Crime of the Truest Kind

EP 82 | True Crime North Shore, Recorded Live at Off Cabot in Beverly, Mass (part one)

Anngelle Wood Media Season 4 Episode 82

The North Shore presents a postcard-perfect façade of historic towns and scenic coastline, beneath this charming exterior lies a darker history of unsolved mysteries that have haunted local communities for decades. During a sold-out live show at Off Cabot in Beverly, Massachusetts, we pulled back the curtain on cold cases that continue to echo through North Shore communites, revealing how justice finally arrived for Claire Gravel, a Salem State sophomore murdered in 1986, when DNA evidence identified her killer 36 years later. This stands in stark contrast to cases like six-year-old Jesus de la Cruz, who disappeared from Lynn in 1996 after being approached by a man with a distinctively marked dog, or Lois Centifanti, whose 1974 strangulation murder remains unsolved despite her body being discovered in Lynn Harbor.

What makes these cases particularly haunting is the suggestion that some killers may have escaped justice not just through clever evasion, but through protection. The murder of 15-year-old Henry Bedard, Jr. in Swampscott has become what locals describe as "an open secret" – a case where community members whisper about the perpetrator but fear or family connections have prevented justice for nearly half a century. As audience members shared their own insights and connections to these cases, it became clear that many cold cases remain unsolved not for lack of information, but because relationships, fear, and sometimes nepotism have created walls of silence. We explore cold cases that continue to haunt local communities decades later while highlighting how scientific advances and changing relationships can bring resolution to seemingly hopeless situations.

• Claire Gravel's 1986 murder case was solved in 2022 after 36 years through DNA evidence
• Six-year-old Jesus de la Cruz disappeared from Lynn in 1996 after a stranger with a distinctive dog approached him
• Lois Centifanti was murdered in Lynn Harbor in 1974, with friends receiving threatening notes to "keep quiet"
• Leanne Redden vanished in 2013 on Marathon Monday, with her boyfriend returning all her belongings days later
• Joel de los Reyes was found in Rumney Marsh after taking a Lyft from Chelsea
• Karen Sharpe's 2000 murder by her husband received national attention due to salacious headlines rather than domestic violence issues
• Henry Bedard Jr's 1974 murder remains what locals call "an open secret" in Swampscott

Do you have information about these or other North Shore crimes? Email your tips & case suggestions - more at crimeofthetruestkind.com.

Support the show

Follow Instagram | Facebook | BlueSky | TikTok | Threads | YouTube
For show notes & source information at CrimeoftheTruestKind.com

Give the dogs a bone tip jar: buymeacoffee.com/truestkind
Become a patron: Patreon.com/crimeofthetruestkind

This podcast has minimal profanity but from time to time you get one or some curse words. This isn't for kids.

Music included in episodes from Joe "onlyone" Kowalski, Dug McCormack's Math Ghosts and Shredding by Andrew King


Anngelle Wood:

Well, hello, my name is Anngelle Wood and this is Crime of the Truest Kind.

Anngelle Wood:

Hey everybody, I have returned from Advocacy Con, which happened over the weekend in Indianapolis, and I gotta say it was a pretty incredible experience because its focus is advocacy and providing resources for families who have been affected by violent crime, whether it be they have a murdered loved one, their case is unsolved or they have a missing loved one who they are desperately looking for and continue to search for new avenues by which to tell their loved one's story. I was there representing MMMPAC, the Massachusetts Missing and Murdered Persons Advocacy Coalition, which you can learn all about if you go to massmissingandmurdered. org. You can also learn about it on social media, on all platforms at @MassAdvocacy. Of course, Crime of the Truest Kind had a presence there too. I just began my training to be credentialed as a victim's advocate. That's the language they use. A credentialed victim's advocate Training is through NOVA, the National Organization of Victim Advocacy, and it covers a lot. We talk about the history of advocacy. We talk about the many facets of crime, from domestic violence to sexual assault, to missing and murdered loved ones, to sexual assault, to missing and murdered loved ones. So just know, your girl gonna be really busy. Thank you to all the patrons who have helped make this possible, and I will welcome new patrons on Patreon before we're through. This is Crime of the Truest Kind Massachusetts and New England crime stories. I talk about history and I talk about advocacy.

Anngelle Wood:

In March, we did our very first sold out show. It happens at Off Cabot in Beverly. I think it was my third visit there or the fourth, and we will be back on the North Shore telling North Shore crime stories. That's Otis. He is scratching at his doggy bed. Hey dude, you busy here. I have split the live show in two parts. We went almost two hours. I typically like to keep the show at about 90 minutes, so this is part one of our live show True Crime North Shore, recorded Thursday, March 13th 2025 at Off Cabot in Beverly, Massachusetts. Oh, this is episode 82.

Anngelle Wood:

One of the best parts of these shows is audience participation, when people there share their stories or comments and we try to get it all on mic, though it's tough and you will hear some quiet spots, some of which I hope gets picked up by the transcripts, but that's not always the case, and I make mention of images throughout this presentation. You will find that deck on the show page at crimeofthetruestkind. com,

Chris King:

That's true. So I'm going to turn things over to Anngelle Wood for Crime of the Truest Kind, North Shore Edition. So there you are, thank you.

Anngelle Wood:

This couch very cool, but there's a little bit of a dip. So if you see me throughout the show do this like kind of fall into an abyss. You know what's going on and Chris, by the way, is the set designer and he's extraordinary, so let's hear it for Chris. Thank you very much, chris, anything for you. You gave it up for Ben. Way to go, Ben, you're getting a little bit of a groupie crowd, so don't let it go to your head. Thank you to the Off Cabot.

Anngelle Wood:

This is probably I think this might be my fourth show here, maybe at least three. Have you all been to one of my shows here before I recognize you? Yes, how are you? Okay? Well, welcome.

Anngelle Wood:

A couple of things I want to say right up front. If any of you in the audience have been involved with a crime when I say that, I mean if you have a loved one, if you are adjacent, if you will I go at these cases very carefully and very respectfully. So if you have never listened to the podcast that I do. Please know that this isn't one of those. I don't want to say the name, I don't want to say the word morbid, because then it just associates with another very popular podcast. But if you're interested in the subject matter, you're in the right room. But I don't do it in an exploitative way, so I'm right out of the gate. That's what I'm going to say to you. So a little bit about me first of all.

