Inside Crime with Angeline Hartmann
We finally know the name of the little boy found dead in Dekalb County, Georgia in 1999. His name was William and his mother is now charged with murder. Meet the woman who helped break the 23-year-old mystery. Support the show:
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It’s their job to protect the President but that’s not all! Director James Murray sits down with Angeline Hartmann at the agency’s headquarters to break it all down for Inside Crime listeners.
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When a teenager shows up in Newport, Kentucky, confused and beaten, he tells cops his name is Timmothy Pitzen.
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In her first public interview, Timmothy Pitzen’s kindergarten teacher shares how May 11, 2011 forever changed her life.
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Timmothy has vanished without a trace. Or did he? What clues did his mother leave behind?
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Timmothy’s mother is dead. But what happened to the six-year-old? Angeline goes inside the investigation with Aurora Police.
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Amy Pitzen said there was a family emergency when she picked up her six-year-old son, Timmothy, from school then disappeared. That was 10 years ago today.
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Angeline speaks with Dateline's Josh Mankiewicz at CrimeCon in New Orleans.
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July 21, 2020 - It was his job to investigate the dark side of baseball. Eddie Dominguez talks about what he encountered during his time with MLB’s Department of Investigations.
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Season 4: June 23, 2020 - Atlanta cops have been chasing a child killer for 25 years.
info_outlineAt the edge of a cow farm in rural Texas, a man mowing his property suddenly hit something in his path - a black suitcase. Packed inside was a pink dress with hearts and butterflies that said “Follow Your Dreams,” a size-4 diaper and the skeletal remains of a little girl with her feeding tube.
Medical experts say the child, believed to have been between 2 to 6 years old, had a medical condition that impacted her jaw. Investigators thought someone would recognize her quickly but it’s been three years since she was discovered on Sept. 17, 2016 and no one has stepped forward. Angeline Hartmann brings you to Madison County, Texas, to help identify the little girl now known only as “Madisonville Jane Doe.”