental health of communities.

We hope you'll join us as we explore the world of crime and justice, one episode at a time.




true crime is a nonfiction literary, podcast, and film genre in which the author examines an actual crime and details the actions of real people. The crimes most commonly include murder; about 40 percent focus on tales of serial killers.

As much as we love listening to a celebrity interview or cultural discussion, there’s nothing quite like a true crime podcast to keep you hooked for hours on end.

There’s a reason why so many true crime series have climbed the podcast charts over the years – from the genre-defining brilliance of Serial to the unexpected twists and turns of Sweet Bobby, true crime is the genre that just keeps on giving.

True crime has never been more popular than it is today, as evidenced by the astonishing number of podcasts, TV shows, and documentaries dedicated to the genre. At its core, however, true crime is a type of nonfiction literature. From influential works like Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood (1966) to modern-day investigations such as Michelle McNamara’s I’ll Be Gone in the Dark (2018) or Elon Green’s Last Call (2021), such narratives are unique in the way they connect with their readers, precisely because they explore harrowing real-life events that could happen to anyone.

Want to know more about true crime? Here we define the genre, take a fascinating look at its origins, and cover some of its common themes.

The Definition of “True Crime”
It seems like the definition of true crime would be obvious: A story about a crime that actually occurred. Indeed, most true crime books explore dark and distressing subject matter, and reader discretion is advised. Granted, the first rule of true crime is that the narrative must include as many nitty-gritty facts about the case as possible: Readers expect the actual names of people involved and the correct time and place, information about what they did, and as many details of the crime and its investigation as the author can dig up.

True crime books can be about a single event, like a kidnapping. They can also be about the collective crimes of serial killers, thieves, or cult leaders. However narrow or broad the focus, the best true crime books deliver well-researched, finely written examinations of the case at hand.

But the wealth of details is just half of what makes true crime so popular with readers. The most talented true crime authors excel at presenting the facts of a case while vividly re-creating the atmosphere that surrounded the crime. They put criminals and their victims in context by establishing elements like the political climate of the day, the history of a town, or the struggles faced by a particular community. They dig into everyone’s motives, then weigh these motives against the actions and developments they document. They re-create dialogue as faithfully as possible, although of course sometimes it’s necessary to take artistic liberties.

In other words, the most popular true crime authors transport readers to the scene of the crime, with all senses fully engaged. Without an author’s narrative talents, the details of the crime would simply read like a legal report.

Best True Crime Stories Podcast 2022 Police Interrogations, True Crime Investigations and MORE!

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/true-crime-podcast-2024-police-interrogations-911-calls-and-true-police-stories-podcast--5693470/support. read less
True CrimeTrue Crime

