Épisodes

  • Fort Worth Trio: 50 Years Missing
    Feb 17 2026

    Send a text

    A car left in the Sears upper lot. Christmas gifts still inside. A letter to “Thomas” that Rachel likely never wrote. Nearly five decades after the Fort Worth Trio vanished from a Texas shopping center, we return to the heart of the mystery and scrutinize the few artifacts that have ever mattered: the Oldsmobile, the layaway jeans, a handful of shaky eyewitness accounts, and a baffling note that arrived almost too fast for 1974 holiday mail.

    We walk step by step through the known timeline—Rachel, Renee, and Julie shopping on December 23rd—then trace the details that undercut the “runaway” narrative. The gifts weren’t opened. The keys were left behind. Promises to be home by two were never casual. From there, we turn to the letter: addressed to “Thomas” instead of “Tommy,” penned with language that family says doesn’t sound like Rachel, bearing a debated postmark and a misspelling awkwardly corrected. Handwriting reviews never bring certainty; modern opinions suggest none of the girls wrote it. So why write it—and why so quickly—unless the goal was to distract, delay, and misdirect?

    We balance two competing frameworks. On one side: the local context of the 1970s and 1980s—multiple unsolved disappearances, confirmed serial predators, open land where evidence disappears, and the grim reality that stranger-on-stranger crimes are hardest to solve. On the other: the intimate signals around Rachel—household tensions, the letter’s personal address, and the question of whether someone close would risk acting when two other girls were with her. Could one person control three victims in daylight, or does this scenario demand at least two offenders—or a trusted face that lowered every guard?

    Along the way, we surface a haunting footnote: a private investigator who later died by suicide and ordered his case files destroyed. Whether that choice reflects despair, fear, or protection, it pulls potential clues out of reach and leaves the car, the purchases, and the letter to carry the investigative weight. If the note is a map, it points to someone close. If it’s a smokescreen, it favors a predator in motion.

    If this case grips you as deeply as it grips us, share the episode with a friend, hit follow, and leave a review with your theory—does the letter expose the culprit, or hide them in plain sight?

    www.texaswineandtruecrime.com

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    54 min
  • Art Fraud, Digital Breadcrumbs, And The Murder Of Ana Walshe
    Jan 12 2026

    Send us a text

    A forged Warhol can fool a buyer, but it can’t outrun metadata. We open the year with a case where art fraud, marital strain, and a chilling digital footprint converge: the murder of Ana Walshe and the conviction of her husband, Brian. What began with forged “Shadows” and private checks morphed into a slow-burn crisis—federal charges, stalled accountability, and a family split between Massachusetts and Washington, D.C. Anna built a new life and a new home, hoping legal closure would reunite her with her children. Instead, a New Year’s dinner became the last time friends saw her alive.

    We chart the full arc of the Warhol scheme: the borrowed originals, the convincing reproductions, the eBay listings under Ana’s name, and the LA gallery deal that unraveled when frames came off and stamps were missing. Then the focus shifts to January 2023—store receipts, hydrogen peroxide, a mask on camera, and a cascade of searches on household devices about decomposition, trash routes, and CCTV retention. There was no body to recover, but the tools seized carried her DNA, and the surveillance trail showed where the evidence went. Friends and a boyfriend added context: a woman pleading for accountability, longing for her kids, and trying to chart a path forward.

    The defense offered a story of sudden death and panic; the jury took six hours to return a first-degree murder verdict. We lay out why: motive grounded in control, money, and exposure; method captured by timestamps and purchase histories; and a portrait of a man whose fraud spilled from galleries into a marriage. It’s a rare no-body case that underscores how search history, receipts, and cameras can replace the physical evidence we expect. Listen for a clear, human look at the choices that led here, the investigation that tied them together, and the hard questions left behind for Ana’s family.

