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The Dateline Correspondents' Year in Review: Year of The Cold Case

December 25, 2025 /

This episode covers the biggest Dateline stories of 2025, featuring cold cases, notable interviews, and crime investigations. Guests include Andrea Canning, Keith Morrison, Josh Mangowitz, and Blaine Alexander.

The discussion highlights significant cold cases such as the disappearance of Crystal Rogers and the murder of Leslie Prier. The guests reflect on how these cases impact families and the ongoing hope for justice.

Keith Morrison shares insights from the Wapaka case, where a 30-year-old murder was finally solved through DNA evidence. He emphasizes the dedication of law enforcement in pursuing justice for cold cases.

Josh Mangowitz recounts his experience covering the missing person case of Nancy Snow, expressing a personal connection to the victim. The emotional toll on families of missing persons is a recurring theme throughout the episode.

The episode concludes with trivia about Dateline's filming locations and memorable moments from 2025, showcasing the team's commitment to storytelling and justice.

TLDR

Dateline's 2025 Year in Review highlights cold cases, notable interviews, and the emotional impact on families seeking justice.

Episode

31:55
00:00:00
You look nice, Andrea. How are you? Thank you. How are you? Well, I'm fine, but you know, who the hell is that old dude with a weird hat on?
00:00:09
It says, as seen on Dateline. Love it. There is no Dateline story meeting today.
00:00:16
There are no producers catching up on breaking crime news because it is the holidays.
00:00:21
And we wanted to take a look back at some of the biggest Dateline stories of 2025.
00:00:26
This year, our reporting has taken us from New York to Albania, from Kentucky to the Bahamas, even a haunted house in Texas.
00:00:35
It is December 25th. Welcome to Dateline True Crime Weekly's Year in Review. I want to say hi to everyone. Blaine, hi.
00:00:46
Hello. Coming to us from Oxford, Mississippi Police Department. Yes, the finest conference room we could find here in between interviews.
00:00:55
Nice. All right. Do not make any statements until we can get an attorney over there.
00:00:59
Noted. Thank you. Josh Mangowitz from his office at home in California. I think it's called a lair, actually, Andrea. It's a lair.
00:01:08
And there's the voice, Keith Morrison, coming to you from his home office in California.
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And we have Lester, and Lester has his guitars behind him. Just reminds me, it's time to practice. I haven't practiced in a couple of days.
00:01:23
All right. Well, let's get into it. The big theme that our team noticed in 2025 was appropriate for this time of the year. It's cold. A good portion of the cases we covered were cold cases. A big one was Crystal Rogers, the case of the Kentucky mom of five who disappeared in 2015. It took 10 years for her boyfriend, Brooks Houck, to be tried and convicted for her murder. So what do you think, guys? Can we call 2025 the year of the cold case?
00:01:51
I actually, as I was thinking about this, I had a couple of them. My first of the year actually kicked off with a cold case. And that was, we talked about the haunted house down in Texas. There was also the case of Leslie Prier and her daughter, Lauren, who waited 20 years to bring her mom's killer to justice.
00:02:10
I think that with the cold cases, there's always this feeling of like hope, but then hope that's snatched away, right?
00:02:17
Like time after time thinking, okay, could this be it? Could this be it? And then having to kind of sit and say, okay, maybe it's never going to happen and trying not to get your hopes up again.
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So that was something that we kept seeing with Leslie Priere. I would just say a cold case implies that it's something that's no longer active, that it gives the impression that someone has given up on it.
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And you're absolutely 100% right about the families. These are not cold cases to them.
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Well, in many cases, the cops don't forget about them either. They carry them around with them.
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They take it very personally, as was in the case of one of my stories this year, which went on for like 30 years.
00:02:57
Your Wisconsin story, Keith? Yes, the Wapaka story was a perfect example of that.
00:03:02
1992, when the crime occurs, two people are killed, a vicious, vicious attack in the middle of the night.
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Nobody can figure out why. It was a terrible scene. There was a lot of evidence around the scene, but it was collected in 1992 ways.
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So for years and years, this case went unsolved. They investigated all kinds of possibilities, people who had grudges of one kind or another, people whose character was known to be deficient.
