Murder: True Crime Stories - SOLVED: Mystery in Myrtle Beach 2
Episode Date: November 20, 2025When Heather Elvis’s car was discovered abandoned near a remote boat landing, the quiet town of Myrtle Beach erupted in fear — and suspicion. Investigators quickly zeroed in on Sidney and Tammy Mo...orer, a married couple whose twisted jealousy and manipulation stunned the nation. With no body, no confession, and only a web of circumstantial evidence, prosecutors faced an uphill battle to prove what really happened to Heather. This episode follows the gripping investigation, the explosive courtroom showdowns, and the haunting aftermath of a case that asks: How do you get justice when the truth is buried forever? Murder: True Crime Stories is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. For ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Don’t miss out on all things Murder: True Crime Stories! Instagram: @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios X: @crimehousemedia YouTube: @crimehousestudios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, crimehouse community. It's Carter Roy, and if you love digging into the most gripping true crime stories, then you need to listen to another crime house original.
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They say you never really know someone, not completely.
Well, that might sound a bit dramatic, but in many ways, it's true.
Sure, there are ways to build trust and understanding,
but what do you do when you realize you don't recognize your own partner?
By October 2013, 20-year-old Heather Elvis thought she had a pretty good sense of her new boyfriend,
37-year-old Sidney Moorer.
She knew he was older.
she knew he was funny she even knew he was married and despite all that he knew
nothing about what that marriage was actually like in reality sidney's wife tammy was
extremely controlling she called all the shots and she did not appreciate heather stepping on her
toes before long Tammy became determined to get Heather out of the picture
and she didn't care how many lines she had to cross to make it happen.
People's lives are like a story.
There's a beginning, a middle, and an end.
But you don't always know which part you're on.
Sometimes the final chapter arrives far too soon,
and we don't always get to know the real ending.
I'm Carter Roy, and this is Murder True Crime Stories,
a crime house original powered by Pave Studios that releases every Tuesday and Thursday.
Crime House is made possible by you.
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This is the second of two episodes on the 2013 disappearance of 20-year-old Heather Elvis in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
Last time, we followed Heather, a bubbly waitress and aspiring cosmetologist as she struck up an affair with her married co-worker, 37-year-old Sidney Moorer.
After his wife learned what was going on, Sidney broke things off with Heather, but just
when it seemed like they were both moving on with their lives, Heather mysteriously vanished.
Today, I'll take you along as detectives search for Heather.
Eventually they zeroed in onto suspects, but getting a conviction would be easier said than done.
And to this day, the people of Myrtle Beach are still wondering, what really happened?
to Heather Elvis.
All that and more coming up.
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Peach Tree Landing in Saucastis, South Carolina is little more than a parking lot next to the Wakama River.
During the day, it's full of people launching their boats, but at night, it's a different story.
while the moon and stars provide sunlight, the thick woods cast a dark shadow on the area.
It's pretty spooky, and also the perfect place for people to meet and do things they shouldn't.
So, ORI County Police weren't surprised when someone reported a suspicious vehicle there the night of December 19, 2013.
The car had been at the landing for at least 24 hours and appeared to be abandoned.
Officer Kenneth Canterbury arrived there at 9 p.m. and quickly found the car, a dark green,
Dodge, intrepid. The first thing he noticed was how it was parked across multiple spots.
Whoever left it there had been in a hurry. He's shown his flashlight into the windows and discovered
the cab was a mess. Every surface was covered with clothing, dishes, even trash. It was strange,
but there were no signs that a crime had been committed.
Still, Officer Canterbury wanted to be thorough.
He ran the license plate and found the Dodge was registered to Terry Elvis.
Canterbury knew the Elvases when they live less than 10 minutes away from the landing,
so he decided to go talk to them himself.
Officer Canterbury found Terry and his wife Debbie at home.
When he asked if they were missing a car,
they looked confused.
Their cars were out in the driveway.
The officer specified.
What about a green Dodge intrepid?
Terry said that was their 20-year-old daughter Heather's car.
That's when Officer Canterbury broke the news.
The vehicle had been found at Peachtree Landing.
Terry and Debbie were understandably worried and desperate to help.
Since Terry had a spare set of keys for the Dodge,
he followed Canterbury back to the landing.
