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Murder, She Told

Revisited: The Life and Death of Amy Lynn Drake

Murder, She Told

Kristen Seavey

True Crime, Society & Culture, Documentary

4.91.4K Ratings

🗓️ 12 July 2022

⏱️ 25 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

2006 - Skowhegan, ME. Amy Drake was only 18-years-old when her body was found by hunters in 2006 in the woods of Norridgewock, Maine, just a few miles from the Skowhegan town line. She’d been missing for a little over a month. Since then, there have been few answers as to what happened to Amy, and her case, although still open 15 years later, sits on a list of 100+ other cold cases in the state of Maine. But this story isn't about a murder. It’s about friendship, nostalgia, and legacy. The things that were, and a butterfly effect of the things that could have been. This is a revisit of the life and death of Amy Lynn Drake. Kristen is out with Covid this week, and picks one of her personal favorite episodes with a new intro and a newly recorded original song to revisit this week. This episode originally aired December 2020. Submit a tip at Maine Major Crimes Unit Central If you or someone you know is struggling with substance abuse, it’s not too late to get help. Call 1-800-662-HELP or visit findtreatment.gov for additional resources. Detailed sources can be found on murdershetold.com Connect on Instagram @murdershetoldpodcast Support the show here Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello, everyone. This is Kristen and thank you for tuning into Murder She Told.

0:06.0

You are probably wondering why I sound like this and if you have been following along on Instagram

0:12.3

at Murder She Told podcast, you know that I just got COVID. And at the point that I got COVID,

0:18.4

I hadn't recorded this week's episode yet. And here I am with the deepest, strangest voice,

0:25.6

which luckily I have a voice because for a couple days I didn't. So this is a good sign that

0:30.3

it's coming back. But I don't think that I could do the story and the victim and the family that

0:37.0

I've worked with justice by recording an episode sounding like this. So I have decided instead of

0:43.8

skipping a week, which thank you for your patience. This is just the cherry on top of a very busy

0:50.0

and odd month for me. So I really appreciate you. I thought that I would release an episode

0:56.0

that I'll tell you why I'm picking this one. Amy Drake's story still sticks with me.

1:02.0

This episode came out in December of 2020. It was the third episode that I did.

1:07.8

In this case, didn't really have a lot of information available publicly. And then I connected

1:13.9

with her friend Jason and his interview just changed everything for me. For the first time,

1:20.0

I really saw the power of interviewing people close to the victims. In all the articles that I read

1:26.2

about Amy, it was all about her drug use. And I knew that there was more to her than that. And when

1:31.7

I talked to Jason, it just confirmed that for me. And hearing him talk tapped into my own personal

1:37.6

nostalgia and made me connect with Amy in a way that reading the articles didn't and telling her

1:43.8

story just from the articles didn't. Also, this episode last summer was down for a couple of

1:48.6

months and I didn't realize it until someone asked me about it. This is the only episode that has

1:53.3

an original song. And if you heard this episode in December of 2020, it didn't have this song

1:59.9

in it. It had something different. So the song that's in it now is new. And Amy's story deserves

2:06.7

to be heard. So I am releasing one of my personal picks for this week so that I can recover a little

...

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