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The detectives spent years and years and years and years, you know, analyzing every little piece of evidence they could possibly find.
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And they never gave up on it. At one point, they even exhumed the body of a potential suspect to compare his DNA with DNA found at the crime scene.
00:03:48
That's why the episode was called Raising the Dead. But, Keith, police did get a match eventually to someone in town.
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It was a mild-mannered, law-abiding citizen who lived a couple of miles down the road named Tony Hayes.
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And Tony Hayes was, you know, they inventively got his DNA by making him handle a big pen when they gave him a traffic ticket.
00:04:11
But he was put on trial. He had a very good couple of defense attorneys who questioned the evidence that was brought against him.
00:04:21
DNA evidence to show that he must have been the person who left the DNA on the body of this young
00:04:28
woman and who left a palm print on the door. And the jury came back and found him not guilty.
00:04:35
And so he continues to live just a couple of miles away from the other people in the town,
00:04:40
many of whom believe in their hearts that he is a guilty party. Quite a story. The thing cops always say is two things solve cold cases. One is changes in circumstance.
00:04:50
People will no longer, they decide, you know, we're not married anymore, so I'm not going to lie for you.
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I'm no longer going to tell that story. I'm going to call the cops. I'm going to tell them what actually happened.
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And the other thing that changes is changes in technology. Like now you can test things for DNA that you didn't use to be able to or some kind of forensic technical data off something that wasn't available before.
00:05:12
Sometimes it comes down to money, right? Just good old-fashioned resources. So what made the difference in the Haunted House Confessions case was DNA phenotyping.
00:05:21
And so when I spoke with the investigator, he kind of made the point that he had to convince his bosses, his department, to work up the money to actually go through with that.
00:05:32
And it turned out to be the key in solving it. They took the DNA and essentially made a picture of what they thought the suspect looked like.
00:05:38
And it turned out to be a dead ringer for this guy. So much so that when the picture was circulated in the media, he went on the run.
00:05:44
and ultimately resurfaced and came back and confessed in the middle of a Wednesday night
00:05:50
church service. Oh, wow. Let talk about the Crystal Rogers case which is the case that I covered in Kentucky That was a case where there wasn necessarily you know there wasn a smoking gun there wasn a ton of physical evidence or anything like that It was more of the kind of case that I feel like we see a lot on Dateline
00:06:08
which is where it's just a big puzzle and you just start putting more and more of the pieces
00:06:12
together. I think that's a very common thread with the cases that we cover is that they don't
00:06:18
always have all the pieces that they want. But when you put them all together, you know,
00:06:22
it's enough to say, let's, let's go for it. You know, there's a saying, uh, among cold case
00:06:27
detectives that the answer's in the box. Um, you know, it's the, the, that when you find out who
00:06:33
it is, it's always somebody that you already interviewed and discarded for one reason or
00:06:38
another, or you made a mistake ruling them out and you shouldn't have. And you see these wonderful
00:06:42
stories in which, you know, these, uh, these investigators end up retiring, but they're still
00:06:48
working on the case. They take the file with them. They copy it. They're reading it when they're,
00:06:53
you know, actually retired and at home and still sort of making calls. I also think that like determined family members, they're the ones who keep calling,
00:07:01
who keep pressing, keep pushing for answers. And ultimately, that's oftentimes what makes
00:07:05
the difference. Josh, you deal with that with your Missing in America podcast, you know, all the time with the stories that you cover. You had a unique Missing in America
00:07:15
this year where you went in the time machine back to your DC days. Yeah. Nancy Snow went missing in 1980, and she has never been seen or heard from since.
00:07:29
But the thing that made this an interesting story for me was that I had this weird feeling
00:07:34
that I had met the victim in this case, Nancy Snow. She worked for the Republican National Committee in 1980 in their Senate races.
00:07:44
And in 1980, I was at ABC News. I was an off-camera reporter, and I was covering the Senate races.
00:07:50
And I had this very strong feeling that Nancy Snow and I had been in the same room at one time or another, at the same briefings or at the same events.
00:07:58
Not that we were friends or that I knew her, but that maybe I had met her. Nancy Snow's still missing.