Meanwhile, Debbie called Heather.
It went straight to voicemail without even ringing.
This struck Debbie as odd.
Heather never let her phone die and she never turned it off.
As call after call went straight to voicemail, she began to panic.
Back at the landing.
Terry was growing concerned as well.
He couldn't think of any reason his daughter would have left her car here.
It was her only mode of transportation.
Without it, she'd be stranded.
Terry wondered if the car had been stolen.
But if anything had been taken, it would have been hard to tell.
The car looked just like Heather's room at home always did, complete and utter chaos.
Still, Officer Canterbury did his best to go through the interior.
Despite the mess, he noticed there were a few very important items missing.
missing, Heather's wallet, and phone.
At this point, Canterbury knew he was looking at a possible missing person case,
so he followed Terry back home to ask more questions.
Neither Terry nor Debbie had heard from their daughter in at least two days
since the night of Tuesday, December 17th.
Debbie said Heather had mentioned going on a date that night,
but she didn't know with who.
Terry showed Canterbury the last text message Heather sent in
the picture of her driving a car with a manual drive
she was playfully rubbing it in that someone else had managed to teach her how to drive stick
that was the only clue they had
while Canterbury spoke with the Elvis family
his colleagues arrived at Heather's workplace the tilted kilt to interview her
co-workers her boss Jessica Cook was worried for Heather and eager to help
She told police that Heather had gone on a date on December 17th with a boy named Stephen Shiraldi.
Investigators tracked him down at his mother's house in the early hours of December 20th, 2013.
Stephen was cooperative.
He admitted that he and Heather had gone out to dinner a few days ago.
After dropping her off at her apartment, Stephen came straight home and went to sleep.
They'd made plans to see each other again the following day.
but Stephen hadn't heard from Heather since.
Stephen's mother confirmed what her son said
and verified that he hadn't left the house
after coming home from the date.
It seemed like Stephen had a solid alibi,
which meant it was time for Officer Canterbury
to look into the other person Heather's boss had mentioned.
Back at the restaurant, Jessica Cook was clear.
If something had happened to Heather,
they needed to talk to her co-worker, 37-year-old Sidney Moore.
Officer Canterbury called Sidney at the number that Jessica had provided.
When asked if he'd talked to Heather recently,
Sidney said they hadn't spoken in weeks.
But as the conversation continued,
he suddenly admitted to calling her a couple nights before.
That was enough for Canterbury to ask Sidney for an official interview.
Canterbury arrived at the Moore residence around 2 a.m. on December 20th.
Sidney met him at the end of the driveway, as if he'd been waiting for him.
Right away, Canterbury noticed something odd.
Unlike everyone else, Canterbury had spoken to,
Sidney didn't seem particularly worried about Heather.
Instead, he seemed annoyed.
Canterbury asked what his relationship to Heather was,
was, and Sidney quickly said there was no relationship.
Then he backtracked.
He admitted that there had been one, but he ended it months ago in late October.
Canterbury saw an opening.
If that was the case, then why did Sidney suddenly reach out to her a few days ago, like he'd said?
But Sidney had an explanation at the ready.
He claimed that Heather had been pestering him, leaving notes on his truck,
so he'd called her to leave him and his family alone.
He didn't know anything else.
Back at the precinct, another detective, a man named John Martin,
tried to corroborate Sidney's story by going through Heather's cell phone data.
He started by calling everyone Heather had spoken to
on the night of December 17th and early on the morning of December 18th.
One of those people was Brianna Worrellman.
Heather's friend and roommate.
Detective Martin called Bree, who said that Heather had been distraught the last time they'd spoken.
Sidney had just called her and wanted to get back together.
Heather hadn't known what to do, basically the exact opposite of Sydney's story.
It confirmed what Detective Martin already suspected.
Sidney was hiding something.
But before they could bring him in for more questioning,
Martin needed to finish going through the phone records.
At around 1.30 a.m. on the morning of December 18th,
just before Heather spoke to Bree,
she received two calls from a number that wasn't saved in her phone.
The detective contacted the phone company
and found it belonged to a pay phone at a gas station just off the highway.
