Disturbing History

The Corpsewood Manor Murders

59 min · 31 mei 2026
aflevering The Corpsewood Manor Murders artwork

Beschrijving

This week we step away from the corridors of presidential power and head into the North Georgia mountains, to a hand-built stone castle on Taylor's Ridge and one of the most misunderstood crimes in the state's history. On December 12, 1982, Dr. Charles Scudder, a brilliant former Loyola University pharmacology professor, and his partner Joseph "Joey" Odom were robbed and shot to death inside Corpsewood Manor, the off-grid medieval-style home they had built brick by brick after leaving Chicago behind. Their killers, 17-year-old Kenneth Avery Brock and 30-year-old Samuel Tony West, had convinced themselves the eccentric couple was hiding a fortune, and that two openly gay men, one of them a documented member of the atheistic Church of Satan, were the kind of victims nobody would mourn. They were wrong about the money, and history has proven them wrong about the men. This episode hits especially close to home, Brian grew up just a few miles away and was only eight years old the winter the murders happened, and who has spent a career learning to tell the difference between rumor and evidence.  We trace the whole arc, from Scudder and Odom's search for a simpler life and the truth about what the Church of Satan actually believed, through the rumors and the Satanic Panic that turned two kind hosts into the county's boogeymen, to the night of the killings, the murder of Navy Lieutenant Kirby Key Phelps during the fugitives' flight through Mississippi, the manhunt, the confessions, and a trial where a defense attorney argued in open court that a murdered man had bewitched his killer with a glowing golden harp. Brock remains incarcerated to this day; West died in prison. Listener discretion is strongly advised, as this episode contains descriptions of violence, murder, and the bigotry of the era. More than a true crime story, this is a study in how a frightened culture decides who deserves to be called a victim, and how easily fear becomes permission. Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation? Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past. Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets. Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

Reacties

0

Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst

Meld je nu aan en word lid van de Disturbing History community!

Probeer gratis

Probeer 14 dagen gratis

€ 9,99 / maand na proefperiode. · Elk moment opzegbaar.

  • Podcasts die je alleen op Podimo hoort
  • 20 uur luisterboeken / maand
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle afleveringen

112 afleveringen

aflevering Walt Disney: The Man Behind The Mouse artwork

Walt Disney: The Man Behind The Mouse

Walt Disney built the most trusted brand in the world, and he built it on top of a story the company has spent eighty years hoping you would never hear. Behind the castle, the cardigan, and the warm Missouri voice was a workplace that tore itself apart, a founder who treated a fair-pay dispute as a foreign conspiracy, and a man whose grudges ended up wired into the machinery of the Red Scare.  This episode strips off the sanitized image and looks at the documented record of Walter Elias Disney as the complicated, contradictory figure he actually was.We start with the 1941 Disney animators' strike, the single most consequential event in the studio's early history and the one you will not find in the official mythology. After the financial wounds of Pinocchio and Fantasia in 1940, Disney workers who earned as little as 12 dollars a week while stars pulled 200 to 300 walked off the job over pay, screen credit, and the right to organize. We trace how Walt fired his greatest animator, Art Babbitt, the creator of Goofy, how a 315-to-4 strike vote put hundreds of his own cartoonists on a picket line at the Burbank gate, and how the founder of the studio nearly came to blows with Babbitt on a public street before the whole thing ended with Walt losing on every point. From there we follow the line that runs from that picket line straight to Washington. We cover Disney's role as a founder of the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American Ideals, his friendly-witness testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee on October 24, 1947, and the names he gave Congress, including animator David Hilberman, whom Walt flagged in part for having no religion. We put union organizer Herbert Sorrell in his real context, the man Walt branded a communist who actually broke with the Communist Party to lead the violent 1945 Hollywood Black Friday riot, and we connect the dots to the Hollywood blacklist, the Waldorf Statement, and the careers it ruined. We then work through the decades of FBI files on Walt Disney, the 1954 designation that made him a Special Agent in Charge Contact, and the long-running fight over what that relationship with J. Edgar Hoover actually was, separating the documented record from the disputed claims in Marc Eliot's biography.  Finally, we take the antisemitism question head-on, weighing the 1938 Leni Riefenstahl visit and the harshest accusations against the rebuttals from biographer Neal Gabler and the people who knew him, and we refuse the easy verdict in either direction. This is not the cartoon-villain Walt and it is not Uncle Walt either. It is the evidence-first account of a genuine artist and a frightened, controlling man who happened to be the same person, and a reminder that the brightest brand on earth was built directly over a fight it never wanted you to see. Listener discretion is advised for discussion of political persecution, labor violence, and historical bigotry. Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation? Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past. Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets. Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

Gisteren1 h 2 min
aflevering Did Lyndon B. Johnson Help Kill JFK? artwork

Did Lyndon B. Johnson Help Kill JFK?