00:08:05
There was only one suspect. He has never been arrested or charged. charged. And he's not talking with police. Josh, you had a chance to interview her daughters
00:08:17
for this story. Let's take a listen. Your mom wouldn't have wanted this to take over your life.
00:08:23
No, I don't think so. That's why I tried to change and become the mother that she was to me for my
00:08:32
kids and pour my love and my heart and my time into them and make mold them to be like my mom
00:08:40
because she was so amazing. She just believed that I was extraordinary and that I was capable of
00:08:47
anything. So I think of all the things that she taught me, I think the most powerful is how to
00:08:53
believe in myself and how to love myself and how to be present in the moment and to soak in the life
00:09:00
around me. I want justice to be served. I want to know the truth. I will never stop looking for
00:09:10
our mom. It's so sad. You know, that tells you, and I don't think any of us need to have this
00:09:19
underlined, but that does show how these kind of events, the death of someone or the abrupt
00:09:28
disappearance of someone, and then later it's pretty much assumed that they are no longer alive.
00:09:33
How this splits the lives of people in that situation into two, because there's the part
00:09:38
before and there's the part after. And the idea that you move on from this or that there's something
00:09:42
called closure is nonsense. It changes you forever, and there is no pretending otherwise.
00:09:48
And we hear over and over again that actually the situation those young women were in is in some
00:09:55
ways more difficult than if they knew what happened to their knew their mother was killed
00:10:00
by somebody. Because this uncertainty is the thing that gnaws away day after day, hour after hour,
00:10:06
all the time on the mind, and they can't get it out of their heads. One of the interviews that I'm doing right now actually deals with that very thing,
00:10:13
this notion of police departments, investigators, yes, working to bring someone to justice and
00:10:19
working to get answers. But part of that getting answers for the family is bringing their loved
00:10:23
one home in whatever way that looks like, right? Like bringing their body home, helping them be
00:10:28
able to have a proper funeral, a proper burial. And I just spoke with an investigator who truly
00:10:33
got emotional. I mean, tears came to his eyes speaking about how important that was for him to
00:10:39
essentially put a fine point, finish the investigation, finish the job. He said,
00:10:44
my job isn't done unless I can say that I've been able to bring your loved one home so that you can
00:10:48
say a proper goodbye. You know, people certainly want their loved ones brought home, but they also
00:10:53
have this desire to know why, because, you know, we use the term senseless murder and they, you know,
00:10:58
they are senseless murders. And it's so amazing to know that the story, this ordeal was not forgotten. Yeah. Yeah.
00:11:10
Up next, we're going to talk about some of our favorite interviews from 2025. Also, we have some
00:11:15
trivia for you. Two killers featured on Dateline also were on the show Wheel of Fortune as
00:11:24
contestants. Who were those killers? Which Datelines? And also, where did Dateline visit
00:11:31
the most as far as which states had the most Dateline episodes in 2025? Think about that.
00:11:38
And we'll be right back. Welcome back. And I want to hear what you think Where were the most datelines shot in 2025 Which states Well historically I always thought that it would be Florida because crazy things happen in Florida as we all know
00:12:07
But then it turned out over the years, like the state that that led the league for us was California just because there were so many people in it.
00:12:16
Like we did, you know, the Michael Jackson story so many times. So each of those was a California story.
00:12:21
And so, and like, you know, the, the OJ Simpson story, which we did again and again and again.
00:12:26
So those, those all sort of counted as stories from California. So I'm going to say California because it has the most people.
00:12:32
Any other guesses? My money's still on Florida. My money's still on Florida. I'm going with you.
00:12:37
I'm going with you, Blaine. Well, here's the answer. I'm here in New York. You guys are in California.
00:12:42
It's a tie. New York had four. California had four. And Florida trailed. It was next on the list at number three.
00:12:51
Interesting. Get it together, Florida. All right. So I want to hear any favorite memories, any favorite moments from all of you from the road.
00:12:59
Let's say I went my farthest. I went to Albania for an interview for the death of Dr. Schwartz.
00:13:05
We spent more time getting there and getting back than we actually did on the ground in Albania.
00:13:10
That was a great story. It was a terrific story. Thank you. Any not-so-favorite moments from the road?
