Tell Me The Crime

Episode 18: Diane Downs - The Mother Who Blamed a Stranger

24 min · 20 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Episode 18: Diane Downs - The Mother Who Blamed a Stranger

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2599742/fan_mail/new] In 1983, Diane Downs drove to an Oregon hospital with her three children shot in the car. She said a stranger had attacked them on a rural road. But her story quickly started to fall apart. This week, we cover the Diane Downs case: the strange hospital arrival, her relationship with Robert “Nick” Knickerbocker, the children she may have seen as obstacles, and the daughter who survived long enough to tell the truth. Content warning: This episode discusses violence against children, child death, and parental violence. Support the show [https://buy.stripe.com/fZuaEQ5F0cx5cqefeVfMA00]

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19 episodios

Portada del episodio Episode 19: The Grief Book and the Poisoned Cocktail - The case of Kouri Richins

Episode 19: The Grief Book and the Poisoned Cocktail - The case of Kouri Richins

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2599742/fan_mail/new] Today's episode is one of the strangest and most unsettling cases we've covered so far: a woman who wrote a children's grief book after her husband's death, then was later convicted of murdering him. Febriana tells John the case of Kouri Richins, a Utah mother and real estate investor whose husband, Eric Richins, died from a lethal dose of fentanyl in 2022. At first, Kouri publicly presented herself as a grieving widow trying to help her children process the loss of their father. But investigators uncovered a very different story involving financial pressure, life insurance, forged documents, a prior poisoning attempt, and a marriage where Eric had reportedly feared his wife was trying to kill him. In this episode, John hears the case for the first time as we talk through public grief, image management, financial desperation, and the disturbing question at the center of the case: what kind of person turns a death they caused into part of their public identity? Content warning: murder, poisoning, fentanyl, family trauma, grief, and children affected by parental death. Support the show [https://buy.stripe.com/fZuaEQ5F0cx5cqefeVfMA00]

26 de jun de 202628 min
Portada del episodio Episode 17: The Lie That Led to a Family Murder - The Jennifer Pan Case

Episode 17: The Lie That Led to a Family Murder - The Jennifer Pan Case

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2599742/fan_mail/new] A mother is killed inside her own home. A father is shot and left for dead. Their daughter is upstairs, tied up, calling 911. At first, it looks like a home invasion. But then the father wakes up, and the story starts falling apart. In this episode of Tell Me The Crime, we cover the Jennifer Pan case: the fake grades, fake university, fake work, hidden relationship, staged home invasion, and years of lies that led to one of Canada’s most disturbing family murder cases. Was this about freedom, money, Daniel, shame, control, or the fear of finally being caught? Listener discretion is advised. This episode discusses murder, family violence, and coercion. Support the show [https://buy.stripe.com/fZuaEQ5F0cx5cqefeVfMA00]

13 de jun de 202627 min
Portada del episodio Episode 16: The Man Who Pretended To Be a Doctor - The Jean-Claude Romand Case

Episode 16: The Man Who Pretended To Be a Doctor - The Jean-Claude Romand Case

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2599742/fan_mail/new] In this episode of Tell Me The Crime, we examine the disturbing case of Jean-Claude Romand, the French man who spent nearly eighteen years pretending to be a doctor and researcher connected to the World Health Organization. His wife believed him. His children believed him. His parents, friends, and even people who trusted him with money believed him. But there was no real medical career, no WHO job, and no normal workday. When Romand left home “for work,” he often spent his days in cafes, libraries, parking lots, service stations, and airport hotels, waiting until it was time to come home and continue the lie. When that false life finally started to collapse, Romand did not confess. He killed his wife, his two children, his parents, and tried to kill another woman who had trusted him. This episode looks at identity, shame, family annihilation, deception, status, and the psychology of a person who seemed to find exposure more unbearable than destruction. The central question: did Jean-Claude Romand kill because he could not live without the lie, or because he could not live with the people closest to him seeing the truth? Support the show [https://buy.stripe.com/fZuaEQ5F0cx5cqefeVfMA00]

5 de jun de 202627 min