Anngelle Wood:

For those of you who may not know, I started the show back in around 2020. Something was going on I don't quite remember what was it and I had always I love podcasting. I love crime. Sounds weird to say, but it's true. Love crime Sounds weird to say, but it's true Always was a fan of nonfiction, always a fan of documentary style films, always a fan of things that really happened. I have read novels and the like, but I've always gravitated to things real life things. So that led to me starting a podcast in 2020. And I remember exactly what happened.

Anngelle Wood:

I was away in Maine in a cabin, it was raining and I was reading a book written by friends of mine. It was called Hunting Whiny, by Dave Wedge and Casey Sherman, and I loved the book. I loved everything about the story that they told and it really is about Whitey Bulger and the hunt for him the name suggests that and then the capture. And I thought at that moment you know what I want to do? A podcast, and I want to do it about this book, and then whatever else happens. So I made the decision. That night, sitting in a cabin on a rainy night in Maine, I figured out the name, which I didn't really love the name, but it worked and I stuck with it and then it went from there.

Anngelle Wood:

But I have changed as a result of my time in this true crime space, and I will explain what that means. When I first got into it okay, so I need to tell you this For more than 20 years, I was a radio DJ here in this area. I worked at radio stations, okay, so we're in the North Shore, so a lot of you know what WFNX is Central Square Inland. I worked there for a really long time. I did a morning show, I did afternoons, etc. I worked at WBCN, I worked at WZLX, so what that means is I was all about getting the joke. We would say all kinds of ridiculousness just to get a laugh, and I think the beginning of my podcasting career I was a lot more like that. But then as soon as I started to really dig into this subject matter, read these stories, learn the things that happened to people and then eventually meeting families well, everything changed for me. So that picture right there in the far corner is me in one of my earliest radio shifts at WFNX in the old studio. If anybody is aware of what radio was about back then, right behind me is a bunch of carts. They look like 8-track tapes for anybody who knows what an 8-track tape is.

Anngelle Wood:

So I grew up here in Massachusetts. I grew up in a small town called Groveland. Anybody know where. Groveland is Very nice, because a lot of people don't. When I say, like what the hell is that? There's like one little sign on the highway that says Groveland this way, nobody really knows about it. It's a very small town. Few have heard of it. They don't still to this day, don't even have a grocery store. That's all right.

Anngelle Wood:

Then my family moved to Southern New Hampshire. I went to school there and then I ended up coming back to go to college Subsequently and I see typos right now and I didn't fix and I see typos right now and I didn't fix. I subsequently went to school. I got involved in radio. It was my dream. I didn't know what radio really entailed. As a kid I knew I wanted to do it. I kind of thought radio was like being an actress, being like a movie star. Oh, it's so not, but I did enjoy it. Radio has changed very much too, by the way. We won't fall down that rabbit hole, but I worked at FNX. It was a fantastic experience. I met lots of people. I did all kinds of interviews. It was. It was wonderful. I worked at WCLX, which is very different now than it was when I was there. Um, I make the joke that I was there before they played Billy Joel. It's a thing. I like Billy Joel, no shade on Billy Joel, but they didn't play Billy Joel back then when I worked there. It was much more rock then, but it's very different now and I still have wonderful friends in radio that you know good for them. I worked at WBCN when I was at BCN when they went away In the bottom picture.

Anngelle Wood:

The second picture is what appeared in the Boston Globe on WBCN's last days. It's Charles Lacodera who is a superstar morning DJ, tommy Lee, the drummer from Motley Crue, howard Stern, who is a legend in radio, and me Okay, I'll take it, but really Okay. And I had red hair then and that's me like playing DJ at some show we were doing. I think it was a rumble party. I'll take it because, look, it was a good time. But I went from DJ to podcast host, to victim advocate. This is how much I didn't get it when I got involved in this space. That picture of me on the left is I'm at a party at Hard Rock Cafe in Boston when it was still there. It's gone now and I was dressed up like the Black Dahlia. So I looked at probably like a lot of people still do.

Anngelle Wood:

I looked at people who were victims of crime, like it was a character, like it was a you know somebody on a TV show which is really not how it is at all, like not human. They were non-human, they were just a character, they didn't really exist. A costume right. And at the same time I did this and I remember one of my, one of my they were non-human, they were just a character, they didn't really exist, a costume right. And at the same time I did this and I remember one of my one of my fellow DJs said wow, they're really brave dressing up like that.

Anngelle Wood:

Since I had stalkers, I did. I had some stuff. I was at that very moment in time I was dealing with some stalker situations. I'm it say it worked out. Sounds strange, but we dealt with it. But I've learned a lot since then. I don't make jokes at the expense of people who have experienced these things More on that later.

Anngelle Wood:

And that's my me, downstairs in my basement in front of a green screen, in front of a green screen. So here we are, together talking about North Shore cases that happened here. The last time I was here in Beverly I went through a series of crimes that happened here and I had this long leftover list and what I said the last time was next time I come back to off Cabot I continue this list. I had this long list in Claire. Her story was one of those. We're going back to 1986. I barely remember it because I'm very young, like a little baby who here is familiar, even a little bit, with Claire's story. Okay, it's okay. If you're not, it's okay, you're welcome to be here. This is a story that went. Her case went. Look at how beautiful she is. She was murdered. She was 20 years old. She was a sophomore at Salem State. She was originally from North Andover. She was found murdered.

Anngelle Wood:

It was June 29th 1986, so the start of the summer. She had played softball with her friends. She was at a bar in Salem called Major McGleishy's. I didn't really I wasn't familiar with that at all Anybody familiar with that. Oh, alright, you're in the right place. What is it now? It's still the same thing. Oh, let's go thereafter. Okay, we'll all meet up thereafter, alright?

Anngelle Wood:

At the time it was believed that she left the bar. Somebody gave her a ride home. They believe that. Well, at least they were told she was dropped off around 1, 1.30. But there were many conflicting reports about that, about where Claire went. Leaving the bar. She was doing all the regular things that college sophomores do. Right, you hang out with your friends, you go, maybe grab a couple of drinks, you stay out late. It's what we all did. She was doing absolutely nothing wrong. She was loved, respected by her coworkers. She worked on campus. She also had another job. Somebody said I don't know who, I don't have a name for who to quote here, but she was always smiling. She was always happy. She was studying computer science. Her mom said that when they learned that she hadn't shown up at her job, she was working at a place in Boston that some of her brothers went to look for her. She was found in Beverly. She's from North Andover. She was living in Salem. She was found here in Beverly.

