A Dark City
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2261482/fan_mail/new] A city can look familiar in daylight and still keep secrets in its parks after dark. We head to Glasgow Green in the late 1950s, where a short run of attacks leaves three men dead and one young survivor with wounds that never quite fit a simple explanation. The killings feel linked by more than geography: lone nights out, last sightings with unidentified men, and the same kind of sharp double-bladed weapon. Even when police search, question, and comb the ground, the trail keeps collapsing into silence. We walk through the cases of John “Ginger” Orr and Richard Gibson step by step, using the witness descriptions that do exist: a shabby gabardine coat, an evening suit, a chip shop departure, a body found by morning commuters. Then the story tightens around January 1960, when James McMahon is stabbed and survives, while Arthur Still dies and becomes the oldest undetected murder still carried on Police Scotland’s files. It is a sobering look at what a cold case really is: not just a lack of answers, but a lack of surviving detail. We also tackle the tempting headline theory. Ian Brady, later notorious for the Moors murders, claims extra killings in letters and interviews, but his shifting story raises the question of whether he is confessing or performing. Finally, we ask why the Glasgow Green murders stop at all, exploring how post-war Glasgow, slum clearances, migration, work opportunities abroad, and the possibility of dormancy can end violence without any arrest. If you care about unsolved murders, Scottish true crime, and Glasgow’s hidden history, follow the show, share the episode with someone who loves a mystery, and leave us a review. What explanation fits these cases best for you?
31 episoder
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