The murder of John F. Kennedy in Dallas on November twenty-second, nineteen sixty-three remains the most contested crime in American history, and at the center of the contest stands the man who became president before Air Force One left Texas soil. This episode of Disturbing History takes on the theory that refuses to die, the claim that Lyndon Baines Johnson helped engineer the assassination of the president he served. It is, by design, a different kind of episode. The show deals in facts, but this is one of those rare cases where documented fact and unproven conspiracy run straight into each other, and rather than pretend otherwise, this episode walks the listener into that collision and lets them see exactly where one ends and the other begins. The story moves through the solid ground first, the timeline of the assassination, the arrest of Lee Harvey Oswald, the silencing of Oswald by Jack Ruby on live television, and the swearing-in of Johnson on the tarmac at Love Field beside a widow still wearing her husband's blood. From there it lays out the two official answers the United States government has given, the Warren Commission's lone-gunman conclusion of nineteen sixty-four and the House Select Committee on Assassinations' finding in nineteen seventy-nine that Kennedy was probably killed as the result of a conspiracy, a conclusion built on acoustic evidence that later collapsed under scientific review. That official contradiction is the soil everything else grows in.Then comes the case against Johnson at full strength. His ruthlessness and ambition. The Bobby Baker and Billie Sol Estes scandals closing in on him in the fall of sixty-three. The reported press scrutiny of his fortune. The Texas oil and defense networks behind his career. And the specific, named accusations that have circulated for decades, the Madeleine Brown account of a gathering at the Murchison mansion the night before the killing, the Billie Sol Estes claims naming Mac Wallace as Johnson's triggerman, and the Barr McClellan fingerprint allegation that briefly aired on the History Channel before independent historians rejected it and the network pulled the episode.  Each claim is given fairly and then tested against the record, and each, examined honestly, fails to make the jump from story to proof, including in the roughly eighty thousand pages of long-secret files released to the public in twenty twenty-five, which revealed a great deal about Cold War covert operations and nothing that implicated Johnson. The episode closes where it must, in the uncomfortable middle. Johnson is the man who gained the most. Johnson is not, on any evidence that has ever held up, the man shown to have done it. Both are true. Drawing on an investigator's hard rule that motive is where a case begins and never where it ends, the host lays the documented facts and the unproven beliefs side by side and hands the verdict to the listener. This is the dark heart of twentieth-century American history, an open wound the country never fully closed, and tonight the ending belongs to you. Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation? Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past. Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets. Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

17 jun 202659 min
aflevering Ulysses S. Grant: The Curse of Loyal Friends artwork

Ulysses S. Grant: The Curse of Loyal Friends

Ulysses S. Grant left the White House without a fortune, never took a bribe, and never sold an office, yet his administration produced more documented corruption than any presidency of the nineteenth century. This episode of Disturbing History continues our series on the dark history of presidential politics by walking straight into the Gilded Age and the Whiskey Ring, the federal liquor-tax fraud that siphoned millions of dollars out of the United States Treasury while a depression squeezed ordinary Americans, and traces how the trail of stolen tax money ran all the way to the desk of Grant's private secretary, General Orville Babcock, in the office adjoining the president's own. We open with the central question that runs through every scandal here. What happens when the honest man in the room is the reason the corruption survives? Drawing on sixteen years of law enforcement experience, your host lays out the pattern that connects Grant to crooked bosses and clean ones alike, the boss who stakes his spotless reputation on a guilty subordinate and makes that subordinate untouchable. Grant kept score on loyalty the way other men kept score on money, a habit forged during his years of failure before the Civil War, his binge drinking and resignation from the Army, the Hardscrabble farm, the firewood sold on St. Louis street corners, and the clerk's job in his brother's Galena leather store. Once a man was inside the wall of Grant's trust, almost nothing could throw him out, and the con men of the era learned to exploit that vulnerability like published exploit code.The episode follows that pattern through the Black Friday gold panic of September eighteen sixty-nine, where Jay Gould and Jim Fisk attempted to corner the New York gold market by buying access to Grant through his own brother-in-law Abel Corbin, and the scheme collapsed only when Grant ordered the Treasury to sell. From there we cover Credit Mobilier, the transcontinental railroad construction-company fraud that dragged Vice President Schuyler Colfax, future president James Garfield, and roughly two dozen members of Congress into the mud, the falling-out among thieves that exposed it, and the censure of Oakes Ames that closed the books while the rest of Washington walked. We set the political stage of the Panic of eighteen seventy-three, the spoils system, and the Salary Grab before turning to the main event. The Whiskey Ring itself gets the full treatment. We explain the seventy-cents-a-gallon liquor tax, the economics of crooked whiskey, and how supervisor John McDonald built a parallel tax system across St. Louis, Milwaukee, Chicago, Cincinnati, and Peoria, with gaugers and storekeepers and collectors all lying in the same direction, campaign money flowing into Grant's eighteen seventy-two reelection effort, and cipher telegram warnings arriving from Washington signed with the alias Sylph. We follow Treasury Secretary Benjamin Bristow and his solicitor Bluford Wilson as they ran a covert investigation against their own department, counting grain in and barrels out at the railyards to build a shadow ledger, and we cover the May tenth, eighteen seventy-five raids, the two hundred thirty indictments, and the hundred and ten convictions. Then we watch Grant's response to the indictment of Babcock, the order banning plea deals, the firing of special prosecutor John Henderson, and the sworn deposition the sitting president gave in defense of his private secretary, the only time in American history a president has been deposed as a witness in a criminal prosecution.The back half surveys the rest of the wreckage. The Belknap affair, where Secretary of War William Belknap raced to resign ninety minutes ahead of his unanimous impeachment over the Fort Sill post-tradership kickbacks, with George Custer's complaints riding off toward the Little Bighorn under Grant's anger. The Interior Department under Columbus Delano, the Navy Department under George Robeson, Attorney General George Williams and the carriage, the New York Custom House and Roscoe Conkling, and the battalion of Grant relatives on the federal payroll. We close with Grant's final message to Congress and its famous line about errors of judgment rather than intent, the Grant and Ward Ponzi collapse that left the general with eighty dollars in his pocket, and the dying race to finish his Personal Memoirs that restored Julia to comfort and secured his place in American letters. We also give Reconstruction its due, the Klan prosecutions and the Fifteenth Amendment, because the man who sent his deposition to defend Babcock and the man who sent the cavalry after the Klan were operating on the same code all the way down. Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation? Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past. Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets. Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

