You don’t hear much about scandals related to Playboy, much less murders. But The Playboy Murders sheds light on murders of Playboy models and people related to them and delves into how the franchise sometimes directly or indirectly impacted these homicides.
Detectives, victims’ loved ones, writers, and those involved in the Playboy operation detail the cases, along with Playmate and Hugh Hefner’s former girlfriend Holly Madison (an executive producer of the show). She provides commentary and lets viewers in on some of the secrets behind the Playboy franchise. (For more on its secrets, check out Secrets of Playboy.)
Disappointingly, few cases relate to actual Playmates; these include Star Stowe, Dorothy Stratten, and Victoria Vetri. Other cases in the true crime show involve web or international Playboy models like Christina Carlin-Kraft and Kelsey Turner.
The Show Elements
Seasons: 2 (2023-)
Where to stream: Amazon Prime Video, Hulu, Discovery+
More shows like The Playboy Murders: Secrets of Playboy
When a person is missing and foul play is suspected, finding a body is a priority, and forensic anthropologists can help
Katie East
In June of 2020, a team of investigators carefully searched the property of Chad Daybell and Lori Vallow in Salem, Idaho. The couple were under investigation following the disappearance of two children in their care. While scouring the backyard, officers noticed an innocuous four-by-two-foot patch of short grass that stood out against the backdrop of taller weeds. Below that patch of grass investigators found the remains of a young boy. The body was later identified as J.J. Vallow.
This discovery is an example of how the principles of forensic anthropology and forensic taphonomy can be used to locate human remains, even if they are hidden. Forensic anthropology is the study of human remains, while forensic taphonomy is the study of what happens to human remains after death. In addition to understanding the human body and how it decomposes, investigators must rely on their senses of smell, feel, and sight.
Smell
For years in the late 2000s, a rancid smell hung around the house of Anthony Sowell in Cleveland, Ohio. Although several women had disappeared in the neighborhood, investigators and neighbors assumed the smell originated from a nearby sausage factory. It was only after a victim escaped that investigators realized the smell came from the 11 decomposing bodies found inside the home.
Decomposing human bodies have a particular aroma; it is a bit like rotting meat and fruit. The smell comes from biological and chemical reactions, insects, and bacteria that release volatile organic compounds. Investigators can sometimes follow their nose to a corpse, but other techniques are required once decomposition is complete or the body is buried.
One common method of detecting human remains when they are not smelly enough for human noses is to use dogs. Dogs’ noses are 10,000–100,000 times stronger than those of humans. Dogs can also be trained to locate targets and alert when they do. Dogs have a reported success rate of 83%–100%. However, not all cadaver dogs are created equal. There are no universal standards for the training or certification of dogs or to measure the skill of the handler. One researcher summed up the use of cadaver dogs: “Their ability to detect [buried human remains], while poorly understood, uncharacterized, and unstandardized, is nevertheless impressive.”
Multiple researchers are working on creating machines or applying existing technologies to identify odors from decomposing human remains. Although promising, until they are perfected, dogs remain the preferred method of detection.
Feel
During the search of the Branch Davidian compound at Mount Carmel, Texas, investigators were directed to the basement, where bodies were said to have been buried. The area was 30 by 100 feet with a dirt floor. Investigators dug all day, and cadaver dogs were brought in without success. It wasn’t until investigators employed their sense of touch, through the use of soil probes, that they identified an area of disturbed soil in the northwest corner, where four bodies were ultimately uncovered.
Soil is mixed and aerated during the digging of a grave. Investigators can use a probe to differentiate between stable, compact soil and the disturbed soil of a grave. Soil probes are long sharp tools that will pass through the disturbed soil more easily. Investigators carry out a systematic survey of the area in this fashion, inserting the probe at regular intervals and consistent depths.
Touch can also identify differences in temperature consistent with a decomposing body. In the early stages of decomposition, a human body will cool down, eventually matching the surrounding temperature. However, in the later stages of decomposition, a body can actually heat up. Bacterial activity can warm a body up to 50°F higher than the surrounding environment. Blowfly larva, or maggots, can also generate heat. Maggots feed in groups, known as maggot masses, and can generate and insulate heat that may produce temperatures as high as 122°F. The heat generated by a body may be felt in the soil surrounding the body. However, new advancements use thermal infrared cameras, sometimes mounted on airplanes, to detect the heat of decomposing human remains.
