A Dark City

The Glasgow Green Murders

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jakson The Glasgow Green Murders kansikuva

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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?

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jakson The Glasgow Green Murders kansikuva

The Glasgow Green Murders

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?

Eilen17 min
jakson The Oil Drum Execution kansikuva

The Oil Drum Execution

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2261482/fan_mail/new] A pub car park should be the last place a peace-maker dies, yet that’s exactly where Thomas “Tam” Cameron is gunned down in Bishopbriggs after trying to settle a debt that isn’t even his. We walk you through the Glasgow gangland backdrop of the mid-2000s, when heroin money and squeezed supply lines turn neighbourhoods like Possil Park and Milton into contested ground and make “collectors” more feared than the people they work for. At the centre are Billy Bates and Derek “Daco” Ferguson, two independent enforcers running a protection racket disguised as a loans firm. A young debtor panics, Tam steps in with a brown envelope, and what should have been a quiet agreement curdles into accusation and violence. We reconstruct the moments outside the Auchinairn Tavern, the close-range shotgun blast, and the immediate scramble that follows: witness descriptions, a torched Vauxhall Astra, burner phones and the chilling message that suggests someone is trying to stop Bates from talking. Then the River Clyde gives up its secret a month later, when an oil drum surfaces with Bates bound inside. From there the story turns into a long-form manhunt, with Ferguson allegedly moving through Europe under false papers and later intelligence pointing to Spain’s Costa del Sol and links to larger organised crime circles. We also explore how modern investigations lean on encrypted chat breakthroughs like EncroChat, updated EFIT images, and renewed Police Scotland appeals backed by a £10,000 reward. The most haunting takeaway is how a single debt can echo for years, even crossing bloodlines. If you care about Glasgow true crime that focuses on evidence, motives and the human cost, press play, then subscribe, share the episode, and leave us a review so more listeners can find the case. What do you think finally breaks a fugitive’s silence?

8. kesä 202618 min
jakson Reece Trainer kansikuva

Reece Trainer

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2261482/fan_mail/new] A white van screeches into a Milton street as the sun drops over Glasgow. Kids are still outside. Seconds later, a shotgun is raised and John McGregor is shot dead. That brutal moment in 2021 is the centre of this story, but the roots run much deeper and far darker than one night’s violence. We follow the chain back to 2010 and the daylight execution of Kevin “Gerbil” Carroll, a feared Daniel-linked enforcer whose death never fully settled, even after a conviction. A later police corruption scandal reveals that surveillance intelligence about Carroll’s movements was leaked from inside the system, and although official reviews find no wider orchestration, the betrayal leaves a stain that gangland Glasgow does not forget. Against that backdrop, Reese Traynor grows up carrying a family name, a childhood trauma, and whispers that never quite fade. From there, we track how the Daniel Lyons feud keeps renewing itself, how “intimidation” becomes murder once weapons are in play, and how a driver’s decision can carry life-changing consequences. We also take you through the investigation, the flight abroad, and the High Court proceedings in Stirling that bring sentences but not peace, as violence continues to echo across Scotland and into Spain. If you care about Scottish true crime, organised crime in Glasgow, and how corruption and family loyalty shape outcomes, listen now. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with your take on the hardest question here: can anyone truly break free?

1. kesä 202623 min
jakson Paige Doherty kansikuva

Paige Doherty

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2261482/fan_mail/new] A Saturday morning routine should not end in a national tragedy, yet that is exactly what happens in Clydebank when 15-year-old Paige Doherty sets off for work and never arrives. We walk through who Paige is beyond the headlines: a small, energetic teenager with a sharp sense of humour, a close bond with her mum, and a clear dream of building a future in beauty and hairdressing. That normality is what makes the silence that morning so frightening, and why her disappearance is treated as urgent from the start.  From the first missing hours to the discovery off Great Western Road, we follow the investigation step by step, focusing on how Scottish police use timeline checks, witness accounts, and CCTV to narrow the search. The story turns on Delicious Deli, the last place Paige is clearly seen, and on the growing contradictions around what happened inside. We dig into the missing footage, the shutter coming down, the odd movements captured on camera, and the forensic evidence that transforms suspicion into proof.  We also look at what comes after the court case: the impact on Paige’s family, the strength and mourning of the Clydebank community, and how remembrance becomes action through Page’s Promise and calls for better support for victims’ families, including limits on post-mortem waiting times. If you care about Glasgow true crime, forensic evidence, and the real human cost behind a case, listen through to the end. Subscribe, share with someone who follows Scottish crime stories, and leave us a review with the detail you think people should remember most.

25. touko 202631 min
jakson Kenny Reilly kansikuva

Kenny Reilly

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2261482/fan_mail/new] A red light in Maryhill. A silver BMW waiting in traffic. A masked man steps out of a black Ford S-Max and fires six shots before disappearing into side streets. That’s the opening moment we can’t shake, because it shows how quickly everyday life in Glasgow can collide with a feud that has been building for years. We walk through who Kenny Riley was, why a £100,000 drug debt is never just about money, and how postcode loyalty in Possilpark and Maryhill turns into something lethal. From the rumoured personal slight that inflamed tensions to the brutal assault on Ryan McAteer that made payback feel “necessary”, the motive keeps tightening like a knot. Along the way we map the crew police say built the operation, the logistics behind the untraceable car, and the role encrypted messaging plays when planning moves from the street to WhatsApp and EncroChat. Then we follow the investigation: CCTV, phone data, prison intercepts, and the forensic detail that cuts through the attempted cover-up, including DNA recovered from a vehicle meant to vanish in flames. The High Court trial in Edinburgh delivers long minimum sentences, but we end with the harder question of what remains when a legal chapter closes and the conditions that feed violence still exist. If A Dark City helps you see Glasgow’s gangland crime more clearly, subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review. What part of this case best explains why these feuds keep escalating?

18. touko 202617 min