True Crime Coldblood

The killer who marched asking for his victim

23 min · 23 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The killer who marched asking for his victim

Descripción

The killer who marched demanding his victim: The femicide of Cristina Shecabisa Molina A man wanted by Interpol attended public marches demanding the return of his missing wife the same week that, according to forensic evidence, he had murdered her in their home. Blood stains under ultraviolet light, the vehicle's GPS, and the testimony of a domestic worker converged towards an uncomfortable truth: a femicide committed within a luxury condominium, covered up by networks of power within the Guatemalan judicial system. In this episode, we explore the contradictions that define this mystery: how a GPS recorded movements towards concealment areas while Roberto Barreda promoted the hypothesis of organized crime; how the intervention of a former Minister of Justice and former Supreme Court judge - his own mother - blocked investigative advances; and why, thirteen years later, Cristina's body remains unfound despite massive exhumations in six departments. Victim: Cristina Shecabisa Molina Date: July 6, 2011 Location: San José Pinula, Guatemala Status: Body not located; perpetrator died without conviction - Roberto participated in a demonstration of over 500 people on July 24 demanding the return of his wife, ten days before fleeing with his children to Mexico. - Petrona, the domestic worker, was threatened after witnessing the crime and later protected as a key witness with a consistent account to that of Roberto's eldest son. - The GPS of Roberto's vehicle guided active searches in El Progreso and San Vicente Pacaya between 2021 and 2024, areas coinciding with body concealment hypotheses. - Ofelia de León, former Minister of Justice and mother of the accused, was arrested for obstruction of justice and threats to witnesses, obtaining a plea deal after her son's death. Cristina Shecabisa Molina, San José Pinula femicide 2011, Guatemala, investigation, forensic, impunity, criminal minds, cover-up, homicide, delayed 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].

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73 episodios

episode The Smiling Grandmother: Twelve Deaths for Love artwork

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The Cheerful Grandmother: Twelve Deaths for Love: The Case of Nannie Doss A fifty-year-old woman arrives for questioning with her romance magazine under her arm, looking for lonely hearts ads for her next husband. What the detectives discover is that for twenty years, Nannie Doss has poisoned twelve people with a weapon she never changed: rat poison mixed into their food. The question that no one can answer is how a smiling grandmother managed to outsmart forensic medicine in every death. In this episode, we explore the contradictions that define the most prolific serial killer of the 1950s: experts declare her fully legally sane in 1955, but two years later a judge declares her insane; she insists she was seeking perfect love, but systematically collected life insurance after each victim; she confessed to killing her mother and sister, but never explained why she poisoned her own infant grandchildren. Post-arrest exhumations confirmed arsenic in two daughters, four husbands, two sisters, her mother, and two grandchildren, validating a total of twelve homicides that forensic medicine had certified as "natural deaths." Victim: Nannie Doss and her twelve murders Date: 1921-1954 (crimes); arrest October 1954 Location: Alabama, Oklahoma Status: Sentenced to death; sentence commuted due to insanity; dies in prison from leukemia, 1965 - Samuel Doss died with enough arsenic in his body to kill five men, triggering the autopsy that led to the arrest. - Nannie collected $500 in insurance one month after her grandson Robert Lee died of "asphyxia," and another identical $500 after the death of Frank Haroldson. - The judge who commuted her sentence publicly admitted he did not want to set a precedent by executing a woman, contradicting the psychiatric diagnoses of sanity from 1955. - Before her arrest, Nannie mailed a poisoned food package to a farmer in North Carolina who was expecting a romantic encounter, evidence that she was planning her next victim. Nannie Doss, Blue Mountain Alabama, multiple murder, 1950s, serial killer, arsenic, forensic investigation, homicide, unsolved mystery, true crime Spanish If you want to listen to this podcast ad-free 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 permission from OBOMEDIA. For permissions, licenses, and business inquiries, write to: business@obomedia.com [business@obomedia.com].

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Sheila's Suitcase: Police Who Covered Up the Killer: The Feminicide of Sheila Condor A mother identified the suspect by name and address, went to three different police stations with evidence from Facebook, and the police refused to act. Four days later, Elsa found the remains of her daughter Sheila in a suitcase under the bed of apartment 307. How did an active sub-officer, with previous reports of sexual abuse since 2023, manage to commit a feminicide within police facilities while his own colleagues covered for him? In this episode, we explore the documented predatory pattern of Darwin Condory, the three consecutive refusals from police stations that protected him, and the death under contradictory circumstances that occurred just two days after he was identified. Subsequent video shows Darwin entering the police station on the same day the report was made, while agents who denied knowing him are exposed. The criminal investigation opened in January 2025 suggests systematic police cover-up, a missing weapon, and a letter found next to the body whose contents remain classified. Victim: Sheila Condor Date: November 13, 2024 Location: Comas, Lima, Peru (Las Praderas condominium, apartment 307) Status: Open criminal investigation, Judicial Power intervening - Rigor mortis was already present when police arrived at the La Perla hotel, confirming 8-10 hours of death prior to the official report. - Darwin's weapon was never located at the scene where he was found dead, contradicting the version of self-harm. - Video from January 2025 shows Darwin entering the Santa Luzmila police station on November 15, the same day Elsa made the report that agents denied having received. - Reports of sexual abuse and drugs documented in January 2023 and March 2024 remained archived while Darwin continued in active duty. Sheila Condor, feminicide Comas, November 2024, murder, police sub-officer, institutional cover-up, sexual abuse, investigation, unsolved mystery, forensic, police corruption, true crime Spanish 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].