    If this resonated, share the episode with a friend, follow the show, and leave a review—your support helps more listeners find thoughtful, evidence-driven true crime stories.

    www.texaswineandtruecrime.com

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    40 min
  • Twenty Wounds And A Locked Door: The Ellen Greenberg Case Revisited
    Nov 15 2025

    Send us a text

    A young teacher, a locked apartment, and twenty wounds that refuse to settle into a single story. We dive into the Ellen Greenberg case with a clear-eyed look at the timeline, the 911 call that primed the response, and how a scene labeled too soon can close doors that should have stayed open. We talk through the concierge logs, the missing hallway footage, and the mechanics of a latch that became the centerpiece of a suicide narrative.

    From there, we pull apart the evidence that sparked years of debate: shallow punctures versus a single fatal stab to the heart, bruises in different stages of healing, and medications that complicate judgment but don’t resolve pattern or force. We explore why some see hesitancy marks while others see overreach, and how toxicology, body mechanics, and wound placement can support more than one conclusion. The most telling conflict may be institutional—a medical examiner’s homicide ruling set against law enforcement’s suicide determination—exposing the cost of early certainty and the weight of a mishandled scene.

    Along the way, we consider the texts about job stress, the dynamics of a new engagement under pressure, and the optics of removing electronics after cleanup. None of it is definitive; all of it matters. What emerges is less a tidy answer than a hard lesson: when investigators let first words guide the work, families lose faith and truth gets buried under procedure. Listen for the timeline, stay for the evidence, and decide where you land on the locked-room puzzle. If this episode moved you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review with the one detail that most shaped your view.

    www.texaswineandtruecrime.com

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    1 h et 6 min
  • How A Family Became Jewel Thieves And What It Cost Them
    Oct 28 2025

    Send us a text

    A diamond thief with a conscience, a father who thrived on beating the system, and a brother who asked the hardest questions—Bryan Sobolewski takes us inside a five-year run of New England jewelry heists and the aftermath that reshaped his life. The story starts with a “favor” to recover stolen money and spirals into armed robberies, fake storefronts, and a tight 90-second rule. Bryan breaks down how mom-and-pop stores relied on traveling salesmen carrying entire catalogs, why insurance policies demanded they be armed, and how that escalated risk on both sides. He explains the choreography behind Burlington’s most complex setup, and why control—not speed—was their true advantage when they could create the right conditions.

    We go deep on recruitment, including the surprising role of a hockey mom, and the mechanics of moving stolen goods without touching pawn shops. Bryan reveals how they pre-sold, hosted private “gold parties,” and even unwittingly sold to a local police department. It’s a masterclass in criminal logistics and a candid look at the paranoia that follows: the weeks-long adrenaline, the constant rearview mirror checks, and the searing anxiety that becomes your new normal. When a perfect composite sketch of his father hit the papers, the cracks widened. Arrests rolled in across states, an insider flipped, and the crew took plea deals—twelve years for his father, eight for his brother, and nearly three for Bryan.

    What comes next is raw and human. Bryan’s builds a new life with education, personal training, and speaking to students and recovery groups about choices and consequences. He confronts family loyalty, addiction, and the grief of losing both his father and brother in 2022, a case ruled a double suicide with lingering uncertainty. Along the way, he calls out the stubborn stigma of a criminal record and the urgent need for second-chance hiring. This is true crime with uncommon clarity—ethics, logistics, trauma, and the long road to redemption.

    If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review. Your support helps more people find stories that change how we think about crime, choice, and second chances.

    www.texaswineandtruecrime.com

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    55 min
  • When Wealth Turns Deadly: The Cullen and Priscilla Davis Story-Part Two
    Oct 6 2025

    Send us a text

    A six-million-dollar mansion, a bitter divorce, and a midnight shooting that left a 12-year-old dead—then a not guilty verdict that stunned Texas. We retrace the aftermath of the Cullen and Priscilla Davis case and examine how venue changes, narrative warfare, and community loyalty can bend the arc of justice. From Racehorse Haynes’s masterclass in defense strategy to a courtroom culture that felt more like a fan convention, we unpack how a jury heard two eyewitnesses, zero physical evidence, and a thousand rumors—and still walked a wealthy defendant out the front door.

