『True Crime Central』のカバーアート

True Crime Central

True Crime Central

著者: True Crime Central
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Welcome to True Crime Central: The Home of 100% Real, Unsolved, and Chilling Stories. Hosted by Max.

If you’re looking for gripping true crime without the filler, small talk, or fiction, you’ve found it. True Crime Central dives deep into the most disturbing solved and unsolved mysteries, cold cases, unexplained disappearances, and shocking murders from around the world. We don't just read headlines—we tear apart the police reports, analyze the forensic evidence, and ask the questions the official files left unanswered.

Every case we cover is 100% real. From crime scenes staged to look like art, to killers who hide in plain sight, to interrogations that unravel impossible lies. Whether it's a 40-year-old cold case finally cracked by DNA, or a modern digital mystery where the clues exist only on a deleted hard drive, we put you right at the center of the investigation.

What to Expect on True Crime Central:
  • Immersive Storytelling: No banter, no distractions. Just straight-to-the-point narratives that pull you into the timeline from minute one.
  • Cinematic Details: We focus on the exact details that change everything—the missing zip ties, the silent dogs, the phone that posted after the victim was dead.
  • Daily Uploads: Your daily true crime fix. New episodes drop every single day at 3:33 AM and 9:00 PM.

True crime isn't just about who did it. It's about how they were caught, the mistakes made along the way, and the victims who deserve to have their stories told.

Don't forget to follow the show and turn on notifications so you never miss a case.

Recommended Listening:

If you are a fan of deep-dive investigative podcasts and suspenseful storytelling like Crime Junkie, True Crime with Kendall Rae, Dateline NBC, 48 Hours, Morbid, 20/20, Betrayal Season 5, MrBallen Podcast: Strange Dark & Mysterious Stories, My Favorite Murder, Criminal, Murder at the U, Snapped: Women Who Murder, Serialously with Annie Elise, Casefile True Crime, or The Epstein Files, this will be your new favorite podcast.

Topics Covered:

True crime podcast, unsolved mysteries, cold cases, serial killers, missing persons, real crime stories, investigative journalism, homicide investigations, forensic science, interrogations, 911 calls, true crime daily, unexplained deaths, true crime stories English.

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  • The Text She Sent Before She Disappeared - Episode 105
    2026/06/09

    The Text She Sent Before She Disappeared: The Death of Morgan Patton

    At 10:25 PM on November 8, 2019, a 24-year-old woman texted her fiancé something strange — a tip about cocaine being smuggled onto a Marine Corps base through pizza deliveries. Eleven minutes later, she sent her last message. Six minutes after that, she was dead, found on the ground beneath a speeding truck she had no known reason to be inside. The forensic science, the witness statements, and the medical records all point in different directions — and nobody has been charged with her murder.

    In this episode, we explore the autopsy's two blood alcohol readings that cannot both be true, a foreign male DNA profile found under Morgan's fingernails that has never been matched to anyone, and a sworn military statement that directly contradicts the physical injuries documented in hospital records. Was Morgan Patton the victim of a tragic accident driven by a drunk Marine, or was something far more deliberate happening inside that truck? The investigation, the homicide, and the evidence tell three different stories.

    Case Details

    Victim: Morgan Patton, 24, former waitress and only child, traveling to visit her fiancé at Camp Lejeune.

    Date: November 8–9, 2019.

    Location: Maysville, North Carolina, USA.

    Case Status: Hunter O'Neill Wells has been indicted on felony death by vehicle, involuntary manslaughter, and DWI charges; a criminal trial is pending. No foul play charges have been filed. The question of how Morgan came to be in the truck remains officially unanswered.

    Episode Key Points

    - Morgan's blood BAC measured 0.13 from an aortic sample collected 59 hours after death, while her vitreous fluid — unaffected by decomposition — measured only 0.02, a discrepancy prosecutors addressed by telling the family to "assume somewhere between the two."

    - Foreign male DNA from two contributors was recovered from Morgan's fingernail scrapings; the quantity was deemed insufficient for identification and no match has ever been announced.

    - The Event Data Recorder confirmed the truck was traveling at 86 miles per hour with zero braking detected before leaving the road — a detail the family says raises questions about who, if anyone, was trying to stop the vehicle.

    - Charlie Cornwall gave a sworn military statement claiming he was wearing a seatbelt, then later asked civilian prosecutors whether he had been wearing one, then told a private investigator he remembered nothing about the crash or the months surrounding it.

