Hitler's Doomed Angel
The conspiracy theories surrounding the 1931 death of Hitler’s niece and object of affection.
The conspiracy theories surrounding the 1931 death of Hitler’s niece and object of affection.
Ron Rosenbaum Vanity Fair Apr 1992 55min Permalink
Manson at 79: in poor health and walking with a cane, obsessed with Vincent Bugliosi, willing to talk at length with a reporter for the first time in years, and visited every weekend by a 25-year-old woman he calls Star.
Erik Hedegaard Rolling Stone Nov 2013 40min Permalink
The trial of a 10-year-old who murdered his neo-Nazi father.
Amy Wallace GQ Nov 2013 20min Permalink
How John Snavely went from petty criminal to porn star to prison.
Michael E. Miller Miami New Times Nov 2013 20min Permalink
Separating truth from lore in Haiti: “The dossier was, at bottom, a murder story, the judge said—but it was a murder story with the great oddity that the victim did not die.”
Mischa Berlinski Men's Journal Sep 2009 Permalink
What did soccer have to do with two brutal murders after a pickup game?
Jeré Longman, Taylor Barnes New York Times Oct 2013 20min Permalink
The complicated case of Michelle Kosilek, a murderer fighting for sexual reassignment surgery.
Nathaniel Penn The New Republic Oct 2013 20min Permalink
An examination of the Minutemen movement and death on the border.
Greg Grandin The Nation Oct 2013 20min Permalink
After a beloved teacher is murdered by his schizophrenic son, his colleagues and students pay him the ultimate tribute.
James Ross Gardner Seattle Met Sep 2013 25min Permalink
On the fall of Ross William Ulbricht, the alleged creator of The Silk Road, a hidden black market website where users could buy and sell drugs, guns and, according to the FBI, the services of a hit man.
Nate Anderson, Cyrus Farivar Ars Technica Oct 2013 15min Permalink
How the author, following up on a rumor, helped reignite the dormant investigation into the murder of Martha Moxley, a teenager who had been murdered nearly 25 years before in Greenwich, Connecticut.
Dominick Dunne Vanity Fair Oct 2000 35min Permalink
What a secret audio tape revealed about the murder of mycologist and magic mushroom pioneer Steven Pollock.
Hamilton Morris Harper's Jul 2013 50min Permalink
How a series of lies and an incompetent lawyer led to a Florida woman’s wrongful conviction.
Terrence McCoy New Times Broward-Palm Beach Sep 2013 20min Permalink
A 55-year-old cold case ends with a conviction. But was justice really served?
Playing outside after dinner, best friends Kathy and Maria meet a man calling himself “Johnny.” Kathy runs home to grab mittens; upon her return, her 7-year-old friend and the stranger are nowhere to be found.
The story of Jack McCullough, once known as John Tessier, a man who once lived near Kathy and Maria and has a troubling history of abusing women.
Police zero in on McCullough after a deathbed confession.
Half a century after her friend was abducted, Kathy identifies the man who took Maria.
Jack McCullough is convicted of Maria’s kidnapping and murder, but questions are raised about the evidence (or lack thereof) presented at trial.
Ann O'Neill CNN Aug 2013 20min Permalink
On the hanging of James Murphy, murderer.
Lafcadio Hearn The Cincinnati Commercial Aug 1876 20min Permalink
The house at 114 Lake Avenue in Bristol, CT that kept calling Aaron Hernandez, a NFL star by 20, back to “a volatile underworld of guns, drugs, and violence.”
Bob Hohler Boston Globe Aug 2013 10min Permalink
How a serial killer and his teenage accomplice used listings for “the job of a lifetime” to lure their victims, all down-and-out single men, to the backwoods of Ohio.
Hanna Rosin The Atlantic Aug 2013 40min Permalink
Billy Dillon was about to sign a contract with the Detroit Tigers. Instead he was convicted–wrongly–of first-degree murder and spent the next 27 years in prison.
Brandon Sneed SB Nation Aug 2013 35min Permalink
Unpacking a false confession 20 years later.
Marc Bookman The Atlantic Aug 2013 25min Permalink
Interlocking narratives of relationships and a potential murder.
"Metal ran in an extensive and intricate network in streams across the countryside and densely through the city. Metal channeled the blood, and metal screws held Sarah’s glasses together as she left the parking lot and exited Le Roy onto the freeway. She felt sad to have missed a chance to get involved with a crazed dangerous person like Mike. Had he really committed a murder before she picked him up? She thought about the geese and drove home."
William Gillespie PANK Magazine Jul 2013 Permalink
An older brother’s murder and its aftermath.
Maccabee Montandon Gawker Jul 2013 35min Permalink
After a botched bank robbery in 1990, Sture Bergwall, aka Thomas Quick, confessed to a string of brutal crimes. He admitted to stabbings, stranglings, incest and cannibalism. He was convicted of eight murders in all, and after the final trial he went silent for nearly a decade. But a few years ago, Bergwall came forward again—there was one more secret he had to tell.
Chris Heath GQ Aug 2013 45min Permalink
Jurors from the Emmett Till trial revisit the case 50 years later.
Richard Rubin New York Times Magazine Jul 2005 20min Permalink
The crimes of former NFL star Rae Carruth.
Previously: “The Boy They Couldn’t Kill” (Thomas Lake • Sports Illustrated)
Peter Richmond GQ May 2001 20min Permalink
Encounters with Albert DeSalvo, the self-confessed Boston Strangler.
Sebastian Junger Vanity Fair May 2006 35min Permalink