Unmasking D.B. Cooper
The search for the world’s most elusive skyjacker.
The search for the world’s most elusive skyjacker.
Geoffrey Gray New York Oct 2007 20min Permalink
The lonesome death of Arnold Rothstein, notorious gambler, inspiration for the character Meyer Wolfsheim in The Great Gatsby, alleged fixer of the 1910 World Series, opiate importation pioneer, mobster.
Nick Tosches Vanity Fair May 2005 40min Permalink
A Montana sheriff and a manhunt in the mountains.
Richard Ben Cramer Esquire Oct 1985 35min Permalink
The real-time intersection of race, crime, reality, and entertainment.
Sarah Shun-lien Bynum New Yorker Apr 2016 25min Permalink
A murder involving one of the India’s celebrity couples has mesmerized the country and exposed some of its darkest fears.
Sonia Faleiro The California Sunday Magazine Mar 2016 20min Permalink
A taxidermist's life gradually spins out of control.
Andrew F. Sullivan Little Fiction Mar 2016 15min Permalink
“It is a story that seems almost impossible to believe: a group of female convicts, few of whom had ever played a musical instrument or taken voice lessons, forming a country and western band and becoming, at least in Texas, the Dixie Chicks of their day.”
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly May 2003 35min Permalink
How two love-struck, type A high schoolers almost got away with murder.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Dec 1996 40min Permalink
Decades after the body of beauty queen Irene Garza was pulled from an irrigation canal, there is still only one suspect: John Feit, the priest who heard her final confession.
Pamela Colloff Texas Monthly Apr 2005 30min Permalink
When cops kill civilians, their union is on hand to defend them. In many cases this has come at the expense of the truth.
Yana Kunichoff, Sam Stecklow Chicago Reader Feb 2016 25min Permalink
Years after the era of the “superpredator,” Taurus Buchanan is still paying for a crime of his youth.
Corey G. Johnson, Ken Armstrong Mother Jones Jan 2016 20min Permalink
Sandy Jenkins was a shy, daydreaming accountant at the Texas headquarters of Collin Street Bakery, the world’s most famous fruitcake company. He was tired of feeling invisible, so he started stealing — and got a little carried away.
Katy Vine Texas Monthly Dec 2015 30min Permalink
How PCC, once an inmate soccer team and now Brazil’s most notorious prison gang, coordinated seven days of riots throughout São Paulo using mobile phones.
William Langewiesche Vanity Fair Apr 2007 40min Permalink
He was an 18 year old Marine bound for Iraq. She was a high school senior in West Virginia. They grew intimate over IM. His dad also started contacting her. No one was who they claimed to be and it led to a murder.
Nadya Labi Wired Aug 2007 15min Permalink
An essay on “how we ignore the long-term effects of violence on children, adults and our communities.”
Alex Kotlowitz Frontline Feb 2012 10min Permalink
The police told Lara McLeod to report her rape. Then they arrested her for lying.
Katie J.M. Baker Buzzfeed Sep 2015 25min Permalink
No one knew how Suzanne Jovin ended up in a wealthy neighborhood away from Yale’s campus in New Haven, or why she was brutally stabbed on the sidewalk, apparently by someone she knew. The only suspect that police named was her thesis advisor.
Suzanna Andrews Vanity Fair Aug 1999 35min Permalink
The story of a small town just outside Pittsburgh that has suffered through a half-century of economic decline, racial tension, and endless crime. Despite that trajectory, or perhaps because of it, Aliquippa has also produced an astounding number of NFL players.
S.L. Price Sports Illustrated Jan 2011 35min Permalink
An investigation into serial killings in a small North Carolina city.
Robert Draper GQ Jun 2010 20min Permalink
Telephone poles began to appear around the same time that white Americans started lynching black Americans.
On the 1934 lynching of Claude Neal, and the Florida town that kept the identity of those responsible a secret.
Ben Montgomery The St. Petersburg Times Oct 2011 25min Permalink
The strange case of Kip Litton, road race fraud.
Mark Singer New Yorker Aug 2012 40min Permalink
Baby Girl and Perry, two small town partners in crime; from Hunter's forthcoming debut novel.
"The Estates was a ritzy-ass neighborhood with a gate at the front and open sidewalks on either side. Perry and Baby Girl had hit the neighborhood before, strolled right in. Those sidewalks were an in- vitation: Come on in, and steal some stuff while you’re at it. Perry had started to think if rich people weren’t afraid of their stuff being taken, they wouldn’t feel so rich."
Lindsay Hunter The Fanzine Oct 2014 Permalink
A mini epic of murder, theft, and nature in the Old West.
"He trotted down the steep slope and across the range, passing monuments of salt cedar and sagebrush and croppings of bouldered limestone and sandstone. Everett marched on, glancing back to the pass like clockwork. His vision began to blur and he mistook shadows of dashing clouds overhead as armies of villains bent on doing him harm. He crept on as his headache worsened and soon he forgot his sentried errand. He kept low to the ground and stopped himself twice from collapsing completely, bracing himself on passing man-made edifices of rock and earth. His limp had worsened and he stumbled upon wreckage of some wrecked wagonette and used a long timber from the wagon-bed as a crutch until it snapped in half ten minutes later. The sun was hot and without his hat or coat he felt the full effects of it on the nape of his neck."
Robert James Russell Bull: Men's Fiction Oct 2014 40min Permalink
A young boy anticipates his own kidnapping.
"One day in school, they passed out flyers for parents at the end of the day and Mom told him that a boy from another school had been taken. A poor school, where even when you were young you walked home alone because your parents had to work all the time. A man came up to the boy and promised him treats, candy and a Happy Meal from McDonald’s but instead he brought him to an empty parking garage in Stuyvesant Town and there security cameras had lost sight of them, the boy’s hand still pressed into the man’s, his book bag carelessly unzipped halfway."
Royal Young Vol. 1 Brooklyn Jul 2014 Permalink