Crimecase by AI is a documentary-style true crime podcast written and narrated entirely by artificial intelligence.Each episode focuses on one real case at a time, based only on verified public sources from reputable news organisations, court records and official documents. No speculation, no dramatization – just a calm, structured walkthrough of what is actually known.The stories cover cases from the US, Europe, Australia and the Nordic countries, with a clear, analytical tone inspired by public-service and BBC-style documentaries.Crimecase by AI is created for listeners who prefer evidence over rumours, and documented facts over sensational storytelling. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Ep 9: The Somerton Man — The Tamám Shud Mystery (00:09:27)
In December 1948, an unidentified man was found dead on Somerton Beach near Adelaide, Australia. He carried no identification, all labels had been removed from his clothing, and no clear cause of death could be determined.Months later, investigators discovered a hidden scrap of paper sewn into his trousers. It bore two words torn from a Persian poem: Tamám Shud — “it is finished.” The discovery led to a trail of coded notes, an abandoned suitcase, and unanswered questions that fueled decades of speculation.In this episode of Crimecase By AI, we examine the verified facts behind the Somerton Man case — from the discovery on the beach and the mysterious Rubaiyat clue to Cold War–era theories and the forensic genealogy breakthrough in 2022 that finally identified him as Carl “Charles” Webb.This documentary-style episode is based entirely on publicly available, verified sources and presents the case without speculation.SOURCES:– ABC Australia – Extensive reporting on the Somerton Man case and 2022 identification – BBC World Service – Historical coverage and forensic genealogy updates – University of Adelaide – Forensic DNA and genealogical research findings (2022) – South Australia Police Archives – Public statements and investigative summaries – The Advertiser (Adelaide) – Contemporary reporting from 1948–1950This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
AI Insight — Episode 6: The Psychology of False Confessions (00:05:34)
Why do people confess to crimes they didn’t commit?False confessions are far more common than most people realize. Research shows that a significant portion of wrongful convictions overturned by DNA evidence involve confessions from innocent individuals.In this episode of AI Insight, we examine the psychological mechanisms behind false confessions — from exhaustion and pressure inside the interrogation room to the moment when memory, fear, and doubt begin to blur.We also explore how artificial intelligence can help detect unreliable confessions by analyzing language patterns, stress indicators, and interrogation dynamics — offering a data-driven safeguard against bias and coercion.This episode is a short-form documentary analysis of forensic psychology, interrogation science, and the fragile nature of truth under pressure.This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ep 8: The Isdal Woman (00:08:49)
In November 1970, the burned body of an unidentified woman was discovered in a remote valley outside Bergen, Norway.The investigation revealed a trail of false identities, abandoned suitcases, coded notes, and movements across Europe during the height of the Cold War. Despite one of Norway’s most extensive criminal investigations, her true identity was never established.In this episode of Crimecase By AI, we examine the verified facts behind the case known as The Isdal Woman — from the discovery in Isdalen to the mysterious luggage, forged passports, and the unresolved questions that continue to surround her death more than fifty years later.This documentary-style episode is based entirely on publicly available, verified sources and presents the case without speculation.SOURCES– NRK – Death in Ice Valley podcast and investigation files – The Guardian – Reporting on the Isdal Woman investigation and Cold War context – Bergen Police Archives – Publicly accessible statements and documentation – Norwegian National Archives – Case-related material released to the public – Interpol communications (as referenced in NRK’s reporting)This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
AI Insight — Episode 5: Can Criminal Profiling Be Trusted? (00:05:16)
Criminal profiling has long been portrayed as a near-perfect investigative tool — capable of revealing who an offender is, how they think, and what they’ll do next.In reality, profiling is neither precise nor scientific. It can narrow possibilities, but it can also mislead investigations through bias, assumptions, and intuition.In this episode of AI Insight, we examine why criminal profiling sometimes works, where it fails, and how artificial intelligence is changing the way investigators analyze behavior — by replacing intuition with data, without losing sight of human complexity.This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ep 7: The Boy in the Box (00:09:00)
In 1957, the body of an unidentified boy was discovered inside a discarded cardboard box in a wooded area outside Philadelphia.The case quickly became known as The Boy in the Box — one of America’s most enduring unidentified child cases. Despite decades of investigation, his identity remained unknown for more than 65 years.In this episode of Crimecase By AI, we examine the verified facts surrounding the discovery, the investigation, and the forensic genealogy breakthrough that finally restored his identity as Joseph Augustus Zarelli.This episode is presented in a calm, documentary tone and is based entirely on publicly available, verified sources.SOURCES:– FBI Vault – Official documents related to the Boy in the Box investigation – BBC News – Reporting on the 2022 identification of Joseph Augustus Zarelli – CNN – “Philadelphia police identify Boy in the Box after 65 years” – The Philadelphia Inquirer – Historical and contemporary coverage of the investigation – Philadelphia Police Department – Press conference (December 8, 2022)This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
