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Episode 61: The Great Canadian Maple Syrup Heist
Picture this: a heist that didn't target diamonds, gold, or priceless art, but maple syrup instead! đ Canada's highly coveted liquid gold, The Great Canadian Maple Syrup Heist is one of the most unusual crimes in Canadian history. Thieves coordinated this sweet operation between August 2011 and July 2012 and walked away with 3,000 tonnes of maple syrup, worth an astounding $18.7 million. It was a syrupy saga that left a bittersweet taste, showing the importance of safeguarding this golden treasure. Hope you enjoy this sticky tale! đđ Sources: https://mapleterroir.com/blogs/blogs-maple-terroir/canadian-maple-syrup-heist-a-30-million-theft-unveiled#:~:text=Richard%20Valli%C3%A8res%20emerged%20as%20the,to%20process%20the%20syrup%20efficiently. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Canadian_Maple_Syrup_Heist https://www.quebec-cite.com/en/restaurants-quebec-city/sugar-shacks https://www.distractify.com/p/richard-vallieres-now
Netflix - âDirty Moneyâ Ssn 1 ep.5
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Episode 81: The Lords of Chaos
01:04:54|The Lords of Chaos were a group of Florida teenagers whose obsession with rebellion, vandalism, and shock value spiraled into real violence in 1996. What began as petty destructionâsmashing windows, stealing road signs, and setting small firesâquickly escalated as the group sought notoriety and a sense of power. Their crimes culminated in the murder of Mark Schwebes, a popular highâschool band director, after he confronted them about vandalizing the school. The killing shattered the illusion that the groupâs actions were harmless mischief, exposing instead a volatile mix of alienation, thrillâseeking, and performative cruelty. The case became a chilling example of how quickly teenage bravado can mutate into deadly violence, leaving a community stunned and forever changed.Sources: TBA
MICOBREW: The Curious Case of Kenneth Parks
30:11||Season 5, Ep. 0When 23âyearâold Kenneth Parks drove across Toronto in the early hours of May 24, 1987, he wasnât consciousâor so he claimed. By sunrise, his motherâinâlaw was dead, his fatherâinâlaw gravely injured, and Parks himself was standing in a police station, confused and covered in blood. What followed became one of Canadaâs most controversial courtroom battles: could a man commit murder while sleepwalking?Sources:https://apnews.com/article/c7c3bc37038fdde048fd8e3caf3c84eehttps://dokumen.pub/canadian-landmark-cases-in-forensic-mental-health-9781487536077.htmlhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R_v_Parkshttps://www.cwsdefense.com/blog/2024/september/understanding-the-sleepwalking-defense/
80. Episode 80: Imbolc - Groundhogs, Goddesses, and the First Hint of Spring
01:00:44||Season 5, Ep. 80As winter loosens its grip, we explore two traditions that mark the turning of the season: the ancient Celtic festival of Imbolc and the quirky North American ritual of Groundhog Day. From Brigidâs sacred flames to shadowâseeking marmots, we trace how different cultures have tried to predictâsummon, evenâthe first stirrings of spring. This episode blends folklore, history, and a touch of whimsy as we look at why humans have always searched for signs of returning light, and what these midwinter rituals reveal about hope, renewal, and the promise of warmer days ahead.Sources: TBA
MICROBREW: The Tragedy of Lacey Fletcher
39:41||Season 5, Ep. 0In this episode, we examine one of the most haunting and heartbreaking cases of neglect in recent memoryâthe death of 36âyearâold Lacey Fletcher. Found in conditions almost beyond comprehension, Laceyâs story forces us to confront uncomfortable questions about isolation, responsibility, and the systems meant to protect vulnerable people. We trace Laceyâs life from a quiet childhood in rural Louisiana to the years of seclusion that ultimately ended in tragedy.This isnât just a story about a crimeâitâs a story about silence, stigma, and the devastating consequences of looking away. With care and compassion, we piece together the timeline, the investigation, and the charges that followed, while honoring Lacey as more than the circumstances of her death. Her case is a stark reminder of the importance of community, vigilance, and humanity.Sources: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10769793/Co-worker-Louisiana-dad-accused-murdering-daughter-locked-syndrome-shocked.html https://people.com/lacey-fletcher-parents-sentenced-8612500 https://www.whattheforensics.ca/sources https://townofslaughter.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/11-16-2021-1.pdf https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/parents-louisiana-woman-melted-into-couch-re-indicted-second-degree-murder-charge https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killing_of_Lacey_Fletcher
Episode 79: Theresa Allore
01:02:22|A quiet college town in Quebec, a missing teenager, and a family who refused to let her memory fadeâthis episode unravels the haunting case of Theresa Allore, a 19âyearâold student whose disappearance and death in 1978 became one of Canadaâs most troubling unsolved mysteries.Follow Theresaâs final weeks at Champlain College in Lennoxville, where she vanished under circumstances that never quite added up. When her body was discovered months later in a remote area, authorities quickly labeled the death a tragic accident. But her familyâespecially her brother, John Alloreâsaw too many inconsistencies, too many unanswered questions, and far too little investigative effort.The episode traces Johnâs decadesâlong fight to uncover the truth, from poring over forgotten police files to connecting Theresaâs case with a disturbing pattern of violence against young women in the Eastern Townships. His relentless search for justice helped spark broader conversations about cold cases, victim advocacy, and systemic failures in how missing persons investigations were handled.This episode explores not only what happened to Theresa, but how her familyâs determination reshaped the way Canada confronts unsolved crimes. Itâs a story of loss, persistence, and the enduring power of refusing to look away.Sources:"Wish You Were Here" by John Allore & Patricia Pearson
