Hillbilly Crime Investigates

Can You Live Without Electricity?

1 min · 19 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Can You Live Without Electricity?

Descripción

Public Comments meeting in Hazard Kentucky during a rate increase request by Kentucky Power. These meetings are not required and the Public Service Commission, by law cannot deny a rate increase request if the company can show it is an operating need. They already fixed it from the inside I am learning. Who do you think runs these companies? People they have hired as President and COO's of AEP and Kentucky Power came straight out of the Supreme Court legal community. Knowledge is power.

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54 episodios

Portada del episodio Was She Going To Leave?

Was She Going To Leave?

This video from Hillbilly Crime examines the tragic fire that occurred on January 19, 2023, in Lebanon Junction, Kentucky, which resulted in the deaths of Eryn Toogood, her daughter Haisley Heath, Raegan Maraman, and the unborn baby, Holten (7:23 - 11:27). Key themes and concerns raised in the video include: * Questioning the official narrative: The host challenges the classification of the event as merely an "accident" or "tragedy," emphasizing that officials failed to perform a thorough investigation (5:53 - 6:05, 11:32 - 12:43). * Allegations of domestic violence: The host highlights evidence, including text messages, suggesting Eryn Toogood was living in a dangerous situation and attempting to leave prior to the fire (8:02 - 8:14, 15:12 - 16:20, 31:45 - 32:55). * Procedural and investigative concerns: The video discusses issues with the handling of the fire scene, the lack of smoke detectors, and inconsistencies in the statements provided by Billy Maraman, the resident who survived the fire (12:45 - 13:20, 26:19 - 29:55). * Advocacy for victims: The host highlights the struggle of Raegan Maraman’s mother, who has been seeking accountability and answers despite being met with resistance from authorities (9:37 - 10:36, 57:25 - 58:45). The core question posed by the show is: "How would they know?" The host argues that without a comprehensive investigation that considers the history of domestic violence and inconsistencies in witness accounts, authorities cannot definitively rule out foul play (3:36 - 4:10, 11:45 - 12:43).

Ayer1 h 17 min
Portada del episodio A Legal System That Protects Its Own

A Legal System That Protects Its Own

In this episode of Hillbilly Crime, we break down the complex intersection of power, money, and local corruption by examining the Alex Murdaugh case through the lens of our own community dynamics in Letcher County. Key Discussion Points: * The Financial Web: We trace how Alex Murdaugh utilized his status as a high-profile attorney to misappropriate settlement funds from vulnerable clients, grieving families, and victims of accidents (9:33 - 12:56). * The Power of the "Dynasty" Mask: We explore how generations of family influence in the legal system created a culture of silence where peers looked away from suspicious behavior, gambling, and a party lifestyle (18:02 - 20:13). * The Turning Point: A deep dive into the 2019 boat crash involving Paul Murdaugh, which served as the crucial pressure point that began to unravel the family’s financial empire and exposed their desperate attempts to control the narrative (20:56 - 25:15). * Justice and Misconduct: We analyze the first murder trial, the controversial role of former Clerk Becky Hill, and the implications of the South Carolina Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the conviction due to jury tampering (34:14 - 44:30). * Bringing it Home: We ask the hard questions about our own backyard: When people inside the system stop questioning one another, who is left to protect the truth? We discuss how the "courthouse crowd" mentality can leave regular people susceptible to the same corruption seen in national headlines (45:05 - 50:54). This episode serves as a warning label for what happens when the machinery of justice becomes a tool for the powerful to hide their tracks.

2 de jul de 202656 min
Portada del episodio Mountain Money Train: Amler Millions

Mountain Money Train: Amler Millions

Tonight’s Hillbilly Crime episode digs into the Mountain Money Train — the flow of AMLER grant dollars across Eastern Kentucky and the long shadow they cast over our communities. We break down how these grants are awarded, who benefits, and why so many families feel left behind while the same hands keep catching the money. I walk through the history of AMLER funding, the promises made to coal counties, and the reality we’re living with today. We look at the projects that moved forward, the ones that stalled out, and the questions nobody in power seems eager to answer. If you’re trying to understand where the money went, who controlled it, and how these decisions shape our region’s future, this episode lays it out plain. Appalachian truth, Appalachian voice, Appalachian receipts.

28 de jun de 20261 h 31 min