00:13:15
I had to get on a boat. I mean, Andrea, if you are our adventure girl on Dateline, I'm probably the opposite of you, right?
00:13:21
I like to have my feet on solid, dry ground and preferably not moving. So, yes, I did an interview on a boat.
00:13:28
I cannot swim. But I think that being able to really kind of channel and focus on what we were doing, I didn't feel crazy on the boat.
00:13:37
It was the getting on, the getting off that maybe gave me a little pause. But the cameras weren't rolling then, so it's all good.
00:13:42
So nobody knows. Josh, we have a fun moment of you in Palm Springs. driving around in an Impala with the person you were interviewing for the story,
00:13:52
The Prince, The Wizkid, and The Millionaire. Hi, Barbara. Welcome to Palm Springs.
00:13:57
Thank you. I'm starting to figure out what my problem is here, which is I'm not LaRue enough.
00:14:04
And I don't have enough Do Re Mi. Step on it, Jeeves. yeah there's a crazy story happened in the desert outside of los angeles it was a a giant con that
00:14:21
ended up being a murder everything about it was turned out to be lies i mean the people were lying
00:14:28
to the victim he was lying to them he sort of bragged himself into an early grave by talking
00:14:34
about how much money he had and how valuable his art was turned out none of that was true
00:14:39
And so we went out there. And part of the story was the environment of Palm Springs that the guy at the center of
00:14:45
this story, Cliff Lambert, lived in. So I went for a drive with a woman who'd been a society columnist in Palm Springs who talked
00:14:53
to us about sort of the life that Cliff led and how that ended up placing him in danger
00:15:00
for living so luxe. Lester, you had a road trip of your own down to Palestine, Texas, to interview death row
00:15:06
inmate Robert Roberson. Tell me about that. Well, he's a Texas man sentenced to death in 2003 for the death of his daughter, Nikki.
00:15:16
Prosecutors say Robertson shook his daughter to death. Subsequently, there's been a lot of research and new science about shaken baby syndrome,
00:15:23
and it has caused a lot of courts to pause on some of the prosecutions, not, however, in the case of Robert Robertson.
00:15:32
So I interviewed him a year ago and then again this past year. Lester, let's take a listen to a clip from your interview with Robert Robertson.
00:15:40
Good morning to you, Mr. Hope. How are you? I'm blessed. I'm blessed. How are you preparing for your own death, your own execution?
00:15:46
I'm at peace if it happens, but I'm not ready because I don't think I should be executed when I'm innocent.
00:15:53
This is a guy who multiple times has come within hours of being executed. And it is, I have to say, it's a gripping moment when someone's describing to you, they put on the slippers and then they took off the bracelets and then they walked me here and they walked me there.
00:16:07
And trying to imagine what that kind of horror is like is simply, simply stunning.
00:16:14
But I was glad I got the chance to interview him again. But he is his execution has been stayed.
00:16:19
A stay based on the shaky science of shaking baby. Yeah, the court wants to send it back to a lower court and wants them to really look at this issue of why some courts have exonerated individuals who were convicted under very similar circumstances.
00:16:38
Keith, you had a very big interview this year. You interviewed Lori Vallow, doomsday mom in prison.
00:16:45
Just even the ratings I remember that night were so big. I mean, people were really talking about that interview.
00:16:51
We should remind people Lori Vallow was convicted for the 2019 murders of her children, J.J. and Tylee, and for conspiring to murder her husband's former wife, Tammy.
00:17:02
And you, of course, met up with her, Keith, in Arizona. That was one of the most frustrating experiences of my life, interviewing people.
00:17:11
You know, when you're talking to someone who wants the interview to occur, but just wants to sabotage it at every turn.
00:17:17
It was quite an experience. And doesn't she didn't she at one point say, I'm glad we're friends or something.
00:17:23
And you're like, yeah, what? I was on social media after that. And I saw this just wave of revulsion to the way she was talking to you.
00:17:34
Are you keeping track, Keith? Can we agree on that, Keith? Can I joke with you, Keith?
00:17:39
Can we joke? Good one, Keith. You've heard a lot of stuff, Keith. And I'm here to say you've heard a lot of stuff.
