True Crime Vanished

The Perfect Crime That Failed Because of a Stone in the Acid

22 min · 19. juni 2026
episode The Perfect Crime That Failed Because of a Stone in the Acid cover

Beskrivelse

Man Confesses to Dissolving Body in Acid, Certain No Court Can Convict Without a Body: The Murder of Olive Durand-Deacon February 1949, London. A sixty-nine-year-old widow vanishes after leaving her hotel with a businessman offering to help develop her business idea. What police discovered in the warehouse would expose a calculated system of murder-one that had worked flawlessly five times before. A pathologist's examination of two hundred kilos of greasy soil revealed what sulfuric acid could not destroy, unraveling a killer's fatal miscalculation. In this episode, we explore how John George Haigh built a method that eliminated bodies but left behind systematic evidence: forged documents, jewelry sales witnessed by dealers, bloodstains on warehouse walls, and the meticulous planning of a con artist turned serial killer. How did a pathologist named Keith Simpson identify a victim from fragments the acid was supposed to obliterate, and why did Haigh's confidence in the absence of a corpse become his undoing? Victim: Olive Durand-Deacon Date: February 18, 1949 Location: South Kensington, London / Crawley, East Sussex, England Status: Solved - A killer voluntarily accompanied the victim's friend to report her disappearance to Scotland Yard the very next day - Haigh confessed without pressure, believing sulfuric acid had made conviction impossible without a body - Pathologist Keith Simpson discovered a gallstone the size of a cherry, preserved by protective fat tissue the acid could not penetrate - Olive's dental prosthesis and bone fragments allowed definitive identification, collapsing Haigh's entire defense strategy Olive Durand-Deacon, John George Haigh, London serial killer, sulfuric acid murder, 1949, forensic science, criminal minds, pathology, unsolved vanished, true crime English To listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com. © 2026 OBOMEDIA. All rights reserved. This episode and its content (audio, text, and related materials) are the exclusive property of OBOMEDIA and are protected by applicable copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or commercial use, in whole or in part, without prior written permission from OBOMEDIA is prohibited. For permissions, licensing, and business inquiries: business@obomedia.com [business@obomedia.com]. If you'd like to listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, we invite you to try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com. © 2026 Created with OBOMEDIA technology. All rights reserved. This episode and its content (audio, text, and associated materials) are the property of their respective creator and are distributed under the OBOMEDIA name on platforms such as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and Pocket Casts. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or total or partial commercial use is prohibited without prior written authorization. For permissions, licenses, and commercial inquiries: business@obomedia.com

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226 episoder

episode Clan Puccio: the family that turned kidnapping into a criminal enterprise within their own home cover

Clan Puccio: the family that turned kidnapping into a criminal enterprise within their own home

The nanny who wanted to steal her identity: The murder of Rachel Barber An anonymous call offered easy money. Rachel Barber, a 16-year-old dancer, accepted without telling her mother. Hours later, she disappeared. What the family discovered in her killer's notebook revealed a documented obsession: Caroline Reed not only wanted to kill her, she wanted to become her. In this episode, we explore how a trusted nanny spent years gathering personal data, how the police took 48 crucial hours to act, and how a phone cord and a notebook with Rachel's complete biography exposed an identity theft plan that almost worked. How does someone who was part of the family turn into a killer? Victim: Rachel Barber Date: March 1, 1999 Location: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia Status: Sentenced to 20 years; parole January 2015 - Caroline obtained Rachel's number by calling twice with fake money offers: modeling and "psychological study." - In her home, there were photographs of Rachel, family data lists, and a notebook where she described the victim as "pure and perfect" while depreciating herself. - The body was transported in military bags and buried on a family farm; the phone cord was still around her neck when it was found. - In prison, Caroline lost 30 kilos, dyed her hair blonde, and straightened it to physically resemble Rachel, continuing the identity theft plan even behind bars. Rachel Barber, Melbourne 1999, murder, identity, impersonation, obsession, criminal minds, forensic, premeditated crime, investigation, homicide, true crime Spanish If you'd like to listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, we invite you to try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com. © 2026 Created with OBOMEDIA technology. All rights reserved. This episode and its content (audio, text, and associated materials) are the property of their respective creator and are distributed under the OBOMEDIA name on platforms such as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and Pocket Casts. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or total or partial commercial use is prohibited without prior written authorization. For permissions, licenses, and commercial inquiries: business@obomedia.com

19. juni 202618 min
episode The Perfect Crime That Failed Because of a Stone in the Acid cover

