

* When DiAnne Keidel went missing in September 1966, it was just the start of a tragic series of events for her family. Sources: https://pastebin.com/fb4QTheD


* These two cold cases were solved thanks to a major change in the law, and family members dedicated to making sure the killers faced justice.


* In 1965, 19-year-old Cheryl Burnett was brutally murdered. Little did the investigators know, but solving her murder, would lead them down a dark path.


* In 1975, a body was found floating in the Nation River near Casselman, Ontario, Canada. It would take decades to identify her, and her killer.


* In 1991, Bryan Ruff seemingly vanished into thin air. But it wasn't the first time he went missing.


* In 1999, in Raymond, Wisconsin, the dead body of a woman was found. The police had no idea as to her identity. What they did know was that she was tortured for a long time before her death. It was decades before she and her and her killer were identified. It was someone the police never suspected.


* In December 1988, Cathy Swartz was brutally murdered. The crime scene was also very bizarre. It would take decades before the case was finally solved. Sources: https://pastebin.com/55bkuFP0


* In 1992, Corey Wieneke was brutally murdered. Twenty-five years later, a witness with an odd story would come forward and break the case wide open.


* On December 20, 1984, Jonelle Matthews was home alone. When her father got home, she wasn't there. It would take decades, dedicated detectives and a little bit of luck before the case was finally solved.


* In this episode, we look at three Canadian cases that were as cold as they could get...but then, after decades they were solved.


* The murder of Howard Witkin seemed straight-forward, but then, the truth came out.


* Jana Reynolds was just one of over a dozen unsolved murders in Southern Illinois. Then, an unexpected person helped get the killer convicted.


* Nanine Grimes was just 15 when she was brutally murdered. Another young woman was murdered just blocks from her house. Are they connected?


* 13-year-old Teri Jo Bradish was murdered in 1985. For years, her case was unsolved. Then, when the killer's identity was discovered, it shocked even the detectives.


* Janet Chandler was considered a good Christian girl, and tragically she died a brutal death.. We've covered a lot of disturbing cases, but this is one of the darkest we've done.


* Jimmie Ferrera was an actor who had several bit parts in some Western movies. He later became a businessman. Then in 1985, he was executed in his home. For decades, it was a mystery as to who killed the actor-turned-businessman, and why they killed him.


* For over 50 decades, Mary Klinsky's murder was unsolved. It turned out that she was murdered by the notorious killer Robert Zarinsky. It turns out that Mary's case isn't the only cold case connected to this suspected serial killer.


* In the 1970s and 1980s, four women who attended Southern Illinois University-Carbondale were brutally murdered. The police, the media and the citizens think a serial killer is on the loose. But things aren't exactly as they appear...


* In the 1990s, the police in Houston thought there was a serial killer preying on young females. But it would be over a decade before they knew what truly happened...


* In 1979 Kenny Conrick was brutally murdered. The police had a disturbing amount of people who may have killed the eight-year-old, but it still took decades for the case to be solved. Credits: https://pastebin.com/kWNuYtYG


* In 1969, Diane Maxwell Jackson was brutally murdered. Decades later, the investigators thought the odds of closing was the case were a billion-to-one... Credits: https://pastebin.com/q6Ec19a0


* Three members of the Eastburn family were slaughtered in their home in 1985. The police quickly make an arrest, but do they have the right man? Credits and sources: https://pastebin.com/88PKW3G0


* Dr. Helena Greenwood was a brilliant DNA researcher. Little did her killer know, but the work she and and her company did would help solve her murder. Credits: https://pastebin.com/WF4VkYLv


* When 16-year-old Amy Weidner was murdered her home, the police were sure that she knew her killer. But did she? If so, who was he? Credits: https://pastebin.com/SkMrVUuz


* 36-year-old Jeanette Kirby was murdered in 1986. The police had three suspects. But it would take years and a very small clue before the case was finally closed.


* Was Robert Spangler the unluckiest man alive? Or a cold blooded serial killer? Credits: https://pastebin.com/WjeVgr1i


* In this episode, we reveal how the police identified B.T.K. and talk about the man who killed 10 people between 1974 and 1991 in Wichita and Park City, Kansas.


* In this first of our two part series, we examine the crimes of one of the most infamous American serial killers - B.T.K. Bind. Torture. Kill.


* In September 1983, a horrifying massacre shocked the citizens of Kilgore, Texas. The police had several suspects. But did any of them do it? It would take decades before the case was finally solved.


* For more than three and a half decades, the disappearance of 12-year-old Jonelle Matthews was a mystery – a riddle neither authorities nor her family members could solve. The residents of her cloistered Colorado hometown had scoured every inch of prairie. Jonelle’s face had been on milk cartons nationwide. Even the President of the United States had appealed to the public for help. Still, every lead had fizzled. Every person of interest had turned out to be a dead end. * Then, in 2019, Jonelle’s remains were unearthed near the foothills of the Rocky Mountains. With the discovery came a troubling new question: Had the truth been hiding in plain sight the entire time? Was the man who couldn’t stop obsessing over Jonelle’s disappearance also the person who took her? From Campside Media and Wondery comes season two of SUSPECT. Former CNN reporter Ashley Fantz and executive producers Matthew Shaer and Eric Benson (Suspect, Over My Dead Body) dig into one of the most mind-bending cold cases in modern history, in an attempt to separate fact and fiction, compulsion from guilt, and true-crime fandom from a motive for murder. * http://www.amazon.com/SUS_us_pfd_AA_110122.