Anngelle Wood:

They didn't know anything about what happened to her. Hers was like so many other cases. What happened to this young student, out with friends, doing what all students do, generally speaking, and her case stayed cold from 1986 to 2022. Could you imagine for a moment being a family member of this young woman who was found, absolutely no idea why or who? And then we learned that they were following this case for many, many years A man named John Carey, a 63-year-old man who was already serving time someplace else for another Massachusetts crime, attacking somebody in Hamilton whose name we don't know. And we don't need to know, because they certainly, you know, deserve their privacy, need to know because they certainly, you know, deserve their privacy, and they followed this lead for ten years, based on the physical evidence that was recovered from Claire's the scene where they found Claire. Thank God for science, because science is solving cases.

Anngelle Wood:

I talk about this all of the time on the show as I become more aware of technology and the scientific advantages that we have. I try to say to all family members or anybody that's involved in this space make sure your DNA is in the database, make sure your dna is in someplace, like jed match, and we'll talk about that, the ramifications of that after, because I know that some people like I don't want my stuff in there. Well, if you didn't commit a crime first of all, you've got nothing to worry about. If you don't, then we should really talk about that, because then I'm going to question you about, like, why are you so scared? What did you do?

Anngelle Wood:

We learned that they were following this lead on this guy for more than 10 years based on the physical evidence that was recovered. Thank God that back in 1986, the investigators who were on that case captured some of that, because, remember, we didn't know the importance of this stuff back then. We didn't know how important things under nails would be and kits and etc. We had no real idea how important this could be, and this stuff does also degrade over time. So it's really important. Just how we handle this stuff does also like, degrade over time. So it's really important. Just how we handle this stuff is really important. So all of these years later, they determined that this person was responsible for what happened to Claire.

Anngelle Wood:

Now I can't be more pointed in saying this that it's important that you know law enforcement. Keep some of this stuff close to the vest Right, because I know that families oftentimes get frustrated and they say things like well, what have you done? What progress have you made? And a lot of times they'll say, well, we don't have any developments right now, but they know things that they have to keep to themselves, because oftentimes there's a lot of people who falsely confess. We've seen it a number of times.

Anngelle Wood:

One case that comes to mind right now is like the John Bonnet Ramsey case that has been languishing for years and years and years. For those of you who are not aware, a little girl who was found murdered in, and it still remains unsolved to this day. Why, I'm not quite sure. There was a lot of evidence found, but people have falsely claimed that they did this and so they know information and they can rule people in or out. And there are also a lot of bananas basket case people who want to inject themselves into stories, don't we know?

Anngelle Wood:

So all of these years later her case was finally solved, what the motive was, we will really have no idea. No one has to prove motive, right? He had a very violent past. We know that. The attempt, the home invasion the woman in Hamilton testified that he had broken into her home. He did horrible things, very violent. He fled after her son basically tried to defend her. I just find it so incredible that after all this time that her case has finally been solved, he was convicted, sent to prison.

Anngelle Wood:

We don't know why. Oftentimes we don't ever really know why, why these people do that, and I think that's also part of our interest in true crime. Right, we don't necessarily want to know. I know some people do, they're curious about what happens, but I think a lot of us share the same response as to what makes people do this. I think that's probably one of the first things that unites everybody and their interest is like I want to really know why people are this way. I do. I, I really do want to know why I read probably some of the most bizarre things like forensics and and crime scene stuff. I don't want, I don't need to see the crime scene stuff. I'm not interested in the brutality of it. I just really want to know. Everybody watch Mindhunter. That's exactly where my interest lies. Why do people do this? I really wish that show would come back and sidebar. I keep seeing this thing online where, like season three of Mindhunter is coming back and I sidebar um there's, I keep seeing this thing online. We're like season three of mind hunters coming back and they were like fuck you, it is not coming back. You're a goddamn liar, because we all wanted to come back season three. They were just getting into the btk thing. Still interested, he is a despicable human being, but I'm still really interested in what happened.

Anngelle Wood:

Okay, familiar with the case of Jesus de la Cruz, lynn, massachusetts, this little guy disappeared off the streets of Lynn in 1996. Now, I remember this case pretty well because it got quite a bit of coverage at the time. Excuse me, he was just six when he disappeared. He was walking down the same street that he lived on with his mom. He was last seen, reportedly about 6 pm. He was with another little friend who was older, a nine-year-old child, headed toward the Lynn Common. If you're familiar with Lynn, where he lived on Park Street. It was probably about a six-minute walk give or take.

Anngelle Wood:

They learned of this little friend, this little boy, the nine-year-old little boy who said that Jesus was pushing his bicycle that had two flat tires when some man and his dog approached them on the sidewalk. Now, this person was pretty familiar to the area and one of the things that made him pretty memorable was his dog. He had a dog with a white, I'm assuming, the fur around his eye and a brown fur around his eye. So the dog was pretty recognizable, the man probably not so much, but the dog, yes, the dog was pretty recognizable, the man probably not so much, but the dog yes. So the man also had a bike and the little nine-year-old boy with Jesus asked for the bike and the man said no, I'm gonna give the bike to him. So the nine-year-old little boy did not go with the man and Jesus because he, for whatever reason, the nine-year-old decided to listen to his parents that day and his dad told him to stick around. Jesus is believed to have gone with this man. He was never seen again after that.

Anngelle Wood:

In a piece in the Daily Item Lynn's Daily Item from the 20th anniversary of his disappearance, he was not reported missing until later, like past midnight. His mom had come home. She couldn't find him. She went looking. He was nowhere to be found. She called the police and reported him missing. The man with the bike was known to the neighborhood because of the dog With the bike was known to the neighborhood because of the dog.

Anngelle Wood:

He was identified as a man named Robert Levesque. He was 26. He was living on Western Ave in Lynn at the time. He was arrested at his parents' home in Lowell on unrelated offenses, some kind of motor vehicle offense. He was held for several weeks and then evidently released. But he was never charged in Jesus's disappearance, despite the fact that when they went to his apartment they found a host of things like duct tape, handcuffs, drumsticks I mean, he could have just been a drummer, but a hammer and the dog with the unique markings. So it all connected. This is a picture of his mom.

Anngelle Wood:

Investigators learned that this guy, levesque, had called out sick from his job. That night he was working at some store in Marblehead. So for those of us who are even the slightest bit familiar with how these things go, when somebody commits a crime their behavior changes. We oftentimes see changes in people's appearance. His behavior definitely changed. He called out of work that night.