Episodes

Anthony Palma Child Killer 30 Year Cold Case FULL Police interrogation
Yesterday
Anthony Palma Child Killer 30 Year Cold Case FULL Police interrogation
Anthony Palma Child Killer 30 Year Cold Case FULL Police interrogationNeighbor is arrested for 1997 murder of Oklahoma girl, 8 - after he VOLUNTEERED a DNA sample that matchedAnthony Palma, 56, has been charged with the first-degree murder and kidnapping of Kirsten Hatfield The eight-year-old girl went missing from her Midwest City, Oklahoma, home on May 14, 1997 Her body has never been recovered - if she were alive today, she'd be 26DNA found on the windowsill of her bedroom and a pair of her underwear recovered from backyard led to Palma's arrest 18 years after the crimePolice say DNA test results showed a match of one in 293 sextillionPalma served more than a year in prison for assault in the 1980sAn Oklahoma man has been arrested in connection to the cold-case disappearance of his eight-year-old neighbor who was abducted from her bedroom in 1997.Investigators used DNA to link Anthony Palma, 56, to the murder of Kirsten Hatfield, who was reported missing from her Midwest City home on May 14, 1997.An affidavit said Palma gave a DNA sample willingly in June to investigators who were following up on the case. Results showed a match of one in 293 sextillion. Kirsten is presumed dead, although her body has never been found. If she were alive today, she would be 26.Palma was arrested Monday on charges of first-degree murder and kidnapping, according to the affidavit, which was released on Tuesday by Midwest City Police Chief Brandon Clabes. Clabes said investigators are searching Palma's home for any evidence. The suspect lives two houses away from where Kirsten's family lived in 1997.Police tape could be seen around Palma's property on Monday night. The request for his arrest warrant, which was issued Friday by Midwest City Police Detective Darrell Miller, stated: 'There have been no verified sightings or contact from Kirsten since May ... of 1997. Therefore, it can be concluded that she was killed shortly after her abduction.Anthony Palma Child Killer 30 Year Cold Case FULL Police interrogationTrue Crime Podcast 2022 Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Police Stories PodcastBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/true-crime-podcast-2024-police-interrogations-911-calls-and-true-police-stories-podcast--5693470/support.
Escape From A House Of Horrors FULL AUDIO The Turpin Sisters
2d ago
Escape From A House Of Horrors FULL AUDIO The Turpin Sisters
Escape From A House Of Horrors FULL AUDIO The Turpin SistersEscape From A House Of Horrors FULL AUDIOPERRIS, Calif. -- Jordan Turpin quietly climbed up on a windowsill of her parents' home without them knowing and dropped down into the outside world.The 17-year-old had only been outside a few times in her entire life and she was terrified. Her hands were shaking uncontrollably as she held a deactivated cell phone her parents didn't know she had, but thinking of her siblings chained up inside the house, she worked up the courage to dial 911."I was always terrified that if I called the cops or tried to escape, I would get caught, and then I knew I would die if I got caught," Jordan, now 21, told ABC News' Diane Sawyer in an exclusive interview. "But at the end, when I saw all my younger siblings, I knew that's what I had to do."Jordan's bravery that day in January 2018 freed herself and her siblings from a life of horrific abuse and captivity at the hands of their parents, David and Louise Turpin, who are now in prison for beating, shackling and starving 12 of their 13 children."That was my only chance," Jordan said. "I think it was us coming so close to death so many times. If something happened to me, at least I died trying."Jordan and her eldest sibling, Jennifer Turpin, are telling their story for the first time in an exclusive interview with Sawyer. They are the first of any of the Turpin children to share their stories. In their interview, the Turpin daughters described physical abuse and being deprived of food, hygiene, education and health care for years."The only word I know to call it is 'hell,'" said Jennifer Turpin, reflecting on the trauma of her childhoodGrowing up, Jennifer Turpin attended public school from first to third grade but then her parents took her out. From then on, the parents claimed to be homeschooling their children but weren't in reality. The children were rarely allowed to leave their home when the family lived in Texas and then in California, they said they were never allowed outside without their parents."We [weren't] even allowed to stand up. We were supposed to be sitting down all the time," added Jennifer, now 33. "Most of the time we were up at night and then sleeping in the day."In the family's Perris, California, home that Jordan escaped from, she told investigators she was kept in a bedroom where two little sisters were chained on and off for months. She said she and her siblings lived in filth and that she hadn't bathed in seven monthsJennifer said for years she and her siblings only ate once a day, primarily peanut butter sandwiches, bologna, a frozen burrito or chips, while their parents ate fast food and other full meals. She said some of the children would try to "steal" food and their parents would beat them or chain them up for it. When rescued, all of the children except for the youngest, a toddler, were severely malnourished, prosecutors said.An 11-year-old child was so malnourished that her arm circumference was the equivalent of a 4-and-a-half month old baby, investigators said.Jordan said she hadn't been to a doctor in five years, she said, and had never been to a dentist in her life.The plan to escapeIn 2016, Jordan said she got a hold of one of her parents' old smartphones. It opened up a whole new world she had never seen before, and eventually she discovered Justin Bieber's music videos."I don't know where we would be if we didn't watch Justin Bieber," Jordan said. "I started realizing that there is a different whole world out there... I wanted to experience that."The smartphone became a critical escape for Jordan. She said she watched Bieber's interviews, movies and used it to make little videos to post on social media. One day, she said someone commented on one of her posts to ask why she was always inside and awake at night."I did tell him that I didn't really go to school, and I wasn't allowed to go in the backyard or front yard and that I'm always kept inside, and I told him how we eat and how we're not allowed to get out of bed," she said. "He was like, 'This isn't right, you should call the cops' ... I was so happy to hear him say that because I