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Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

844 episodes — Page 9 of 17

Jared Bridegan: Henry Tenon, the Chain That Reached Him, and the Moments Nobody Interrupted | Pt. 5

A murder-for-hire requires a network. Communication. Agreement. Multiple people who knew something and either chose to be part of it or chose not to interrupt it. Every one of those people was an interruption point. Every one of those points was passed through without the chain breaking.Part 5 — the final episode of One Mile From Home — examines those interruption points, and the psychology that keeps them from being used. Tony Brueski breaks down probability discounting — the documented cognitive bias that causes the brain to systematically underweight the likelihood that someone it knows will commit violence. The specific social calculus that almost always favors waiting over naming. The way "it probably won't go that far" wins the internal argument right up until the moment it shouldn't.He examines Henry Tenon — the final link — not as a monster but as the endpoint of a chain that had multiple human beings attached to it above him. And he asks the question this entire series has been building toward: where were the moments when this could have been stopped, what kept those moments from being used, and what does the research tell us about what we should do differently when we see someone escalating?95% of the time, you feel foolish for saying something. 5% of the time, it's the only thing that would have mattered.There is no reliable way to know which situation you're in.Hidden Killers. The series finale.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#JaredBridegan #OneMileFromHome #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #EscalationBlindness #TrueCrimePsychology #HenryTenon #ShannaGardner #MurderForHire #BystandardEffect

Mar 27, 202614 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Evidence, Contradictions, and What's Left Unresolved

The Kelsey Fitzsimmons case was never going to produce a clean answer. A police officer shot by a colleague during a restraining order service. Two completely contradictory accounts of where the gun was pointed. No body camera footage. A documented mental health history that every officer entering that house knew about before they walked through the door.What the trial record established: Kelsey Fitzsimmons, 29, a North Andover police officer on maternity leave, was home on June 30, 2025, when three colleagues arrived to serve a restraining order from her fiancé, Justin Aylaian. The order required Kelsey to surrender her firearms and transfer custody of her four-month-old son. Kelsey had been diagnosed with postpartum depression and was involuntarily committed for 12 hours in March 2025. At least one responding officer knew this. No mental health professional was present.Officer Pat Noonan testified that Kelsey raised her service weapon and aimed it at his face. Kelsey testified she raised it to her own temple. The gun was unloaded. Noonan shot her twice. One round struck her in the chest.Under cross-examination, Noonan acknowledged he may have called Kelsey a "f---ing whack job" to a neighbor — that neighbor confirmed it under oath. He provided two materially different accounts of the sequence in which he fired, and acknowledged the inconsistency. The defense argued that the location of the firearm after the shooting — found under Kelsey's leg — is physically inconsistent with Noonan's account of where it was pointed. The defense spent significant time in court obtaining approval for a site visit at the home, then dropped it without explanation after Kelsey completed her testimony.Bench trial before Judge Jeffrey Karp. Closing arguments complete. Verdict expected.This episode walks through the full trial record — what was established, what was contested, and what this case leaves unresolved regardless of outcome.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #TrueCrime #NorthAndover #PoliceShooting #HiddenKillers #BenchTrial #PatNoonan #PostpartumDepression #AssaultTrial #MentalHealthCrisis

Mar 27, 202619 min

The Sheriff Who Said "No" Under Oath

Under oath, in a sworn December deposition, Sheriff Chris Nanos was asked directly: had he ever been suspended during his law enforcement career? He said no. The Arizona Republic then published his El Paso Police Department employment file — eight suspensions, thirty-seven days without pay, a suspect in the intensive care unit, a grand jury, and a forced resignation in 1982. Nanos says he interpreted the question as referring only to his Pima County career. Supervisor Matt Heinz says that answer is "disqualifying for any county employee, but especially for one in law enforcement" — and has raised the possibility that every case Nanos touched over four decades may require review.The same week that deposition answer went public, his own deputies voted 241-0 to call for his resignation. The Pima County Board of Supervisors invoked a territorial-era state statute to require him to testify under oath — with removal on the table if he refuses.He said he'll comply. And that single answer may be what keeps him in office. The statute's removal power requires refusal. Compliance may close the door. County attorneys are now working through what the board can actually do if Nanos shows up, answers every question, and the board doesn't believe a word of it. The next board meeting — where outside counsel delivers the specific questions — tells us whether this mechanism has any real force.Nancy Guthrie is still missing. This is the full accounting of where things stand.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#SheriffNanos #NancyGuthrie #PimaCounty #NoConfidenceVote #NanosRecall #SavannahGuthrie #TrueCrime #LawEnforcementAccountability #TucsonMissingPerson #HiddenKillers

Mar 27, 202615 min

Bill Cosby: What the $59 Million Civil Verdict Actually Revealed

The verdict number got the headlines. What happened inside that Santa Monica courtroom tells the fuller story.On March 23, 2026, a California civil jury found Bill Cosby liable for drugging and sexually assaulting Donna Motsinger in 1972, awarding her $59.25 million — $19.25 million in compensatory damages and $40 million in punitive damages after determining he acted with malice, oppression, or fraud under California law. It is the largest civil judgment Cosby has faced. His legal team has announced an appeal.Motsinger, 84, alleged that Cosby cultivated her trust over multiple visits to The Trident restaurant in Sausalito while recording a stand-up album nearby, then invited her to his show, gave her wine and pills she believed to be aspirin, and assaulted her while she was incapacitated. She woke up at home with her clothes removed. She came forward anonymously as Jane Doe Number 8 in the 2005 Constand civil case. She waited another eighteen years before filing her own lawsuit — made possible only by California's 2022 law temporarily suspending the statute of limitations for older sexual assault claims.At trial, the jury heard pattern testimony from Andrea Constand, Victoria Valentino, and Janice Baker Kinney — three additional accusers whose accounts of being given pills and losing consciousness closely mirrored Motsinger's allegations. Perhaps the most damaging evidence was Cosby's own videotaped deposition, in which he acknowledged obtaining Quaalude prescriptions, renewing them seven times, intending to offer the sedatives to women he was pursuing sexually, and stating he did not know whether a woman given a Quaalude from him could meaningfully consent.Cosby, 88, did not testify. His attorney argued the assault allegations rested on speculation given Motsinger's acknowledged lack of direct memory. The jury disagreed. Whether Motsinger will collect on the judgment remains an open question as Cosby disputes estimates of his net worth and litigation continues.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#BillCosby #DonnaMotsinger #CosbyCivilTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #SexualAssaultVerdict #MeToo #JaneDoePlaintiff #CaliforniaLaw #PunitiveDamages

Mar 27, 202627 min

Nancy Guthrie Investigation: What the Case Actually Looks Like Right Now

Strip away the politics. Set aside the board meetings and the no-confidence votes. What is happening on the ground in the investigation into Nancy Guthrie's disappearance — right now?That's the harder question. And it's the one this episode addresses directly.The facts as they stand: Nancy Guthrie, 84, has been missing from her Catalina Foothills home since early February. Blood confirmed as hers was recovered at the scene. The FBI has been co-leading the investigation from the outset. Multiple ransom notes sent to media outlets have been evaluated and could not be authenticated. DNA from gloves recovered near the scene produced no matches in the national CODIS database. Investigators have been specifically requesting footage from January 11 — weeks before the abduction — suggesting something potentially significant occurred on that date. Sheriff Nanos has stated publicly that he believes the home was targeted and the attack was planned. No arrest has been made. No suspect has been identified by name.Meanwhile, the sheriff co-leading that investigation is managing a unanimous no-confidence vote from his deputies union, a Board of Supervisors compliance order requiring sworn reporting, and an active recall effort.Retired FBI Counterintelligence Behavioral Analysis Program Chief Robin Dreeke addresses directly what this institutional disruption means for investigators on the ground who simply want to find Nancy. Whether FBI involvement can insulate the case from command-level chaos. Whether the investigation is at risk of losing critical momentum. And what would realistically need to happen for this case to break open.No false comfort. No optimism that isn't earned. Just an honest look at where this stands.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#NancyGuthrie #ChrisNanos #PimaCounty #FBI #MissingPersons #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #SavannahGuthrie #CriminalInvestigation #AbductionCase