Investigators obtained the surveillance
footage from that night. It wasn't exactly HD quality, but the video showed someone in
light pants and a dark shirt approaching the phone around the time the call to Heather's cell
was made. If that was Sidney Moore, he'd gone to great lengths to hide his phone call. The question
was, why?
On December 20th, 2013, Orie County Police were investigating the disappearance of 20-year-old Heather Elvis in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
Friends and family hadn't heard from her since the morning of the 18th, but thanks to their information, authorities were closing in on a suspect.
47-year-old Sidney Moore, who Heather had been having an affair with.
That afternoon, on December 20th, Sydney went down to...
to the station to speak with Detective John Martin.
He repeated his story about ending things with Heather back in October.
He claimed that after his wife, Tammy found out he immediately dumped Heather and hadn't seen her again.
Since then, he and Tammy had been trying to repair their marriage.
But Detective Martin quickly learned that Tammy had an unusual way of dealing with Sidney's indiscretions.
Sidney explained that Tammy had taken his phone and didn't give it back to him for weeks.
She also followed him everywhere, even to the odd jobs he worked as a maintenance man.
Tammy never let Sidney out of her sight.
Detective Martin asked if they were together on the night of December 17th.
Sydney said they were.
Tammy had gone to work with him that night.
and probably to keep an eye on him.
On the way home, they stopped to have sex in two different parking lots.
Apparently, this was also part of their reconciliation plan.
If the detective found that strange, he didn't let on.
He simply asked what they did after.
Sidney said they stopped at the Walmart in Myrtle Beach before going home.
At home, Tammy handcuffed him to their bed.
Apparently, this was something she'd done every night since she discovered his affair with Heather.
Sidney acknowledged that it sounded extreme, but assured the officer that he was completely fine with it.
Detective Mart was getting a clear picture of the power dynamics in Sydney and Tammy's marriage.
He tucked the information away for later.
It was time to get to the real questions.
They all knew that Heather called.
called Sidney at around three in the morning on the 18th.
It was in the phone records, and Sidney admitted to it.
But Martin asked if he'd called her earlier, maybe from a payphone.
Sidney immediately denied it.
He even attempted to joke about pay phones still existing,
but he'd fallen directly into the detective's trap.
Martin revealed they had security footage from the payphone
that was used to call Heather that night.
Sidney seemed to panic, and his story quickly changed.
He admitted to calling her from the pay phone,
but he insisted it was still just to tell Heather to leave him alone.
The backpedaling did nothing to save him, though.
Investigators had been wondering if Sidney was hiding something,
and now they knew that he was.
They needed to find out if there was anything else he was lying about,
so they tried to retrace the steps he said he took.
with Tammy. Soon, detectives tracked down security footage from the Walmart that Sidney and
Tammy had gone to. Sidney was easily identifiable as he entered the store. Whatever he was
there for took him less than 10 minutes to find, and he paid for it with cash. Cameras in the
parking lot captured the Moor's F-150 truck leaving the area. From the timestamps on the footage,
it was clear they'd then gone straight to the gas station where Sidney called Heather.
After that, their whereabouts could not be accounted for.
It was certainly suspicious.
And now the detectives had spoken to Sydney, it was time to interview his wife, Tammy.
Officers arrived at the moor home later that day on December 20th.
They asked if Tammy wouldn't mind answering a few questions and,
letting them look around. She seemed hesitant, but ultimately decided to let them in. Still, Tammy
made it very clear she was calling the shots. She knew they didn't have a search warrant
and was very specific about where they could and couldn't look. One of the first things the
officers noticed was that Tammy and Sydney had an extensive security system with cameras
inside and outside the house. They also observed that there was a black F-150 in the driveway.
When they asked to look inside, however, Tammy claimed she didn't have the keys. After snapping
a few more photos, the detectives thanked her for her cooperation and left. As they headed back to
the station, they had one goal in mind, getting a warrant for that surveillance system as soon
as possible. While the investigation went on, the community rallied to help the Elvis family.
On December 22nd, five days after Heather was last seen, the Elvis' church held a candlelight
prayer vigil, an organization called Q Center for Missing Persons, put together search parties
to comb the woods around Peachtree Landing, hoping to find any sign of Heather. Hundreds of
Volunteers showed up to search by foot, by horse, and by boat.