The Perfect Crime That Failed Because of a Stone in the Acid

Man Confesses to Dissolving Body in Acid, Certain No Court Can Convict Without a Body: The Murder of Olive Durand-Deacon February 1949, London. A sixty-nine-year-old widow vanishes after leaving her hotel with a businessman offering to help develop her business idea. What police discovered in the warehouse would expose a calculated system of murder-one that had worked flawlessly five times before. A pathologist's examination of two hundred kilos of greasy soil revealed what sulfuric acid could not destroy, unraveling a killer's fatal miscalculation. In this episode, we explore how John George Haigh built a method that eliminated bodies but left behind systematic evidence: forged documents, jewelry sales witnessed by dealers, bloodstains on warehouse walls, and the meticulous planning of a con artist turned serial killer. How did a pathologist named Keith Simpson identify a victim from fragments the acid was supposed to obliterate, and why did Haigh's confidence in the absence of a corpse become his undoing? Victim: Olive Durand-Deacon Date: February 18, 1949 Location: South Kensington, London / Crawley, East Sussex, England Status: Solved - A killer voluntarily accompanied the victim's friend to report her disappearance to Scotland Yard the very next day - Haigh confessed without pressure, believing sulfuric acid had made conviction impossible without a body - Pathologist Keith Simpson discovered a gallstone the size of a cherry, preserved by protective fat tissue the acid could not penetrate - Olive's dental prosthesis and bone fragments allowed definitive identification, collapsing Haigh's entire defense strategy Olive Durand-Deacon, John George Haigh, London serial killer, sulfuric acid murder, 1949, forensic science, criminal minds, pathology, unsolved vanished, true crime English To listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com. © 2026 OBOMEDIA. All rights reserved. This episode and its content (audio, text, and related materials) are the exclusive property of OBOMEDIA and are protected by applicable copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or commercial use, in whole or in part, without prior written permission from OBOMEDIA is prohibited. For permissions, licensing, and business inquiries: business@obomedia.com [business@obomedia.com]. If you'd like to listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, we invite you to try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com. © 2026 Created with OBOMEDIA technology. All rights reserved. This episode and its content (audio, text, and associated materials) are the property of their respective creator and are distributed under the OBOMEDIA name on platforms such as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and Pocket Casts. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or total or partial commercial use is prohibited without prior written authorization. For permissions, licenses, and commercial inquiries: business@obomedia.com

19. juni 202622 min
episode Rachel Barber: the nanny who planned a crime for years against a family that trusted her cover

Rachel Barber: the nanny who planned a crime for years against a family that trusted her

Marilyn's last post: 30 stabs and a secret: The femicide of Marilyn Martínez in San Borja, Lima. On January 16, 2023, a scream pierced an apartment in San Borja. Marilyn, an influencer with 600K followers who smiled on TikTok, was packing to escape when her husband arrived. An impossible detail: her last post from the day before carried a message of female autonomy. In this episode, we explore the contradictions between the happy couple image on social media and the documented cycle of violence since 2013, the partially empty closet that evidenced her intention to leave, and the jealousy declared by Alexander Pinedo Barrón as the motive for 30 stabs to the head and arms. How was a woman on the radar of millions murdered without anyone seeing the outcome coming? Victim: Marilyn Martínez Date: January 16, 2023 Location: San Borja, Lima, Peru Status: Aggravated femicide; preventive detention since January 23, 2023 - Alexander admitted that comments from men on social media were the declared trigger for his attack. - The couple's son witnessed the crime from another room and locked himself in out of fear of his father. - Marilyn made her first report at 18 years old for serious assault, which she withdrew after manipulation by Alexander. - Alexander requested a reconstruction of the event at the scene and carried it out with complete coldness, asking to be recorded. Marilyn Martínez, San Borja Lima femicide 2023, coercive control, domestic violence, influencer, criminal minds, serial murder, forensic investigation, justice, Spanish true crime If you want to listen to this podcast without ads and have access to premium episodes, we invite you to try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com. © 2026 OBOMEDIA. All rights reserved. This episode and its content (audio, text, and associated materials) are the exclusive property of OBOMEDIA and are protected by applicable copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or commercial use, in whole or in part, is prohibited without prior written authorization from OBOMEDIA. For permissions, licenses, and business inquiries, write to: business@obomedia.com [business@obomedia.com]. If you'd like to listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, we invite you to try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com. © 2026 Created with OBOMEDIA technology. All rights reserved. This episode and its content (audio, text, and associated materials) are the property of their respective creator and are distributed under the OBOMEDIA name on platforms such as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and Pocket Casts. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or total or partial commercial use is prohibited without prior written authorization. For permissions, licenses, and commercial inquiries: business@obomedia.com