Mar 27, 202619 min

Nancy Guthrie Case: The Sheriff's Hidden Record Changes Everything

The case was always complicated. An 84-year-old woman abducted from her home in Catalina Foothills, her blood on the porch, ransom notes distributed to media, a backpack-wearing suspect captured on doorbell footage — and a multi-agency investigation under the national microscope from day one. What nobody anticipated was that the man running the investigation would become a story unto himself.Sheriff Chris Nanos has maintained from the start that his department is handling this case properly. But over the past several weeks, a different picture has emerged. Documentation from his time with the El Paso Police Department reveals a history of suspensions and insubordination — a record he never disclosed to Pima County across 42 years. Under sworn testimony, he denied being suspended. When records contradicted him, his explanation shifted: he was only thinking about his Pima County tenure.The deputies union, representing over 300 officers, voted unanimously no confidence and called for his immediate resignation. Pima County Supervisor Matt Heinz stated publicly that Nanos' entire tenure with Pima County "seems to be based on fraud." The Board of Supervisors has directed legal counsel to draft language requiring Nanos to report under oath. A recall effort is now underway, requiring more than 122,000 signatures by July 10.And Nancy Guthrie is still missing.Former FBI Counterintelligence Behavioral Analysis Program Chief Robin Dreeke analyzes what Nanos' behavior — the selective memory under oath, the denial, the rapid compliance once removal became legally actionable, the silence following his deputies' rejection — actually signals in the context of an authority figure managing a constructed professional identity. This is evidentiary analysis, not speculation.For listeners who have been tracking this case from the beginning, this episode addresses the question nobody at those press conferences is asking.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#NancyGuthrie #ChrisNanos #PimaCounty #SheriffNanos #TrueCrime #MissingPersons #HiddenKillers #FBIAnalysis #RobinDreeke #Abduction

Mar 27, 202623 min

The Shape of Him Part 4: The People Who Fit The Profile And Never Cross The Line

Hidden Killers presents Part Four of The Shape of Him — the episode that asks what it costs to fit the Kohberger profile and never do a single thing wrong.After every case like this, the profile gets built more carefully. More characteristics get added. And the population of people living inside that description — people who are odd, intense, isolated, fascinated by dark subject matter, socially misaligned — grows larger and carries more weight. Without being acknowledged. Without anyone stopping to say: this description also belongs to people who are living harmless lives and are now carrying something that was never theirs to carry.Tony Brueski examines the experience of being the person others quietly monitor. The impossibility of disproving a feeling-based concern. The exhaustion of performing normalcy for people who have already made a decision. And the documented reality that the false positive rate in behavioral profiling is not a small inefficiency — it is the defining feature of the problem.This episode also speaks directly to the true crime audience — overwhelmingly women — about their engagement with this content, and what it actually reflects about them. Not a warning sign. Something else entirely, and worth naming.For the people carrying this description quietly. They don't get acknowledged in the aftermath. This episode acknowledges them. Part four of five.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#BryanKohberger #TrueCrimePsychology #IdahoMurders #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #ProfileBurden #TheShapeOfHim #WomenAndTrueCrime #MoscowIdaho #CriminalPsychology

Mar 27, 202615 min

The Duggar Family, the System Behind Them, and the Psychology of All of It — Complete 3-Part Series With Shavaun Scott

The arrests are only part of the story. Understanding what's happening with the Duggar family — and why it keeps happening — requires understanding the organization that shaped them, the psychology of the men at the center of it, and what recovery from a system like this actually looks like.Hidden Killers hosts Tony Brueski and Robin Dreeke sit down with psychotherapist Shavaun Scott for a three-part interview series that goes deeper than any crime report can. Scott is a thirty-year licensed clinician who has worked across forensic mental health, trauma recovery, domestic violence, and criminal psychology — and who grew up inside a fundamentalist religious system herself, documented in her memoir Nightbird.Part 1 examines IBLP — the doctrine of absolute paternal authority, the homeschool curriculum that deliberately excluded sex education, and the control mechanisms that kept millions of families inside a closed loop.Part 2 examines Josh Duggar, Joseph Duggar, and Jim Bob Duggar through a forensic clinical lens — what their patterns reveal, what the research says about faith-based handling of offenders, and what the complete absence of accountability produces over time.Part 3 examines healing — what it takes, what it looks like when it works, and what the specific people at the center of this week's story need right now. The victim. The children. The hundreds of thousands of former IBLP members watching this become national news.Three parts. Everything underneath the headlines.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#DuggarFamily #IBLP #ShavaunScott #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #ReligiousAbuse #DuggarFamilySecrets #ForensicPsychology #TraumaRecovery #19KidsAndCounting

Mar 26, 20261h 4m

Kirsten Bridegan: The Woman Who Refused to Let Jared Bridegan's Murder Go Cold | One Mile From Home Pt. 4

The arrests of Shanna Gardner and Mario Fernandez did not happen because the system operated efficiently. They happened because a cooperating witness came forward — and because this case stayed alive, in public attention and investigative priority, long enough for that to matter.The reason it stayed alive has a name. Kirsten Bridegan.Part 4 of One Mile From Home examines the psychology of what Kirsten did and what it cost her to do it. Tony Brueski breaks down institutional betrayal — the research-documented finding that being failed by a system that was supposed to protect you is its own category of trauma, separate from the original loss. Jared had tried to communicate danger through available channels. The system processed his concerns and continued the arrangement.Kirsten came into the aftermath of those failures and made an accurate assessment: this case goes as far as I push it. And then she pushed. For years. While grieving. While parenting alone. While navigating the specific moral complexity of advocating against people who were also the parents of Jared's other children.This episode is about the interior cost of that — and the damning observation that she should not have had to pay it.She made herself visible so the system would move. He had already tried to make himself heard before it was too late.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KirstenBridegan #JaredBridegan #OneMileFromHome #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #InstitutionalBetrayal #TrueCrimePsychology #JusticeForJared #ShannaGardner #MurderForHire

Mar 26, 202611 min

Duggar Survivors and the Long Road Out — A Psychotherapist on What Recovery From This System Really Takes

Jill Duggar Dillard was abused by her brother as a child, told the country on national television that her parents handled it correctly, and is now publicly condemning abuse and supporting victims. Something significant happened between those two moments. Understanding what that is matters for every person who came out of a system like IBLP.In Part 3 of Hidden Killers' three-part interview series, hosts Tony Brueski and Robin Dreeke sit down with psychotherapist Shavaun Scott for a conversation about what recovery from a closed fundamentalist system actually requires. Scott is a thirty-year licensed clinician who specializes in trauma recovery and left a fundamentalist religious system herself — she brings both the clinical framework and the lived experience.This conversation covers what has to happen before someone raised in a closed system can begin to see it clearly, what the clinical work of rebuilding an identity that was never allowed to form actually looks like, and whether healing requires repairing a relationship with parents who were the enablers — or whether it can look like something else entirely.It also addresses the people who need the most right now: a 14-year-old girl in the middle of an active criminal investigation, four children ages 3 to 7 whose parents are both facing criminal charges, and hundreds of thousands of former IBLP members watching their story finally become national news.This is Part 3 of 3.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#JillDuggar #DuggarFamily #IBLP #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #TraumaRecovery #ReligiousAbuse #DuggarFamilySecrets #19KidsAndCounting #ShavaunScott

Mar 26, 202620 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Judge Jeffrey Karp — NOT GUILTY!