    Morgan Patton, Maysville North Carolina homicide, Camp Lejeune 2019, felony death by vehicle North Carolina, Marine Corps criminal case, true crime, murder, forensic science, investigation, criminal minds, homicide, unsolved mysteries, true crime English.

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    37 分
  • She Won Six Hundred Dollars. Then Someone Shot Her. - Episode 104
    2026/06/08

    She Won Six Hundred Dollars. Then Someone Shot Her.: The Murder of Furbia Faye Tinsley

    A 51-year-old Army veteran won big at bingo on a Friday night, deposited her winnings at the bank, and was found shot twice in the head inside her own car before sunrise. The engine was still running. Her seatbelt was still on. Her purse was gone, but nothing inside the car had been touched. Homicide investigators have named no one in over a decade — but one man who was in that car walked away without calling 911.

    In this episode, we explore a phone call Faye made before 5 a.m. that brought her to a street she had no reason to visit, a convenience store surveillance clip showing a man without shoes who told a clerk something so significant that detectives still refuse to repeat it, and a gun linked to multiple Charlottesville shootings that has never been found. Was Faye driven to that block by someone she trusted, or did she go there to confront the truth about her own relationship? The forensic science and the witness accounts point in two directions that cannot both be right.

    Case Details

    Victim: Furbia Faye Tinsley, 51, U.S. Army veteran living on disability benefits.

    Date: July 14, 2012.

    Location: 800 block of Prospect Avenue, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.

    Case Status: The murder of Furbia Faye Tinsley remains officially unsolved. No charges have ever been filed. As of 2023, the case is technically active but has seen no public movement in years.

    Episode Key Points

    - Two spent handgun casings were found inside Faye's locked car with all windows rolled up, yet no one could definitively establish where the shooter was sitting.

    - A man who was present in the car when Faye was shot fled on foot, appeared on surveillance without shoes minutes later, and left Charlottesville that same morning without calling police.

    - The gun used to kill Faye was ballistically linked to multiple other Charlottesville shootings, suggesting it was passed between individuals before and after the murder.

    - Detectives tried repeatedly to bring charges but prosecutors declined, citing a mystery third-party shooter described by the surviving witness — a man no one has ever identified.

    Furbia Faye Tinsley, Charlottesville Virginia homicide, Prospect Avenue murder 2012, unsolved cold case Virginia, bingo night shooting, true crime, murder, investigation, forensic science, homicide, criminal minds, unsolved mysteries, true crime English.

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    33 分
  • She Said His Name. The Phone Disappeared. - Episode 103
    2026/06/07

    She Said His Name. The Phone Disappeared.: The Murder of Deanna Cook

    She called 911 while he was in the room. For nearly seventeen minutes, the operator listened to a woman beg for her life — and heard a man say "I'll kill you" three times. When police finally knocked on her door, they left without going inside. Three days later, her mother found her face down in a bathtub full of water. The phone Deanna used to make that call was never recovered from the scene.

    In this episode, we explore a 911 call that captured an active homicide in real time but triggered no immediate response, the fifty-minute gap between dispatch and the moment officers knocked and walked away, and DNA evidence from a sexual assault kit that took two separate laboratory tests to produce a usable profile. Was this a system that failed one woman, or a system that was never built to protect her at all? The forensic science and the recorded audio tell a story the city of Dallas spent years trying to avoid.

    Case Details

    Victim: Deanna Cook, 32, mother of two, Dallas resident.

    Date: August 17, 2012.

    Location: Dallas, Texas, USA.

    Case Status: Delvecchio was convicted of murder on May 18, 2015, and sentenced to 85 years in prison. A civil lawsuit filed by Deanna's mother against the City of Dallas and others was still in active appeals as of March 2019 with no public resolution confirmed after that date.

    Episode Key Points

    - The 911 call ran for eleven to seventeen minutes and captured the sound of a struggle and what investigators described as water splashing, yet the call taker did not log an active assault in her records.

    - Two responding officers stopped at a 7-Eleven and completed paperwork from a prior call before arriving at Deanna's address — fifty minutes after they were dispatched.

    - Deanna's sexual assault kit contained DNA from two unidentified males who have never been traced, a gap the defense used to argue the investigation was never completed.

    - Without the 911 recording, the medical examiner stated the death would have been classified as mysterious rather than homicide — there was no visible bruising consistent with a beating.

    Deanna Cook, Dallas Texas homicide 2012, domestic violence murder Dallas, 911 call evidence, criminal minds, true detective, homicide, forensic science, investigation, murder, systemic failure, true crime English.

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    37 分
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