00:17:44
But what I tell you will be the truth. I thought we were going to be friends, Keith.
00:17:49
Like, I'm not sure the rest of us would have had that. But to our audience like you cannot be rude to Keith like that or you will suffer our wrath That how everybody felt But it was a deliberate strategy that she was employing She wanted to yeah and she was also practicing for her court case
00:18:08
I mean, she's a deeply troubled individual, and she'll spend the rest of her life in prison for what she did.
00:18:14
It was great. It was great. And the great thing was you were not fighting her. You're just asking the questions.
00:18:20
And she was every second like digging herself in a little bit deeper. Did you watch your children die?
00:18:28
That's a really sad question. It's a terrible question. And it's one I hate to have to ask.
00:18:33
But I mean, we've been talking about all. I was not there. You did not kill a soul.
00:18:39
Absolutely not. You didn't participate in killing a soul. No. You didn't conspire to kill a soul.
00:18:43
Correct. You didn't do any of those things you've been convicted of doing. Correct.
00:18:47
She's such an odd person. such an interesting character. It was quite an experience.
00:18:53
And this brings us back to our trivia question about who appeared on Wheel of Fortune from
00:18:59
Dateline. And can you guess who one of them was? I'm a Jeopardy guy. I don't know.
00:19:05
Lori Vallow. She was on Wheel of Fortune? Yeah. And the second Wheel of Fortune contestant. Any guesses?
00:19:12
Donna Adelson. Yes. I knew that one. Donna Adelson. Because her puzzle was Mischief Maker, right? Mischief Maker.
00:19:19
It was her puzzle. Another memorable interview, Josh, was from your episode, The Phantom, about Christiel Krug, that case.
00:19:29
You interviewed Detective Andrew Martinez. This detective was extremely vulnerable about getting something wrong in this case.
00:19:38
Christiel was being stalked, she thought, by the guy who'd been her boyfriend back in high school.
00:19:44
It turned out it was not him. But the only way police learned that was after the actual stalker had impersonated this high school boyfriend, essentially made him a suspect for a while.
00:19:57
He turned out to have absolutely nothing to do with it. And police could not get the search warrant information back in time from phone and Internet companies to identify the stalker.
00:20:08
And so as a result, they were led down this path by the person who actually did the stalking and ended up murdering Christelle Krug.
00:20:15
Let's take a listen. It was just kind of like an earth-shattering moment of like the realization that I was on the wrong path the entire time trying to track down Anthony.
00:20:25
You were on the wrong path the whole time. Yeah. Because somebody wanted you on the wrong path the whole time.
00:20:31
I felt like a puppet. This was a difficult case for the police department in Broomfield, Colorado.
00:20:36
They worked on this really hard. They could not be accused of not taking this seriously.
00:20:40
But they were not equipped and they did not have the tools that they needed to solve this thing in time for her murder, which is one of the reasons why that family is now pushing for something that they're going to call Christelle's Law, which requires phone and Internet companies and texting companies to provide information on search warrants when those search warrants are legally signed and executed in a finite period of time.
00:21:10
Because if you're working a cold case homicide, it doesn't really matter whether you get the phone records back Friday or Monday.
00:21:16
In a stalking case in which somebody's life is in danger, it does matter. And in this case, it really did matter, and it might have made a huge difference.
00:21:26
Yeah. All right. When we come back, we've got some rapid-fire news headlines and some holiday reading.
00:21:40
So families, of course, are always on our minds at Dateline. And, you know, we talked earlier about how, you know, the pursuit of justice.
00:21:51
Often the families play a big role in that, not just law enforcement. Blaine, your episode, The Pin at Apartment 210, was really an example of a family not giving up.
00:22:02
We're talking about Jazzy Pace, and ultimately her killer was brought to justice.
00:22:07
The family made that possible. It wasn't just the fact that they knew something was wrong about her behavior.
00:22:15
They said, OK, these messages that are being sent from her accounts doesn't sound like her.
00:22:20
They tracked it down. They looked up the phone number. They found her car. Then they found the apartment where she last was.
00:22:27
And when nobody answered, when police weren't listening, they used a credit card, popped the lock and went inside and found the evidence that ultimately led to getting the guy who killed her.