Judge Jeffrey Karp renders his verdict in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 26, 202610 min

Larry Millete: He Googled Rohypnol, Paid Spell Casters & His Wife Was Never Seen Again

On January 7th, 2021, Maya Millete called a divorce attorney, came home to Chula Vista, and was never seen again. Her husband Larry sent his last email to a spell caster two minutes before she drove up. A neighbor's camera recorded loud banging sounds from the house that night. Maya's phone went dark around 1:25 AM. No camera ever captured her leaving.What investigators found when they started pulling this marriage apart is unlike almost anything in recent true crime. Larry Millete allegedly paid over $1,100 to people he believed could cast magic spells — starting with love spells, escalating to requests that Maya be injured, made dependent, given nightmares, or given cancer. He placed subliminal audio devices throughout the house — his internet search history included the phrase "subliminal wife training." He Googled Rohypnol and date rape drugs. He allegedly built a physical shrine to the marriage with what appeared to be red wax or blood. Maya's own diary entries suggested she believed he was poisoning her vitamins. A friend told investigators he had choked her until she passed out. A police officer testified in open court that he once punched through drywall to get to her when she locked herself in the bathroom in fear.The morning after Maya disappeared, Larry drove the family Lexus for over eleven hours with his phone turned off and no alibi that has ever held up under questioning. He later asked a neighbor to detail — clean — the vehicle. Every text between him and Maya had been deleted from his phone.Five years later, Larry Millete still hasn't faced a jury. The latest delay came January 28th, 2026, just two weeks before a trial date attorneys had publicly described as final. Defense attorneys cited personal family losses. Maya's sister Maricris stood in court and begged the judge not to grant it — telling him their aging parents wake up every morning still waiting for justice for their daughter. The judge granted it anyway. Trial is now set for May 11th, 2026.Larry Millete has pleaded not guilty. His defense has argued Maya had her own reasons to disappear — a professional situation that could have cost her everything, and an alleged plan to make Larry look responsible. Tony Brueski gives that theory the fair hearing it deserves. Then he lays out everything the prosecution has spent five years building.Maya Millete told her sister, her brother, and a stranger at a law firm: if anything happens to me, it was Larry. Her parents are still waiting for the trial that will decide if she was right.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#LarryMillete #MayaMillete #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime2026 #MissingMom #MurderTrial #ChulaVistaMurder #CoerciveControl #NoBodyCase #TrueCrimePodcast

Mar 26, 202620 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Closing Arguments — Attorneys Make Final Case to Judge

The Commonwealth and Defense deliver closing arguments in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 26, 202653 min

Lindsay Clancy: The Case That Changes How You Think About Postpartum Psychosis

When Patrick Clancy came home on January 24th, 2023, his wife was in the backyard, seriously injured. She told him she had tried to kill herself. He asked where the children were. She said the basement. What he found down those stairs broke every assumption anyone had about this story.Five days later, Patrick asked the world to forgive Lindsay. As he already had.Lindsay Clancy was a Duxbury, Massachusetts mother of three and a labor and delivery nurse at Massachusetts General Hospital. After the birth of her youngest child, she spent months fighting for her mental health — seeing psychiatrists, visiting ERs, calling crisis lines, checking herself into McLean Hospital. Her husband called her doctors himself and said it was urgent. They were told to keep taking the medications. By January 2023, the defense says she had thirteen different prescriptions from multiple providers in four months with no meaningful coordination between them. The day before everything happened, her doctor raised her dose after a seventeen-minute virtual call.Prosecutors say she planned the murders. That she searched methods of killing. That she calculated her husband's absence and acted with premeditation. That argument goes before a jury on July 20th, 2026.Lindsay has pleaded not guilty. Her defense is lack of criminal responsibility — postpartum psychosis. The prosecution's psychiatric evaluation is set for April 10th. Her attorney has told the court she remains at serious risk of suicide.Patrick has moved to Manhattan. He told The New Yorker he was married to someone who got sick — and prosecutors have subpoenaed the tape.Hidden Killers tells the full story. The one nobody is telling completely.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#LindsayClancy #PostpartumPsychosis #DuxburyMurders #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #PatrickClancy #InsanityDefense #MaternalMentalHealth #TrueCrimePodcast #MurderTrial2026

Mar 26, 202618 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Took the Stand. A Verdict Is Hours Away. And the Question Nobody's Asking Is the Most Important One.

After three days of other people telling the story of what happened in that bedroom, Kelsey Fitzsimmons sat down and told it herself. She said she watched her baby, her fiancé, her house, her badge disappear in minutes. Saw a two-second window. Grabbed the gun, put it to her head, and pulled the trigger. When nothing happened, she pulled it again. Then she was on the ground.In the ambulance: "I'm a f---ing idiot. I just tried to kill myself with an unloaded gun." On the oxygen mask: she kept pulling it off. She still wanted to die. Five surgeries. Fifty-three days in the hospital. And on the stand: "I never pointed the gun at a fellow police officer. It never happened."Noonan says she pointed it at him. His own neighbor took the stand and testified he called Fitzsimmons a "f---ing whackjob" and that she walked away from their conversation asking why nobody brought a social worker. Fitzsimmons's mother heard two shots from downstairs and never heard her daughter say a word.Both sides rested. The site visit the defense fought two days to get approved was quietly cancelled after Fitzsimmons testified. Closing arguments are next.But here's what this episode is really about. At least one officer walked into that house knowing Fitzsimmons had been involuntarily committed for postpartum depression. There was still no mental health professional anywhere near that call. Not because anyone was negligent. Because the system was never built to put one there — even when you know walking in that the person upstairs has already been to the edge once.That gap is what put everyone in danger. And no verdict is going to address it.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #NorthAndoverPolice #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #PostpartumDepression #MentalHealthCrisis #PatrickNoonan #TrueCrime #MassachusettsTrial #HiddenKillers

Mar 26, 202627 min

What a Forensic Psychotherapist Sees When She Looks at Josh, Joseph, and Jim Bob Duggar

One Duggar brother is in federal prison. Another was arrested this week on charges he allegedly admitted to twice. Their father has known about abuse inside his family since 2002 and has faced zero legal consequences. A federal judge has already put his finding about Jim Bob's sworn testimony on the public record: not credible.In Part 2 of Hidden Killers' three-part interview series, hosts Tony Brueski and Robin Dreeke sit down with psychotherapist Shavaun Scott — thirty years working with perpetrators of violence across forensic mental health programs, domestic violence settings, and private practice — to examine the psychology of the men at the center of this story.What does Josh Duggar's pattern look like to a clinician who has spent decades in this work? What does Joseph's alleged admission — and his apparent apology to the girl at the time — tell us about how he processed what he did? What is Jim Bob doing when he chooses church over law enforcement, twice, across two decades, and then claims he can't remember any of it under oath?What does the research actually show about what happens to offenders who receive faith-based handling instead of clinical treatment? And what does the complete absence of real consequences do to someone who has harmed others?This is Part 2 of 3.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#JoshDuggar #JosephDuggar #JimBobDuggar #DuggarFamily #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #ForensicPsychology #DuggarFamilySecrets #19KidsAndCounting #ShavaunScott

