4 • 2.7K Ratings
🗓️ 18 September 2018
⏱️ 65 minutes
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0:00.0 | Did you know choosing the train can take up to 500 cars off the road? Just one train at a time. |
0:07.0 | One gig at a time, one last minute plan, one festival, one going then, why not at a time? |
0:18.0 | One train journey at a time can help create a greener future. |
0:23.0 | So when will you take your next trip? Find out more at nationalrail.co.uk for what's |
0:29.0 | the most shocking killers in true crime history and the authors that have written about them. |
0:49.0 | Gacy, Bundy, Dahmer, the Night Stalker, BTK, every week another fascinating author talking |
0:57.0 | about the most shocking and infamous killers in true crime history. True murder with your host, journalist and author, Dan Zufanski. |
1:15.0 | Good evening. When Elizabeth Andes was found bound stabbed and strangled in her Ohio apartment in 1978, |
1:23.0 | police and prosecutors decided within hours it was an open and shut case. Within days Bob Young, a 23-year-old football player |
1:31.0 | who had found his college sweetheart's lifeless body on their bedroom floor, was charged with her murder. |
1:37.0 | To this day police and prosecutors still say they had the right guy, even though two juries, one criminal and one civil, disagreed and young walked away a free man. |
1:48.0 | Best case went cold nearly four decades later, two Cincinnati reporters re-examined the murder and discovered that law enforcement ignored |
1:57.0 | leads that might have uncovered who really killed Beth Andes. It wasn't that there weren't other people to look at. |
2:04.0 | There were plenty, but no one bothered until now. The book that we're featuring this evening is accused, the unsolved murder of Elizabeth Andes, |
2:13.0 | with my special guest, journalist and author Amber Hunt and Amanda Rossman. Welcome to the program and thank you very much for agreeing to this interview. Amber Hunt and Amanda Rossman. |
2:26.0 | Thank you for having us. |
2:30.0 | Thank you very much. I hope I didn't pronounce Miss pronounce Elizabeth's last name. |
2:36.0 | No, that was right, Andes. |
2:39.0 | Okay, great. Let's talk right away how you both came to, we alluded to it that you were working for the Cincinnati inquire, but tell us how you came to want to and feel the need to compel to write this story, do this podcast accused, but especially this book accused. Tell us about that, the genesis of it. |
3:02.0 | Well, it started with a lawyer who was representing Beth's family. |
3:08.0 | And she, she had started to do some digging around in the case and she hit a brick wall. So she happened to be acquainted with the lawyer who represents the inquire in legal matters when we have to sue for documents and that sort of thing. |
3:24.0 | So she mentioned it to him more like in passing. Can you believe I'm dealing with this kind of stuff. He recognized it as a possible story mentioned it to an editor here. |
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