Sight
In the summer of 2002, investigators searched 30 acres of the Pickton Farm for the remains of up to 69 women. They carried out a pedestrian search, excavated large sections, and sifted over 300,000 hundreds of cubic yards of soil to find any traces of human remains. Because the remains were likely dismembered, left to decay, or consumed by animals, all that was found were small fragments of bone. They collected 600,000 pieces of evidence and 200,000 DNA samples leading to the identification of several victims. Robert Pickton was convicted on six counts of murder.
One of the most effective ways of finding hidden bodies is a pedestrian survey, a fancy way of saying a walking search. Teams walk across suspected areas in a careful and controlled pattern, keeping their eyes glued to the ground. They are searching for evidence or pieces of bone as well as changes to the landscape.
The act of digging a grave, and the fluids of an actively decomposing body, can kill surrounding vegetation. At the same time, the loosened soil will not fit back into the grave. As decomposition progresses, however, new nutrients are introduced into the soil and the mixing of the soil may bring new seeds. A pile of bare soil also provides a clean slate for new species of vegetation. Consequently, the vegetation above a body may be different or lusher than surrounding areas. As the soil settles and the body decomposes, the grave may become depressed from its surroundings.
An investigator’s sense of sight can be enhanced using remote sensing technologies such as ground-penetrating radar or magnetometry. These technologies can reveal anomalies below the surface that differ in density or magnetic composition from surrounding soil. However, they do not work well in all soil types, and the devices will pick up any anomaly, which must then be interpreted by an analyst.
TL; DR
Despite how TV and pop songs might make it seem, successfully hiding a body is challenging. Anthropologists have an in-depth understanding of decomposition and can use smell, touch, and sight to locate hidden human remains. As technology improves, hidden graves will continue to get easier to find, helping to bring justice to more victims.
Katie East has been a professional forensic anthropologist since 2018 and received her PhD in 2021. By day, she analyzes skeletons, and by night (and weekends), she educates public audiences. With over a decade working in museums, laboratories, and field settings, Katie offers a broad range of insights about forensic anthropology to audiences from diverse backgrounds. In light of the widespread popularity of forensic anthropology, she believes that forensic anthropologists need to do a better job of educating the public about what they do and how they do it.
Love the drama of mean girls? Mean Girl Murders takes mean to its ultimate conclusion
About Mean Girl Murders
Those mean girls. We love to hate them. And when they kill, we love to watch the cases. Take the case of Skylar Neese, so shocking that it was covered by a bunch of shows, including Dateline, Snapped, and See No Evil. High school mean girls murdering one of their classmates? Sounds like a compelling premise, but Discovery+’s Mean Girl Murders doesn’t quite deliver on the stereotype.
Some of the episodes in this true crime show take you back to the days of high school, with the complicated drama and catty back-biting, falling squarely into the mean-girl stereotype. Others, however, feel shoved into the mean-girl box, when they don’t really qualify. A rodeo queen who murders her father? Not quite.
The absence of a true mean-girl slant makes Mean Girl Murders a pretty run-of-the-mill true crime show, with the usual elements like re-creations, narration, and stories from detectives and families, using the trope of the mean girl to draw audiences in. Unfortunately for all its promise, it falls a bit short.
The Show Elements
Seasons: 1 (2022-)
Where to stream: Amazon Prime Video, Hulu, Discovery+
Women who kill multiple spouses and finally get caught
About Black Widow Murders
Female killers seem to be so much more…fascinating. Maybe it’s their general rarity in comparison to men (women commit about 12 percent of the murders in the US), maybe it’s their methods of murder, or maybe it’s the stereotype that women are the gentler sex, a stereotype that has been proven so very wrong by shows like Black Widow Murders.
This true crime show delves into homicide cases involving women who have murdered multiple romantic partners, gaining them the “black widow” label.
These women kill using various means, from poison, to murder-for-hire, to guns, and the show includes commentary by psychologists, reporters, and crime writers who covered the cases, as well as testimonials by investigators and victims’ loved ones.
As one of the psychologists from the show notes, these women are serial killers who murder people they know, unlike male serial killers who usually kill strangers. Just as sociopathic, but these women are doing things their own way.
A forensics-based tour through murders and other crimes
About The New Detectives
Similar to Forensic Files, The New Detectives centers on the forensics behind solving homicide cases (including murders by serial killers) and other crimes like bombings, airplane crashes, sexual assaults, drug trafficking, missing persons, and arson. It showcases a variety of forensic methods, from DNA testing, to tire tracks, to footprints, to bite marks.
Forensic specialists demonstrate techniques related to profiling, forensic photography, forensic entomology and botany, toxicology, facial reconstruction, ballistics, forensic pathology, and forensic anthropology, creating a semi-educational tour through the field through specific cases.