Mar 26, 202619 min

The System That Built the Duggars — A Psychotherapist Who Survived Fundamentalism Breaks It Down

Two Duggar brothers are now facing criminal charges involving children. A third is in federal prison. Understanding how one family keeps producing these outcomes requires understanding the organization that shaped them.In Part 1 of this three-part interview series, Hidden Killers hosts Tony Brueski and Robin Dreeke sit down with psychotherapist Shavaun Scott to examine the Institute in Basic Life Principles from the inside out. Scott brings something rare to this conversation: thirty years of clinical experience working with trauma survivors and perpetrators of violence — combined with her own personal history inside fundamentalist Christianity, documented in her memoir Nightbird.IBLP's doctrine gave fathers absolute authority. Their own published materials described leaving paternal authority as witchcraft, fear of dying in pregnancy as satanic, and rock music as more addictive than crack cocaine. Their homeschool program deliberately excluded sex education — leaving generations of children without the tools to identify, name, or report abuse.This conversation examines how a system like that gets built, how it maintains control, and what it produces in the people who live inside it. The Duggars aren't the story. They're the symptom. This is the disease.This is Part 1 of 3.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#DuggarFamily #IBLP #BillGothard #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #ReligiousAbuse #CultExposed #DuggarFamilySecrets #19KidsAndCounting #ShavaunScott

Mar 26, 202625 min

The Shape of Him Part 3: The Feeling Nobody Around Kohberger Could Act On

Hidden Killers presents Part Three of The Shape of Him — an examination of everyone who felt something wrong around Bryan Kohberger, had nowhere to take it, and is still carrying that experience.The accounts across his life share a quality: not specific incidents, but a persistent texture of wrongness. A delivery driver. Graduate students. Classmates. People who created distance without being able to say exactly why, who mentioned their discomfort to someone and watched the conversation end there, because the conversation had nowhere to go.Tony Brueski examines what that feeling actually is — the neuroscience behind social threat detection, why it's real, and why it's also imprecise enough that it cannot and should not function as evidence. Then he walks through what every system Kohberger moved through actually required before it could act — and why, at every level, a feeling without a documented incident wasn't enough to cross the threshold.The most honest part of this episode is the acknowledgment that the systems that didn't flag Kohberger are the same systems that protect everyone. That tension doesn't resolve cleanly. It isn't supposed to.For anyone carrying guilt about a feeling they had and couldn't act on. For anyone who works inside a system and has hit its wall. This is the episode that speaks to both. Part three of five.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#BryanKohberger #TrueCrimePsychology #IdahoMurders #HiddenKillers #GutInstinct #TrueCrime #MoscowIdaho #TheShapeOfHim #WomensIntuition #TrueCrimeCommunity

Mar 26, 202616 min

Duggar, Fitzsimmons, Spencer: The Legal and Behavioral Breakdown of Three Cases That Don't Have Easy Answers

An alleged confession on a recorded call. A bench trial turning on which direction a gun was pointed. A June 22nd trial date for a man who killed a documented predator the court had already set free. Three active cases — and in every one of them, the legal picture is more complicated than the headlines suggest.Joseph Duggar's defense is starting from a position that most defense attorneys would describe as severely compromised: two reported pre-representation statements, one of which was made to law enforcement and reportedly recorded. He's headed to Florida on felony child sex abuse charges while his wife faces her own counts in Arkansas. The investigation that produced those Arkansas charges was opened because of the Florida case — but police are describing them as legally distinct. The defense has to figure out what to do with all of that simultaneously.Kelsey Fitzsimmons is in a Massachusetts bench trial on one count of assault with a dangerous weapon. The grand jury declined to return the more serious charge. Martha Coakley is on the defense team. The entire case comes down to whether a judge believes the gun was at her colleague's face or her own head — and whether the phrase a witness said in that moment means what the defense says it means.Aaron Spencer is 90 days from trial. The prosecution says the public's understanding of this case is incomplete. The child at the center of it may have to testify. And the 40 counts of child sexual abuse against the man Spencer is accused of killing will not be part of the proceeding — legally, they don't exist in that courtroom.Criminal defense attorney Bob Motta, retired FBI behavioral analyst Robin Dreeke, and host Tony Brueski examine all three cases with the depth they demand.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#JosephDuggar #KelseyFitzsimmons #AaronSpencer #DuggarCase #FitzsimmonsTrial #SpencerTrial #HiddenKillers #CriminalDefense #BobMotta #RobinDreeke

Mar 25, 20261h 17m

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Kelsey Fitzsimmons — Fitzsimmons Breaks Her Silence

Kelsey Fitzsimmons takes center stage in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 25, 20261h 41m

Jared Bridegan: Bexley Was in the Backseat — What This Murder Did to the Children Left Behind | Pt. 3

Bexley Bridegan was two years old and in the backseat when her father was murdered. The twins — Jared's daughters with Shanna Gardner — grew up allegedly inside the household of the people who arranged his death. And after the arrests, the court granted full guardianship of the twins to Gardner's parents. The children went to the family of the woman accused of killing their father.The system, working as designed.Part 3 of One Mile From Home is the episode dedicated entirely to the children in this case — what they witnessed, what they carried, and what the research on childhood trauma and high-conflict custody tells us about the cost they will spend their lives paying.Tony Brueski examines parentification and loyalty conflict — the specific psychological damage inflicted on children who are consciously or unconsciously recruited into adult conflict. The child who learns to read a parent's mood before they can read a book. Who knows which names are safe to say. Who builds two versions of themselves for two households because being whole in either one feels like a risk.This is not "divorce is hard on kids." This is a precise, research-grounded examination of what sustained conflict does developmentally — and what these specific children, in this specific case, will be integrating for the rest of their lives.Hidden Killers. No flinching.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#JaredBridegan #BexleyBridegan #OneMileFromHome #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePsychology #CustodyChildren #Parentification #HighConflictDivorce #ShannaGardner

Mar 25, 202614 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Lauren Page — “Bang, Bang” — Mother Recalls Scene

Lauren Page, Kelsey's mother, takes center stage in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 25, 202615 min

Aaron Spencer's June 22nd Trial: Defense Strategy, the System's Failure, and 90 Days to Prepare

Michael Fosler was facing 40 counts of child sexual abuse when a judge released him on bond. He never faced a jury. Aaron Spencer is accused of ending that possibility — and on June 22nd, Spencer is the one who walks into court. The case has drawn national attention, produced a judge removal, influenced a primary election, and prompted the prosecution to tell reporters publicly that the public's understanding of what happened is incorrect.On Hidden Killers, criminal defense attorney Bob Motta, retired FBI behavioral analyst Robin Dreeke, and host Tony Brueski examine where the Spencer case actually stands and what the next 90 days mean for the outcome.Bob Motta breaks down the legal framework the defense must navigate: the specific elements of Arkansas self-defense and defense-of-others statutes, the thresholds that have to be met, and the points where cases like this most commonly fall apart. He examines whether Fosler's 40 pending charges carry any legal weight inside the Spencer trial or whether the law treats them as though they never existed. He also addresses what the prosecution's pre-trial public statements signal strategically — and whether Spencer's own media appearances, including a CNN interview, create a liability his defense team now has to manage.Robin Dreeke examines the behavioral dimensions: what happens when public narrative hardens around a defendant before a jury is seated, and how the emotional architecture of this case — father, predator, institutional failure — affects the behavioral reality of that courtroom.The victim may be called to testify. The counts against Fosler are gone. The system that released him will not be on trial — but it will be in the room. Hidden Killers examines all of it.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#AaronSpencer #MichaelFosler #SpencerTrial #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #CriminalDefense #ArkansasCase #SelfDefense #BobMotta #RobinDreeke

Mar 25, 202623 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Maureen Torrisi — Cross-Exam Targets Witness’s Social Media

Maureen Torrisi, neighbor of officer, takes center stage in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 25, 202617 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial — The Shooter's Story Has Holes. A Judge Is About to Walk Through the Crime Scene.

