True Crime Central

The Night Nobody Called - Episode 90

36 min · 25 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The Night Nobody Called - Episode 90

Descripción

The Locked Door That Has No Answer: The Death of Hugues de la Plaza A neighbor stepped outside at 8:00 AM and found two pools of blood leading to a door that was locked from the inside. Every bloody shoe print inside the apartment belonged to the victim. No weapon was ever found. Four separate investigations reached four different conclusions — and no one has ever been charged. In this episode, we explore a 2:40 AM timeline window where a neighbor heard a door open three times and a thud strong enough to shake a shared wall, a broken watch found pinned beneath the body that later yielded an unidentified DNA profile from a foreign source, and a Marin County homicide ruling that was withheld from the victim's family for seven months. Was Hugues de la Plaza capable of stabbing himself in the stomach, chest, and neck — then locking his own door and disposing of the weapon — or did someone walk out that front door and leave him to die alone? Case Details Victim: Hugues "Oog" de la Plaza, 36, French-American software professional recently promoted at his company. Date: Death discovered June 2, 2007; estimated time of death approximately 2:40 AM. Location: San Francisco, California, USA. Case Status: The case remains officially unsolved with an undetermined ruling from the San Francisco medical examiner. No arrest has ever been made. A French magistrate investigation concluded homicide in 2009, but jurisdictional limits prevented prosecution. Episode Key Points - Every bloody shoe print tracked across the interior of the apartment matched shoes Hugues was wearing — not a single unidentified print was found inside. - A broken watch found pinned beneath the body yielded an unidentified DNA profile in French lab testing in 2009 — a profile that has never been publicly matched to any known individual. - The Marin County medical examiner independently concluded homicide in February 2009, noting blood splatter on the exterior step wall consistent with a knife being inserted and withdrawn — but that report was withheld from the family for seven months. - Hugues was known by close friends to be extremely squeamish about blood, feeling nauseous even at small amounts — a detail that becomes difficult to reconcile with the suicide theory's required sequence of three self-inflicted stab wounds. Hugues de la Plaza, San Francisco homicide 2007, locked room death California, unsolved murder San Francisco, French-American cold case, true detective, homicide, forensic science, criminal minds, investigation, murder, unsolved mysteries, true crime English.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de True Crime Central!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

96 episodios

Portada del episodio He Cleaned the Room. The City Became the Grave. - Episode 96

He Cleaned the Room. The City Became the Grave. - Episode 96

The Trunk Nobody Thought to Open: The Double Murder of J.B. Hilton Beasley and Tracy Hollett Two seventeen-year-old girls called home from a payphone just after eleven-thirty at night — perfectly fine, asking for directions. By the next morning, their car sat abandoned on a back road with purses, wallets, and cash still inside. Officers stood at that car for hours before anyone thought to pull the trunk lever. The question that still lands hard: what were those officers doing while the girls were already there? In this episode, we explore a DNA profile that sat unmatched in a federal database for nearly twenty years, a paternity court order issued the day before the murders to a man who twice refused to comply, and a genetic genealogy match that finally put a name to the semen found on J.B.'s clothing. How does a double murder in a small Alabama town stay unsolved for twenty-three years when the biological evidence was recovered in the first week? Case Details Victim: J.B. Hilton Beasley, 17, recent high school student; Tracy Hollett, 17, JCPenney retail employee. Date: Night of July 31 into August 1, 1999. Location: Ozark, Dale County, Alabama, USA. Case Status: Coley McCraney was convicted on four counts of capital murder on April 25, 2023, and sentenced to life without parole on June 15, 2023. No appeal has been publicly filed as of the latest available records. Episode Key Points - Officers stood at J.B.'s unlocked car for hours on the morning of August 1 without checking the trunk because the keys were missing — a family friend had to drive from Dothan to ask about the trunk lever. - Both girls were still wet from the waist down when examined at autopsy the following day, more than fourteen hours after the car was found. - The day before the murders, Coley McCraney was court-ordered to submit a DNA sample for a paternity test — he refused, and refused again when ordered a second time months later. - McCraney was never in the CODIS national database, meaning the DNA match only became possible in 2019 through genetic genealogy run on samples from his biological relatives. J.B. Hilton Beasley, Tracy Hollett, Ozark Alabama double homicide, Dale County murder 1999, genetic genealogy cold case, true crime, homicide, forensic science, investigation, cold case Alabama, criminal minds, unsolved mysteries, murder, true crime English.