Each episode features 2-3 cases, and the focus is on the forensic techniques involved, rather than a step-by-step account of the investigations. As a result, only some episodes include victims’ loved ones, and not much time is spent on trial aspects, usually just a summary of the verdict.
The true crime show is a bit dated, but still enjoyable for forensics buffs.
The Show Elements
Seasons: 9 (1996-2005)
Where to stream: Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, Tubi, The Roku Channel, True Crime Network
More shows like The New Detectives: Forensic Files, Forensic Files II, Forensic Factor
Mysterious disappearances, murders, and other cases
About Still a Mystery
Still a Mystery features homicide and missing persons cases that are unsolved or unresolved in some other way: cases yet to be tried, those awaiting retrial, or solved cases that the family believes was not a suicide or accident but instead, a murder.
Each episode of the true crime show includes two cases and emphasizes the views of the family and their emotional and heartbreaking stories, rather than that of detectives and their investigations. Loved ones offer a lot of speculation about what may have happened, as they cling to their beliefs about their family member’s disappearance or death.
Still a Mystery is similar to Disappeared, but broadens the focus past only disappearances to include murders, accidents, suicides, and other causes of death that family members and friends just can’t bring themselves to believe.
The Show Elements
Seasons: 6 (2019-)
Where to stream: Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, Discovery+
More shows like Still a Mystery: Disappeared, Gone, In Pursuit: The Missing, Last Seen Alive, The Missing, Real Life Nightmare, The Search, Vanished: The Missing Persons Project
Missing persons cases, as told by family members and friends
About Disappeared
Imagine your family member, your friend, or your coworker gone without a trace. Calls and texts unanswered. No explanation. This is the premise of Disappeared, which follows the stories of mostly unsolved missing persons cases, thought to be possible suicides, murders, drug overdoses, or psychotic breaks. In only a few episodes are bodies ever found, and even fewer have been solved.
Similar to Still a Mystery, Disappeared is less emotional but also has a lot of speculation by family members and friends about what they think might have happened to their loved one. The focus is on their stories and thoughts, rather than the theories of detectives, who don’t always appear on the show.
Disappeared is a nice change from the usual homicide-based true crime shows, but it will drive you crazy if you’re the type who needs resolution. It may even make you look for updates on the cases. With 10 seasons and still going strong, the show sheds light on just how many unsolved missing persons cases exist in the US. A surprising and sad number at the same time.
The Show Elements
Seasons: 11 (2009-)
Where to stream: Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, Discovery+
More shows like Disappeared: Still a Mystery, Gone, In Pursuit: The Missing, Last Seen Alive, The Missing, Real Life Nightmare, The Search, Vanished: The Missing Persons Project
(Note: This site contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.)
Season 32
The Girl with the Hibiscus Tattoo If These Walls Could Talk The Night Time Stopped True Confession The Secret in Black Rock Canyon The Last Weekend Part of the Plan The Case of the Man With No Name On the Hunt for the Zombie Hunter Bethany Vanished
Season 31
The Killings on King Road The Trial of Lori Vallow Daybell Killing Time Along Came Sarah Laci Peterson: A New Turn Finding Rita Who Killed Mindy Morgenstern? On a Dark, Deserted Highway Killings in a College Town The Last Walk The Sisterhood The Last Ride
Season 30
The Day the Music Died The Curious Case of Sherri Papini The Real Thing About Pam In the Light of Day Echoes in the Canyon What Happened in Vegas The Doomsday Files Ascension of Mother God Kill Switch The Evil That Watches
Season 29
Secrets by the Bay The Necklace Mommy Doomsday The Waiting Car The Woman with No Name Broken Circle Night of the Summer Solstice Into the Night – Part 2 Far from Spider Lake 10 Minutes to Sunset Hope Whispers Killer Role Left for Dead
Season 28
The Rise and Fall of Oscar Pistorius What Happened to JJ and Tylee? Unbreakable Family Business The Death of Gianni Versace What Happened to the Children? Before Daylight The Ranch Where are the Children? The Black Candle Confession In a Lonely Place 2 While They Were Sleeping The Black Widow of Lomita The Box Haunted The Thing About Pam
Season 27