The cross-examination of Officer Patrick Noonan — the North Andover cop who shot his colleague Kelsey Fitzsimmons inside her own home — didn't go smoothly. And in a bench trial where one judge weighs every word, that matters enormously.Fitzsimmons is charged with assault with a dangerous weapon after colleagues arrived at her home to serve a restraining order and Noonan shot her in the chest. The prosecution says she pointed her service weapon at him and pulled the trigger. She says the gun was aimed only at herself — that she was in crisis, suffering from postpartum depression, and that what Noonan believed he saw was a catastrophic misread of a woman trying to end her own life. There's no video. No body cameras. Just two people and two completely different versions of the same few seconds.Defense attorney Timothy Bradl put Noonan's credibility directly on trial. He raised the prior call Noonan and Fitzsimmons responded to together — a murder-suicide involving a mother and her infant, while Fitzsimmons was twenty weeks pregnant. He challenged contradictions in how Noonan described firing the shots. He read prior testimony back to Noonan that Noonan had left out of his current account — including that after shooting her, she grabbed his hand and asked why. Noonan said he didn't remember saying it.Noonan also acknowledged he briefly considered, in the moment, that the gun might have been aimed not at him but at Aylaian downstairs.Fitzsimmons's friend and would-be bridesmaid Michelle Mitchell closed the day with testimony that put a human frame around everything: she watched Fitzsimmons drive past the house where Aylaian's group was deciding to file against her. Crying. Saying she needed him. While it was being decided inside that she would lose her child and her career.The judge approved a site visit to the home. He's going to stand in that room. In a case with no video, the space itself may be the last neutral witness.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #NorthAndoverPolice #CopOnCopShooting #PatrickNoonan #BenchTrial #TrueCrime #MassachusettsTrial #AssaultWithADangerousWeapon #PostpartumDepression #HiddenKillers

Mar 25, 202618 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Sargent David Strong — The Final Witness — Commonwealth Rests

David Strong with the Massachusetts State Police takes center stage in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 25, 202626 min

Kouri Richins: Guilty, Sentenced, and Still Writing the Story

She sat at that defense table for three weeks like a statue. That's the word a juror used — statue. No fear, no grief, no visible seam where the performance ended and a real person began. And then the judge read guilty, and for the first time, she bowed her head.What broke in that moment? That's what this episode is really about.The jury told us something important after the verdict. They didn't want to convict her. They walked into that deliberation room hoping the defense's version would hold up — the sloppy investigation, the biased detectives, the husband with a secret drug habit. They wanted to believe her. Three hours later, they voted unanimously to put her away. The evidence didn't just beat reasonable doubt. It beat a jury full of people who were rooting for her.On Hidden Killers, I'm going through everything that comes next. The appeal — and why the judge spent the entire trial quietly dismantling the grounds for one. The twenty-six pending financial felonies that haven't seen a courtroom yet. And the psychological profile of a woman who, when confronted with the worst moments of this story, responded by writing. A grief book dedicated to the husband she allegedly poisoned. A six-page letter from jail scripting testimony for her own brother. Two pieces of writing. One pattern. Same instinct every time the narrative needed protecting.Does the guilty verdict break the story — or just change its title? The grieving widow is now the wrongfully convicted mother. Same character. Different chapter.Sentencing is May 13th — Eric Richins' 44th birthday. This is where it gets heavier before it gets quieter.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KouriRichins #HiddenKillers #EricRichins #TrueCrime #UtahMurder #KouriRichinsGuilty #FentanylPoisoning #TrueCrimePodcast #KouriRichinsAppeal #KouriRichinsTrial

Mar 25, 202615 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons: How the Defense Builds a Case When the Shooting Isn't in Dispute

The shooting itself is not contested. Kelsey Fitzsimmons drew her weapon. A fellow officer shot her. What is contested — entirely and completely — is the direction of that gun in the seconds before she was wounded. The prosecution says it was aimed at Officer Noonan's face. The defense says it was at Fitzsimmons' own head. A bench trial is underway before a single judge in Massachusetts on a single count: assault with a dangerous weapon. The grand jury had armed assault with intent to murder in front of them and sent it back with a downgrade.On Hidden Killers, criminal defense attorney Bob Motta, retired FBI behavioral analyst Robin Dreeke, and host Tony Brueski examine the legal and behavioral layers of a trial built almost entirely on competing interpretations of one moment.Bob Motta analyzes what the bench trial decision communicates about the defense team's read of this case — and why having a former Massachusetts Attorney General at the defense table is not a routine choice for a weapons charge. He breaks down how the defense uses the prosecution's own witness language as an argument, what the absence of internal affairs statements means for the evidentiary record, and how mental health evidence gets carefully deployed without becoming the prosecution's best asset.Robin Dreeke examines the behavioral distinction between a person in suicidal crisis and a person preparing to assault someone — and what those differences look like when filtered through the testimony of officers operating under extreme stress.This is a case decided on the edge of one perceived moment. Hidden Killers examines what the legal record actually shows.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #PoliceTrial #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #BenchTrial #CriminalDefense #BobMotta #RobinDreeke #WeaponsAssault #MassachusettsCrime

Mar 25, 202622 min

Joseph Duggar's Recorded Confession, Two-State Charges, and the Defense's Real Problem

Joseph Duggar is accused of sexually abusing a child — allegedly confessing to the victim's father and then to Tontitown police detectives, reportedly during a recorded call. He waived his extradition hearing and is headed to Florida, where the charges include molestation of a victim under 12 and lewd and lascivious conduct. In Arkansas, both Joseph and Kendra Duggar face four counts each of child endangerment and false imprisonment — counts that align precisely with the number of children in the home. Tontitown police describe the Arkansas charges as legally distinct from the Florida case, but the investigation that produced them was opened because of the Florida case.Criminal defense attorney Bob Motta, retired FBI behavioral analyst Robin Dreeke, and host Tony Brueski examine this case from the inside out on Hidden Killers.When a client makes documented statements to law enforcement before counsel is present — and those statements are reportedly on tape — a defense attorney enters the case at a serious disadvantage. Bob Motta breaks down what that actually means strategically: what suppression arguments exist, how the Florida and Arkansas cases interact, what a delayed disclosure from a now-14-year-old victim looks like through the lens of a defense file, and whether waiving extradition was the right call.Robin Dreeke adds the behavioral dimension — specifically, how a family with a documented history of managing disclosures internally responds when that internal system becomes evidence in a criminal investigation across two jurisdictions.Joseph's brother Josh is serving 12½ years in federal prison for child sex abuse material. The defense in this case doesn't begin in a courtroom — it begins with the near-impossible task of separating this defendant from everything a jury already carries through the door. This panel examines every layer of that challenge.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#JosephDuggar #KendraDuggar #DuggarCase #ChildSexAbuse #HiddenKillers #CriminalDefense #BobMotta #RobinDreeke #ArkansasCrime #TrueCrime

Mar 25, 202632 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Officer Timothy Houston — Invited to Her Wedding — Then Watched Her Get Shot

Timothy Houston, North Andover Police Officer, takes center stage in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 25, 202638 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Michael Bonasoro — The Gun: 16 Rounds and Unanswered Questions

Lieutenant Michael Bonasoro with the Massachusetts State Police takes center stage in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 25, 202659 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Steven Corr — No Report, No Interview. Why?