29 de may de 202621 min
episode The call that no one stopped: the murder of Alessandra artwork

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The call that no one stopped: the murder of Alessandra Matusi Estefanía heard her sister's screams over the phone, the blows, the name Giovanni repeated over and over, and then silence. The police already knew who he was. Alessandra had reported him weeks earlier. No restraining order was issued, no one stopped what was to come. This is the account of how the system looked the other way while a man meticulously planned the murder of the woman who rejected him. In this episode, we explore the weeks leading up to the crime: the internet searches revealing intent to kill, the handwritten letter where Giovanni admits his plan, the list of materials found in his possession, and the catastrophic gap between the formal report and institutional inaction. How was it possible for a woman to identify her future killer by name and the State did not react? Victim: Alessandra Matusi Date: August 23, 2022 Location: Bologna, Italy Status: Life imprisonment, February 12, 2024 - Giovanni planned the murder for seven weeks, documenting each step in internet searches on how to kill his partner. - The list of materials (hammer, bat, ropes, handcuffs, tape) was prepared three days before the attack. - Alessandra formally reported Giovanni for harassment on August 1; he murdered her twenty-two days later without any legal restriction. - At the crime scene, Giovanni was found lucid, cold, reviewing Alessandra's phone to show conversations that "justified" his attack. Alessandra Matusi, Bologna, premeditated murder, 2022, femicide, investigation, premeditation, harassment, institutional negligence, criminal justice, documented crime, true crime Spanish If you want to listen to this podcast ad-free 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].

28 de may de 202620 min
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The gold tooth that broke forty years of silence: The disappearance of Michelle Wallace A gold tooth attached to a bleached skull on a slope three thousand meters high. A geologist who stepped aside to urinate discovered in August 1992 the only trace of a woman who had disappeared eighteen years earlier. The question that no one dared to ask: how did a homeless drifter manage to murder women for decades and remain free? In this episode, we explore the institutional cracks that allowed Roy Allen Melanson to operate with impunity. His car contained Michelle's license plate, her camera, her backpack, her ID, yet he was only charged with theft. We will examine how inmate testimonies, forensic analysis from Necrosearch, and a trial where the killer refused to appear finally closed a case that the police had buried in 1974. Victim: Michelle Wallace Date: August 30, 1974 Location: Grand County, Colorado Status: Homicide - Life sentence (1993) - Roy Allen Melanson had Michelle Wallace's original license plate in his car when he was arrested in September 1974, but he was only charged with theft. - Michelle's mother, Margaret Wallace, committed suicide between 1974 and 1975 with barbiturates, leaving a note asking to be buried next to her missing daughter. - Chuck Matthews was a witness to the last sighting: he saw Michelle leave the Colombian Bar alone with Roy in a car that was supposedly broken down. - A cellmate of Roy, John Paul Steel, testified that Melanson confessed to him about hiding a body in the Colorado mountains, corroborating the forensic reconstruction. Michelle Wallace, Grand County Colorado 1974, murder, disappearance, forensic investigation, unsolved mystery, Necrosearch, DNA analysis, detective, delayed justice, true crime Spanish If you want to listen to this podcast ad-free and gain 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 permission from OBOMEDIA. For permissions, licenses, and business inquiries, write to: business@obomedia.com [business@obomedia.com].

27 de may de 202625 min
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Paula enters healthy and leaves dead in prison: The homicide of Paula Josette Arizona A 23-year-old woman, with no cardiac history, walks into Cerezo 2 in Sonora on January 14, 2024, and leaves lifeless hours later. The cameras are not working, her body arrives at the hospital without clothes or belongings, and the first forensic examination is conducted by an unaccredited doctor. Heart attack or covered-up crime? In this episode, we explore the contradictions that disprove the official version: body washed before the examination, petechiae consistent with asphyxia, bruises from struggle in the second autopsy, and a clonazepam detected without a specified dosage. Inoperable surveillance cameras, deleted messages, missing belongings, and seven defendants at liberty. A year later, the prosecutor's office maintains its version of a heart attack while the State Human Rights Commission classifies the events as extrajudicial execution. Victim: Paula Josette Arizona Date: January 14, 2024 Location: Cerezo 2 Prison, Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico Status: Open case - seven defendants at liberty; prosecutor's office resists changing the charges - Entered without valid identification or legal proof of connection to an inmate, violating the National Criminal Execution Law. - First autopsy conducted by an unaccredited doctor; body was washed before the examination, destroying evidence. - Second autopsy (2025) reveals multiple petechiae and perimortem injuries inconsistent with myocardial infarction. - Missing belongings (clothes, cell phone, wallet) were never recovered; messages and accounts of Alexis Romero deleted. Paula Josette Arizona, Hermosillo Sonora, January 2024, forensic, contradictory autopsy, prison, inoperable cameras, extrajudicial execution, asphyxia, justice, mystery, Spanish true crime If you want to listen to this podcast without ads and gain 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 permission from OBOMEDIA. For permissions, licenses, and business inquiries, write to: business@obomedia.com [business@obomedia.com].

26 de may de 202624 min