Welcome to True Detective Stories podcast. A podcast where real homicide detectives share their cases.

Step into the interrogation room as investigators recount their tense confrontation with a 70-year-old man who claimed he "just wanted to live the rest of his life at home." This deep-dive episode profiles the tactical maneuvers of Galveston detectives as they tracked William Clifford Lawrence across various Texas and Louisiana hideouts. Learn how relentless investigative scrutiny and a dramatic search warrant forced a definitive forensic match, closing the file on a monster who almost escaped justice.

Uncover the fascinating intersection of nature and justice as experts utilize plant DNA and wood morphology to solve high-stakes criminal investigations. This episode explores the groundbreaking techniques used to identify botanical evidence, proving that even a single leaf can hold the key to a conviction. Perfect for fans of true crime, forensic science, and environmental biology, this deep dive reveals how the natural world serves as the ultimate silent witness.

Was Gareth Williams a victim of his own private life, or a targeted hit by a foreign intelligence agency? This episode navigates the two warring theories that define this cold case. On one side, the official police conclusion of a "solitary accident" involving claustrophilia; on the other, the coroner's verdict of "unlawful killing" potentially linked to Williams's work on Russian money laundering. We re-examine the timeline of his final days, the £25,000 of unworn designer women's clothing in his closet, and the suspicious "redirection" of the investigation that some say points to an MI6 cover-up.

today we examine a foundational yet often underappreciated element of modern criminal investigations: victimology as the starting point. In forensic psychology, detectives and behavioral analysts frequently begin by constructing a detailed psychological and behavioral profile of the victim—rather than the suspect—to reverse-engineer motive, assess lifestyle exposure, and identify risk patterns. This evidence-based forensic method provides critical crime scene insights and illuminates offender psychology long before a suspect emerges. By integrating criminology theories such as routine activity theory and lifestyle theory, victimology transforms seemingly random crimes into structured patterns. Throughout this episode, we will explore the core principles of victimology within forensic psychology, review educational case studies that demonstrate its practical application, and extract actionable takeaways for understanding criminal behavior analysis. This approach underscores how forensic psychology and detective investigation techniques work together to deliver justice through systematic, evidence-based methods.

When the trail went cold in the pre-digital era, many thought the truth died with the victim. But behind the scenes, a dedicated team of "cold case warriors" refused to let the file close. We examine the evolution of investigative technology and the relentless detective work required to bridge the gap between a 20th-century crime and 21st-century justice. It's a testament to the idea that time doesn't heal all wounds—it just provides better tools to find the person who caused them.

In the measured style of a detailed case examination, this account explores the 2015 murder of Connie Dabate in Ellington, Connecticut, where her husband Richard claimed a masked intruder killed her during a home invasion. The episode focuses on how data from Connie's Fitbit activity tracker directly contradicted Richard's timeline by recording sustained movement nearly an hour after he said she died, alongside supporting electronic evidence from home alarms and social media. Listeners receive a clear review of the investigation, trial evidence, conviction, and appeals, while considering the broader implications of wearable technology in establishing objective timelines in criminal cases.



