True Crime This Week is now on YouTube, too! New episodes every Friday morning. Click here to subscribe.
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How cool is this!?! The Porchlight Project is featured in the new edition of Kent State Magazine.
Renner put out a message on Facebook asking for help; it was answered by Alexa Doutt, a director of advancement at Kent State. The two met at a coffee shop in West Akron—and the idea of the Porchlight Project was born.
The new season of The Philosophy of Crime premieres today! Check it out everywhere you get your podcasts.
Here’s the full release schedule:
April 20: “How Can Lawyers Defend Guilty People?
April 27: “Does Reward Money Ever Help Solve Cases?”
May 4: “The Alford Plea – Pleading Guilty When You’re Innocent”
May 11: “School Shootings and Toxic Masculinity”
May 18: “Help! I Still Don’t Understand Money Laundering.”
May 25: “The Most Difficult Case — No Body, No Crime”
Hey there, true crime addicts! I’ve started a brand new, weekly podcast. Every Friday, I will catch you up on the top true crime stories of the last week and share updates on your favorite cold cases. Follow this link to find True Crime This Week on any podcast platform you like to use.
Today I published a new piece of long-form journalism, a story about false confessions and serial murder. Hopefully, Shaker Heights police will reopen these old murders so we can finally know who killed Plain Dealer executive editor Philip Porter and his wife, Dorothy. It’s possible the killer was also involved in the murder of Lisa Pruett, five years later.
JAMES ARNOS WAS ONLY NINETEEN when he found his grandfather’s dead body. It was Sunday, May 19, 1985 and James’s mother, Joly, had become concerned that she had not heard from her mother in several days. So she sent her son, James, to check in. Her mother was Dorothy Porter, a renowned artist, who lived with her husband Philip Porter in a large house in Shaker Heights, on Lee Road near Shaker Boulevard. Philip was executive editor of the Plain Dealer in the 60s. The couple were practically Cleveland royalty.
The first two Larkey mysteries are now available on Kindle Vella, Amazon’s new short-story service that works sort of like a subscription podcast, except it’s a story you read on your phone or favorite device. Here’s the teaser for the first book, Winter’s End:
Retired FBI Special Agent Phil Larkey used to investigate the Bureau’s toughest “locked room mysteries.” These days, he just wants to investigate a good book beside a warm fire. But when a young woman is crucified on the side of a barn on a remote Lake Erie island, Larkey knows he’s the only one who can track down her killer before the ice thaws.
Here’s what people are saying about the new season of The Philosophy of Crime:
For my fellow true crime fanatics thirsty for something more; a more introspective, varietal look at this phenomenon we call true crime, look no further. This is the podcast I didn’t know I needed. – Kristen32
People are polarized by Renner. I get it. Just listen. – SailorFamiLee
Initially, I was really intrigued by title of this podcast but was hesitant to listen to or subscribe after I discovered James Renner was at the helm. SO … here I am, years later, binge listening to one of the most well-thought-out and thoroughly researched podcasts I’ve ever listened to. – ssoozee
I could not stop listening once I started. It went from listening at work, to the car and kept going while making dinner. – G Lunn
My nonprofit, The Porchlight Project, is featured in this month’s Signal. We discuss how Porchlight came to be and the cold cases we’ve solved already! Click here for more info on The Porchlight Project
I’m the guest on this week’s episode of the Mile Higher Podcast. It was such a treat to get to meet Kendall, Josh, and Janelle in Denver and talk about developments in the Amy Mihaljevic case, Maura Murray, and little green men! Check it out!
New episodes of The Philosophy of Crime begin today! Available everywhere you get podcasts.
Here’s the full release schedule:
May 4: “Do Serial Killers Every Really Have Multiple Personalities?”
May 11: “What Are Grand Juries and Why Do They Need to Go?”
May 18: “Tried As An Adult, Still a Kid.”
May 25: “Should We Defund the Police?”
June 1: “Renner’s 2nd Law of True Crime Dynamics.”
June 8: “Killer Art, Or: How to Love Thriller While Still Hating Michael Jackson.”