Anngelle Wood:

Jesus has been missing for almost 30 years. He was last seen wearing a white t-shirt, blue jeans, brown and yellow boots or brownish yellow boots. That was unclear to me. He has a scar above his left eye. You can see it in his eyebrow if you look closely at the, if you look closely at the poster. He has birthmarks and his disappearance is is classified as a non-family abduction because there have been a number of rumors about his disappearance over those years and that's something that happens. There's speculation. People like to try to armchair detective this stuff, you know. Okay, if you want to keep his story in the public eye, I guess I'll give you a pass with that, but making up things that happened to a missing little boy isn't helpful for anyone.

Anngelle Wood:

The pond at the cemetery was drained. Other ponds were searched, nothing turned up and I'm sure there have been a number of tips and information that has come in since. His father did give a DNA sample, not till 2011. Remember, the language and the understanding of this stuff changed dramatically from the 80s and 90s. Right, we're seeing that even today, how people are now understanding how this stuff works. So the dad did give a DNA sample in 2011. It was uploaded to CODIS, which is very important to have. Their CODIS checks DNA in there against offenders. Nothing so far has been matched to him. No, you know missing person. No remains of anybody has been found to connect to Jesus.

Anngelle Wood:

After all this time, what do we think happens? I don't know what happened. We know that there are I don't want to get too deep into this because it's very dark but we know that children got abducted off of the streets and were, you know, trafficked, etc. Could this have happened to Jesus? It is possible. Is it possible that this Levite guy did something? Yes, it's very possible.

Anngelle Wood:

Nick Mick created an age progression image of what he might look like at 31 years of age. That's the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Oftentimes I hear that families aren't thrilled with the age progression photos, but it's possible that, if you know Jesus was still here and with us, that he could be recognizable and he has some features. He had that scar, he has some birthmarks. So we're always asking for tips, we're always asking for the public to help share some information, and what that means is sometimes relationships change People who may have been keeping things quiet for a long time because they may have been, you know, bullied or threatened by other people who are involved. Relationships change and then sometimes people come forward and say well, that person's gone. I can tell you now these are how a lot of cases are being solved. In addition to DNA, in addition to forensic science and familial DNA, relationships change and people come forward and they drop a dime. They tell people what they know. We've seen a number of cases that have gone this way.

Anngelle Wood:

Another Lynn story Lois Centifanti. Back in 90, we're going back to 1974. Early summer day, clear day, 55 degrees, 22-year-old Lois Centifanti was out first thing in the morning. She was on a mission, she was job hunting. She had been staying at the time at the Charlestown YMCA, despite the fact that her family was, I think she was from. She was from East Boston, but like a lot of families, there was something going on and she didn't want to be at home. So she was staying at the ymca and she was job hunting. And back then you had to show up in person and fill out the stupid application because there wasn't, nothing existed, like it does today. Imagine that you actually have to go out and see people in person pick up the phone. She was from Orient Heights of East Boston and her brother talked about how she was a very talented and wonderful person, as people should. She loved to play piano, she was musically gifted, she was a talented cook, she was a seamstress All that stuff is a talent.

Anngelle Wood:

I got to say another sidebar. There'll be a lot of that tonight. Tell your kids it's okay to go to trade school, it's okay to learn something else, it's okay to be a plumber, because I'll tell you what, when all the plumbers are gone, we're all going to need a fucking plumber. There's a great. Yes, you can applaud that, I'll take it.

Anngelle Wood:

There's a great South Park episode that I have talked about, where I forget what it's called, but it's um. You know, randy is the, the oven door is broken and his wife's, like Randy, fix the oven door and he doesn't know how. So he wants to go and get some service person to come and fix it. But the service people are rich and busy because nobody knows how to fix anything anymore. So, as South Park does, they flip the script and the next scene is all the business people are outside Home Depot with their signs I will pay you $500,000 to come to my house and fix something and all the service. People are like, nah, we're good Because they're living large, because people will give them ridiculous amounts of money to fix their stuff.

Anngelle Wood:

The moral to that story is we all need people who know how to fix stuff, because the world has changed and for some reason, people think that the only way in life is to go to college. No shade on college. I get it. It's good, you should go, all of those things but if you don't want to go to college, don't go to college. Go to trade school and learn how to fix stuff. I know I'm probably speaking to people who are beyond that, but if you've got kids and they're thinking they don't want to go to college, it's OK that they don't want to go to college. Let them fix stuff for you. And plumbers, by the way, make a lot of money any plumbers in the house. I don't need you to fix anything right now, but if I do, I know where to call you Build stuff. People need to know how to build stuff and fix stuff.

Anngelle Wood:

Lois's brother told the Lynn Daly item that he saw his sister the day before she died. She had come by their house, their parents' house, to grab a jacket before heading to a bar in Revere called Jacob's Ladder. Anybody know about Jacob's Ladder? All right, I'm under the assumption that she was going there to apply for a job. I'm not. It's not clear to me. I need stories about Jacob's Ladder, you guys. And she was. She told her family that the next day she was going to Harbor House and Lynn and this is a picture of Harbor House that I lifted off the internet it looks really fancy. Did anybody go to Harbor House? Did it look like that? Did it look that cool? Okay, this is a. This picture is amazing. It was a lounge in a nightclub where, evidently, aerosmith played in the late 90s. Did anybody go see Aerosmith at that harbor house? An Aerosmith cover band? All right, and what I learned about?

Anngelle Wood:

Another part of what I love about doing this podcast is I fall into like history rabbit holes and I learn about all the. I never cared about history when I was a kid. I never really cared about learning anything when I was in school, but now, as an adult, I love history and I love learning about things that happened primarily in New England, because this is where we live and this is where I love and I don't really ever want to leave. I don't know how you feel about being here, but I love it here. I think it's the best, and you're all from here and we get to share these stories and we laugh about Jacob's ladder nothing better than that I.

Anngelle Wood:

Then I learned that the harbor house fell into bankruptcy and it was. It sat it correct me if I'm but it sat like in disrepair for a long time and then it burned down to the ground. It got caught up in this, like you know, two entities fighting over it and it was bankrupt and then it burned to the ground. I did pull some pictures off the internet, but we don't need to get into that right now. So there is a small window of time where Lois's movements are mostly unaccounted for. Where did she go and who did she see? That is a question. That's a question of the ages, because we just don't know.

Anngelle Wood:

Around four o'clock that Thursday the same day she had gotten up really early, going to look for a job and maybe went to the harbor house. Around four o'clock that afternoon a fisherman found her badly beaten body floating in Lynn Harbor near General Edwards Bridge and the public fishing pier. So that's sort of a, you know bird's eye view of what it looked like. I don't know when this was taken, but anybody who drives that route across that bridge this is familiar to you. I did that a lot when I was working at FNX on Lynn Lynn Lynn, the city of sin. She was fully clothed. According to her autopsy report, she had only been in the water reportedly for a few hours. She was covered in bruises her face, her neck, her jaw, around her eyes but her cause of death was strangulation.