Into the Dark Robert Durst: The Secret Tapes The Secret Keepers Before Midnight Into the Night #2 The Betrayal of Sarah Stern Evil Intent Evil Was Watching The Motive In a Lonely Place Suspicion in Silver City Everything She Knew At the Bottom of the Lake
Season 26
A Deal with the Devil No Title (segment: the bail project) Trapped Prairie Confidential The Threat The Other Side of Paradise The Watcher Silent Witness Into the Night No Way Out A Crack in Everything Secrets on the Emerald Coast The Women & Dirty John Unthinkable: The Menendez Murders Black Friday The Halloween Party At the Bottom of the Pool Scorned
Season 25
Dark Valley The Summer of Manson The Knock at the Door A Shot in the Dark The Death of Gianni Versace: A Dateline Investigation The Laci Peterson Story: A Dateline Investigation Nightfall Good & Evil Double Lives Vanished Heart of Darkness The House on the Lake Stranger Than Fiction The Man Who Knew Too Much Secrets in the Smoky Mountains A Dangerous Man After the Storm
Season 24
Family Secrets The Bastille Day Attack Manson The Feud After the Party Tangled The Hometown Hero & The Homecoming Queen Deadly Desire Smoke and Mirrors A Place on the Sand The Interrogation The House on Badger Lane Return to Game Night Where the Heart Is Mystery in Big Sky Country Under a Full Moon In the Shadow of Justice: The Confession Footprint in the Dust
Season 23
The Shadow Miami Heat Game Night Robert Durst: The Lost Years A Perfect Spot The Fugitive Millionaire Deadly Twist Infatuation In Broad Daylight The Trap The Root of All Evil Someone Was Out There While She Was Sleeping The Wire
Season 22
Into the Wild Bad Blood Family Business The Man Who Talked to Dogs Deadly Connection The Vow Swept Away The House on Sumac Drive Secrets in the Mist The Mystery on Bridle Path Graduation Night A Killing in Cottonwood Secrets in Pleasant Grove The Wrong Man Miles from Nowhere Burning Suspicion Up in Flames
Season 21
Secrets in the Desert The Stranger A Cold December Morning Mystery at Payson Canyon Deadly Desire Deception What Happened to the Beauty Queen? Secrets in the Mist Vanished Under the Desert Sky Under a Killing Moon Secrets in the Snow
Season 20
The Confession Tragedy in Colorado Finding Booker’s Place/Deadly Conspiracy (segment “Deadly Conspiracy”) The Last Dive Buried Secrets Who Killed the Radio Star? Poison Deadly Trust A Family’s Story Suspicion Deadly Triangle The Player Someone Was Watching Strangers on a Train Crossing the Line Justice for Bonnie Silent Witness
Season 19
The Day She Disappeared Path of Destruction/Royal Wedding (segment “Path of Destruction”) As Darkness Fell The Boy from Baby House 10 Disaster in Japan Haunting Images Conduct Unbecoming In the Dead of Night Blind Justice Deadly Ambush Mean Girls The Night Before Halloween Lost and Found The Mystery of the Murdered Major Deadly House of Cards
Season 18
The Disappearance of Debbie Hawk The Mystery in Rock Hill The Secrets in the Suitcase The Family Secret The Desperate Hours Mystery at Lost Dog Road The Grifters Flying High at Cocktail Cove/Disappearance Before Dawn Recipe for Murder
Season 17
Michael Jackson: Remember the Time Deadly Sanctuary
Season 16
The Devil’s Business The Stripper and the Steelworker 10 Most Unforgettable 911 Calls/The Secret Life of a Soccer Mom (segment “The Secret Life of a Soccer Mom”) The Santa Strangler
Season 15
Somewhere in the Shadows Family Ties Death in the Hollywood Hills Fatal Exposure/The Death of a Centerfold Blood Ties The Miraculous Life of Jonathan Swain The Party’s Over/Death in the Desert Blood Ties Suspicion
Season 13
Children of War/Rocky Mountain High/The Perfect Storm (segment “Children of War”) Secrets & Lies (II) Blackout: Minute by Minute/Blackout: Answers/Total Recall II/Going South (segment “Going South”)
Season 11
Secrets & Lies Say You Will Against All Odds A Separate Peace Separate Lives 9-11 Investigations/NYC Principal/Stephen Ambrose/The Heroes of Flight 93/Arab Americans (segment “Arab Americans”)
Unknown Season
The Good Samaritan/Dark Victory (segment “The Good Samaritan”) Tower of Terror/Animal Kingdom (segment “Animal Kingdom”) Out of Gas/Sonny’s Story/True Lies? (segment “Sonny’s Story”) Under the Gun/The Families vs. O.J. Simpson/Survivor: Troubled Waters/Who Killed JonBenet? (segment “The Families vs. O.J. Simpson”) Language Barrier?/Deep Pockets/North by Northwest/Consumer Alert: Coming Clean (segment “Language Barrier?”) In an Instant
You know you’re watching a classic Keith Morrison Dateline episode when it has an outside shot of Keith doing his patented, casual lean-against-something, a pensive look, a creepy voiceover line that drops an octave at the end and trails off in a “well…,” or Keith pushing back against a suspect or their attorney. And of course, it has to have a great story.
