True Crimes, Killer Cases & Cocktails Podcast
In the mid-1970s, a grim pattern emerged along the industrial banks of Ohio’s Ashtabula River: the bodies of young women, all connected to the gritty world of interstate truck stops and roadside bars, were discovered discarded like refuse. But was this the work of a single, mobile serial killer exploiting America's highway system, or a tragic coincidence of a dangerous trade? This episode dives into a cluster of homicides that have long been overshadowed by more famous serial killer cases, yet may represent a chilling blueprint for highway predation. We trace the investigations—often hampered by jurisdictional confusion and the transient nature of both victims and suspects—focusing on the murders of 28-year-old Beverly Potts and 24-year-old Deborah Sue Smith. The episode explores the specific, haunting details that link the cases, the truckers questioned, and the potential connection to a mysterious figure known to investigators only by his CB radio handle. We analyze why the FBI’s nascent Highway Serial Killer Initiative, decades later, would circle back to this specific time and place. Listeners will gain an understanding of how the pre-digital interstate system created a perfect hunting ground for predators, and how the vulnerabilities of women in the truck stop subculture were systematically exploited. This is a deep dive into a cold case corridor that asks if a shadowy figure, a "phantom of Route 90," was caught, or simply drove away into anonymity. The highway holds its secrets, but the riverbank gave up its dead. #AshtabulaMurders #HighwaySerialKiller #TruckStopPredator #1970sColdCase #OhioTrueCrime #RiverbankKillings #LostHighwayCode Hosted by Ibnul Jaif Farabi. Produced by Light Knot Studios (lightknotstudios.com).
20 episodes
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