A decorated Green Beret physician claimed hippies invaded his home and slaughtered his family, but investigators saw something else entirely in the blood-soaked apartment.
A decorated Green Beret physician claimed hippies invaded his home and slaughtered his family, but investigators saw something else entirely in the blood-soaked apartment.
When Army doctor Jeffrey MacDonald called police to report that drug-crazed hippies had murdered his pregnant wife and two daughters, he had no idea that he would become the prime suspect—or that a mysterious woman in a floppy hat would haunt the case for decades.
When Army doctor Jeffrey MacDonald called police to report that drug-crazed hippies had murdered his pregnant wife and two daughters, he had no idea that he would become the prime suspect—or that a mysterious woman in a floppy hat would haunt the case for decades.
When Edith Casas married Victor Cingolani on Valentine’s Day 2013, she wasn’t just marrying any man — she was marrying the convicted killer of her identical twin sister.
In the summer of 1872, when elderly drifter Franklin Evans arrived at his sister’s New Hampshire farmhouse, no one suspected that the shambling vagabond was actually a monster who had been stalking and butchering children across New England for nearly a decade—until his own grand-niece became his final victim and the truth about the unsolved Joyce murders finally came to light.