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Bella Fiori

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Welcome to your weekly sanctuary for the unknown. Here, Mondays aren't just the start of the week—they are the moment we dive deep into the depths of True Crime and atmospheric dread. More than just recounting facts, I aim to transport you into the scene, exploring the psychology behind the crimes and the chilling suspense that only the unexplained can provide.Copyright Bella Fiori Sciences sociales
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  • SOLVED AFTER 50 YEARS _ The Case of Felix Vail
    Apr 5 2026
    Three women. One man. Fifty years of lies. And a mother who refused to let her daughter become a forgotten footnote.

    In 1962, Felix Vail told police his wife Mary drowned in the Calcasieu River. In 1973, Sharon Hensley vanished after leaving with him for Florida. In 1984, Annette Craver Vail disappeared after marrying Vail when she was just 17 [citation:8]. For decades, Vail maintained his innocence, claiming each woman "chose to disappear" [citation:3]. But one mother, Mary Rose, never believed him. She connected the families of all three missing women and enlisted investigative journalist Jerry Mitchell, whose reporting led pathologist Dr. Michael Baden to reexamine Mary's autopsy. His conclusion: she was dead before she hit the water — with a scarf stuffed in her mouth and a hematoma on her skull [citation:4]. In 2016, nearly 54 years later, a jury convicted Vail of murder. It remains the oldest conviction of a suspected serial killer in U.S. history [citation:2]. Turn down the lights, put on your headphones, and press play — because justice took half a century, but it finally arrived.
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    1 h et 12 min
  • The Camm Family Murders
    Apr 5 2026
    He was a decorated state trooper. He found his family slaughtered in the garage. And then the police decided he was the killer — spending 13 years fighting to prove his innocence.

    On September 28, 2000, David Camm returned home from a church basketball game to discover his wife Kim, 35, and their two children — Brad, 7, and Jill, 5 — shot to death in the family garage [citation:4]. Three days later, the former Indiana State Police trooper was arrested for their murders [citation:1]. For 13 years, Camm maintained his innocence as he endured three trials, two wrongful convictions, and a prosecutor who called him a "remorseless killer" [citation:9]. But a gray sweatshirt left at the crime scene — bearing the nickname "Backbone" and DNA from a convicted felon named Charles Boney — would eventually expose the truth [citation:4][citation:9]. Boney, who had a history of attacking women and stealing their shoes, was linked by palm print to Kim's vehicle. He claimed Camm hired him to supply an "untraceable" gun, then blamed the ex-trooper for the killings [citation:3][citation:7]. Based on real police reports, court transcripts, and DNA evidence, this is a deep dive into a case of tunnel vision, prosecutorial misconduct, and a man who lost everything — including his freedom — before justice finally prevailed [citation:9]. Turn down the lights, put on your headphones, and press play — because the system failed before it finally got it right.
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    1 h et 2 min
  • The Case of Susan Smith
    Apr 4 2026
    She cried on national television. She begged for her children's safe return. And for nine days, America believed her.

    In this episode, I bring you the disturbing true crime story of Susan Smith, a South Carolina mother who murdered her two young sons — three-year-old Michael and 14-month-old Alexander — by strapping them into their car seats and rolling her car into John D. Long Lake [citation:1][citation:5]. She then claimed a Black carjacker had stolen her vehicle with her children inside, sparking a massive manhunt and exploiting a racist trope that led to innocent men being pulled over by police [citation:8][citation:2]. Her motive? A wealthy lover named Tom Findlay had ended their affair because he did not want children. Prosecutors argued Smith saw her boys as obstacles to a new life [citation:1][citation:2]. A police re-creation showed her car floated for six agonizing minutes — more than enough time to save her sons — before finally sinking [citation:1][citation:8]. The jury convicted her in just two and a half hours, sparing her the death penalty because they believed life in prison would force her to reflect on her crimes [citation:3][citation:8]. But former prosecutor Tommy Pope says, "Susan has been focused on Susan for 30 years, not Michael and Alex" [citation:7]. In November 2024, after serving three decades, Smith was denied parole. Her ex-husband David Smith told the board: "Thirty years is just not enough. That's only 15 years per child" [citation:2][citation:8]. Turn down the lights, put on your headphones, and press play — because some masks never come off.
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    36 min
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