Where It Begins
Set the scene here. Introduce the case, the location, the time period. Who is involved? What happened — or what is the mystery? Write in your own voice, the same way you'd open the episode. This should pull the reader in immediately.
Continue painting the picture. A few strong paragraphs before the first section break works well. Don't give everything away at once — let the story breathe.
"A powerful quote from a source, a witness, an investigator, or the case itself goes here."
Source name, year or role
What the Evidence Shows
Dig into the details. What did investigators find? What was reported at the time versus what we know now? Use this space to lay out the facts clearly and chronologically or thematically — whichever serves the story better.
Continue the story after the image. Build toward the central mystery or the most compelling unanswered question in this case.
A Thread Worth Pulling
Use a subheading like this to break up longer sections. Focus on one specific detail, person, or piece of evidence that deserves its own spotlight.
Questions That Remain
What hasn't been answered? Who hasn't been held accountable? What does the community still wonder? This is a great place to bring in listener perspectives or community context.
Close the written post the same way you'd close an episode — with something that lingers. Not a neat answer, but a thought that stays with the reader.
Sources & Further Reading
- Author Last Name, First. Article or Book Title. Publication Name, Year. Link if available
- Source Name. "Article Title." Website or Newspaper, Month Day, Year. Link
- Official report, court document, or public record name. Agency, Year. Link if available
- Add as many sources as needed. Be specific about dates and outlets.
Join the Discussion