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The Devil Within

The Devil's Ledger - April 27th

The Devil Within

EVIO Creative

True Crime

0.00 Ratings

🗓️ 27 April 2026

⏱️ 8 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

🎧 The Devil’s Ledger Week of April 27 Welcome back. Hope everyone had a great week. From graveyards to digital ghosts… this week’s stories don’t just cross boundaries— They erase them. 🕯️ The Creepiest Thing I Heard This Week This week’s story starts where most stories should end… in a cemetery. In Pennsylvania, authorities uncovered a case of repeated grave desecration—mausoleums broken into, vaults opened, and human remains removed over time. Not impulsively. Not randomly. But methodically. Dozens of bodies disturbed. Generations of the dead… handled like objects. But as disturbing as that is, it’s not the part that lingers. Because alongside it is something quieter… and arguably more unsettling: The rise of what some are calling digital grave robbing. AI recreating voices. Faces. Personalities. The dead—brought back not symbolically, but functionally. Used in media, content, even advertising… sometimes without consent. It forces a question we’re not ready to answer: At what point does preservation become violation? 🐊 This Week on The Devil Within We head deep into the American South for a two-part series on the Fouke Monster—a swamp-dwelling cryptid out of Arkansas tied to a pattern of sightings that refuses to fade into myth. This isn’t just about something in the woods. It’s about proximity. Because whatever people were dealing with in Fouke… it didn’t stay out there. It came closer. 🏛️ On The Ides of April A new series begins on the assassination of William McKinley—a moment remembered less for the presidency it ended… …and more for the one it created. Because waiting in the wings was Theodore Roosevelt. This is the story of a single moment that reshaped the trajectory of American power. 🕵️‍♀️ On Criminal Mischief Carolyn Ossorio continues her deep dive into Hollywood—the Seattle-based bank robber who somehow became both criminal and folk hero. This week: the rise, the myth, and the reality behind the legend. Because the truth… Is always less cinematic. And more dangerous. 🎙️ On Finding Me Josh Wolf hit a few bumps last week. But he keeps showing up. And that’s the story. Follow Finding Me every weekday—because growth isn’t clean, and it isn’t linear… but it’s real. 🕶️ On The Slippery The newest Evio show is off to a strong start. Each week, hosts Nancy and Scott break down a new case involving scammers, grifters, and the people who thought they could get away with it. They didn’t. Catch up now and stay current. 🎬 This Week in Horror A major release from Warner Bros. Pictures: The Mummy, directed by Lee Cronin (Evil Dead Rise) and produced by James Wan and Jason Blum. This isn’t a remake—it’s a reinvention. A body horror take on the classic legend, following a family terrorized by their daughter after she returns… eight years after going missing. Grotesque. Violent. Uncomfortable. Exactly what you want. 📣 The Usual CTA’s If something in this episode stuck with you… Follow The Devil’s Ledger wherever you listen so you don’t miss next week.
Leave a rating and review—it matters more than you think.
And share the show with someone who likes their stories a little… off. Because the best ones usually are. We’ll see you next week… across the Evio Universe. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

EEO

0:02.0

Welcome back.

0:11.0

Hope everyone's had a great week. This is the devil's ledger for the week of April 27th.

0:16.0

And let's get right into it. We start, as we always do, with the creepiest thing that I heard this week so

0:25.7

there are stories that unsettle you because they're violent others because

0:29.4

they're strange and then there are the ones that just feel wrong not loud or

0:34.0

chaotic but quietly invasive like something has crossed a boundary it was never

0:38.8

meant to even approach. And this week had one of those stories. It started in a cemetery.

0:44.6

In Pennsylvania, authorities uncovered what can only be described as one of the most

0:48.6

disturbing cases of grave desecration in recent memory. A man, methodical, patient, and apparently undeterred by

0:57.6

anything resembling human decency, had been breaking into sealed mausoleums and underground vaults,

1:04.2

some dating back to the 1800s. Not once, not impulsively, but over time, carefully, repeatedly.

1:12.2

What they found when they finally caught him was worse than anyone expected.

1:16.4

Human remains, dozens of them, skulls, torsos, mummified fragments of people who had been buried, mourned, and laid to rest generations ago.

1:26.5

Now removed, handled, transported, and stored,

1:30.8

as if they were objects instead of lives that had already been lived and ended.

1:35.4

There's something deeply unsettling about that kind of violation.

1:39.6

Not just the act itself, but what it represents.

1:42.5

The idea that even in death, there is no guaranteed

1:45.4

boundary, that rest isn't necessarily permanent, that someone, somewhere, might decide that what's

1:52.3

been buried isn't off limits. But somehow, that wasn't even the part that stuck with me most,

1:58.7

because running parallel to that story, quieter,

...

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