There are too many episodes to sift through to find these gems, and since we at True Crime Docket are unabashed Keith Morrison fans, we’ve done that just for you.
(Note: This site contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.)
1. “The Black Widow of Lomita” (Season 28, Episode 8)
This is not your typical black widow story. Instead, it’s a twisty story about a woman (Sonia Rios) in Lomita, California, whose two marriages end in death when her husbands die within 20 years of each other. The case leads to the discovery of a murderer who is killed by their family member before an arrest can occur, and it includes plenty of creepy voiceovers by Keith.
2. “Scorned” (Season 26, Episode 1)
In this episode, a strange story begins with a love triangle and unfolds into stalking, arson, and murder, leading investigators to the discovery of a woman impersonating the victim. Keith adds his usual creepy narration, and the story will keep you guessing until the end. The case is also detailed in American Justice.
3. “A Shot in the Dark” (Season 25, Episode 34)
When Cara Ryan kills her ex-husband in her bedroom, she claims that it was self-defense. She appears on the show, and Keith provides plenty of pushback against her story.
4. “Deadly Desire” (Season 24, Episode 36)
Two seemingly normal couples in Idaho, Kandi and Rob Hall and Emmett and Ashlee Corrigan, are caught in a tangled relationship that leads to affairs, murder, and a surprising defense. In his interviews, Keith pushes back against the main suspect and his wife, and the episode contains plenty of spooky narration.
5. “The Shadow” (Season 23, Episode 74)
Late one night in Iowa, Angie Ver Huel wakes up to find her fiancé, Justin Michael, dead in their bed. Questioning by detectives leads to the discovery of a convoluted plan by the killer to pin the murder on someone else. Keith not only provides his classic chilling narration, but plenty of empathy for Michael’s family and fiancée. The case is also covered by The Last 24.
6. “The Man Who Talked to Dogs” (Season 22, Episode 53)
In this case involving a love triangle and divorce, dog trainer Mark Stover is murdered. The draw of the episode is when Keith confronts the lies of the main suspect, who also tries to push back against Keith. How dare he!
7. “Secrets in Pleasant Grove” (Season 22, Episode 9)
Martin MacNeill finds his wife Michele dead in the bathtub a few days after she had a facelift. Family secrets come out, and the truth of Michele’s death is revealed. Keith provides entertainingly eerie dialogue and plenty of sarcasm, as well as lots of resistance against the suspect’s story.
8. “Under the Desert Sky” (Season 21, Episode 14)
In this compelling episode, Keith details the murder of Micaela Costanzo, a 16-year-old high school student from a small town in Nevada. You’ll be shocked by the identities of the murderers, and what they claim happened. The case is also detailed on Snapped: Killer Couples.
9. “Secrets in the Snow” (Season 21, Episode 2)
Stephanie Roller Bruner is found dead in the snow one winter night in Colorado, and a love triangle comes to light. Police investigate three suspects, and Keith provides the requisite creepy narration, along with pushback against one of the suspects.
10. “Deadly House of Cards” (Season 19, Episode 95)
In Edmonton, Canada, Johnny Altinger vanishes, leading police to a killer inspired by the show Dexter. The episode and twisty story will keep you watching until the end. It includes footage from a weird police ride-along with their key suspect, in which he is creepily silent the entire time. The case is also covered on Bizarre Murders.
Bonus: Keith Morrison has some fun with Seth Meyers
If you ever wanted more details on a People Magazine story about a murder case, this true crime show is for you. It showcases murder and missing persons cases from articles in the magazine, detailed by its reporters and editors, along with the investigators involved in the cases, and victims’ loved ones.
Episodes include high-profile cases like JonBenét Ramsey, Lorenzen Wright, the Delphi murders, Todd Kohlhepp, Pam Hupp, the Long Island Serial Killer, and the Golden State Killer, along with many cases covered in other true crime series. The show features police interviews and re-creations, as well as narration (only in the first two seasons), but no trial clips.
It’s a solid true crime show, but the number of unsolved cases may drive you crazy if you’re the type that needs resolution.
The Show Elements
Seasons: 8 (2016-)
Where to stream: Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, Discovery+
More shows like People Magazine Investigates: People Magazine Investigates: Crimes of Fashion, Vanity Fair Confidential