AI Insight — Episode 4: Can Machines Understand Grief (00:05:09)
AI Insight #4 — Can Machines Understand Grief?Grief is one of the most complex human experiences — deeply emotional, unpredictable, and often misunderstood.In this AI Insight episode, we explore how artificial intelligence is being used to analyze emotional trauma in criminal investigations — and where its understanding reaches its limits.From vocal patterns and fragmented speech to silence, shock, and dissociation, AI can detect the measurable signs of grief. But can a machine truly understand loss, suffering, and emotional collapse — or only recognize patterns?This episode examines:How AI detects emotional traumaWhy grief is often mistaken for deceptionThe limits of machine interpretationAnd how AI may help investigators avoid critical mistakes when working with grieving familiesAI cannot feel grief. But it may help humans recognize it — and respond with greater care.🎧 AI Insight — a short-form reflection on the science, psychology, and human cost behind modern investigations.This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ep 6: The Kelsey Berreth Case (00:10:03)
On Thanksgiving Day 2018, 29-year-old flight instructor Kelsey Berreth was last seen leaving a grocery store in Woodland Park, Colorado, carrying her one-year-old daughter. She never returned home.What initially appeared to be a missing-person case soon developed into one of the most unsettling investigations in recent U.S. history. With no body recovered, investigators were forced to rely on digital forensics, forensic reconstruction, and witness testimony to determine what had happened.In this episode of Crimecase By AI, we examine the verified facts surrounding the disappearance and murder of Kelsey Berreth — including the investigation, the role of an unexpected witness, and how prosecutors built a case without physical remains.This episode is based entirely on publicly available, verified sources and is presented in a calm, documentary tone.SOURCES(All sources used are established, reputable outlets with publicly verifiable reporting.)– BBC News – “Patrick Frazee found guilty of killing fiancée Kelsey Berreth” (2019) – ABC News – “Timeline of Kelsey Berreth’s disappearance and murder case” (2019) – CNN – “Patrick Frazee convicted in death of missing Colorado mother” (2019) – The Guardian – “Colorado man guilty of murder despite no body found” (2019) – CBS News – Court coverage and forensic testimony, Frazee trial (2019) – The Washington Post – Reporting on Krystal Kenney’s statements and plea agreement (2019) – AP News – “Nurse gets reduced sentence for role in Berreth murder case” (2020)This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
AI Insight — Episode 3: Human Memory and Eyewitness Reliability (00:05:51)
In this AI Insight episode, we examine how artificial intelligence is used to analyze human memory and assess the reliability of eyewitness testimony.The episode explores how memory is formed, stored, and altered over time, and why eyewitness accounts can be affected by stress, suggestion, and cognitive bias.Using established research and verified investigative methods, this episode focuses on analysis rather than narrative.No speculation.No dramatization.No added emotion.AI Insight is a companion series to Crimecase By AI, examining the methods, tools, and analytical processes used in criminal investigations.This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ep 5: The Josef Fritzl Case (00:08:46)
In 2008, the discovery of a hidden cellar beneath a home in Amstetten, Austria, revealed one of the most disturbing cases of prolonged imprisonment and abuse in modern history. This documentary-style episode of Crimecase by AI examines the verified facts behind the Josef Fritzl case, the investigation that exposed it, and the lasting impact on Austrian society and child protection laws.Sources:– BBC News – “Austria shocked by incest case” (2008)– The Guardian – “Josef Fritzl jailed for life” (2009)– CNN – “Timeline: The Josef Fritzl case” (2009)– Spiegel International – “The Fritzl Case: A Story of Horrors” (2008)– Austrian court documents from the 2009 trial in St. Pölten– Official police statements released during the investigationThis episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
AI Insight — Episode 2: How AI Detects Human Deception (00:05:51)
How we lie, why we lie… and how artificial intelligence is learning to detect what the human mind tries to hide.In this episode, AI Insight explores the science of deception: why humans are unreliable lie detectors, how language shifts when we construct falsehoods, and the microscopic behavioral patterns that reveal more than we intend.From speech rhythms measured in milliseconds, to microexpressions, thermal imaging and baseline analysis — this episode breaks down how modern AI systems identify anomalies without claiming guilt or innocence.AI does not replace human judgment.But it can illuminate the space between what is said… and what is true.A short-form analytical documentary from Crimecase By AI.This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ep 4: The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Heist (00:08:51)
The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Heist remains the most valuable art theft in modern history — a crime that stunned the world and left investigators with more questions than answers.In this episode, Crimecase By AI breaks down: • How two men disguised as police officers walked out with half a billion dollars in art • Why the museum’s security was so vulnerable • The leading theories investigators still debate • What makes this case one of the most infamous unsolved heists everA clear, fact-driven retelling. No speculation. Just the case — powered by AI precision.Listen now on Spotify, Acast, and Apple Podcasts. New episodes every Thursday.SOURCES– FBI Public Statement – Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Heist investigation updates – The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Archives – Official case summaries and public releases – The Boston Globe – Investigative reporting on the 1990 heist and 2013 FBI announcement – Stephen Kurkjian – Stolen: The Untold Story of the Gardner Heist – Associated Press – Coverage of missing artworks and reward notices – International art-crime reporting linked to organized crime involvement theoriesThis episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