Anngelle Wood:

Her murder remains unsolved more than 50 years later, despite reports of her friends receiving threatening notes saying keep your mouths shut. What more is there's? I'm sure there's much more to the story that either the public isn't privy to. You know some of these people, all these years later, time is really running out for a lot of these folks. She would be well into her 60s now. We need people whose relationships have shifted to tell us what's going on. And you know I I'm hoping that even all these years, all those years ago, although her body was in the water, it's really difficult for any dna to be captured, to be present.

Anngelle Wood:

Her murder remains unsolved. What's sadder still about that story? And I think I probably? I can't recall if I, if I left it in there or it didn't make, it didn't make the cut on the slide, but Lois passed away. But four years before Lois passed away, her brother, john, passed away unexpectedly. So her family not only had to deal with the loss of her brother, but then they have to deal with, four years later, this horrible murder of their daughter, lois and their sibling Lois. No family deserves that. No family deserves to go through that. Two losses One will take you out Two. It's horrible. We're staying in Lynn, folks. We will leave Lynn, but we're still in Lynn.

Anngelle Wood:

Leanne Redden was from Lynn. She has been missing since 2013. She was 37 when she disappeared. Boston 25 News, also Bob Ward, is the best. If you're familiar with Bob Ward, he is a reporter on Boston 25 News who digs deep into a lot of these unsolved missing persons cases. He's a terrific guy. He's phenomenal at what he does. So he's not here, but yay, bob Ward.

Anngelle Wood:

Leanne would regularly visit her mother and family in Lynn. She grew up in Lynn, lived there really all of her life. But on April 15, 2013, the day of the Boston Marathon bombings, leanne showed up at her mother's door with a new boyfriend, an older man, reportedly from Saugus. I don't know very much about this man. I don't know what the police learned. I don't know what investigators learned about this person. It would take a little bit more digging and research on my part.

Anngelle Wood:

Strangely, this guy that was with Leanne had made a statement that he was going to marry her and help her. So the story, the background. There's a lot to Leanne, but one of the things that we do have to mention is she battled drug abuse for a long time and anybody who's had a family member that has dealt with this, it is very painful for everybody. It's very painful for everybody to watch. So this man said in front of Leanne's mother and Leanne I'm going to marry her and help her. Leanne didn't say anything. Her mother, donna, was like what, who's this guy? Who's this clown? And Leanne's just like, yeah, whatever.

Anngelle Wood:

The next morning that boyfriend called Donna, her mom, telling her that Leanne left him in the middle of the night. One week later, that boyfriend returned Leanne's belongings to her family's house. Family and friends, as you would imagine, were all alarmed. First of all, who's this clown? Where's my sister and why are you dropping all her stuff off? They wouldn't get any answers to those questions. Of course, he was very suspicious. Within months of Leanne's disappearance, that man died of a suspected drug overdose. Now you can connect those dots right. If she had substance abuse problems. This person looks like he did as well. He wasn't saving anybody from anything.

Anngelle Wood:

As of 2023, investigators were still looking at this person. They searched the Saugus home where he was living, I guess, a couple of times and then last summer, july 2024, state police from New Hampshire and Massachusetts gathered on a small road in Barrington, new Hampshire that's up there to search the property of somebody associated with this boyfriend. He had ties to this Barrington, new Hampshire area. I remember hearing this in the news that there was a search taking place on this property in Barrington, new Hampshire, and one of the first things people started to say was oh, is it related to Mara Murray's case? Which is? It's a Mara's case, if anybody is not familiar.

Anngelle Wood:

She's been missing for 21 years. She's from Hanson, mass. She was a nursing student at UMass, amherst. For some reason she, for some reason her family still to this day is not aware of, for some reason her family still to this day is not aware of left school telling her professors that she had a death in the family and she headed north, ended up in Haverhill, new Hampshire. She did not have a death in the family. Nobody knows what was going on. She had a really a pretty minor accident on the side of the road in New Hampshire.

Anngelle Wood:

Locals stopped to help her. She said no, I'm fine, I'm fine, I'm fine. I called AAA, I'm fine. Well, I've been to Haverhill, new Hampshire. There's still no cell phone service to this day. So, you know, neighbors said we'll help you. No, I'm fine, I'm fine, I'm fine. Still, neighbors went and called the police. Anyway, the police showed up A number of minutes later.

Anngelle Wood:

Maura was gone, disappeared, never seen ever again. Still today and her family are soldiers for her. They will not stop looking for her. They're not going to stop. They're not going to stop. They're very good people. I know her sister, I met her dad. They're very good people and they're dedicated to finding out what happened to Mara. They do not believe she's alive. They believe she met with foul play.

Anngelle Wood:

So when this search started, when you can see that there's, you know these helicopters flying overhead when the search made the news, people immediately connected that because why wouldn't you right? It was for Leanne. Subsequently, there's no news that came connected that because why wouldn't you right? It was for leanne. Subsequently, there's no news that came from that. So leanne described as 5'2, 105 pounds, curly black hair, blue eyes. She had very distinctive tattoos, one of a cross with words, forgive me, father on her upper back, sunflower tattoo on her lower back you can say a tramp stamp, because I think she would laugh about it too and a tattoo across her fingers, across her middle finger of her left hand. So all of that information is important, despite the fact that it's been all of these years later. If she had been found sooner, they could have helped to identify her. Where is she today? We all wish that we knew so, leanne. It's just sad to know that this person whomever this person is sounds like they decided what they were going to do and probably caused harm to her. Looks like the case right.

Anngelle Wood:

So this story. I had been really wondering what happened, because when I heard the story of Joel I'll tell you the background on this Young guy, 24 years old, went out to a party in Chelsea. He was from Lynn. He went out to a party in Chelsea. I actually spoke to a detective about this. I recently went to an event with the Mass State Police Unsolved Case Unit in the Boston Police Cold Case Unit and I asked them questions about these cases. And I asked one of the questions I asked about. We actually talked about Leanne's case.

Anngelle Wood:

I asked about Joel. He went by Joel, I asked about his case and I said tell me about this young man. He was at a party in Chelsea. He left the party in chelsea. He took a lift. He was missing supposedly. He got out during the ride and the detective gave me a little bit information. Of course they're careful with what they share with you. The detective said he was in the lift. He was let out of the lift, the I don't know what you call it.

