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Ep 73: Yellow Thunder

All Crime No Cattle

All Crime No Cattle

History, True Crime

4.82.6K Ratings

🗓️ 16 May 2020

⏱️ 75 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In May of 1991, 24-year-old Scott Dunn disappeared from his apartment in Lubbock. An order of superhero crime sleuths and a room full of blood help solve the case that could have been forever cold.

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Transcript

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0:30.0

Well, hello everybody. Welcome back to another episode of All Crime No Cattle. This is the Texas

0:43.6

True Crime podcast that you have not heard from in a little bit. It's been a while, but

0:48.4

uh...

0:49.4

Quarantine, global pandemic. Everything is bad.

0:54.4

That's right, and those dulcet tones are your favorite bone lady, Aaron.

0:59.1

Oh, thank you. And the introducer is your favorite introducer, Che.

1:06.6

Man, it's showing that it's been a while since we've done this.

1:09.4

Well, let's just say this is how we're handling the lockdown. I have purple here now,

1:14.2

and Che has a mohawk.

1:15.7

That's true.

1:17.2

I think that illustrates exactly what we're going through. But you know what, we're alive

1:20.9

and healthy. We really hope that you are healthy as well, and are getting through this quarantine

1:25.9

as best as possible. And we have an episode for you today that hopefully you will enjoy

1:31.5

learning about. So I'm excited to present it to you today.

1:34.2

That's right. So why don't we just jump into it, Aaron?

1:36.8

Okay. Well, let's begin, as always, with our sources. The leading newspapers that helped

1:41.4

with research for this case were the Lubbock Avalanche Journal, Lubbock Online, and Plain

1:45.9

View Daily Herald. We also used an article from the Philadelphia Inquirer called Super

1:51.0

Slooth by Barbara Whitaker, published in 1997. Forensic Files also covered this case in

1:57.6

the second episode of season four in an episode called The Killing Room. And finally, we

2:03.0

use the incredible book, Trail of Blood, A Father, A Son, and A Telltale Crime Scene by

2:08.7

Wanda Evans and James Dunn. If you love a good, true crime read, this book is excellent

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