    The story doesn’t end there. When the divorce court kept ruling against him, a murder-for-hire scheme targeted the judge and Priscilla. An ally flipped to the FBI, staged macabre photos with ketchup “blood,” and recorded the payoff in a diner parking lot. On tape, with cash in hand, the case seemed unloseable—until the defense floated a wild counter: he was “helping” the FBI. Despite the Bureau’s denial, another jury acquitted. We explore why that argument resonated, what it reveals about juror psychology, and how hometown prestige, oil money, and media frenzy intertwined to shape both trials.

    Along the way, we reflect on the victims who too often vanish in the glare: Andrea, a young girl whose death became a footnote, and Stan Farr, remembered mostly for how the case treated his family afterward. We follow the mansion’s strange second lives, the fall of Ken Davis Industries, and the uneasy legacy of a case that still feels modern in all the worst ways. If you care about true crime beyond headlines—jury dynamics, defense tactics, and the real cost to families—you’ll find this chapter of Texas history impossible to forget.

    If this deep dive resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves Texas true crime, and leave a quick review—your support helps more curious listeners find us.

    www.texaswineandtruecrime.com

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    39 min
  • When Wealth Turns Deadly: The Cullen and Priscilla Davis Story-Part One
    Sep 25 2025

    Send us a text

    From the sprawling elite neighborhoods of Fort Worth comes a true crime story so outrageous it seems pulled from a Texas-sized soap opera. The Cullen Davis case represents everything larger-than-life about Texas wealth – oil money, mansions, jealousy, and ultimately, murder.

    When platinum blonde Priscilla met oil heir Cullen Davis at an exclusive country club in 1968, both were married to other people. Their attraction quickly developed into a relationship that embodied 1970s excess. Cullen, from one of the wealthiest families in Texas, constructed a $6 million mansion (worth $43 million today) featuring technology decades ahead of its time – security keypads, video monitoring systems, and luxury amenities that made it the most enviable address in Fort Worth.

    The couple's relationship was as extravagant as their home – silver fox bedspreads, private jets, European shopping sprees, and wild parties that attracted the elite while shocking more conservative Texas society. But beneath the glossy exterior lurked darkness. Cullen, a man unaccustomed to hearing "no," demonstrated disturbing violence, once punching Priscilla's teenage daughter during an argument and killing her kitten in a fit of rage.

    When their divorce proceedings began in 1974, the judge shocked everyone by awarding Priscilla temporary residence in the mansion Cullen had built. This decision set in motion events that would culminate in a night of horror. On August 2, 1976, hours after a judge increased Priscilla's spousal support, she and her boyfriend Stan Farr returned home to find a figure in a black wig who opened fire. Stan was killed, Priscilla was wounded, her daughter Andrea was executed, and another man was paralyzed.

    Two witnesses identified the shooter as Cullen Davis, setting the stage for what would become one of the most sensational murder trials in American history, with the wealthiest man ever charged with murder fighting for his freedom against compelling evidence and eyewitness testimony.

    Join us as we unravel this twisted tale of Texas high society gone terribly wrong – a story that continues to captivate true crime enthusiasts nearly five decades later and reminds us that sometimes the most dangerous predators are those hiding in plain sight behind wealth and privilege.

    www.texaswineandtruecrime.com

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    32 min
  • Murder Without Reason: The Sasha Krause Tragedy
    Sep 12 2025

    Send us a text

    A young woman's devotion to faith leads her to a Mennonite community in Farmington, New Mexico, where she thrives writing church music and working for a religious publication. Her peaceful life comes to an abrupt end one January evening when she disappears while retrieving materials from her church. What unfolds next reveals the dark intersection of technology, hatred, and random violence.

