Canadian CrimeCast: Coast to Coast True Crime
I tell you the details and the story for interesting crimes from across Canada, with insights that only a retired RCMP officer can provide. Finally, a Canadian true crime podcast that is interesting on more than one level.
My podcasts are the best version of true crime, where you get the juicy details of the story, but also an understanding of what was happening in the minds of police investigators as they're working the case, and how certain pieces of evidence can solve the case. I also do my best to paint a picture of the day or life of the unsuspecting victim.
Just don't listen to a story of what happened, try and feel what it felt like for those involved.
Canadian CrimeCast: Coast to Coast True Crime
Latest Episodes
The Purest Truth Convicts a Human Trafficker
A woman runs out of a roadside motel in Mississauga, Ontario, wearing only a T-shirt. She has no phone, no money, no car, and barely any English. She borrows a phone, dials 911, and over twenty-six terrifying minutes she unknowingly lays out th...
A Hole Where His Conscience Should Be: The Violence of Donald Armstrong
It is just past 8:30 pm on a Friday evening in May 1977. A young mother named Glenna Fox is walking back to her car on the upper parking level of a shopping mall in Bramalea, Ontario. She is 27 years old. She has an 8-month-old daughter at home...
The Cleaner Who Watched Her: The Murder of Lisa Posluns
It was a Saturday night November 2, 2002. The kind of night when Yorkville, one of Toronto's most fashionable neighbourhoods, a place of boutiques and galleries and quiet, tree-lined streets, empties out by ten o'clock.Inside a 9-s...
The Last Mothers Day: The De Jong Murders
On the morning of May 9th, 2022, Raymond Hoogland drove out to Arcadian Way in east Abbotsford, British Columbia. It’s a rural road, the kind of road where you can’t see your neighbours, where raspberry fields back up against stands of trees, a...
Cold Water: Where is Jennifer, and the Trial of Dean Penney
It was a Thursday morning in December. The kind of morning when St. Anthony, Newfoundland, a fishing village of 2500 people, clinging to the northern tip of the island, is still pitch black at a quarter to seven.Inside the house at...