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Unfound

Episode 296: Paul Gregory Egan: Truly Diabolical

Unfound

Ed Dentzel

True Crime

41.4K Ratings

🗓️ 8 April 2022

⏱️ 204 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Paul Gregory Egan was an 18 year old from Plantation, FL. He had five siblings and worked for a family friend. During the early morning of July 21, 1975, Paul allegedly drove his friend’s Jeep home from work, with it ending up in his carport. Later that day, no one could locate Paul. He was never seen again. Unfound Website: https://theunfoundpodcast.com/2022/04/05/paul-gregory-egan-truly-diabolical/ Charley Project: https://charleyproject.org/case/paul-gregory-egan NAMUS: https://www.namus.gov/MissingPersons/Case#/20414?nav If you have any information regarding the disappearance of Paul Egan, please contact the Plantation Police Department at (954) 797-2100. You can find Unfound episodes on: Spotify, iTunes, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, Stitcher, Podbean, and many other platforms, especially outside the United States. Unfound has social media accounts on: Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube. Speaking of YouTube, join me on Wednesdays at 9pm ET on the Unfound Podcast Channel for the Live Show, the only one of its kind in true crime. Ask questions. Chat with other viewers. And give the show a thumbs up. You can contribute to Unfound in the following ways: 1. Patreon.com/unfoundpodcast 2. Paypal.me/unfoundpodcast 3. Contribute during the Live Show with Superchat. And 4. Join the YouTube Membership program for the low price of $2.99/month. The website: theunfoundpodcast.com The email address: [email protected] And, please mention Unfound at all true crime websites and forums. Thank you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Paul Gregory Egan was an 18-year-old from Plantation, Florida.

0:05.6

He had five siblings and worked for a family friend.

0:10.9

During the early morning of July 21, 1975, Paul allegedly drove his friend's jeep home

0:17.9

from work, with it ending up in his carport.

0:22.7

Later that day, no one could locate Paul.

0:27.2

He was never seen again.

0:32.8

I'm at Densel, and this is unfound.

0:57.2

We talk about foul play quite a bit unfound.

1:11.2

Why?

1:12.2

Because there are many reasons to believe many of the disappearances covered are murders.

1:18.2

But that is not to say all suspects are alike.

1:22.0

There are the disappearances of Angela Green, Rosemary Rap, and Brian Sullivan, and many

1:28.1

others, where I'm not sure the people who committed those acts thought they would do so

1:33.5

when the day started.

1:36.1

Then there are those disappearances that were surely not accidents or crimes of passion

1:41.5

or mistakes, all planned and done by evil people.

1:47.8

Some of them are solved, Andrea Bowman, Tyler North, Camisha Hollis, and some unfortunately

1:55.4

that are still technically unsolved.

1:58.2

Kelly Rothwell, Jeff Nichols, Beatrice Villela, and once again many others.

2:05.9

It's important to make a distinction between each type because knowing which kind can

2:10.8

help ultimately to solve that particular case.

2:15.7

This goes to something I've told college students so far.

...

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