Steven Corr, North Andover Police Officer, takes the stand in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 25, 202613 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Patrick Noonan — He Fired the Gun

Patrick Noonan, North Andover Police Officer, takes center stage in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 25, 20261h 12m

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Patrick Noonan — He Fired the Gun

Patrick Noonan, North Andover Police Officer, takes center stage in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 25, 202640 min

The Shape of Him Part 2: What Rejection Built In Bryan Kohberger

Hidden Killers presents Part Two of The Shape of Him — a psychological deep dive into what chronic social rejection does to a person over time, anchored to the documented adolescence of Bryan Kohberger.Before the PhD program. Before the criminology thesis. There was a heavy, awkward kid in a small Pennsylvania town who got bullied in the daily, grinding way that kids who don't fit always know about before they have language for it. That kid was not a killer. He was a kid who hurt. And this episode is about what years of that kind of hurt does when nobody helps a person carry it.Tony Brueski walks through the documented psychology of rejection — the neuroscience of social pain, the stages it moves through, the closed loop it creates where the damage produces the behavior that produces more damage. And he brings it home to the people living inside this dynamic right now: the parents watching a child harden over years, running out of doors to try, loving someone they can feel losing access to without a roadmap for what comes next.This episode is not about excusing anything. It is about understanding the formation — because that formation is not unique to Kohberger. It is happening in families across the country without the tools to address it. And talking about it honestly is the only way to give those families something more than hope and patience.Part two of five. Built for the audience that wants the full psychological picture, not just the crime.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#BryanKohberger #TrueCrimePsychology #IdahoMurders #HiddenKillers #BullyingAwareness #RejectionPsychology #TheShapeOfHim #TrueCrime #MoscowIdaho #ParentingSupport

Mar 25, 202616 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Justin Aylaian — Ex-Fiancé Takes the Stand

Justin Aylaian, North Andover Firefighter, takes center stage in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 25, 202630 min

Duggar Charges, IBLP Doctrine, and the Nancy Guthrie Investigation: What the Evidence Reveals

The Hidden Killers team presents an extended analytical session with retired FBI behavioral analyst Robin Dreeke, examining three interconnected active cases through the lens of behavioral science, institutional analysis, and documented evidentiary record.In the Duggar matter: Joseph Duggar and Kendra Duggar face documented criminal charges. Josh Duggar is currently incarcerated following federal conviction on child sexual abuse material offenses, with appeal denied. Robin examines the behavioral and psychological patterns documented across this household's history — what the established research shows about family systems that have repeatedly managed alleged harm through internal channels — and what prosecutors and investigators face when new charges emerge inside the same environment. The alleged victim reportedly did not disclose for five years following the alleged onset of abuse. Robin addresses the documented psychological significance of that timeline.On IBLP: The Institute in Basic Life Principles represents the documented institutional framework in which this family operated. Robin breaks down the Umbrella of Authority doctrine, the deliberate curriculum design regarding children's knowledge of boundaries and abuse, and the institutional protection structure that has kept founder Bill Gothard — facing accusations from over 34 women — free of criminal charges at age 91. Former members' documented recovery experiences are examined for what they reveal about the psychological impact of this system and the clinical framework that most accurately describes it.On Nancy Guthrie: At this point in the investigation, documented FBI canvassing activity is targeting individuals who departed the area prior to her disappearance. The case sheriff has been publicly reported to have provided false testimony under oath about his own prior record. The family has publicly and repeatedly referenced January 11th as a significant date in the pre-disappearance timeline — without any law enforcement response. Robin examines each development, what it reflects about the investigation's current direction, and what the documented law enforcement credibility issues mean for any eventual prosecution.Three cases. One analytical framework: what systems of authority and silence protect — and what investigators look for when those systems start to crack.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#JosephDuggar #NancyGuthrie #IBLP #BillGothard #RobinDreeke #DuggarFamily #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #FBIInvestigation #TrueCrimePodcast

Mar 24, 20261h 5m

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Courtney Aylaian — Holding The Baby When Everything Exploded

Courtney Aylaian, Justin Aylaian's sister, takes the stand in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 24, 202616 min

Jared Bridegan: Mario Fernandez Had No Motive — So How Did He Allegedly Plan the Murder? | Pt. 2

Mario Fernandez had no personal grievance against Jared Bridegan. No history. No reason. He came into this story as a husband and stepfather — and he allegedly left it as the person who arranged Jared Bridegan's murder through his own tenant, Henry Tenon.Part 2 of One Mile From Home examines the psychological pathway that could allegedly take a man with no personal stake and no violent history to the operational center of a murder-for-hire plot. Tony Brueski breaks down the research on grievance transmission in intimate relationships — the documented process by which one partner's consuming, organized resentment migrates into another through love, loyalty, and the ordinary mechanics of deep emotional attunement.This episode examines what it means to enter a relationship and receive a fully formed narrative about an ex-spouse before you've ever had an independent impression of them. To only ever meet the problem. To absorb, over time, a grievance that wasn't yours — until it stops feeling borrowed.It also examines what happens when the absorbing partner goes further than the originating partner ever explicitly asked. The research on this is consistent and disturbing: in relationships where one partner's consuming grievance has fully migrated into the other, the receiving partner sometimes escalates beyond what was ever said out loud.Hidden Killers at its most psychologically precise. Built for people who want to understand not just what happened — but how.Shanna Gardner and Mario Fernandez have pleaded not guilty. Trial is set for August 2026.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#JaredBridegan #MarioFernandez #ShannaGardner #MurderForHire #OneMileFromHome #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePsychology #GrievanceTransmission #HenryTenon

Mar 24, 202612 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Lieutenant Sean Daley — "Kelsey, Don't Do It" — First Witness Testimony

Lieutenant Sean Daley, North Andover Police Department, takes center stage in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 24, 20261h 28m

Nancy Guthrie Investigation: FBI Canvass, Sheriff Misconduct, and the January 11th Question

