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The Katie Autry Case: The Dorm Room Attack at WKU
53:02|*Listener discretion is advised. This episode contains discussion of sexual violence, severe physical injury, and death.In the early morning hours of May 2003, a piercing fire alarm shattered the silence inside Hugh Poland Hall at Western Kentucky University. Students poured out into the dark, confused and half-asleep, unaware that behind one closed dorm room door an 18-year-old freshman was fighting for her life. This episode of Crime Salad examines the brutal attack on Katie Autry, a case that shocked the WKU campus, raised questions about campus safety, and continues to spark debate more than two decades later.Ashley and Ricky break down the timeline, the investigation, courtroom developments, and the lingering controversies surrounding one of the most disturbing true crime cases in Bowling Green, Kentucky. From the initial emergency response inside Room 214 to the legal aftermath and public reaction, this episode explores how a night meant to be ordinary turned into a tragedy that still resonates with students, families, and true crime followers today.Keywords: Katie Autry case, Western Kentucky University true crime, WKU dorm fire 2003, Bowling Green Kentucky crime, campus crime podcast, Crime Salad podcast, college campus safety, unsolved questions, true crime investigation, dorm room attack.
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Ryder Belisle: When Custody Became a Medical Crisis
52:50|Ryder was a medically fragile child living with Sanfilippo Syndrome Type IIIB, a rare and terminal neurological disease that required constant specialized care. For years, his survival depended on strict medical routines, equipment management, and a caregiver trained to respond to emergencies. Then a custody battle moved his case from hospital rooms into courtrooms, where legal procedure began to outweigh medical warnings.In this episode, we examine the timeline of court decisions, ignored medical directives, and the devastating consequences that followed. This is not a mystery of who did it. It is a case that raises difficult questions about how family courts handle medically fragile children, what happens when expert medical advice is sidelined, and whether systems meant to protect can sometimes fail the very people they are designed to serve.This episode contains discussion of severe childhood illness and death. Listener discretion is advised.Links to support the family: Facebook: Justice For Ryder - We The People Demand Accountability NOW GoFundMe: https://gofund.me/709193ee9Support Crime Salad:Check out the merch on our website, crimesaladpodcast.com Be sure to tag us on social media when you get it!!And also, thanks to our supporters on Apple Podcasts and Patreon. You truly keep this show going! If you’d like to get ad-free episodes and bonus content, you can join for as little as one dollar at patreon.com/crimesaladpodcastKeywords/Topics: rare childhood disease, medical dependency cases, caregiver continuity, child welfare systems, family court custody battles, medical advocacy, legal responsibility, true crime podcast, child protection
Daniel Morcombe Case Explained | Child Abduction in Australia
43:46|On December 7, 2003, 13-year-old Daniel Morcombe disappeared while waiting for a bus beneath the Kiel Mountain Road overpass on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast. What should have been a routine trip to Sunshine Plaza became one of the largest missing child investigations in Queensland history, spanning years of public tips, shifting timelines, and missed opportunities.In this episode of Crime Salad, Ashley and Ricky trace Daniel’s final known movements, the early police response, the flood of leads that overwhelmed investigators, and the long road to answers. Eight years later, an extraordinary undercover police operation finally drew out a confession from convicted child sex offender Brett Peter Cowan and led detectives to Daniel’s remains. Cowan was later convicted of murder, indecent treatment of a child, and interfering with a corpse.We also examine the lasting impact of Daniel’s case, including major procedural reforms in Queensland and the ongoing work of the Daniel Morcombe Foundation to promote child safety education.Listener discretion advised: This episode includes discussion of child abduction, sexual violence, and murder.Daniel Morcombe, Daniel Morcombe case, Brett Peter Cowan, Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Palmwoods, Woombye, Kiel Mountain Road overpass, Sunshine Plaza, missing child, child abduction, true crime Australia, Queensland Police undercover operation, Operation Bravo Vista, Daniel Morcombe Foundation, Day for Daniel, Daniel’s Law, child safety.