31 de may de 202635 min
Portada del episodio The Trunk Nobody Thought to Open - Episode 95

The Trunk Nobody Thought to Open - Episode 95

She Called at 10 A.M. — Seven Hours After She Died: The Disappearance of Vivian Cameron A woman was officially declared dead by suicide on the morning of September 23, 1986 — yet a friend received a phone call from her at 10:00 a.m. that same day, corroborated by a second witness and a handwritten diary entry the friend never saw. The bridge she allegedly jumped from showed no disturbance on its salt-film-coated guardrails. If she never jumped, where did Vivian Cameron go? In this episode, we explore the 10 a.m. phone call that two witnesses say happened hours after Vivian was supposed to be dead, a maroon towel carrying her blood type found inside the victim's bathroom, and a black handbag that moved from the Cameron family home to an abandoned car without any explanation. Was this a murder staged to look like a suicide-homicide, or did the investigation simply stop asking the right questions? The forensic science and the witness timeline cannot both be telling the truth. Case Details Victim: Beth Barnard, 23, farmhand and Penguin Parade employee. Missing person: Vivian Cameron, 34, farmer and community center co-founder. Date: September 23, 1986. Location: Phillip Island, Victoria, Australia. Case Status: Officially closed. A 1987 coronial inquest ruled Beth Barnard was killed by Vivian Cameron, and a separate 1988 inquest ruled Vivian died by suicide. No criminal charges have ever been filed. The case has not been reopened. Episode Key Points - The salt-film coating on both sides of the bridge guardrail was completely undisturbed — investigators found zero physical evidence that anyone had climbed or jumped from that structure. - Vivian's blood type was found on a maroon towel inside Beth Barnard's bathroom and on the exterior path by Beth's back door, yet no one at the scene reported seeing Vivian injured that night. - Blood in the spare bedroom — where Fergus Cameron claimed he retreated after being stabbed — tested as Type A, Vivian's blood type, not Fergus's Type O. - A black handbag observed at the Cameron home at 3:00 a.m. by a neighbor was later recovered inside Vivian's abandoned Land Cruiser at a bus stop — with no account of how it moved between locations. Vivian Cameron, Beth Barnard, Phillip Island Victoria homicide, cold case Australia 1986, unsolved mysteries, true detective, forensic science, criminal minds, homicide, investigation, murder, morbid, true crime English.

Ayer33 min
Portada del episodio She Called at 10 A.M. — Seven Hours After She Died - Episode 94

She Called at 10 A.M. — Seven Hours After She Died - Episode 94

The Fifteen Minutes No One Can Explain: The Murder of Fiona Yu A college student walked through her back door at 5:10 PM with mail in her hand. Her roommate arrived ten minutes later. In that window — no forced entry, no sign of panic, no stranger visible on the street — someone who had been watching for days was already inside. The forensic science recovered one thing that does not belong to Fiona: blood from her killer, sitting in evidence for over twenty-five years without a name attached to it. In this episode, we explore a 2017 DNA phenotype snapshot that contradicts the only eyewitness account of a man leaving the apartment, a series of strangulation attacks in the same neighborhood six weeks later that led to convictions — but not a match to Fiona's killer — and a possible linked case ninety miles away whose DNA has never been officially compared. Was this a targeted attack by someone who knew her schedule, or the final escalation of a predator already circling the ASU campus? The evidence points in two directions that have never been reconciled. Case Details Victim: Fiona Yu, college student at Arizona State University, age not publicly confirmed. Date: August 4, 1997. Location: Tempe, Arizona, USA. Case Status: Unsolved. No arrest has ever been made. A DNA phenotype profile was released in 2017, but the case remains open and inactive with no public investigative updates since. Episode Key Points - A bloodstain recovered from Fiona's body belonged to the attacker, not to Fiona — confirmed DNA exists but has never matched any known individual in over twenty-five years. - The only eyewitness placed a six-foot-tall Black man leaving the apartment; the 2017 Parabon Nanolabs DNA phenotype identified the suspect as a Hispanic male — a direct contradiction that has never been publicly resolved. - The attacker's maximum window inside the apartment was fifteen minutes, between the last confirmed sighting of Fiona alive and her roommate's arrival — yet no forced entry was found. - A strangulation attack in Tucson ninety miles away occurred just days before Fiona's murder, producing a suspect sketch and a blood sample — but whether that DNA was ever compared to Fiona's case is unknown. Fiona Yu, Tempe Arizona homicide, ASU campus murder 1997, unsolved cold case Arizona, strangulation homicide, true crime, murder, forensic science, investigation, homicide, criminal minds, unsolved mysteries, crime junkie, true crime English.