14 jun 20261 h 17 min
aflevering Prohibition: Speakeasy In Chief artwork

Prohibition: Speakeasy In Chief

On New Year's Day 1927, New York City's medical examiner stood in front of reporters and accused the United States government of poisoning its own citizens. He could prove it, because the bodies were stacking up in his morgue. In this episode, we tear down the postcard version of Prohibition, the flappers and the jazz and the secret knock at the speakeasy door, and walk through what the thirteen-year war on alcohol actually cost. A federal denaturing program deliberately laced industrial alcohol with methanol and contributed to an estimated 10,000 American deaths, defended by the most powerful lobbyist in the country on the grounds that the dead had it coming. A spiked patent medicine called Jamaica ginger left tens of thousands of poor men paralyzed for life, and the men responsible were handed suspended sentences. Federal agents shot a mother named Lillian DeKing in her own home over half a gallon of wine. Drawing on sixteen years in law enforcement, I trace the whole arc: the genuinely drunken America of the early 1800s, the hatchet-swinging crusade of Carry Nation, Wayne Wheeler's invention of modern pressure politics, and the anti-German hysteria that pushed the 18th Amendment over the line.  Then the collapse: George Remus draining government whiskey warehouses before gunning down his wife in a Cincinnati park and walking free, Al Capone turning Chicago into a war zone that produced the St. Valentine's Day Massacre, the Coast Guard sinking a Canadian schooner on the high seas, and the Ku Klux Klan deputizing itself as a liquor patrol. By the time repeal arrived in 1933, the noble experiment had built organized crime, corrupted the courts, and taught a generation that the law was a joke with a cover charge. This is the history they left out of the party photos, and every word of it is documented. Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation? Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past. Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets. Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

12 jun 20261 h 12 min
aflevering Iwo Jima artwork

Iwo Jima

On January 6, 1949, two starving Japanese machine gunners walked out of the caves on Iwo Jima and surrendered to American airmen who had no idea they were there. The war had been over for more than three years. They're where this episode ends, and they're the reason it exists. Before them came the battle. This one goes deep into the fight for a stinking scrap of volcanic ash 650 miles south of Tokyo, and the general who turned it into one of the worst killing grounds of the Pacific war.  Tadamichi Kuribayashi knew Japan couldn't win, so he buried his garrison 16 miles deep in the rock and ordered his men to make the island cost more than it was worth. It worked. American casualties came out higher than the entire Japanese force defending the place, the only major Pacific battle where that ever happened. We walk through the ash-trap landing, the flag on Mount Suribachi and what the famous photograph left out, the blowtorch-and-corkscrew cave fighting up north, and the roughly 3,000 Japanese soldiers still alive inside the island the day it was declared secure. Then the episode follows the men who never stopped. Two Navy machine gunners held out in the tunnels until 1949. A captain named Sakae Oba ran a guerrilla campaign on Saipan until his own chain of command ordered him to quit. A group of stranded sailors on the island of Anatahan came apart into something far darker over six years cut off from the world. Sergeant Shoichi Yokoi hid in the jungle on Guam for 28 years, suspecting the war was over and staying hidden anyway. Lieutenant Hiroo Onoda fought his own private war on Lubang in the Philippines until 1974 and killed around 30 local people who had nothing to do with it. And Teruo Nakamura, the last holdout of all, walked out the same year and got almost none of the welcome Onoda did, for reasons that say a lot about the empire he'd served. It comes down to what an institution can put inside a young man's head, and how long that programming keeps running after everything that built it is gone.  There are still more than 10,000 Japanese soldiers sealed inside Iwo Jima. Most of them are never coming home. Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation? Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past. Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets. Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

10 jun 20261 h 0 min