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Real Cases, Fictional Minds

Real Cases, Fictional Minds

De : Hopewell Valley Student Podcasting Network 2026
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Real Cases, Fictional Minds is a student-run Podcast that dives deep into the world of Criminal Minds by exploring the fascinating true crime stories that inspired its episodes. Join podcast host Jaylli Kushi as she breaks down different Criminal Minds storylines, uncovering the real-life cases behind the fiction. From shocking details to criminal profiling insights, Jaylli compares the show's dramatic versions with the actual events. These episodes have been tweaked in their own way to focus more on the criminal profiling aspect of the show, so she will also compare the episodes to see how different they are from the real-life cases. Whether you're a true crime fanatic, a Criminal Minds superfan, or just curious about how the two compare, this podcast will give you a fresh perspective on your favorite episodes and the chilling real stories behind them.Copyright 2026 Hopewell Valley Student Podcasting Network 2026 Art Drames et pièces de théâtre
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  • Pig Farm Killers
    Feb 2 2026

    Hopewell Valley Student Podcasting Network

    Show Name: Real Cases Fictional Minds

    Episode Title: Pig Farm Killers

    You are listening to Real Cases Fictional Minds, the podcast with your host Jaylli Kushi.

    In this episode of Real Cases Fictional Minds Podcast we discuss: Season 4 Episode 25 and 26 titled “To Hell… and Back” and how it's considered one of the most heavily real-life-inspired Criminal Minds stories of Robert Pickton.

    Listener engagement: For my last episode of my podcast, I would like to thank my listeners for coming along for the scary and suspenseful ride of the criminal minds world mixed with the true crime world. If you'd made it this long and enjoyed the show, I'd love your support. Take a moment to subscribe on your favorite podcast platform and leave me a review; it really helps me reach more people like you. Thanks for tuning in, and I hope you enjoy this last and very disturbing episode!

    Segment 1: To Hell… and Back

    The episode begins in Detroit, Michigan, with a man moving quietly through the streets of a homeless area, carrying a gun, searching desperately for his sister. His search leads him to a motel, where he impulsively grabs a random man and holds him hostage, the gun pressed to his neck. They drive toward the Canadian border, tension rising with every mile, until they crash into a toll booth and are finally stopped by border control and Detroit police. Calmly, almost eerily, the man tells the authorities, “You’re going to want to call the police. I’ve killed 10 people in the last month,” pointing them toward photographs of homeless people in the car, claiming he’s responsible for all of them. Back at Quantico, the BAU pieces the case together and identifies the man as William Hightower, a former U.S. Army sergeant who served two tours in Iraq and lost his left leg in a roadside ambush, earning a Purple Heart before being discharged just two months earlier. William has been documenting the missing people, recording their names, taking photos, and noting dates, all from Detroit’s Cass Corridor, an area notorious for drugs, prostitution, and homelessness. Agents Morgan and Prentiss take to the streets, talking to locals about William and the missing people. Some victims haven’t been seen in days, and while William is a familiar figure in the area, nobody interferes with him because he carries a gun. Meanwhile, Agent Hotch interviews William to understand where the victims went, and the situation quickly becomes tense. William reveals he didn’t actually kill anyone, but he has been tracking people on the streets because he knows many are missing. Hotch asks him about the night he tried to cross the border, and William explains that every night he goes out to do a headcount, not just for protection but out of love, searching for someone specific — his baby sister, Lee. After returning from Iraq, his mother told him she was living on the streets. He once found her and brought her home, but two weeks later, she returned to the streets. William keeps all the information he has gathered about her hidden in a spare tire in his car. The team listens in on a phone call from Lee that night — she is scared, confused, and says a man is taking her somewhere, the fear in her voice making the stakes painfully clear. Meanwhile, the unsub is introduced: an older white man on a pig farm, a seemingly quiet property hiding unimaginable horrors. He keeps victims chained in a barn, using the pigs on the farm to dispose of bodies, a method as shocking as it is methodical. Back at Quantico, the team gains custody of William to help locate potential victims. Garcia uncovers that on five of the nights victims disappeared, Detroit police reported break-ins at medical facilities, with stolen items including anesthesia,...

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    15 min
  • The Hostages of Ariel Castro
    Jan 13 2026

    Hopewell Valley Student Podcasting Network

    Show Name: Real Cases, Fictional Minds

    Episode Title: The Hostages of Ariel Castro

    You are listening to Real Cases, Fictional Minds, the podcast with your host(s) Jaylli Kushi.

    In this episode of Real Cases, Fictional Minds the Podcast, we discuss: Criminal Minds Season 11 Episode 14 titled “Hostage” and how it is based on the real-life Ariel Castro Case.