00:22:36
So it was, you know, there was that line in speaking with investigators of could this have contaminated the, you know, the crime scene?
00:22:43
Could it have gotten the whole thing thrown out? But it was a risk that they took and it paid off for them.
00:22:48
Yeah, you know, it reminds me of a story that I covered recently in my hometown of Blue Mountain, Ontario, Canada, where a mother was murdered by her husband, a firefighter.
00:23:01
And I interviewed her sister, Lindsay. The victim is Ashley Schwamm. And her sister, Lindsay, said that there was, you know, this was, they believed this was an accident, that she had, her car had slid off the road and caught on fire and she died until she said a few days went by.
00:23:19
And she said it was like her sister was in her gut screaming at her like something is wrong.
00:23:26
And it was so interesting how she described that, you know, this feeling that she had.
00:23:32
I've never heard I've heard people say, oh, you know, something my gut was telling me.
00:23:35
She said her sister was screaming at her from her gut. And her instincts were right, you know, that this was this was actually a murder.
00:23:45
Let's take a listen. You gave a very powerful victim impact statement. What was your core thought that you wanted to get across?
00:23:56
She didn't have to go. It wasn't right. I just want him to pay for what he did. She just wasn't some victim.
00:24:15
That she was a sister, an aunt, a friend, a mom. She was amazing. He took her from you.
00:24:25
Yeah. He shattered your family. He did. And for me, it was very interesting because, you know, this this crime happened three miles from my childhood home.
00:24:37
I thought you did a great job on that story. And I loved I loved the footage of baby Andrea, the TV reporter.
00:24:44
I love that. Doing this series, I've learned a lot about education over the last few weeks.
00:24:48
Police are aggressively investigating the fatal collision, looking for any clues.
00:24:53
Thank you. Yeah, that was the station that I worked at an hour from my hometown in Barrie, Ontario.
00:25:00
That was one of my first jobs. So we thought, why not pull out some of the archival footage? Not only that, we got to go back to the station. We went back to the TV station. I got to see a couple people who were still working there.
00:25:11
And, you know, what's what's so nice is that this family, they have a chalet at the base of the mountain, which is, you know, where I, you know, go home to visit my family at the mountain.
00:25:22
And now I've made some friends. I wish it wasn't in this way, you know, but I'm, you know, really honored to call them friends again.
00:25:31
Just wish it was under much different circumstances. So to the final part of our show, I thought it would be fun to get your rapid fire reaction to
00:25:43
some of the big news stories of 2025. So let's start with the heist at the Louvre in October.
00:25:50
Big French museum you know you think it a fortress in there with all the artwork and jewels but apparently it not that hard Is there any more proof that you need that the French understand a work balance in the way we don That robbery occurred in the morning not in the dead of night
00:26:06
Everybody got a good night's sleep and had a nice breakfast. Then they went to the Louvre and cleaned it out.
00:26:10
I'm really surprised they got the suspects as quickly as they did. I guess I've watched too many of these movies where the guys get away with it
00:26:16
because it's so sophisticated and so brazen. But they nailed their approach pretty quick.
00:26:22
I was surprised they got them at all. Yeah, me too. Assuming they got the right people.
00:26:27
The Sean Combs trial was another big one for 2025. A lot of interest in that one as well.
00:26:33
A lot of people outside the courthouse every day. The details of this man that so many people have known, have listened to his music, have consumed his liquor, worn his clothes.
00:26:44
And for all of these sort of details and things to come out, I think no matter where you kind of stood on, it was just shocking to watch unfold in a public arena.
00:26:52
Karen Reed, trial number two. Karen Reed hugging her attorneys tightly. She has been cleared of the most serious charge of second degree murder.
00:27:01
Thoughts? If I were in some significant legal trouble, I would hire Alan Jackson.
00:27:09
Yeah, he did an amazing job. Outside of OJ, it felt like that was maybe the biggest trial that I've seen.
00:27:16
I mean, I was sitting in the courthouse when the verdict came in and the thunderous applause and screams from outside of all the Karen supporters was like nothing I'd ever seen before.
00:27:28
Not guilty or guilty. I get asked about that case a lot in airports and by people I know.