Despite their efforts, they couldn't find any clues to Heather's whereabouts.
Ory County PD were hopeful that searching Sydney and Tammy's home would be more fruitful.
On December 23rd, they served a warrant to the moorers.
It was very limited and didn't include the house itself,
but it allowed them to properly search the black F-150,
and collect any phones and surveillance systems.
But Tammy and Sidney had beaten them to it.
Since the police's first visit just a few days ago,
the moors had already replaced the surveillance equipment,
including the computer that stored the recordings,
which meant that all data from before December 21st was gone.
If detectives weren't suspicious before,
Now, they definitely were.
It was clear that Tammy and Sydney were hiding something.
Maybe the recordings didn't match the story they had told.
Their suspicions only grew when they searched the Moors' pickup truck.
It was clear the cab had recently been deep cleaned.
If their home was any indication, they weren't exactly neat freaks.
And yet, there wasn't a speck of dust.
the truck. The police had a glimmer of hope when they discovered the truck had a built-in
GPS, but the log showed the system had been disabled on the night of December 17th, the same
night Heather went missing. The lack of evidence surrounding Tammy and Sidney's whereabouts
that evening looked damning. But authorities knew that wouldn't be enough to make a solid case
in court. They needed something else.
While the police carried on their investigation,
Q held daily searches of the woods near Peachtree landing.
By December 24th, Christmas Eve,
there was a $10,000 reward for information about Heather's whereabouts,
but the holiday came and went,
and the Elvices were no closer to getting answers.
Detectives continued to interview Heather's other friends and coworkers,
and multiple people independently gave them the same,
startling information that Heather was terrified of Tammy. Tammy had been harassing Heather
with threatening phone calls and messages, but according to Heather's friends, the abuse
had stopped weeks before Heather went missing. If Tammy was involved in Heather's
disappearance, something must have happened to set Tammy off again. Investigators got
their answer from Sidney's Walmart sales receipt.
Since receiving the footage from Walmart,
police have been trying to figure out what Sydney bought that night.
He paid in cash, so it wasn't a simple process.
Eventually, though, they were able to match the timestamp on the security tape
with the record of transactions from the cash register.
That's when they discovered that Sydney had purchased a pregnancy.
test. Investigators began putting a theory together. Rumors had been swirling around the tilted
kilt that Heather may have been pregnant with Sidney's baby. If this story had gotten back to Tammy,
it could have set her on a war path. Although this was circumstantial evidence, it pointed to a
clear motive. Now, investigators just had to place Tammy and Sydney at the scene of the crime.
Authorities put in a request to the phone company for all the data pertaining to Heather's cell phone.
Specifically, they were looking for anything that could tell them about her movements in the hours before she disappeared.
They learned Heather's phone was at Peachtree landing at 3.38 a.m. on December 18th.
While she was there, she called Sydney four times in a row.
None of those calls were answered.
four minutes later at 3.42, Heather's phone went dead. This was huge. Now they knew exactly when Heather
arrived at the landing and that she was obviously going there to meet Sydney. But they still
needed something to show that Sydney was also at the landing. That was when a local resident
reached out to police. They'd been following the story on Facebook and thought they might know
something. This person lived on the road that led from the Moors' house to Peachtree Landing.
If the Moors had gone to the landing that night, they would have driven right past this person's
house. And luckily, this concerned citizen had cameras pointed right at the road.
Ory County PD wasted no time getting their hands on that video. Sure enough, it showed a
large black pickup truck driving by around the time Heather's phone put her at the boat launch.
The video quality wasn't great, but it certainly looked like the Moore's F-150.
By February 2014, after months of investigating, the police finally had enough evidence to make
not just one arrest, but two.
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By February 2014, Orie County PD had been searching for 20-year-old Heather Elvis for three months.
But what had started as a missing person's case now looked more like a homicide investigation.
The evidence they'd found was mostly circumstantial.
However, it all seemed to point to 38-year-old Sidney Moore and his wife, 41-year-old Tammy.
On February 21st, 2014, officers arrested the moorers.
The initial charges were two counts each of indecent exposure for having public sex, which Sidney had copped to.
He was also charged with obstruction of justice for lying about the payphone call.