Anngelle Wood:

The drive ended at a certain time. It was about was it even 20 minutes from Chelsea to Lynn where he was going to go. He got in the car in Chelsea. The ride ended 14 minutes later at 3 56 am. Then a call a 911 call came in from his phone to revere police. It cut off.

Anngelle Wood:

Revere police say they tried to contact him again. They were unsuccessful. They began searching that thursday it was. A couple of days went by, so I don't really know the details there. They were looking for evidence related to the disappearance of Joel de los Reyes in the marshland off of 107. He was found five days later after he left that party. Divers with the Mass State Police diving crew located him in the Rumney Marsh Reservation along Route 107 in Revere shortly after 8.30 on Friday June 16th. He was missing from essentially Sunday morning until they located him on Friday, I believe. For a period of time his phone was pinging but then it stopped, so they knew sort of where to look for him.

Anngelle Wood:

So my question to the detective was well, what happened? What do you suspect happened? Chelsea Delin is approximately 23 minutes. I Google mapped it because I'm not really kind of a detective. I Google shit. The marsh was approximately 16 minutes from the Chelsea address. So I'm always thinking about these like detective E things. Yes, I said it, I'm thinking. I try to think about how, how, uh, an investigator might look at things and if it's a 23 minute drive. But after 16 minutes does it all add up? Yeah, kind of does.

Anngelle Wood:

And I spoke with the detective familiar with the case and they said this yeah, kind of does. And I spoke with the detective familiar with the case and they said this he wasn't much of a drinker. He was believed and he had a few drinks that night and, instead of the friends having him stay, he called the car to get home to Lynn and it sounds as though he may have gotten sick or was maybe going to get sick in the car and either he wanted to get out or the driver said get out, don't puke in my car. I mean, we've all taken a car, right, we've all been with not us necessarily, but been with somebody who was on drinker. They don't they clearly don't want you to throw up in their car. Um, so I'm gonna venture a guess that either joel get me out, I'm going to be sick or he was tossed. We don't know.

Anngelle Wood:

Here's one of the many questions that I have and the general public probably does too. Did he get out on his own? Did he get lost? Was he inebriated to the point where he didn't know his surroundings? It's very possible. We don't know. Did he drop his phone? Did he fall into the water? What happened? What was his blood alcohol level? We don't know. I mean, the family has a right to not share any of this information, but I did want to know because oftentimes, when you do what I do something happens. You're concerned about what happened with that individual and sometimes no news is ever available, ever again, and the family has that right. As we understand it, his death is believed to be accidental. But I want to know what did that lift driver say? Did they find that lift driver? Did they interview that lift driver? I'm hoping so, but all Lyft driver has to say is he was getting sick so I let him out on the side of the road and he fell in the marsh and he never made it out and his parents, his family, as you would guess, had a lot of concerns about that. It has been ruled accidental as of right now. So the last time I was here, I had a long list of cases that I was hoping to cover, one of which was the Karen Sharp case.

Anngelle Wood:

Now, for those of you who are not aware of the Karen Sharp case out of Wenham, I'll give you a little bit of a background, and I have you know, I pulled some information. Karen Sharp was a mom from Gloucester, her husband, who she was with for a very long time. They were like college sweethearts. They got married very young. They had a daughter very young. They were like 18 and 19 when they got married. He was a Harvard-educated dermatologist. He had his own practice practice. He was associated with a few hospitals and then he started his own dermatology office and I know some of you here may have somebody last at last show was one of his clients. Is she here? Oh, she was sitting like over here, but she was like I was one of his clients. He had, you know, back in when this happened in the in the late 90s, 2000s, uh like, laser hair removal wasn't what it is now like. Now you can just order a laser hair removal thing on the internet and it shows up, but back then it was like sort of this new technology and he was starting to open these laser hair removal places, you know through his dermatology practice. So they were very successful.

Anngelle Wood:

And Karen Sharp was a nurse. She was a licensed nurse but she was also helping her husband with his business. Her focus was always on her family. She had an older daughter who was an adult by the time she was killed, and she had two smaller children I believe there were seven and five when she was killed. Her husband, over the course of many months, had started to get more and more violence and controlling in the months leading up to her death she had been making. She would have been apologizing for her husband's very strange behavior when they were around friends. She wanted to leave, she wanted to leave him. It got to be enough.

Anngelle Wood:

She moved out of their Gloucester house. She was in the process of building a house in Wenham. I believe that's the house that she was killed in. I don't know the chronology of when the house was started, when it was finished, but she moved from Gloucester to Wenham. She had taken out a restraining order. She had renewed the restraining order shortly before she was murdered.

Anngelle Wood:

Her adult daughter had spoken about like during the trial. Her adult daughter had said things about how she had witnessed her father stabbing the mother with a fork. I mean, it just was getting very, very ugly, despite the fact that they were together. All of these years almost 30 years they were together. He started changing. She wanted to divorce and then, on the evening of July 14, 2000, he showed up. His name is Richard Sharp. I don't give a lot of attention to perpetrators like this but for the sake of context, his name was Richard Sharp. That's probably familiar to you those of you who are from the area, that might ring a bell.

Anngelle Wood:

On July 14th 2000,. Karen's family and her children, I'm sure, were there witnessed. When he showed up at her house he confronted her and pulled out a rifle and shot her in the chest and she died and unfortunately, like a lot of these cases go. There's only one picture of Karen Sharp that's accessible on the internet. Everything else is about the person who murdered her. He killed her, he vanished.

Anngelle Wood:

He was found and arrested two days later at a motel in Tuftonboro, new Hampshire. Used his own credit cards to check in, didn't even give a fake name. He had run that successful dermatology practice. He was affiliated with Beth Israel. He was associated with the Glossier Hospital, beverly Hospital. He earned a lot of money. He had the chain of cosmetically as a hair removal places.

Anngelle Wood:

Her daughter, her grown daughter, had to witness some of this abuse that she went through. After that incident the attack with the fork he was caught and briefly institutionalized and pressured Karen not to press any charges. Court records are sealed and his behavior came worse and worse over time. He brought strange things to the house like pipes and duct tape. It scared Karen, as it should. She was worried about her safety and the safety of her family she would apologize for how rude he would be. She left the Gloucester home, went to Wenham, she got the restraining order and here's where.