was like, 'I was right. I was right that this situation is bad.'"One day, a sibling in the house told their mother she had been watching Bieber's videos. Jordan said her mother came at her and began choking her."I thought I was going to die that day," she said. "After that whole day happened, I kept having nightmares that... she was going to kill me."After that incident, Jordan secretly talked to a couple of her sisters about trying to come up with a plan to escape."She was like, 'We need to get out of here,'" Jennifer said. "So I gave her all the advice I knew, all the advice I could."Jordan eventually decided her best option would be to climb out of her bedroom window and call 911.Jennifer said she tried to draw a map of their neighborhood based on the few times she had been allowed outside. Jordan and another sister tried calling a taxi service to drive them to another state, and then they discussed something Jordan overheard on the rare instances her brother secretly watched the TV show "Cops": Calling 911, and making sure they had proof to back up their claims for police."[I told her] get pictures, anything to prove so they can't think you're a teenager looking for attention," Jennifer said.On Jan. 14, 2018, Jordan realized time was running out. She and Jennifer heard her mother scream that the family was moving to Oklahoma."If we went to Oklahoma, there was a big chance that some of us would have died," Jordan said of her severely malnourished and frail siblings.At the time, she said two of her sisters were in chains for stealing their mother's candy. One of them, she said, had been chained up for 15 straight days.She said she asked her sisters, chained to a bed, for permission to take their photos before doing so, which she did with her brother's old cell phone that she had secretly gotten hold of."They said, 'yes,'" Jordan said. "They knew why I was taking pictures, and they knew what it was for, they were letting me.""The very next day we were moving. It was literally now or never," Jennifer added.The escapeJordan said she placed pillows under a blanket to make it look like she was asleep, in case anyone looked into her room. She said she put on some clean clothes, gathered her pre-packed bag and slipped out of the window. Then she ran.Once outside, Jordan didn't know where to turn. She was standing in the road, she said, because "I didn't even know about the sidewalks.""I had no idea what direction to go. I was so scared," Jordan continued. "I was trying to dial 911, but I couldn't even get my thumb to press the buttons because I was shaking so bad."Jordan reached a dispatcher who kept her talking as she wandered the neighborhood. Eventually, the dispatcher helped guide the shaky and confused girl to a stop sign where she could wait for a deputy to arrive."I was telling them everything: We don't go to school, we live in filth, how we starve and all this stuff," Jordan said. "Because I had to make sure that if I left, we wouldn't go back.""[Talking to the dispatcher], I was like, 'I'm scared [my parents] are going to come,'" she continued. "They would just kill me right there, especially if they knew I was on the phone with the police."Jordan said she was petrified that law enforcement wouldn't believe her."I was freaking out because I was, like, 'Wait, are they gonna take me back there?' I was so scared," she said. "I was so nervous because it was -- I've never had a conversation with a stranger before.Deputy Anthony Colace was coming to the end of a long and busy graveyard shift when he took the dispatcher's call to assist on a runaway call. Colace said the majority of runaway calls only require taking the child home to their family.When he arrived, Jordan quickly tried to tell him her life story and then he asked her a critical question: "Do you have pictures of that?"She showed him the photos of her dirty, shackled sisters, explaining that the chains were punishment for taking food."They looked very sad, malnourished, they were very pale. They had bags underneath their eyes," Colace told ABC News. "Once I saw that photo, it really sealed the deal for me."Colace asked if Jordan was injured, and she asked what "injured" meant. He further explained to ask if she was hurt. She said no. He also asked her if she was on medication and she explained she didn't know what "medication" meant.On Colace's body cam, Jordan is heard telling him that if her parents found her outside they would kill her. As he's listening to Jordan describe the horrors inside the home, Colace was impressed by her courage. Through his questioning, he could tell she'd had little education."I was just thinking how smart and how brave she was," he said. "I asked her what her middle name was and she said 'Elizabeth.' I asked her to spell it. She couldn't spell it."True Crime 411 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls, Police Stories, Unsolved Mysteries Reddit PodcastBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/true-crime-podcast-2024-police-interrogations-911-calls-and-true-police-stories-podcast--5693470/support.
Woman Arrested for DUI After Being Found Asleep at the Wheel
3d ago
Woman Arrested for DUI After Being Found Asleep at the Wheel
Woman Arrested for DUI After Being Found Asleep at the WheelOn January 24, 2023, a Chamblee police officer responded to reports of an Acura SUV failing to move forward through a couple of traffic light cycles. When the officer arrived on the scene, they found the driver, a woman, asleep at the wheel with her foot on the brake and her engine running.Another police officer arrived shortly after and positioned their vehicle in front of the SUV to prevent the driver from moving. The first officer approached the vehicle and attempted to awaken the driver. Initially, the woman began dancing until she understood the officer's command.The officer suspected that the driver was under the influence and asked her if she had been drinking. The woman denied drinking any alcohol. However, when she was asked to step out of the vehicle and participate in a breath test, she refused.As a result, her vehicle was impounded and towed, and she was arrested and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol (less safe).This incident highlights the dangers of driving under the influence and the importance of police officers' vigilance in ensuring the safety of the community. The Chamblee Police Department urges anyone who suspects they may be under the influence to avoid driving and seek alternative transportation options.#bodycam #cops #police #policebodycamBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/true-crime-podcast-2024-police-interrogations-911-calls-and-true-police-stories-podcast--5693470/support.