    Sasha Krause was known for her beautiful writing, linguistic talents, and dedication to her faith. Originally from Texas, she had found purpose working at the Lamp and Light publication in the Mennonite community. When her roommates realized she hadn't returned home one night, they found her car still at the church but her purse at home—only her cell phone was missing. The tight-knit religious community immediately mobilized to find her, but their search would end in heartbreak.

    The discovery of Sasha's body in an Arizona national park a month later created more questions than answers. Why would anyone target a member of a pacifist religious community? How did she end up hundreds of miles from where she disappeared? With no obvious suspects, investigators made an extraordinary decision to subpoena cell phone data from all networks, searching for any device that had traveled the same path as Sasha's phone.

    This digital breadcrumb trail led them to Mark Gooch, an Air Force airman with a disturbing secret—he harbored an inexplicable hatred toward Mennonites despite being raised in the faith himself. Text messages revealed he had been "surveilling" communities before driving seven hours to commit his crime. The randomness of his selection of Sasha as a victim makes this case all the more chilling—she was simply in the wrong place when his hatred found its target.

    Through forensic evidence, digital detective work, and the killer's own mistakes, justice was eventually served with a life sentence. Yet nothing can erase the tragedy of a brilliant, kind woman whose life was cut short by senseless hatred. Join us as we examine how modern technology both facilitated a heinous crime and ultimately brought its perpetrator to justice.

    www.texaswineandtruecrime.com

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    45 min
  • Twenty Years of Questions: The Jennifer Kesse Mystery
    Aug 20 2025

    Send us a text

    When 24-year-old Jennifer Kesse failed to show up for work on January 24, 2006, her colleagues knew something was terribly wrong. The finance graduate had just bought her first condo in a gated Orlando community – chosen specifically because Jennifer was exceptionally safety-conscious. What happened between 10 PM the night before and 8 AM that morning has remained one of Florida's most baffling mysteries for nearly two decades.

    The clues left behind paint a perplexing picture. A damp towel in the bathroom. Clothes laid out for work. Two cell phones with SIM cards mysteriously removed. And most crucially, her car found abandoned at a nearby apartment complex with security footage capturing a grainy image of someone parking it and walking away. An eyewitness reported seeing her car leaving her condo complex "driving erratically, as if two people were fighting over the steering wheel."

    Jennifer's disappearance occurred while her condo complex was under construction, with numerous undocumented workers on site who reportedly "scattered like flies" once police began investigating. She had previously mentioned to her parents that some workers made her uncomfortable with their staring and occasional cat-calling – complaints other women in the complex had also made. Was this relevant to her disappearance, or merely a coincidence?

    Hope for resolution has recently emerged with Florida law enforcement announcing they have "several persons of interest" and are testing DNA evidence that may finally provide answers. After twenty years, could modern forensic technology finally reveal what happened to Jennifer Kesse that January morning? Join us as we examine the evidence, explore the theories, and discuss why this case continues to haunt investigators two decades later.

    Magic Mind
    🌟🌟 Transform Your Life in Just 30 Days! 🌟🌟
    Are you ready to experience unparalleled focus, energy, and productivity magic mind has to offer?
    Chris, we undeniably love this stuff! After using Magic Mind for 30 days, I can confidently say it’s a
    game-changer! Here’s what I achieved:
    ✨ Enhanced Focus: Say goodbye to distractions and hello to laser-sharp concentration. I tackled
    my tasks with ease and efficiency.
    ⚡ Boosted Energy: No more afternoon slumps! I felt energized and motivated throughout the day,
    ready to take on any challenge.
    🧠🧠 Improved Cognitive Function: My memory and problem-solving skills reached new heights. I felt
    sharper and more creative than ever before.
    🌿🌿 Natural Ingredients: Magic Mind’s blend of nootropics, adaptogens, and natural ingredients
    worked wonders without any jitters or crashes.
    Don’t just take my word for it – try Magic Mind for yourself and unlock your true potential!
    Order now and start your 30-day transformation today!

    http://magicmind.com/texaswine20

    www.texaswineandtruecrime.com

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    45 min