MICROBREW: The Whisky War for Hans Island
24:21|In this episode, we dive into the delightfully strange and surprisingly heartwarming tale of the Whisky War, a 50âyear territorial dispute between Canada and Denmark over the tiny, uninhabited Hans Island. What began in the 1970s as an unresolved boundary question slowly evolved into a tongueâinâcheek ritual: each countryâs military would visit the island, remove the otherâs flag, raise their own, and leave behind a bottle of national liquorâCanadian whiskey or Danish schnappsâas a cheeky calling card.The MICROBREW blends history, humor, and geopoliticsâshowing how a barren rock in the Arctic became a symbol of cooperation, cultural pride, and the kind of international conflict everyone wishes there were more of! Sources:https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/can-nato-withstand-the-trump-greenland-test-10472649/https://www.ipolitics.ca/2024/12/06/canada-to-appoint-arctic-ambassador-open-consulates-in-alaska-and-greenland-under-new-northern-policy/https://www.canada.ca/en/global-affairs/news/2024/12/minister-joly-launches-canadas-arctic-foreign-policy.htmlhttps://globalnews.ca/news/11615647/greenland-donald-trump-nato-canada-eu-retaliation/https://www.highnorthnews.com/en/canada-ohttps://www.coastreporter.net/national-news/security-experts-sound-alarm-for-canada-as-trump-threatens-to-take-greenland-11760757pen-consulate-nuuk-greenland
78. Episode 78: Something is Afoot on the Salish Sea...
01:02:25||Season 5, Ep. 78Since 2007, a chilling mystery has unfolded along the shores of the Salish Sea: dozens of human feet, still in sneakers, have washed ashore without explanation. In this episode, we dive deep into the phenomenon that has baffled locals and sparked global intrigue. Are these grisly discoveries the result of foul play, natural decomposition, or something even stranger? Weâll explore the science behind why feet detach, the role of ocean currents, and the theories investigators have considered. Join us as we unravel the facts, dispel myths, and examine what these severed feet reveal about the seaâand about us.Sources:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/300357351_Human_Remains_in_Water_Environmentshttps://www.researchgate.net/publication/226337805_Decomposition_and_Invertebrate_Colonization_of_Cadavers_in_Coastal_Marine_Environmentshttps://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6474513/https://news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2019PSSG0030-000462https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/life-events/death/coroners-service/special-investigations/unidentified-caseshttps://vicnews.com/2025/03/07/parents-of-missing-mission-teen-say-remains-found-after-17-year-search/https://unidentified-awareness.fandom.com/wiki/Jeff_Surtelhttps://www.coastreporter.net/bc-news/new-dna-analysis-in-united-states-confirms-remains-of-bc-teen-missing-since-2007-10357139https://www.cbsnews.com/news/salish-sea-15-feet-found-canada-coastline-shorelines-beaches-since-2007/https://www.iflscience.com/why-are-human-feet-still-in-their-shoes-washing-up-on-beaches-in-british-columbia-45159https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/bc-severed-foot-1.5903703For a full list of sources used for this episode, please email us at homebrewmurdercrew@gmail.com
MICROBREW: The Belmont House in Lincoln New Brunswick
54:27||Season 5, Ep. 0Perched along the banks of the Saint John River in Lincoln, New Brunswick, Belmont House stands as one of the regionâs most intriguing landmarksâa stately neoclassical home built around 1820 for Judge John Murray Bliss, son of a Loyalist settler. Later, it became closely tied to Robert Duncan Wilmot, a Father of Confederation and Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick, who lived there intermittently until his death in 1891.But beyond its political pedigree and architectural grandeur, Belmont House carries a second, darker legacyâone whispered through generations of locals. In this episode, we explore the folklore that claims the house once sheltered British troops, complete with basement holding cells, cannon rooms overlooking the river, and even a tunnel leading down to the shoreline. Residents have reported eerie voices, reappearing stains, shadowy figures in parlours, and footsteps on staircases long after the living have gone to bed.Blending documented history with lived experiences, this episode traces Belmont Houseâs evolution from Loyalist estate to political landmark to one of New Brunswickâs most quietly haunted homes.SOURCES:https://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=1192https://www.pc.gc.ca/apps/dfhd/page_nhs_eng.aspx?id=184https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/lincoln-belmont-haunted-house-1.7005564https://mynewbrunswick.ca/folklore/belmont-house/
BONUS: 2025 Year in Review!
01:11:36||Season 5, Ep. 0Happy New Year! In this episode, Kristy & Meaghan reflect on the successes and milestones of 2025, podcast & personal growth, while reviewing some of the most memorable and top performing episodes of the year