『A Dark City』のカバーアート

A Dark City

A Dark City

著者: A Dark City
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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Delve into the dark heart of Glasgow, a city with history steeped in mystery and violence. A Dark City takes you behind the headlines to explore the city's most notorious murders - stories that shocked the nation, shattered communities and left scars that still linger. From cold blooded killers to infamous gangland slayings, we uncover the chilling details, the victims stories and the impact on Glasgow's streets.

© 2026 A Dark City
ノンフィクション犯罪 世界 社会科学
エピソード
  • A Glasgow Execution
    2026/04/20

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    Three shots at a red light can change a city’s criminal map. We walk through the night Ewan E J Johnston is executed in Glasgow’s Kinning Park while sitting in his Audi RS-4, then follow the investigation as it builds from street-level chaos into a meticulous, evidence-led case. If you’re drawn to Glasgow true crime, forensic detail, and the uncomfortable logic of gangland power, this story stays with you.

    We track how CCTV captures the movements of a dark Audi Q5 and how a burned-out vehicle, meant to wipe the slate clean, instead becomes a turning point. A spent casing, ballistic links, and a torn fragment of a Nike windrunner jacket lead to DNA evidence that places David Scott at the centre of the case. From there, the focus widens: Police Scotland are not just chasing one gunman, they’re staring into organised crime networks that stretch beyond Glasgow and into the long-running drug trafficking routes tied to Spain.

    To make sense of the motive, we reach back to the mid-1990s Paisley gang feud, tracing the legacy of Stuart Boyd’s crew and the Rennie family and how old alliances can shape new violence. The courtroom brings the story to a verdict and a life sentence, but it also exposes how much remains unresolved, especially with another accused cleared and further searches launched years later. If you value smart true crime storytelling that connects murders to history, money, and power, subscribe, share the episode, and leave us a review. What part of the evidence trail do you find hardest to dismiss?

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    24 分
  • Michael Lyons
    2026/04/13

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    Glasgow doesn’t just have famous streets and hard weather, it has a gangland history that still echoes in courtrooms, cemeteries, and school gates. We follow one of the city’s most violent organised crime feuds, the battle between the Lyons family and the Daniel crime clan, and how a rumoured missing cocaine stash turns into years of shootings, stabbings, and calculated revenge.

    We start with a horror-movie image that’s painfully real: gunmen in eerie latex old-man masks walking into a garage and unleashing a hail of bullets. From there, the story widens into ransom demands, whispered threats about “the Piper”, and a police operation that uncovers military-grade weapons and links to stolen arms. This isn’t just a turf dispute, it’s a blueprint for how modern gangland networks intimidate communities while hiding behind silence.

    Then comes the moment that shocks even seasoned true crime listeners: the daylight execution of Kevin “Gerbil” Carroll in the Robroyston Asda car park, carried out in seconds and followed by a trial where prosecutors list 99 potential suspects. We also track the aftermath, including attacks near primary schools, the death of crime boss Jamie Daniel, and the power vacuum that sparks a new wave of attempted murders, until technology and patient investigation finally help deliver major sentences.

    If you’re searching for Glasgow true crime, Scottish organised crime history, and the real human cost of gang warfare, press play. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with the question you still can’t stop thinking about.

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    22 分
  • Jimmy Boyle
    2026/04/06

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    A seven pound debt ends with a man cut down on a Glasgow tenement floor and a 23-year-old sent away for life. That young enforcer is Jimmy Boyle, raised in the Gorbals where poverty, razor gangs and loan shark terror shaped a version of survival built on intimidation. We follow the path from petty theft to safe breaking to tally man violence, then into the Rooney murder, the flight to London, the High Court reckoning and the fear that still clung to the case through witness intimidation and reprisals.

    Prison is where the story becomes harder to file away. Boyle’s early years behind bars are brutal and explosive: assaults on officers, riots and the degrading isolation of solitary confinement. Then Scotland tries something few systems dare to attempt, the Barlinnie Special Unit, an experiment in responsibility, humane contact and creative work. Through books, clay and relentless self-confrontation, Boyle shifts from destroying to making, producing major sculpture and writing a memoir that refuses to soften what he did, while forcing readers to consider what rehabilitation can look like for people branded irredeemable.

    Freedom does not grant a clean ending. We talk through his charity work and prison reform campaigning, the ache of lost family time, and the devastating irony of his son’s later death on the streets. By the end, one question hangs in the air: do prisons breed monsters or mend men, and what kind of society do we become depending on the answer? Subscribe, share the episode with someone who cares about justice, and leave us a review with where you stand on redemption versus accountability.

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    26 分
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