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Coffee and Cases Podcast

E187: Cathy Moulton

Coffee and Cases Podcast

Cloud10

True Crime

4.7640 Ratings

🗓️ 22 June 2023

⏱️ 90 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Cathy Moulton had just experienced a long summer of travel across the country with her family and had returned only days before the start of her junior year at Deering High School in Portland, Maine. On September 24th, 1971, hours before a dance she was excited about attending, she disappeared. In what is now one of Maine’s oldest cold cases, Cathy Moulton’s case is one in which the discovery of clues (and there are many) has spanned decades and countries. For more information concerning Cathy Moulton’s case, please consider purchasing Det. Kevin Cady’s book on the case from Amazon as it served as the main source for today’s episode. Here is the link for download. Please consider supporting the pod by joining us over on our Patreon page! Are you up-to-date on all our regular content? Get access to monthly mini-episodes as well as one full solved case per month by joining today! Be a part of the C & C Fam by going to https://www.patreon.com/coffeeandcases to register! BlendJet Offer: Use my special link (https://zen.ai/coffeeandcasespod12) or go to blendjet.com and use code coffeeandcasesblend12 to save 12% at blendjet.com. The discount will be applied at checkout! Motley Fool Offer: Save $110 off the full list price of Stock Advisor for your first year, go to fool.com/coffeeandcases and start your investing journey today!  *$110 discount off of $199 per year list price. Membership will renew annually at the then current list price. Cure Hydration: Try Cure today and feel the difference for yourself! Use my special link (https://zen.ai/coffeeandcasespod20) for 20% off your order, coupon activated at checkout! Nom Nom: Try Nom Nom today; go to https://trynom.com/coffeeandcases and get 50% off your first order plus free shipping. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

If you've been listening to our show for more than one episode, then you probably know about my love for animals.

0:06.8

What I don't often talk about is the difficulty of meeting all their nutritional needs.

0:11.4

Trust me, not all dog food is created equal.

0:14.5

But we're about to solve that problem for you.

0:16.5

It's called nom nom.

0:18.5

In nom nom, you can actually see proteins of vegetables like beef, chicken, pork, peas, carrots,

0:25.5

kale, and more.

0:27.6

And ordering it is the easiest way to take the guesswork out of feeding your dog the best.

0:33.2

Nom-Nom meals are pre-portioned for your dog's exact caloric needs. Isn't it time to feel good about the food you're feeding your dog? Order NomNOM today. Go to trynom.com slash coffee in cases and get 50% off your first order plus free shipping. Plus, nom-nom comes with a money-back guarantee. That means if your dog doesn't love fresh, delicious meals, Nom-N-N-N-N-N-N-R, nom will refund your first order. No fillers, no nonsense, just nom-nom. When thinking about

1:01.2

American youth culture in the 1960s, several things come to mind, many of which we've discussed

1:07.4

before on this show, anti-war protests, countercultural rebellion against sexual

1:13.8

and social norms. Many were skeptical of authority and felt deeply for the underprivileged.

1:21.4

It was a time of personal freedoms. As a result, based on an article for the BBC by Benjamin Ram published on June 15, 2017, quote,

1:32.8

For Karen Stoller, author of the book Runaways, 1967 was the crisis year when panic gripped the media.

1:43.0

Children, who once played on the streets, now drifted into areas

1:47.7

associated with the counterculture, such as New York City's East Village or San Francisco's

1:53.7

Hyde-Ashbury District during the 67 Summer of Love, end quote. Further in the article, Ram explains, quote, between 1967 and 1971, over 500,000 people in the

2:09.5

United States left home to move into experimental communities, end quote.

2:16.4

Many of those people were teens, wanting to assert those

2:21.7

personal freedoms. So when a young 16-year-old girl disappeared in September 1971 from Portland,

2:30.4

Maine, her disappearance was seen as one of many that did not get the attention it deserved.

2:36.9

Many saw her as just another one of the 500,000, but she wasn't.

...

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