Rachel Hoffman Case: Florida Police Informant Operation Gone Wrong (Tallahassee)
53:10|In late spring 2009, Florida State University students in Tallahassee, Florida, were wrapping up finals when 23-year-old Rachel Hoffman became the center of a police operation that would end in tragedy. In this episode of Crime Salad, we break down the Rachel Hoffman case, focusing on how a “controlled” and “by-the-book” confidential informant (CI) operation unraveled and why officers reportedly waited more than 90 minutes after her last contact before launching a search.Rachel Hoffman was a college student with big plans, described as driven and fearless, working toward her future when she was asked to assist law enforcement as an informant during a drug sting in Tallahassee. What happened next raised serious questions about informant safety, police procedures, and accountability when undercover operations go wrong.We cover the timeline, the decisions made leading up to that night, and the broader issue of how confidential informants are used in drug investigations, especially when the informant is young, vulnerable, or under pressure. This is the story of Rachel Hoffman and the failures that followed.Keywords: Rachel Hoffman, Rachel Hoffman case, Rachel Hoffman murder, Tallahassee Florida, Florida State University, confidential informant, CI, police informant, drug sting, controlled buy, undercover operation, law enforcement negligence, informant safety, true crime podcast, Crime Salad.
Nicole “Nikki” Addimando: Survival or Murder
50:20|Listener discretion is advised. This episode includes discussion of domestic abuse and sexual violence.In September 2017 in Poughkeepsie, New York, a routine traffic stop led police to Nicole “Nikki” Addimando, a shaken mother of two who said she acted in self-defense. Hours later, her partner, Christopher Grover, was found dead, and Nikki was arrested. As investigators uncovered years of documented domestic violence, sexual assault, coercive control, and disturbing evidence of abuse, the case became a flashpoint for how the justice system treats criminalized survivors.In this Crime Salad episode, Ashley and Ricky break down the Nikki Addimando case, the trial, what the jury was and was not allowed to hear, the Domestic Violence Survivors Justice Act, and the advocacy that helped bring Nikki home.Nikki advocacy linksWe Stand With Nikki (website): https://westandwithnikki.com/We Stand With Nikki (Facebook): https://www.facebook.com/WeStandWithNikki/Domestic violence help and resourcesNational Domestic Violence Hotline (24/7): https://www.thehotline.org/Call: 1-800-799-SAFE (7233)Text: START to 88788If you are in immediate danger, call 911Listener discretion is advised. This episode includes discussion of domestic abuse and sexual violence.
The Suspicious Circumstances: The Death of Jennifer Harris
49:29|In May 2002, 28-year-old Jennifer Harris of Bonham, Texas, vanished on Mother’s Day weekend. The next morning, her green Jeep was found abandoned near the Red River in rural Fannin County. Days later, Jennifer’s body was recovered from the river. With no clear cause of death and no arrests, her case remains unsolved more than twenty years later.Follow to support this case:https://www.facebook.com/justiceforjenniferharris https://www.facebook.com/R4Justice/Check out our ad-free option! https://www.patreon.com/c/Crimesaladpodcast
THE DEADLY GLOW OF RADIUM
20:50|Crime Salad steps into Weird History, traveling back to the early 1900s, when a glowing new element promised progress, beauty, and modern life.What followed was anything but.In this episode of Weird History by Crime Salad, we explore the rise of radium mania, from the young women who became known as the Radium Girls, to the powerful corporations that insisted radium was safe while workers grew sick and died.We touch on crumbling jaws, altered death certificates, and why early causes of death were quietly labeled as syphilis instead of radium poisoning. Names like Grace Fryer and Mollie Maggia emerge as whispers of a much larger truth.But the danger was not limited to factories.While workers were suffering, wealthy Americans were drinking radium by choice. Products like Radithor promised vitality and youth, until cases like Eben Byers forced the country to pay attention.From glowing watches and military dials made with Undark, to radium water crocks, cosmetics, alarm clocks, toys, and other everyday items, radioactive products found their way into homes across America.This episode looks at what happens when science, profit, and blind trust collide, and how the voices of the Radium Girls ultimately changed workplace safety and radiation laws forever.Sometimes the most dangerous things are the ones that glow.Radium GirlsRadium poisoningSyphilis death certificatesU.S. RadiumUndark paintRadithorEben ByersRevigatorRadium cosmeticsRadioactive consumer productsWorkplace safety history