There wasn't enough evidence to charge either one with murder,
but now they were able to secure warrants to fully search the moor or home.
and they were shocked by what they found.
Every surface was littered with trash, dishes, and random items.
There was food rotting on the kitchen counters.
Even the kids' rooms were so full of garbage, it was hard to see the floor.
The mess was overwhelming.
It might have been a sign of how much stress Tammy and Sydney were under,
but investigators wondered if it was strategic.
Rodding food, especially meat, could distract any canine units on the scene.
Plus, a dirty house is harder to search than a clean one.
There's more to sort through, and detectives might miss something important.
Investigators had their work cut out for them, and they wasted no time diligently
combing through everything.
In the meantime, Tammy and Sidney were taken to the J. Ruben Long
attention center in nearby Conway where the charges kept coming.
A few days after their arrest, Tammy and Sydney were charged with kidnapping.
And finally, on February 24th, the news Heather's family had been dreading came.
Sydney and Tammy were each charged with the murder of Heather Elvis.
Heather's loved ones were heartbroken by the announcement.
many of them had been holding out hope that Heather would be brought home safely.
For Heather's parents, Terry and Debbie, and her younger sister Morgan, it was devastating.
The news spread like wildfire through the Ory County community,
particularly on social media, which had become a battleground.
The online arguing began to bleed into real life,
and the people of O'Re County started to take sides.
Part of the anger stemmed from the way the courts were treating the moorers.
After being denied bail for a year, they were allowed to walk free.
Granted, they wore ankle monitors.
It was like a gut punch to Heather's family and their supporters.
The tension only grew when Tammy and Sydney successfully argued
that they couldn't find work in South Carolina
and were allowed to move to Florida,
while still charged with murder.
While this drama played out in the courts and the media,
the prosecution was building their argument.
Attorney Nancy Livesay was leading the case,
and she knew this was going to be unlike anything she'd tackled before.
For one thing, all the evidence they had was circumstantial.
Heather had been missing for nearly two years at that point,
and the authorities weren't any closer to,
finding her. One of their most important pieces of evidence was the surveillance video from the
Moore's neighbor, the one who had the camera facing the road to Peachtree landing, but the quality
was too low to make out a license plate, which meant it wouldn't hold up in court. They needed
to demonstrate that the truck in the video was, in fact, the Moors F-150. So they brought in a certified
forensic video analyst. He used a technique called Headlight Spread Pattern Analysis. The expert needed to
recreate the exact conditions in the video, meaning he would drive by the same cameras at the
same time of night at the same speed. He first did this with Sidney's truck, which the police
still had in custody, then he used several different vehicles that were similar sizes. He concluded that the
Headlight's spread pattern in the original video only matched that of a 2014 Ford F-150.
At the time of Heather's disappearance, there were 82 such vehicles in Ory County.
Now, the details are fuzzy, but we know they were all cleared, except for the one that belonged to Tammy and Sydney Moorer.
With this expert testimony in hand, prosecutors felt confident that they were.
could secure a conviction for kidnapping, but they still didn't have a body or any other physical
evidence for murder. So in March of 2016, they made the difficult decision to drop the homicide
charges. They also dropped the indecent exposure charges that left one count of obstruction
for Sydney and kidnapping charges for both Tammy and Sydney. The date for Sydney's trial was set
for June 20th, 2016.
The prosecution knew they were going to face an uphill battle,
especially when the judge allowed a personal friend of Sidney's attorney to join the jury.
When prosecutors requested the man be dismissed,
the judge simply made him promise not to let his relationship compromise his decision.
It was a rough start.
But Nancy Livesay and her partner laid out the evidence as clearly as they could,
they argued that yes, the evidence was circumstantial, however, all of it pointed to Sidney
Moore.
Throughout the trial, Sidney's lawyer focused on the utter lack of physical evidence, but in his
closing statement, he changed tactics.
He implied that a different moor was behind Heather's disappearance.
Tammy, it was a move no one expected, even though they were being tried.
separately, Tammy and Sidney had remained a united front, but the change in tactic paid
off. After nine hours of deliberation, the jury was at an impasse. Ten jurors had voted guilty,
but there were two holdouts who weren't convinced. The judge declared a mistrial. But Sydney
wasn't a free man for long. A year later, in August 2017,
he was found guilty of obstruction of justice for initially lying about calling Heather from a payphone.