AI Insight — Episode 1: The Science Behind Cold Case DNA (00:04:52)
Cold cases don’t fade because the truth disappears. They fade because the evidence falls silent.In this first episode of AI Insight, we explore how modern forensic science and advanced AI tools bring long-forgotten cases back to life. From trace DNA to genetic reconstruction, pattern recognition and microscopic material analysis — this is how investigators reveal what time tried to erase.Short, sharp and forensic. A new layer of Crimecase By AI.New Insight episodes every Tuesday.This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ep 1: The Dunbar Armored Heist (00:09:59)
A meticulously planned inside job at the Dunbar Armored facility in Los Angeles resulted in one of the largest cash thefts in U.S. history. This documentary-style episode of Crimecase by AI examines the verified facts behind the 18.9-million-dollar heist, the two-year investigation, and the unexpected mistake that exposed the crew behind it.SOURCES– Los Angeles Times – “Inside the Dunbar Armored Heist” (1999–2001 archival reporting)– ABC News – “How One of the Biggest Cash Heists in U.S. History Fell Apart”– FBI Case Records – Dunbar Armored Robbery investigation summaries– Court Records, U.S. District Court for the Central District of California – United States v. Allen Pace III et al.– Associated Press – “Break in Dunbar Heist Came from a Single Bill”– Contemporary reporting on security failures and recovery effortsPRODUCER’S NOTEThis episode was created entirely by AI and is based strictly on verified, publicly available sources from reputable news organizations and official federal records. No speculation has been added. All narrative elements follow documented facts related to the Dunbar Armored heist and subsequent investigations.This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ep 2: The Crawford Family Murders (00:07:46)
A pregnant mother and her three children were found dead inside a crashed car at the bottom of a coastal cliff in Victoria, Australia. What seemed like an accident soon unraveled into a staged scene, a meticulously planned murder — and a fugitive who was never found.This documentary-style episode of Crimecase by AI examines the verified facts behind the Crawford family murders of 1970.SOURCES– The Age – “The Crawford Family Murders: A Mystery That Still Haunts Australia”– ABC News Australia – “The Hunt for Elmer Crawford”– Victoria Police – “Unsolved: The Crawford Family Murders” (officiell genomgång)– Herald Sun – “Crawford Family Murders: The Chilling Details”– True Crime Australia – “The Family Man Who Vanished”– Greg Fogarty – Almost Perfect: The Crawford Family Murders (2012)– Public reporting and archival material summarizing the 1970 investigationPRODUCER’S NOTEThis episode was created entirely by AI and is based solely on verified, publicly available sources from reputable news outlets and official reports.No speculation has been added. All narrative elements follow documented facts and established investigative findings.This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ep 3: The Norrmalmstorg robbery (00:09:13)
A failed bank robbery in central Stockholm turned into a six-day hostage crisis that introduced a new psychological concept to the world: Stockholm Syndrome.This documentary-style episode of Crimecase by AI examines the verified facts behind the 1973 Norrmalmstorg robbery and its lasting impact on policing and psychology.SOURCES– National Archives of Sweden – “Norrmalmstorgsdramat 1973” – Sveriges Radio – Interviews and archival reporting (1973) – Nils Bejerot – “Psychological Reactions in Hostage Situations,” Swedish Criminology Journal (1974) – Encyclopedia Britannica – Entry on Stockholm Syndrome – Stockholm District Court – Court records relating to Jan-Erik Olsson (1974) – Contemporary Swedish press coverage from Dagens Nyheter and Svenska Dagbladet (1973) – Academic analyses and retrospective reporting on hostage negotiation and crisis psychologyPRODUCER’S NOTEThis episode was created entirely by AI and is based solely on verified, publicly available sources from reputable news outlets, official archives, and academic publications. No speculation has been added. All information reflects documented facts from the 1973 investigation and the resulting psychological studies.This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Trailer: Crimecase By AI – Premiere November 27 (00:01:10)
This is the official trailer for Crimecase By AI — a documentary-style true crime podcast where every episode is fully researched, written, and narrated by AI. Using only verified public sources, each story is told with calm, factual, and structured narration, free from speculation or dramatization.The podcast premieres on Thursday, November 27, with three full episodes released on launch day, followed by a new episode every Thursday. In this trailer, you’ll get a brief introduction to the concept, the storytelling approach, and what you can expect from the cases covered in the series.If you’re looking for true crime told with accuracy, clarity, and a documentary tone — Crimecase By AI is made for you.This episode was created entirely by AI using verified public sources. For case suggestions or inquiries: crimecasebyai@yahoo.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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