The Hidden Killers team examines the documented investigative developments in the Nancy Guthrie disappearance at the seven-week mark — including the reported FBI canvassing activity targeting individuals who left the area prior to her disappearance, the exposed conduct of the case's sheriff, and the unaddressed date the family has continued to publicly emphasize.According to reporting, FBI agents have been canvassing Nancy Guthrie's former neighborhood with specific questions about individuals who moved out of the area in the period before her disappearance. At day 49 of the investigation, canvassing of this nature is not routine broad-based outreach. Retired FBI behavioral analyst Robin Dreeke examines what a targeted inquiry of this type — focused specifically on people who departed the area prior to the disappearance — indicates about the working investigative theory and the timeline investigators are prioritizing.The Guthrie family has independently issued a public statement asking Tucson community members to search their memories and come forward with relevant information — a step that goes beyond standard family advocacy and represents a direct community outreach effort operating parallel to the official investigation. Robin addresses what this kind of parallel effort typically indicates about a family's assessment of investigative progress, and what the risks and potential benefits of that approach are at this stage.The sheriff with operational involvement in this case was recently reported to have provided false testimony under oath regarding his own prior record. Robin examines the documented behavioral indicators associated with deception by authority figures, and the investigative implications when the public credibility of senior law enforcement leadership is compromised mid-investigation.The Guthrie family has repeatedly and specifically referenced January 11th — approximately three weeks prior to Nancy's disappearance — as a date of significance. Law enforcement has not publicly addressed that date or its relevance. That gap is itself a data point, and Robin addresses what it likely means.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#NancyGuthrie #MissingPersons #Tucson #RobinDreeke #HiddenKillers #FBIInvestigation #JusticeForNancy #TrueCrime #MissingWoman #TrueCrimePodcast

Mar 24, 202617 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Attorneys James Gubitose & Timothy Bradl — Opening Statements: Two Very Different Stories

Opening statements are given by both sides of this caseKelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice

Mar 24, 202630 min

Kelsey Fitzsimmons Trial: Day One — The Gun, the Direction, and the Officer Who Pulled the Trigger

The Kelsey Fitzsimmons bench trial opened Monday in Essex County Superior Court, and the first day made one thing unmistakably clear: this case is going to be decided by a single disputed fact — the direction a gun was pointing in a bedroom in North Andover on June 30, 2025.Fitzsimmons, 29, is a North Andover police officer charged with one count of assault with a dangerous weapon. Three officers arrived at her home that day to serve a restraining order from her then-fiancé, Justin Aylaian, which awarded him emergency custody of their four-month-old son and required the surrender of her firearms. Officer Patrick Noonan went upstairs with Fitzsimmons while she packed. Moments later, Noonan shot her in the chest.Prosecutor James Gubitose told Judge Jeffrey Karp that Fitzsimmons grabbed her service weapon, aimed it directly at Noonan's face, and pulled the trigger. A mechanical failure — the gun had a full magazine but no round chambered — is the only reason Noonan is alive. She then performed a tap rack, loaded a round, and raised the weapon again. Noonan fired twice. The second shot hit.Defense attorney Timothy Bradl told Judge Karp his client reached for that gun with only one intention: to kill herself. She was in a mental health crisis — postpartum depression, a hospitalization months earlier, and an afternoon that stripped her of her baby and her career in one blow. The gun was at her own head, Bradl argued, not aimed at Noonan. The physical position of the weapon after she fell supports that, the defense contends. And the words Noonan used in those final seconds — "Kelsey, no" — are not, Bradl argued, the words of a man staring at a gun aimed at his face.Noonan testified Monday. Cross-examination begins Tuesday. Aylaian also testified, and left the stand with questions about his own credibility after the defense established he is currently on administrative leave from the North Andover Fire Department.No jury. Judge Karp decides.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #PatrickNoonan #JustinAylaian #TrueCrime #MassachusettsCrime #BenchTrial #PostpartumDepression #HiddenKillers

Mar 24, 202625 min

Joseph & Kendra Duggar Arrested — Here's What the Charges Actually Mean

Two arrests. Two states. Two completely separate investigations — all in 72 hours. Hidden Killers breaks down exactly what's happening with the Duggar family this week and what all of it actually means.Joseph Duggar, formerly of TLC's *19 Kids and Counting*, was arrested March 18th on a Florida warrant charging him with lewd and lascivious molestation of a child under 12 — a life felony under Florida statute 800.04. A now-14-year-old girl told investigators that Joseph allegedly abused her during a 2020 family vacation in Panama City Beach when she was 9 years old. Her father confronted him. A Tontitown detective was on the call. According to the Bay County Sheriff's Office arrest affidavit, Joseph admitted what he'd done — to the father, and then again directly to law enforcement. He waived extradition Friday. Florida has 30 days to transfer him.Two days after his arrest, wife Kendra Duggar was charged separately in Arkansas — four counts each of second-degree endangering the welfare of a minor and second-degree false imprisonment, all misdemeanors, all connected to their four children ages 3 through 7. The Arkansas case is unrelated to Florida but was triggered directly by Joseph's arrest, which set off a mandatory home study of the family residence. Tontitown police have confirmed the investigation is ongoing.From federal prison, Josh Duggar — serving 12 and a half years for child sexual abuse material — had his attorney call his brother's admitted conduct sensationalized fiction. Jill Duggar Dillard found out through a friend's text. Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar said nothing.Tony Brueski lays out both cases completely — charges, legal weight, what's confirmed, what's sourced, and who the story is really about.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#DuggarArrest #JosephDuggar #KendraDuggar #19KidsAndCounting #DuggarFamily #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #ChildAbuse #JoshDuggar #DuggarScandal

Mar 24, 202631 min

Bill Gothard, IBLP, and the Documented System That Made the Duggar Pattern Possible

The Hidden Killers team examines the institutional framework behind the Duggar family — the Institute in Basic Life Principles — and what the documented teachings of that organization reveal about the conditions that enabled the pattern of alleged conduct now producing multiple criminal cases within a single family across multiple generations.The IBLP's Umbrella of Authority doctrine establishes a hierarchical authority structure in which male patriarchs hold absolute control, wives submit to that authority, and children submit to both. Questioning this hierarchy is framed within the doctrine as spiritual disobedience. Retired FBI behavioral analyst Robin Dreeke examines how that authority framework functions in documented practice when harm occurs inside the household — specifically what it does to the capacity for reporting, disclosure, or external intervention.IBLP curricula do not include sex education, age-appropriate boundary instruction, or abuse recognition frameworks. Former members have documented this as deliberate design rather than oversight. Robin addresses the established psychological research on what children raised without abuse recognition language are able to do when they experience harm — and what the absence of that vocabulary means for investigators when disclosures occur years later.Bill Gothard founded IBLP and led it for approximately six decades. More than 34 women have publicly accused him of harassment and sexual abuse. He is currently 91 years old and has never faced criminal charges. The organization he founded continues to operate. Robin examines how high-control religious institutions create structural immunity for leadership figures — and how that immunity cascades downward through the families inside the system.Former Duggar family members have publicly described leaving the IBLP framework in terms that parallel what researchers describe as cult exit and recovery — not religious transition. Robin addresses what that clinical and institutional distinction means for how we categorize and scrutinize organizations of this type.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#IBLP #BillGothard #DuggarFamily #RobinDreeke #ReligiousAbuse #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #JosephDuggar #HighControlReligion #TrueCrimePodcast