For this, he would be sent to prison for 10 years.
Still, the saga wasn't over.
Nancy Livesay and the prosecution had to prepare to face Tammy more in the courtroom,
and this time they were ready to fight fire with fire.
First, they had a new witness.
Tammy's cousin, Donald DeMarie's.
Rino testified that Sidney showed him a picture of Heather in which she appeared dead.
And the picture was on a cheap flip phone, and Sidney told Donald that he'd taken it as proof for Tammy.
In addition, lives say dug deeper into Tammy and Sydney's cell phone data and discovered something chilling.
Starting around November 2nd, 2013, when Tammy learned about the affair, one or both of the Moors' phones ping cell towers in the vicinity of Heather's nearly every day.
This continued for weeks.
Livesay had just found proof that the Moors had stalked Heather.
With this new evidence, the Ory County Solicitor's Office was able to add the charge of,
conspiracy to commit kidnapping to Tammy's case. By her trial date in October of 2018,
prosecutors felt ready to take Tammy down. From their opening statement, the state painted a
clear and vivid picture. Tammy was a woman scorned, furious, and jealous. She did everything
to punish Sidney, took his phone, handcuffed him to the bed, followed him her
around day and night, but Heather remained stubbornly out of her reach. And just as Tammy's rage
might have been cooling off, she got word that Heather might be pregnant with Sidney's child.
That was when she snapped. She and Sidney had bought a pregnancy test at Walmart.
They planned to force Heather to take it, and all of this happened the same night Heather disappeared.
Though the prosecution's evidence was circumstantial, it all supported this story.
And this time, it was enough.
Tammy was found guilty of conspiracy to commit kidnapping and kidnapping itself.
On October 23rd, she was sentenced to 30 years.
But the prosecution wasn't done yet.
In September 2019, Sydney's second trial began.
and the prosecution's lawyers used a lot of the same evidence as they had against Tammy,
but they also had one more bombshell to drop.
On the fifth day, the prosecution showed the jury surveillance footage from the Moore's own system,
the new one they'd installed after the investigator's first visit.
The video was taken on December 22nd.
It showed Sidney and Tammy cleaning the passenger's side of their brand new effort,
150 for multiple hours. During the process, Sidney took the rags they were using to the side yard
and burned them. That sealed Sidney's fate. Just like Tammy, he was found guilty of conspiracy
to commit kidnapping and kidnapping. He was sentenced to 30 years in addition to the 10
for obstruction to be served concurrently. The moors have
continued to profess their innocence. They've both filed requests for new trials as recently as
2025. So far, all the requests have been denied. As for Heather's friends and family,
they've had to go on without answers. They've lived with the gaping hole Heather's disappearance
left for more than a decade now. For her part, Heather's little sister Morgan,
found a way to turn the ordeal into something she can use for good.
Morgan Elvis became a nationally accredited victim's advocate,
and today she works with families of missing persons.
She said getting the certificate helped her to process and heal from her own trauma.
With her work, she hopes to help others avoid the long, hard road she's had to walk.
As of this recording, Heather has not been heard.
found her family and friends still cling to the hope that someday they will find answers until then
people like morgan elvis will fight to make sure that all victims find justice if you have any
information about the disappearance of heather elvis you can contact the orie county police
Department at 843-915-5-3-5-3-5-0.
Thanks so much for listening.
I'm Carter Roy, and this is Murder, True Crime Stories.
Come back next week for the story of a new murder and all the people it affected.
murder true crime stories is a crime house original powered by pave studios here at crime house we want to thank each and every one of you for your support if you like what you're heard today reach out on social media at crime house on tic talk and instagram don't forget to rate review and follow murder true crime stories wherever you get your podcasts your feedback truly makes a difference and to enhance your murder true crime stories listening experience subscribe to
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murder true crime stories team, Max Cutler, Ron Shapiro, Alex Benadon, Natalie Pertowski,
Sarah Camp, Megan Hannam, Molly Quinlan Artwick, Honeyas Saeed, Russell Nash, and Spencer Howard.
Thank you for listening.
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