The Delphi Murders: A Conversation About Odinism, Prison Gangs, and Human Sacrifice with The Troth

The Delphi Murders: A Conversation About Odin...

Up next

The Cheat Sheet: Lovers' Lanes and Liars

The Cheat Sheet is The Murder Sheet's segment breaking down weekly news and updates in some of the murder cases we cover. In this episode, we'll talk about cases from Texas, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Northern Ireland.KETV's report on the arrest of Floyd William Parrott's arrest ...  Show more

A Talk with ISP Forensic Genealogist Bradley Marchant Part Two: The First Person That Knows

We conclude our discussion with Indiana State Police forensic genealogist Bradley Marchant. Check out our upcoming book events and get links to buy tickets here: https://murdersheetpodcast.com/eventsPre-order our book on Delphi here: https://bookshop.org/p/books/shadow-of-the-bri ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Delphi Update: Odinism & Accusations of Ritual Sacrifice
RedHanded

This week, Richard Allen’s defence team dropped a 136-page document challenging the warrant that police used to search his house.But it’s not as boring as it sounds – because the bulk of this filing consists of claims that Abby and Libby were in fact killed by an Odinite, white-s ...  Show more

Faith
They Walk Among America - US True Crime

On this episode of They Walk Among America… Many factors can be listed as motives in murder cases, such as greed, love, or revenge. But, when it comes to family annihilators, there is no way to make a jury understand why someone would commit such a horrendous act. When the person ...  Show more

#424: Stolen Youth - Inside the Cult at Sarah Lawrence | Part 1
Real Crime Profile

In 2010, on the small woodsy campus of Sarah Lawrence College located in Yonkers, New York, 50 year old Lawrence Ray came to “crash” with his daughter Talia in her on-campus dorm town-house that she shared with several other students, ostensibly until he found a place to live ...

  Show more

One Eyed Joe
Criminal

Not only was John Frankford a famous horse thief, he was also a notoriously good escape artist. People thought no jail was strong enough to keep him, but then in 1895 he was sentenced to Philadelphia's Eastern State Penitentiary. At Eastern State, Frankford became the victim of a ...  Show more