Anngelle Wood:

Look. You know, murder is horrible and horrendous, but really what pushed this case to the forefront, where it made national attention, is the salacious headlines that everybody wrote, and we know this happens Calling him a cross-dresser. Our language has changed. Now would probably be considered transgender. I don't know anything about this person to even be able to tell you what they were about. I truly don't know. The doc was self-prescribing hormones and abusing lots of medication, but I have trans friends and they're pretty awesome and they're not a monster like this person. So there was definitely something else going on here. Why did he do it? Prosecutors say he was angry over the prospect of losing $3 million in a divorce settlement. I don't know where the $3 million figure comes from and, as we know, his arrest drew national attention because they started sharing photographs of the doc wearing dresses, wigs, stockings, et cetera.

Anngelle Wood:

Karen had said in earlier affidavits that she was missing birth control pills. The doc was taking them as a way to transition. A doctor has much more access to things, so I don't quite understand. But what's to understand he's a murderer. At his trial the doc testified about cross-dressing at a young age. Father was very abusive, apparently. The defense psychiatrist said that they suffered from disorders depression, intermittent explosive disorder which causes bursts of rage and aggression and alcohol made them worse and combined with all of the drugs that the doctor had access to, it just sounds like an absolute disaster in the making. Clearly that's how it turned out.

Anngelle Wood:

The prosecutor said that the doctor faked the symptoms of mental illness and I've done episodes about people like this. They called them malingerers, right? If anybody's heard the episodes I did about the Wakefields technology, what was it called? Yes, yes, edgewater Technology is the name of the company at the time in Wakefield. This person planned this mass killing. The day after Christmas he planned this mass killing and pretend like looked up things to fake mental illness. He was just pissed off that the accountant was going to attach his wages for back taxes, so he decided to kill everybody the day after Christmas. A malingerer, and that's really what he was called, even in court. So the story of Karen Sharp is not that different. I mean there's a lot of extenuating circumstances. That's different than the Michael Mucko story. But prosecutors say that the doctor faked it, that it wasn't in a burst of rage, that he planned the murder after she left him and that he was going to lose millions of dollars in a divorce.

Anngelle Wood:

Here's a timeline of the case July 14, 2000, karen Sharp is shot and killed. Two days later, richard Sharp is arrested. Four days later, karen Sharp's family follows a wrongful death suit against Richard Sharp. Four days later, karen Sharp's family follows a wrongful death suit against Richard Sharp. July 2001, a fellow inmate accuses Sharp of offering him $1 million to help Sharp escape from prison In 2000,. He is charged with murder, held without bail. In November 2001, sharp is convicted of first-degree murder, sentenced to life in prison. December, a wrongful death suit is settled for five million dollars. So you murdered Karen Sharp because you thought you were gonna lose three million dollars. You go to prison for life and you lose $5 million. There's an attempt. There's a suicide attempt in spring of 2002. Fast forward. I'm sure a lot of other whack-ass things happened in that time frame. Fellow inmate says he and Sharp plotted to kill Sharp's prosecutor. Sharp is found not guilty, is charged, found not guilty and then in January 2009, sharp is found hanged by a bed sheet in a cell.

Anngelle Wood:

Too bad, so sad, I don't know. I have a lot of compassion, but you killed someone and you didn't need to do that. You could have just walked away from that, but who knows what was going on in that person's mind. So here's here's where I have to make fun, because you have people that like you see it, on Dateline, right, dateline is like the preeminent you know storyteller in this case, right? Well, you know, she was having the husband and the wife was having an affair and they thought, oh, I don't want to get divorced and lose that money. I know I'll hire a hitman or I'll kill him and make it look like an accident and then I'll get all this money, this insurance money. You idiot, you always get caught. Oh and, by the way, people who kill somebody for like 150 grand, that's never enough money. There's not enough money in the world, by the way, for me to kill anybody. But they're like, oh, I'm going to have them killed and I'm going to get 150 grand. That is not a lot of money, really. People are just utterly pathetic who think that way. But I think you know where I'm going with this. You always get caught. There wouldn't be a Dateline going on, for what are we like? 50 seasons of Dateline if people were smart and I watch Dateline, I'm a big fan Okay, we're doing. Okay, time-wise, all right.

Anngelle Wood:

Henry Bedard Jr of Swampscott this is a case that we touched on a little bit at the last show and I still. I would really like an opportunity to research more about Henry's case and I will do that in a future episode. But 15 years old, from Swampscott, the community still is haunted by this case and I hear people have spoken about it. It was December 1974. He was doing some Christmas shopping. Never made it home. He was a 15-year-old sophomore.

Anngelle Wood:

Stopped at CVS to get his sister some perfume, 1976, what do you think the perfume was? Was taboo around. Sweet honesty, babies, love, babies. What was that? Babies look soft, loves, babies soft. Yes, when I was reading about this, I'm like, because this is how mine, mine, works, what kind of perfume was he getting his sister in 1976? Oh, 1974. Gina Tay, yeah, anjoli. Gina Tay, yeah, anjoli. Remember Anjoli, that's probably around then. Emerude my grandmother had Emerude. That smelled rude. Remember that stuff? That stuff was rude, taboo. I used to wear taboo when I was little. I did so. I always wonder what did he buy for her.

Anngelle Wood:

He was last seen walking in a wooded area by the town's Department of Public Works. His body was later discovered buried in a pile of leaves overlooking a DPW. He had been beaten to death and it's horrible to even imagine, but a Louisville Slugger baseball bat was found nearby and the killer has not been caught all of these years later. Now I know so. This photograph was released later. 50 years later, they're still seeking to revive this cold case and they need help. Investigators need help. This is a piece of evidence that was collected the baseball bat, which has this they call it a cryptic marking carved into it.

Anngelle Wood:

I know that there's been a lot of conjecture about this. Of course, why wouldn't there be? But what does that mean? Who did it come from? What did they discover? What did they discover at that crime scene? Who was involved and what do people who are still around the area know?

Anngelle Wood:

Now I know that somebody has said it, and maybe it was one of you who were here last show, because somebody brought it up and said that there are people in the town yes, there are people in the town that are terrified of one person that they believe is associated with this case. Who that person is. I don't know, and I would be really careful to name them in public anyway, but there was somebody that they believe was associated with that murder and it still remains like. First of all, what did a 15-year-old kid do? Nothing. Did someone just get pissed off at a kid in junior high and go after them? It seems completely plausible that that person may still be there. Yes, wow, wow, aha. A rival, a rival. You don't have to name them. But there's a person that was identified as the jealous one, right, right, right, right, right, right, right, right, right, uh-huh.