    Segment 1: Hostage

    The episode starts in a dark basement where two girls are being held captive, and one girl tries to escape while the other begs her to stop because she is scared they will get caught. The episode takes place in Missouri, and we are then shown another kidnapped girl who is pregnant and very sick, showing that these girls have been held for a long time. The unsub comes home and sees a broken window, and the girls apologize and say they tried to stop the escape. The unsub stays calm and tells the healthier girl that they need to leave, and he leaves the pregnant and sick girl behind, saying she would slow them down. The girl who escaped is Gina Bryant, and she flags down a police car and is taken to the hospital. Gina was kidnapped when she was eight years old and is now eighteen. She tells police she was held with another girl named Sheila Woods, who is now fifteen and was kidnapped seven years earlier. Gina describes the unsub as an older white man named Tom. Gina takes the police to the house where she was held, and they discover it belongs to Clara Riggins, a 108-year-old woman whose bank accounts are still active, leading the team to believe she is dead and the unsub has been using her house and money. While flying to Missouri, the team realizes both Gina and Sheila were kidnapped at age eight, just a few blocks from their homes, which suggests the unsub stalked them and learned their routines. Garcia tells the team that none of Clara’s neighbors have seen her in over twenty years, but they remember a man named Tom who drove a blue van, and she begins searching for men named Tom who own blue vans. At the hospital, Reid, JJ, and Hotch talk to Sheila and learn she had a miscarriage and has old whip scars on her back. Gina’s condition is worse, as she is malnourished, dehydrated, covered in cuts and bruises, has broken bones that were never treated, and has the same scars as Sheila. The next scene shows Violet with the unsub, and she trusts him and calls him Daddy. Reid and JJ interview Gina, and she explains that when she was kidnapped, she saw Violet at the park, and Violet was used to tricking her. The unsub pretended to be Violet’s dad and used a puppy to lure Gina into the car. Gina explains that Violet and Sheila were the good ones because they obeyed him and called him Daddy, while she never received special treatment because she always fought back, and he called her Rose. Gina tells Reid and JJ that the unsub sometimes lets them go outside to plant flowers for Clara, which leads Morgan and Rossi to find Clara buried under rose bushes. Morgan and Rossi also search the basement and find children’s drawings, blood, and a torture room filled with tools, and they see that the unsub is very organized, works with wood, and needs total control, leading them to believe Violet was either his first victim or possibly his daughter because of how much he cared for her. Back at the hospital, Sheila’s mother describes the day her daughter was taken as a normal day, just like Gina described, and Gina later helps police create a composite sketch. While in intensive care, Sheila sadly dies. Using the sketch and the blue van, Garcia identifies the unsub as Michael Clark Thompson, a construction company owner. The team learns that his father had multiple violent marriages and a history of abuse, and they believe Michael learned his behavior from him and enjoys power...

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    11 min
  • Teenage Killing Spree
    Jan 5 2026

    Hopewell Valley Student Podcasting Network

    Show Name: Real Cases, Fictional Minds

    Episode Title: Teenage Killing Spree

    You are listening to Real Cases, Fictional Minds, the podcast with your host(s) Jaylli Kushi.

    In this episode of Real Cases, Fictional Minds the Podcast we discuss: Season 6 Episode 13 of Criminal Minds titled “The Thirteenth Step” and how it's based on Charles Starkweather and Caril Ann Fugate who were a duo of teenagers on a killing spree.

    Today, we are going to start with something different. I went to a fellow Criminal Minds fan and asked them a couple of questions about their favorite show. I have Paola here, who has been watching Criminal Minds since it first came out in 2005, and I'm just going to ask her a couple of questions.

    Question: Who is your favorite serial killer in the show? And why?

    Answer: The serial killer with the split personality, where one personality didn't know that the other was killing people.

    Question: What is your opinion on some of the fictional serial killers being based on real-life ones?

    Answer: I think it is really interesting that some killers are based on real-life ones, and I think about all the research the writers have to do in order to make those specific episodes.

    Question: Which one of the agents do you think has the biggest impact on solving the crimes?

    Answer: I would have to go with Agents Reid and Garcia because of the great attributes they bring to the team.

    Segment 1: The Thirteenth Step

    The episode starts in Montana. A couple gets triggered while shopping at a gas station and decides to kill eight people in the store, and when leaving, they blow up the store. The team goes over the case and decides that there was no robbery or motive, and that spree killers often repeat themselves, so it’s bound to happen again soon. When they arrive at the crime scene, they learn that this couple has been killing for a little longer than they realized, and they are now up to fourteen victims. Agents Reid and Prentiss learn that the killers used guns and a crowbar to kill their victims. Meanwhile, Agents Morgan and Hotch are at the crime scene and they find rice all over the ground but no rice bags in the gas station, and this leads them to believe that they were just freshly married because throwing rice is a tradition to do after you get married, and this leads them to conclude that this killing spree is a part of their honeymoon. Agent Garcia finds thirty-one couples who have records and are freshly married, and she also finds out that they have been killed in gas stations before and took most of their anger out on the store clerk. The scene switches to the unsubs but the girl is alone in the car while her husband sits in an AA meeting to talk about his alcoholism, and while in the meeting the husband gets triggered by questions being asked in the group and he decides to kill everyone there, and while the wife is out in the car a man approaches her and triggers her enough to kill him, and after she kills him she joins her husband in the meeting and finishes killing everyone, and the couple flees into the night after another killing spree. The team arrives at the crime scene and guesses that the unsubs met at an AA meeting, and they think that they are really struggling with sobriety, and they are on their final steps, which are seven, eight, and nine, which are acknowledging your shortcomings, accepting responsibility, and making amends, but these unsubs are taking all these steps too literally. The scene switches to the unsub and the wife is trying to convince her husband that they need to go through with the next steps, and the watchers learn that the husband has trauma from his father and might be the reason because of all this, so the wife is implying that they go...

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    14 min
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