![]() Rose: How will you know when you get there? Gideon: That's a good question. Rose: Where you headed? Gideon: Nowhere in particular. Morgan: How about something I don't already know. Garcia: You're a statuesque god of sculpted chocolate thunder. Morgan: Garcia, baby girl, please tell me something I wanna hear. In Name and Blood Hotchner: George Washington said, "Let your heart feel for the affliction and distress of everyone." And Agent Hotchner, if it were solely up to me, you would never get these credentials back. Hotchner: Ma'am? Erin Strauss: You're suspended for two weeks without pay, pending an investigation of your conduct. ![]() Erin Strauss: It wasn't the outcome you had hoped for? That's your answer to me? Hotchner: Yes, ma'am. Erin Strauss: How could you let this happen? Hotchner: It was not the outcome we had hoped for. Erin Strauss: And now, that student is dead. I can hold him off for days.Įrin Strauss: Did you actually allow a disturbed college student to meet with a man you believed to be a serial killer? Hotchner: We didn't know who, but we knew the meeting would take place. Gideon: How long can you hold that lawyer off? Hotchner: Are you kidding? I was a prosecutor. Everything that points to the profile, yet nothing we can hold him on! ![]() Hotchner: How goes it in here? Prentiss: Means of subduing the victim, potential weapon, source of displaced rage, stressor, evidence of a self-destructive spiral and trophies of his kills. It's possible that his guilt is because his victims were in a position to trust him. Gideon: This Unsub displays a great amount of anger, stabs his victims repeatedly, even after their dead. Considering the stressor and the victimology, there's a good chance that rejection is a recurring theme in his life. If you suspect someone on campus, talk to anyone who knows him, find out if he's recently found religion, been drinking, even if he's been harming himself. Jim Griffith: I'm sorry, how are my men supposed to know about somebody's home life? Hotchner: Well, the people around him have seen him devolving. See if anyone fits the bill, students, professors, support staff. Prentiss: What we need you to do is look at people who are part of the campus fabric. Women he's killing, they're most likely a substitute. Gideon: And because he kills white, brunette women, that stressor probably has to do with a woman in his life that fits the same description. ![]() Now, most likely something has happened in the past few days to set him off. Morgan: This Unsub has killed three women in four days. Prentiss: Which means there's a good chance that this is someone you've seen. He's managed to move in a small community with a high police presence without raising suspicion. Hotchner: We'd like to give you a rough profile of the man we're all looking for. Remember the very first case we had after? It was on a college campus. And I truly believe the way to hand the pain was to get back to our work as quickly as possible. The world confuses me, the cruelty, indifference, tragedy. a profiler needs to have solid footing and I don't think I do anymore. I've searched for a satisfactory explanation for what I'm doing. I also never envisioned writing this letter. ![]() You must be frightened – I apologize for that. The eerie recordings are uncovered by Bridge’s second wife–Marissa, who takes listeners on an unsettling journey of what it means to be the keeper of secrets and the toll it took.Doubt Gideon: I knew it would be you who came to the cabin to check on me. Apology, Allan Bridge found himself tapping into the dark side of the human psyche. Messages poured in, and for 15 years, what started as a social experiment, took on a life of its own. The Apology LineĪ phone number gets posted across the streets of New York City in the early 80s, into which strangers can spill their secrets via voicemail. Whether you’re already an obsessive or just wading into the world of cold cases and red herrings, here are Vogue’s picks for the best true-crime podcasts to try now. There is something particularly riveting about a suspenseful whodunit unfolding in audio form, like a modern-day ghost story or a throwback to the radio mystery plays of yesteryear. Even now, it continues to be the most addictive of the podcast genres, bringing all the mystery, drama, and primal fear of a Law & Order episode directly into our ears. Remember back when there was appointment listening? Those olden days of waiting for the next Serial installment may be far in the past (though developments in the case it chronicled continue to unfold, even to this day), but there is no shortage of true crime offerings that have blossomed in the decade-ish since to fill its place. In 2023, we may be living in the golden age of the best true-crime podcasts. ![]()
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