Anngelle Wood:

Do you have you heard that? That those kind of whispers that whomever was in charge of the investigation may have been connected to who they think perpetrated the crime? Mm-hmm, mm-hmm, mm-hmm. That's very plausible nepotism in a small town police department. Are you kidding? What I heard, canton? I heard that.

Anngelle Wood:

Well, that's important information, because we man, I wish people would talk. I wish people would drop a dime, an anonymous tip. You know, I know, I know that you know, when you do this, or you know just even people who have even the slightest bit of interest in crime at all, you get to understand that there's information that gets shared, that is fact-based, and sometimes people just want to glom onto the story and include them, you know, just inject themselves into it. But a lot of times, even cases that are this old, from the 70s, still get tips Still to this day, and I really, really wish that people would not, with knowledge of something like this, would just come out with it. People with knowledge of something like this would just come out with it Somewhere along the line.

Anngelle Wood:

I heard this last time at our last show here in October, where somebody said that there's some fear among certain citizens of a person and that's sad. Was that you? Yeah, wow, so Henry's best friend has information and they're scared. Oh, hmm, yeah, yeah, mm-hmm, mm-hmm, yeah, mm-hmm. It happens too much. It happens too much where people are threatened and people some people don't want to get involved. They know information. You know I I have spoken about this a lot the case of charlene rosemond, a woman who was found murdered in somerville.

Anngelle Wood:

Her family believes that they, that she knew who killed her and that it's a situation where no one wants to be the snitch. It's like a woman is dead and a family is grieving. You need to snitch. Don't call it snitching, call it being a responsible human being human being, it's tough to hear these stories and to know that families are in pain, still Like it's 1974, right, I mean, these relatives are gone, families are gone, everybody knows who that bat belongs to and still, to this day, nothing has been done. So your, so your information about a family connection, that rings true. I mean, that's common sense. It's not just me being my, you know, putting my weirdo kind of an investigator hat on that stuff rings true.

Anngelle Wood:

Nepotism in a small town that's going to be the name of the book. Nepotism in a small town. You're absolutely right. Thank you for that, because I remember when you told me that story is that people know in Swampscott, in the area and, by the way, my mom was born in Swampscott and she calls it Swampskit, swampskit area, that and, by the way, my mom was born in swamps got and she calls it swamps get, swamps get. My mom grew up in salem. So I am, you know, I don't live that far away from here, but I you know. So you know that that's another, that's another situation where, 1974, this kid was killed.

Anngelle Wood:

Nobody wants to talk. You just hope that a deathbed confession, right, this person who did it is probably never going to say anything ever. They feel like they got away with the perfect crime. Wow. So his family is still alive, the perpetrator's family is still alive, the perpetrator's family is still alive and in the area. But that wow, and the family won't. The family won't say anything.

Anngelle Wood:

Well, because they could be implicated, right, if they knew, if a family, if the families, kept that secret for all this and that's another fascinating question because, again, this is how my mind works I'm going to mention another very, very, very publicized case Gabby Petito case. We know what happened there, that Brian Laundrie murdered Gabby Petito and buried her in the desert and came back to his family in Florida and his family in Florida knew and protected him. But you know what Gabby Petito's family really would my words, not theirs, but you know that they would want that family prosecuted and I have reason to believe they've tried. But Brian Laundrie's family is not going to face any legal consequences to what happens. How do they lay their head on their pillow at night protecting their son that way? It's got to be really painful that he subsequently took his own life, but how in the world? I just can't fathom it.

Anngelle Wood:

Knowing how painful it is for families, I don't know, where do your values stand? Right, I know a lot of families would like to protect their kid. But murder, I don't know. Murder, that outweighs everything. For me it's an open secret. That's a really great way to put it stacy an open secret and it looks like that's what's happening, happened in swamskit.

Anngelle Wood:

There's been an open secret for a lot, a lot, a lot of years and I can't actually blame some people for not really. You know, some people are like well, I don't know exactly. I just heard hearsay doesn't stand up in court but investigators know enough of the facts of the case where they could connect that stuff. I was just talking about this earlier with my friend Jean that some people know and the cops won't move on it. But then other times it takes something like you know somebody really being adamant and having that conviction right to take that stand right. It didn't happen in the Brian Laundrie case for sure. Yeah, I mean there comes a point where people sort of detach from it. Right, and you know it's been since 1974. I mean, look at how the world has changed. I certainly don't know what the authorities know, what kind of DNA evidence or whatever, and we who knows they could be working behind the scenes. Look what happened in the Claire Gravel case. They have been searching, you know, they've been investigating that person for more than 10 years and they cracked the case at last. Right.

Anngelle Wood:

I'd love to think that Henry's case will eventually be solved. Will somebody be brought to justice? No, because it sounds like whomever this person is is no longer walking the earth. But I would love for his family, whoever's left, to be able to say we finally know what happened. That's my wish for everyone, and I'm pretty sarcastic, but I do believe in my heart that cases can be solved because we're seeing it right, even cases that are more than what? Going? 51 years that Henry's been gone. Am I math right? Okay, question marks. Am I math right? More than 50 years that he's been gone? Cases do get solved after 50 years. We've seen it and I always hold out hope for that, always hold out hope, always hold out hope.

Anngelle Wood:

That's part one of our show from Off Cabot in Beverly, mass, on Thursday night, march 13th. It was a sold out show, our first sold out show in this series of live shows since I started Well, since I started live showing a year ago. Thank you very much. I have another date scheduled to return to Off Cabot in Beverly Mass. I'm not ready to announce it yet because it won't go on sale right away, but I will let you know soon.

Anngelle Wood:

We continue the True Crime North Shore series, so if you have a case you would like included, please email at crimeofthechewestkind at gmailcom. You would like included? Please email at crimeofthechewestkind at gmailcom. Part two of True Crime North Shore, recorded live at Off Cabot in Beverly Mass, should be in your feed right now. It's technically episode 83. Thank you to our latest Patreon patrons Danielle Cmoxy, georgia. Extra special thanks to superstar EP Lisa McColgan. There are a number of ways you can support this show. Share it on social media, tell your friends about it, post it in the threads and groups that you are part of. Become a patron. Four tiers starting at just one dollar. Drop a tip in the jar. Subscribe to the mailing list. The latest newsletter just went out this week. Leave a five-star rating and review on Apple Podcasts. What else? Come to a live show. More dates coming soon. All right, locky, goddamn Doors. Part two is next. We'll be right back. We'll see you next time.

People on this episode

Podcasts we love

Check out these other fine podcasts recommended by us, not an algorithm.

Open Investigation Artwork

Open Investigation

Melanie Perkins McLaughlin