4.3 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 12 March 2021
⏱️ 72 minutes
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This week on True Crime Daily The Podcast: Justice is served in the eight-year-old case of missing pregnant woman Kelsie Schelling after boyfriend Donthe Lucas was convicted of her murder. Plus, Suzanne Morphew's husband sells their home 10 months after her mysterious disappearance on Mother's Day. Former law enforcement field officer and author Mike R. King joins Ana Garcia.
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0:00.0 | Award of warning. This podcast explores graphic and disturbing stories and includes some strong language. |
0:06.4 | It therefore may not be suitable for our young listeners or other folks who may find it disturbing. |
0:16.2 | Hello and welcome to True Crime Daily, the podcast covering high profile and under the radar |
0:21.2 | cases from across the country every week. We are recording this on March 10, 2021. I am your |
0:26.9 | host, Anna Garcia. Our special guest this week is Mike King, who's worked in law enforcement for |
0:33.3 | more than 30 years. He's worked several high profile serial killer cases and he's got a new |
0:40.1 | book out and it's called Deceived, an investigative memoir of the Zion Society Cult. Wow. That's |
0:49.4 | scary. Plus, you also have a YouTube show called Profiling Evil. Mike, welcome to the program. |
0:56.6 | Oh, thank you, Anna. It is such an honor to be here. I'm a fan and this is just awesome. |
1:01.2 | Thanks. Oh, you're awfully kind. You're very sweet. We aren't going to talk about your book |
1:06.4 | at the end of the program. Really get into it. But just to understand what motivates you |
1:13.0 | and the kinds of cases that really get you going, just so our audience can understand. |
1:20.2 | You know, I've always been interested in the behavior of criminal offenders. And so, |
1:25.6 | early in my career, starting focusing on behavior, I was fortunate to be trained by FBI profilers |
1:31.7 | in profiling and spent much of my career just taking all of the traditional forms of evidence |
1:38.8 | that we're so used to looking at and kind of setting them on a shelf for just a short season. |
1:44.0 | And then re-examining the case from a behavioral perspective. And I think what it does is just |
1:49.1 | opens up so many possibilities that we don't normally consider once we start applying behavior to |
1:56.8 | all of these other forms of evidence. And it makes a much more rich investigation. I think it helps |
2:02.0 | us understand what motivates an offender really gets their motor going. And it helps us understand |
2:08.8 | why they select the kind of victims they select. Interesting. Well, we've got two cases today where |
2:15.0 | I think both the victim and those around the victim had all sorts of potential suspicious behavior, |
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