Crime Scene: True crime stories and investigations

Jordan Fenster

True crime stories investigated one at a time. Crime Scene takes in-depth looks at murders, both solved and unsolved, and the process of investigating, litigating and living life after those crimes.

  • 7 minutes 45 seconds
    'Shots fired:' Listen as cops respond to toddler's death
    Scanner traffic on the day of two-year-old Gabriella's death reveals how police responded to the initial call, finding the toddler unresponsive and dealing with threats against their lives. Listen in on the latest Crime Scene podcast, with host and reporter Jordan Fenster.
    8 May 2018, 9:00 am
  • 14 minutes 56 seconds
    5 top criminal justice misconceptions
    Movies and television shows have been lying to us about criminal justice. Historical criminologist Fritz Umbach details the five top criminal justice misconceptions. From drugs to court to jail, there's a lot we think we know, that we actually don't. Listen to the latest Crime Scene podcast, written, hosted and edited by Jordan Fenster, to learn more.
    19 April 2018, 10:00 am
  • 15 minutes 25 seconds
    The mass murder and animal cruelty connection
    The connection between animal cruelty and murder is now a commonly accepted fact. The FBI began tracking animal cruelty cases in 2016, but that might never had happened if not for one tiny dog, a shih tzu named Polo, and his devoted, doting owner.
    28 February 2018, 4:56 pm
  • 13 minutes 30 seconds
    Paying the price of police work
    What is the cost of a life spent in law enforcement? Not the salary and benefits, but the physical and mental toll being a cop takes on members of the force. That question is harder to answer than you might think. suicide and PTSD rates are difficult if not impossible to track, but one academic has spent decades looking at the relationships between police work, PTSD and the health of officers. This is the latest Crime Scene podcast.
    31 January 2018, 7:56 pm
  • 22 minutes 29 seconds
    Brothers in trauma: Police officers and PTSD
    Three cops, all friends, and all survivors of devastating injuries. But it's not the physical pain but the emotional challenges they have to overcome. On this episode of Crime Scene we talk to three former police officers, all of whom have dealt with on-the-job injury and life after the force.
    3 January 2018, 7:32 pm
  • 10 minutes
    The case of the cannibal school teacher
    In 1979, Albert Fentress abducted, abused, mutilated, murdered and then ate parts of an 18-year-old boy. But before he did all that he wrote a movie script. In the latest episode of Crime Scene, we look at how fantasy becomes murder, through the lens of a cannibal middle school teacher.
    1 November 2017, 6:46 pm
  • 4 minutes 20 seconds
    UPDATE: Female serial killers
    A quick update on last week's episode - I asked developmental psychologist Sasha Reid to talk a bit about why there are so few female serial killers, at least when compared to the number of men. She gives us her professional opinion.
    18 October 2017, 2:43 pm
  • 17 minutes
    Recipe for a serial killer
    Could you create a serial killer? Or, perhaps more importantly, could you "fix" a potential serial killer before he becomes the monster? In this episode of Crime Scene, Sasha Reid, an etiologist examining the details of serial killers' lives, attempts to share the recipe for a serial killer, the bits and pieces that go into making the monsters we fear the most.
    4 October 2017, 6:13 pm
  • 3 minutes 15 seconds
    UPDATE: How to get a confession
    In this short update, we hear how former NYPD homicide detective Jim Davis got Sunset Bay Jr. to confess to the rape and murder of Roberta Fort. If you'd like to read the transcript, sign up for the Crime Scene newsletter at lohud.us/crimescene or head over to lohud.com and search for the word "transcript."
    20 September 2017, 1:13 pm
  • 17 minutes 15 seconds
    The rape and murder of Roberta Fort
    In 1975, the body of Roberta Fort was found in a pool of blood. Follow along with the original lead detective on the case as he walks through the investigatory process. These were the days before DNA. Seven years later, the killer went to trial. This is Crime Scene, the award-winning true crime podcast.
    6 September 2017, 5:47 pm
  • 6 minutes 43 seconds
    BONUS: Race, racism and serial murder
    We want to believe that all murders are created equal. We'd like to think that, in 2017, the response to one tragedy will be the same as the response to another, regardless of race, creed or economic status. But the truth, according to Dr. Delores Jones-Brown at least, is that our society values some victims more than others, and treats perpetrators differently. Here is a rare mid-month update to the last episode of Crime Scene, in which we look a bit at the sociology behind serial murder, at least as it applies to race.
    16 August 2017, 4:15 pm
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