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Our first episode. Enjoy.
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When a successful Italian immigrant is shot multiple times in his own driveway, the police start asking some serious questions of the family. Was this an act of vengeance or pure insanity.
Redheads anyone?
Between 1978 and 1983 Dennis Nilsen, known as the “British Jeffrey Dahmer” gruesomely murdered fifteen males; his victims ranged from age fourteen and older. His murder spree went unnoticed for 3 years, until he was finally discovered after a plumber was called to his apartment to clear a blocked drain.
Toronto’s "mall Santa" Bruce McArthur murdered eight men from the Gay Village, hiding their remains in garden planters—proving he was far better at landscaping than spreading holiday cheer.
Paul Bernardo and Karla Homolka, Canada’s “Ken and Barbie Killers,” kidnapped, raped, and murdered three teenage girls—including Karla’s own sister—all while looking like the couple you’d trust to watch your dog, not your daughter.
Patrick Kearney, aka the “Trash Bag Killer,” crisscrossed southern California picking up young men, shooting them in the head, then dismembering them and dumping the remains in garbage bags—proving that for some people, taking out the trash was a real nightmare.
Colonel Russell Williams was Canada’s top air force commander by day, but at night he broke into homes to steal women’s underwear, escalating to rape and murder—his military career had more victims than medals.
Grady Stiles Jr., aka “Lobster Boy,” was a circus sideshow performer with claw-like hands who shot his daughter’s fiancé, dodged prison thanks to his rare condition, and was eventually murdered in a family plot—making him the only freak show act killed for being too freaky at home.
Dr. Thomas Neill Cream, nicknamed “Dr. Death,” was a Victorian-era physician who poisoned sex workers and patients across three countries—proving once and for all that if your doctor offers you pills and a cup of tea, maybe just skip both.