Serial killers. Gangsters. Gunslingers. Victorian-era murderers. And that's just the tip of the iceb
In a rough part of Cleveland Ohio called Kingsbury Run, twelve decapitated bodies, some mutilated an
There are many myths surrounding Grigori Rasputin, known in popular history as the "Mad Monk" and th
Dillinger historian Ellen Poulsen, author of "Don't Call Us Molls", completes her interview with me
In this first part of my two part interview with Ellen Poulsen, author of "Don't Call Us Molls", we
In March of 1887 a high-class prostitute and two others, including a child, were found stabbed to de
Richard Zacks, bestselling author of "Pirate Hunter: The True Story of Captain Kidd" is my guest, an
The 1930s were filled with news of midwest bank-robbers like John Dillinger, Baby Face Nelson, Prett
Two events in early 1940s L.A. grabbed newspaper headlines almost back to back- The murder of José D
Carl Panzram was a self-confessed serial killer and rapist, who admitted in his autobiography to ove
Few of us think of 19th century Los Angeles in the same breath as Tombstone, Dodge City, or Deadwood
In 1913 a PR man named John Gluck successfully petitioned the US Post Office for control of New York
Cory Frye, author of "Murder in Linn County, Oregon: The True Story of the Legendary Plainview Killi
My interview with Michael Wallis, author of "Pretty Boy: The Life and Times of Charles Arthur Floyd"
Pretty Boy Floyd lit up the late 20s and early 30s Midwest with bank robberies, daring escapes from
Rumors for many years have circulated about the mysterious death of famed boxer Sonny Liston in Dece
One of the most enduring historical mysteries of the 20th century is of the missing Sodder children.
My guest, David Pietrusza, is the author of "Rothstein: The Life, Times, and Murder of the Criminal
In the outskirts of France in 1869, an entire family is found dead after being stabbed and then buri
Just in time for some Halloween, Diane Student, co-producer and host of the "History Goes Bump" podc
In Stewartstown, Pennsylvania, on a November evening in 1928, Nelson Rehymeyer, a local "powwow" pra