FROM THE VAULT: Sabrina Cain
Coffee and Cases Podcast
Cloud10
4.7 • 639 Ratings
🗓️ 4 February 2026
⏱️ 90 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
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| 0:00.0 | Are you fascinated by true crime stories? Then join me on the casual criminalist podcast, where we dive deep into some of the most intriguing criminal cases of our time. |
| 0:07.9 | From the Oakland County child killer to the bizarre case of Paul Warner Powell, the Mowney sent himself to the electric chair. |
| 0:13.5 | We're going to take you on a journey through the criminal minds and explore the toughest cases. |
| 0:17.4 | Twice each week we bring you a new story such as the Lulu Lemon murder and John Lennr, the firefighter turned arsonist and murderer. If you're ready for a journey |
| 0:25.2 | into the world of true crime, then subscribe now to the casual criminalist. For each one of us, |
| 0:31.1 | it's different. That thing that reminds us of the loved one now missing from our lives. For |
| 0:37.4 | some, it's an item. For me, it is at least. |
| 0:40.9 | Every time I go to bake something, I open the drawer and I see my grandma's rolling pin. It's the one we |
| 0:47.8 | used when I would stay the night and she would bake homemade sugar cookies. It's the one I still use |
| 0:53.5 | to roll out cookies with my daughter. |
| 0:56.4 | For others, it's a card, a letter, a written message that has survived the person who wrote it. |
| 1:03.6 | And it's often not just the message that's important. It's the curve of the letters, |
| 1:09.9 | the slant to the words, the image it conjures up of the person we miss with all of our hearts, leaning low, concentrating, and writing that very message on the page. |
| 1:21.8 | It makes them alive again for us in that moment. That's the case for Kimberly Kane. When she was shown a yearbook |
| 1:30.1 | in which her sister had written, the experience was overwhelming. This book was one her sister |
| 1:36.5 | held. She tightly gripped a pen to write the message, perhaps smiling brightly as she did so. There was an image in Kimberly's mind |
| 1:47.0 | behind it, and a happy image. It was likely powerful because it's the moments of joy that she |
| 1:54.2 | wants her sister to stay in within her mind, and not the injustice that happened later. She wants to remember, and for others to as well, |
| 2:05.4 | that her sister was a person who deserves justice, whether that justice can be achieved all these |
| 2:12.3 | years later as something that remains to be seen, but at the very least, Kimberly needs to know that the burden of memory |
| 2:20.0 | and of sharing the story is not hers alone to be.. Welcome to coffee and cases where we like our coffee hot and our cases cold. My name is Allison Williams. |
| 3:11.3 | And my name is Maggie Damron. We will be telling stories each week in the hopes that someone out |
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