Mar 24, 202621 min

The Duggar Cycle: What Josh's Federal Conviction Taught the Next Generation

The Hidden Killers team presents an in-depth analytical conversation with retired FBI behavioral analyst Robin Dreeke examining the documented behavioral and psychological patterns inside the Duggar household — and what the evidentiary record reveals about how a closed family system handles alleged harm across generations.Joseph Duggar grew up in a household that managed Josh Duggar's alleged conduct quietly and internally for years before law enforcement became involved. Prosecutors now allege Joseph committed his own offense inside that same structure. Robin examines what the documented household history means when investigators and prosecutors approach new allegations within a family that has already demonstrated how it responds to harm internally.Kendra Duggar was 19 when she entered this family — raised inside the same theological framework of submission, male authority, and doctrinal silence. She now faces her own separate charges. Robin reviews the established psychological research on individuals raised in high-control religious environments and what the evidence shows about their capacity to act outside deeply conditioned behavioral systems.The alleged victim in this case reportedly carried what happened to her for five years before disclosing — from age nine to age fourteen. Robin addresses what that length of sustained silence typically reflects psychologically, what investigators look for when a delayed disclosure finally comes, and how this pattern fits the documented profile of abuse within high-control family structures.Josh Duggar is currently incarcerated following federal conviction on child sexual abuse material charges, with his appeal denied. His public statements from prison continue to allege false accusations. Robin examines the behavioral profile of individuals for whom accountability has never functionally operated — and what that sustained denial pattern tells investigators about how these cases develop.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#JosephDuggar #DuggarFamily #JoshDuggar #KendraDuggar #RobinDreeke #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #BehavioralAnalysis #DuggarCase #TrueCrimePodcast

Mar 24, 202627 min

The Shape of Him Part 1: What Bryan Kohberger's Own Words Reveal

He wrote about watching other people experience emotional connection as though through a window. He built an academic career around studying the psychology of people who cross lines. He documented his own interior life with a precision that is both striking and deeply unsettling — not because it sounds like a killer, but because parts of it sound like someone you know.Hidden Killers presents Part One of The Shape of Him — a five-part psychological series on Bryan Kohberger that doesn't retell the case. It asks the questions the case raises that nobody else is sitting with.What does it mean when someone can see exactly what is wrong with them — name it, study it, write about it — and still not stop what's coming? There's a documented difference between insight and integration. Between understanding yourself and changing. Between seeing clearly and living differently. Kohberger's written record suggests he had an unusual capacity for the first. Very little of the second, if prosecutors are right about what allegedly happened next.This episode is for anyone who has ever loved someone who understood themselves perfectly and could not seem to become anything different. Who explained their damage with sophistication and rebuilt it anyway. Who wrote their own darkness down and kept moving forward as though the writing was enough.Most of the time, it is. The question Kohberger's case forces us to ask is what happens when it isn't — and what that means for how much faith we place in self-awareness as a solution.Honest, psychological, and built for a true crime audience that wants more than a timeline. Part one of five.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#BryanKohberger #TrueCrimePsychology #IdahoMurders #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #CriminalPsychology #MoscowIdaho #TheShapeOfHim #TrueCrimeCommunity #ColdCaseFiles

Mar 24, 202615 min

Fitzsimmons Bench Trial, Guthrie Investigation, Richins Conviction: The Evidence Across Three Active Cases

The Kelsey Fitzsimmons bench trial, the Nancy Guthrie investigation at its seven-week mark, and the Kouri Richins conviction share one thread: in each case, the institutional record tells a different story than the public narrative — and retired FBI Special Agent Jennifer Coffindaffer makes that case, specifically.In the Fitzsimmons matter, the evidentiary question is narrow and everything: was the firearm pointed at the officer or at herself? The record surrounding that moment — a postpartum depression diagnosis, a custody execution by her own department colleagues, an ex-partner whose sworn affidavit triggered the entire chain of events and who now faces no charges, an alleged home entry and removal of favorable evidence during a 53-day hospitalization — is the context in which that question has to be answered. She waived her jury. That choice, and what it means for a defense built around mental health and crisis state, is part of this analysis.In the Guthrie investigation, the lead agency's institutional credibility is now directly in question. The sheriff's documented disciplinary history contradicts sworn deposition testimony. A recall is active. His deputies reportedly operated in a culture of fear. Every evidentiary decision this investigation has made — what went to the FBI, what was processed and when — passes through that context. Add a crime scene released ahead of protocol, private lab processing of biological evidence, and FBI veterans publicly questioning the ransom motive, and the investigative picture is significantly more complicated than any press conference has acknowledged.In the Richins case, the conviction rested on what a dead man left behind. Eric Richins' pre-mortem estate restructuring — documented in attorney communications, explicitly aimed at protecting his children from their mother — did the work no living witness could replicate. Coffindaffer examines what the appeal record actually holds and whether it's enough.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KelseyFitzsimmons #NancyGuthrie #KouriRichins #TrueCrimeInvestigation #HiddenKillers #FBIAnalysis #EvidenceAnalysis #CriminalJustice #BenchTrial #TrueCrime

Mar 23, 202653 min

Jared Bridegan: How a Custody Dispute Became a Murder Plot | One Mile From Home Pt. 1

The tire on Jared Bridegan's road didn't get there by accident. And the person who placed it didn't get there by accident either. What built that trap on February 16th, 2022 wasn't a snap decision or a moment of rage — it was the conclusion of a years-long psychological process that produced something cold, organized, and deliberate.In Part 1 of One Mile From Home, Hidden Killers host Tony Brueski examines what allegedly preceded the murder of Microsoft executive Jared Bridegan — not from the night it happened, but from the custody filings and documented conflict that stretch back years. He examines the psychology of grievance identity consolidation: the research-documented process by which a conflict stops being something a person experiences and starts being something a person is. Where resentment stops seeking resolution and starts seeking elimination.He also breaks down the financial motive prosecutors say was underneath the emotional conflict all along — a trust fund structured to release to Gardner only once her legal obligations to Jared ended. According to the prosecution's theory, his continued existence wasn't just painful. It was expensive.This is Hidden Killers at its most psychologically precise — not a case recap, but a deep examination of how resentment compounds over years, how a person gets reclassified from human being to obstacle, and what that reclassification makes possible.Shanna Gardner and Mario Fernandez have pleaded not guilty. Trial is set for August 2026.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#JaredBridegan #ShannaGardner #MurderForHire #OneMileFromHome #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #CustodyDisputeMurder #TrueCrimePsychology #HighConflictDivorce #MarioFernandez

Mar 23, 202613 min

Kouri Richins Guilty: What the Evidence Actually Built — and What the Appeal Would Need to Undo

The verdict is in. Kouri Richins was found guilty of murdering her husband Eric with a lethal dose of fentanyl. For a case with no recovered murder weapon, a star witness whose credibility took documented damage during cross-examination, and a defense that rested without calling a single witness, the evidentiary picture that convinced this jury deserves a close examination.The record Eric left behind arguably did more work than anything prosecutors could have introduced directly. Approximately 18 months before his death, he formally restructured his estate and communicated to his attorney — explicitly — that the purpose was to protect his children from their mother. That documented fear, established by the victim himself through formal legal channels prior to his death, was in front of that jury. It told a story no witness could contradict.The financial evidence reinforced it: undisclosed debt, insurance policies Eric reportedly had no knowledge of, alleged signature forgeries. Individually, each element invites alternative explanations. As a pattern, they constructed a motive framework the defense never directly addressed — and couldn't, without putting a witness on the stand.The appeal path is legitimate. A coaching video connected to the star witness raised process-level concerns. That witness's credibility was publicly challenged during testimony. The lead detective acknowledged in his own testimony that fentanyl was never physically recovered from the scene. Whether any of those issues constitute reversible error — or whether they're trial noise layered on top of a conviction that was always going to hold — is the analytical question this conversation addresses.Sentencing is ahead. Kouri Richins has maintained her innocence through arrest, trial, and verdict. What position she takes next carries both legal and strategic weight.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KouriRichins #EricRichins #TrueCrimeInvestigation #GuiltyVerdict #FentanylMurder #AppealAnalysis #JenniferCoffindaffer #HiddenKillers #CriminalEvidence #TrueCrime

Mar 23, 202613 min