I går23 min
episode The Patternless Killer Who Became Invisible in Moscow cover

The Patternless Killer Who Became Invisible in Moscow

Killer Changes Weapons Every Crime While Police Search Five Separate Cases: The Serial Murders of Sergey Reakovsky In June 1988, a screwdriver murder in Balashikha opens a file. Two weeks later, another stabbing victim dies in the hospital. The two cases sit in separate desks, handled by different units, connected by nothing but geography. This episode traces five years of institutional fragmentation across twenty-four homicides. We examine the fingerprint of exceptional dimensions left at multiple scenes, the glove that pointed to an unusually large hand, the DNA evidence that finally linked two murders-and why none of these pieces met on the same table until two survivors described the same extraordinary physical profile. Victim: Anatoly Bilkin, Claudia Koclova, Vasili Zaitsev, Irina Shumakova, Tatiana Norquina, Nikolay Belkin, Oleg Volkov, Margarita Tusikova, Irina Furmanov, Boris Osipov, Olga Suiko, and seventeen others Location: Balashikha and Moscow outskirts, Soviet Union Date: June 1988 - April 1993 Status: Convicted, 1995 trial - A fingerprint of exceptional dimensions appeared on a ski pole in January 1989, found again on eyeglasses four years later, yet never cross-referenced until the arrest. - Police investigated Anatoly Bilkin's screwdriver murder and Claudia Koclova's fourteen stab wounds separately despite occurring fifteen days apart in the same district. - A semen sample from Irina Shumakova's 1990 decapitation remained in a laboratory with no suspect to match it against for three years. - Boris Osipov's body showed mutilations that occurred twenty-four hours after death, revealing the killer returned to the scene-a planned behavior masked as isolated crimes. Sergey Reakovsky, Balashikha Moscow homicide serial killer 1988-1993, unsolved mysteries, forensic science, true detective, criminal minds, investigation, serial killers, true crime English To listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com. © 2026 OBOMEDIA. All rights reserved. This episode and its content (audio, text, and related materials) are the exclusive property of OBOMEDIA and are protected by applicable copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or commercial use, in whole or in part, without prior written permission from OBOMEDIA is prohibited. For permissions, licensing, and business inquiries: business@obomedia.com [business@obomedia.com]. If you'd like to listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, we invite you to try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com. © 2026 Created with OBOMEDIA technology. All rights reserved. This episode and its content (audio, text, and associated materials) are the property of their respective creator and are distributed under the OBOMEDIA name on platforms such as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and Pocket Casts. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or total or partial commercial use is prohibited without prior written authorization. For permissions, licenses, and commercial inquiries: business@obomedia.com

I går22 min
episode Ted Bundy: The Perfect Predator Who Deceived Everyone cover

Ted Bundy: The Perfect Predator Who Deceived Everyone

Man Jumps from Eight-Meter Window as Courtroom Realizes Who He Really Is: The Serial Murders of Ted Bundy A law student in a three-piece suit sits calmly in a Florida courtroom, taking notes on legal motions. Hours earlier, forensic evidence linked him to the bodies of at least thirty women across five states. The question that haunted investigators for years was not whether he killed-it was how someone so articulate, so intelligent, so utterly charming had operated in plain sight. In this episode, we trace the complete architecture of Ted Bundy's deception: the carefully constructed public identity, the calculated exploitation of interstate police failures, the systematic selection of victims, and the moment when forensic science finally caught what charisma could not hide. From his first documented attack in 1974 to his final escape across state lines, we examine how a man with an IQ of 136 weaponized intelligence itself-and why the system took so long to see what was in front of it. Victim: Margaret Bowman, Lisa Levy, Kimberly Leach, and 27+ others Date: January 1974 - February 1978 Location: Washington, Utah, Colorado, Florida Status: Executed 1989 - At age eight, Ted Bundy had documented access to domination pornography; no one understood why - A girl named Ann Marie Burr vanished from blocks away in 1961; the case was never solved and Bundy denied it until death - He was interviewed by police after the Lake Sammamish disappearances and dismissed because he was too articulate and educated to be a killer - Forensic dentistry proved bite marks on a victim's skin matched his teeth with such precision that no jury could ignore it Ted Bundy, serial killers, forensic dentistry, homicide investigation, Florida State University, Chi Omega murders, 1970s true crime, criminal psychology, unsolved disappearances, charismatic predator, televised trial, true crime English To listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com. © 2026 OBOMEDIA. All rights reserved. This episode and its content (audio, text, and related materials) are the exclusive property of OBOMEDIA and are protected by applicable copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or commercial use, in whole or in part, without prior written permission from OBOMEDIA is prohibited. For permissions, licensing, and business inquiries: business@obomedia.com [business@obomedia.com]. If you'd like to listen to this podcast ad-free and access premium episodes, we invite you to try our subscription with a 14-day free trial at obomedia.com. © 2026 Created with OBOMEDIA technology. All rights reserved. This episode and its content (audio, text, and associated materials) are the property of their respective creator and are distributed under the OBOMEDIA name on platforms such as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and Pocket Casts. Reproduction, distribution, editing, or total or partial commercial use is prohibited without prior written authorization. For permissions, licenses, and commercial inquiries: business@obomedia.com

17. juni 202625 min