29 de may de 202633 min
Portada del episodio The Video That Was Never Sent - Episode 92

The Video That Was Never Sent - Episode 92

Guilty and Innocent at the Same Time: The Murder Case of Nathaniel Young and the Plea That Changed American Law A man stood in a North Carolina courtroom in 1963 and told the judge he was innocent — then pleaded guilty to the crime. That single moment created a legal mechanism used hundreds of times every year in American courts. The same mechanism that failed to save Henry Alford later freed three men who had spent nearly two decades on death row for murders the DNA evidence said they did not commit. In this episode, we explore the night Nathaniel Young was killed by a single shotgun blast in Forsyth County, the words Henry Alford spoke directly to the judge before accepting a deal he said gave him no real choice, and how the West Memphis Three used that same legal framework in 2011 to walk free while remaining convicted killers under the law. How does a plea of guilty mean innocent — and what does that cost the people who make it? Case Details Victim: Nathaniel Young, age unknown, private citizen. Date: November 22, 1963. Location: Forsyth County, North Carolina, USA. Case Status: Henry Alford pleaded guilty to second-degree murder on December 10, 1963, and was sentenced to thirty years. He died in prison in 1975. The United States Supreme Court upheld the plea in a six-to-three ruling, establishing the Alford plea as binding legal precedent still in use today. Episode Key Points - Henry Alford told the judge he was innocent at the moment he entered his guilty plea — and the judge accepted both statements simultaneously. - Ruby, Alford's longtime girlfriend, told police he left home with a shotgun and four shells, returned thirty minutes later, and described how he shot Nathaniel Young at the front door. - A 2007 DNA sweep of every piece of evidence in the West Memphis Three case found zero biological material linking the three convicted men to any of the three victims. - Damien Echols, Jason Baldwin, and Jesse Misskelley stood in court in 2011, proclaimed their innocence, pleaded guilty on paper, and walked out free — while remaining convicted murderers under Arkansas law. Nathaniel Young, Forsyth County North Carolina homicide, West Memphis Three Arkansas, 1963 murder plea, Alford plea Supreme Court, true crime, homicide, investigation, criminal minds, forensic science, murder, unsolved mysteries, true crime English.

27 de may de 202640 min
Portada del episodio Guilty and Innocent at the Same Time - Episode 91

Guilty and Innocent at the Same Time - Episode 91

The Night Nobody Called: The Murder of Catherine "Kitty" Genovese A young woman was stabbed twice on a lit sidewalk in New York City, screamed loud enough to wake her neighbors, and then lay dying in a vestibule for nearly an hour while her attacker sat quietly in his car two blocks away and waited. The first phone call to police came after she was already gone. This homicide investigation would expose not one failure, but three — a killer hiding in plain sight, a police force that looked the wrong direction, and a city with no way to call for help. In this episode, we explore how investigators spent six hours questioning Kitty's partner while a man with scabs on his hands and a matching car drove through the same neighborhood, why a witness who saw the knife blade from his lobby window simply went back to sleep, and how a single front-page story with at least one major factual error changed American infrastructure forever. Was this a failure of community, of policing, or of a system that forced people to dial zero and hope someone answered? The forensic record and the timeline tell a story that is equal parts murder case and institutional reckoning. Case Details Victim: Catherine "Kitty" Genovese, 29, bar manager, Kew Gardens, Queens, New York. Date: March 13, 1964, approximately 3:00 AM. Location: Kew Gardens, Queens, New York City, USA. Case Status: Winston Moseley was convicted of first-degree murder in 1964 and sentenced to death, later commuted to life imprisonment. Moseley died in prison on March 28, 2016, having served over fifty years. The case remains closed but its legacy is actively studied in criminal justice and social psychology curricula worldwide. Episode Key Points - The building's assistant superintendent watched the entire first attack from his lobby — including the knife blade — and returned to sleep, later telling police he did not want to be bothered. - A drunk neighbor named Carl Ross opened his door during the second attack, watched Winston Moseley stabbing Kitty in the vestibule, and called a friend before calling anyone who could help. - Winston Moseley was captured less than one week after the murder — stopped for a television theft — and confessed immediately when investigators noted his car matched witness descriptions and his hands showed fresh scabs. - The New York Times reported thirty-eight witnesses watched and did nothing; a 2016 editor's note acknowledged the article contained multiple factual inaccuracies, and prosecutors at trial cited five or six actual witnesses. Kitty Genovese, Kew Gardens Queens homicide, New York City murder 1964, bystander apathy case, 911 system origin, true crime, murder, homicide, investigation, forensic science, criminal minds, unsolved mysteries, true crime English.

26 de may de 202634 min