00:27:39
And I always say the same thing. I didn't cover it. Please call Andrea. I mean, you mentioned OJ.
00:27:45
I think that like OJ it so interesting to me how there are some cases in which people have no stake but really are invested in this right That so fascinating to me It is really fascinating Another story that Keith you covered was the continuing story of the students who were murdered in Idaho by Brian Koberger We saw a big resolution in that case
00:28:09
this year with Brian Koberger taking a plea. Let me ask you, did you kill and murder Madison Mogan, a human being?
00:28:17
Yes. Did you on or about that same date kill and murder Kaylee Gonzalez, a human being?
00:28:23
Yes. And did you on that same date kill and murder Zanuck Karnotl, a human being?
00:28:29
Yes. Did you kill and murder Ethan Chapin, a human being? Yes. Were you surprised?
00:28:34
Frankly, no, I was not surprised. There was a tremendous amount of evidence that had been built up.
00:28:40
He had very good defense attorneys, very good advice, But they seemed to recognize that there really was no way out.
00:28:48
I think we put on our story in the kind of lead-up period before the trial. I thought your story was a perfect example of public service journalism, which is it made it very clear what happened and how strong the case against him was.
00:29:04
I mean, it felt like that's the reason he took the plea. Like his lawyer said to him, you're not going to win.
00:29:11
And if you go to trial, you're going away forever. Exactly. And he's still going away forever, but he is not going to be on death row.
00:29:18
Yeah. The Menendez brothers, that was another case that just got a ton of attention, you know, not only because of that Netflix documentary, but then so many people got on board of wanting to see them released.
00:29:32
Yes, exactly. And that became such a cause one way or the other. It had taken on a new life and a different kind of life in social media that maybe didn't always comport with the facts.
00:29:45
We should say things didn turn out for the Menendez brothers the way that they had hoped and that so many of their supporters had hoped A crippling blow in the brothers fight for freedom Eric and Lyle Menendez both denied parole this week It might at some point in the future You don know
00:30:03
It may, and it seems a little less likely now. After the election of a new DA who is very much opposed to an early release for the Menendez brothers,
00:30:13
the only avenue for them now would be clemency from the governor, I suspect. That seems unlikely.
00:30:22
And that seems unlikely. Yeah. There are all kinds of people speculating on whether or not that would be valuable for the governor to do.
00:30:29
And that's a mugs game. Who knows what will happen? A mugs game? Is that what you said?
00:30:36
It's an old expression, Josh. You're just such a young guy. You wouldn't have heard it.
00:30:40
From the 1800s? From when mugs were invented? What? Yeah, exactly. I'm absolutely taking that.
00:30:47
Yeah. so before we go i just want to hear if anyone has any holiday traditions that they
00:30:55
that they want to pass along that they do um yeah i um i go over to keith's house
00:31:00
and i buff his car with your shirt off that's after we play a game he gives me a shiny new
00:31:07
quarter it's a wonderful tradition and we had our annual viewing of a christmas story this weekend
00:31:13
Oh, that's fun. That show only gets better. Christmas movies. Ours are A Muppet Christmas Carol.
00:31:19
That is a classic that will never be defeated. And The Preacher's Wife. Those are my two favorite Christmas movies.
00:31:25
We just hope that all of our viewers have a safe and happy holiday. One thing you can do is you can listen to Keith reading The Snow Queen.
00:31:32
Just search for Morrison Mysteries wherever you get your podcasts. And we'll be back in January with new episodes.
00:31:39
Merry Christmas and happy holidays to all of you and your families. Thank you. Thank you.
00:31:44
Thanks for all the support all year long. Enjoy everybody. Happy holidays.

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Episode Highlights

  • Dateline True Crime Weekly's Year in Review
    A look back at the biggest Dateline stories of 2025, covering cold cases and more.
    “Welcome to Dateline True Crime Weekly's Year in Review.”
    @ 00m 35s
    December 25, 2025
  • The Pin at Apartment 210
    A family's determination leads to justice for Jazzy Pace, despite police inaction.
    “They used a credit card, popped the lock and went inside.”
    @ 02m 14s
    December 25, 2025
  • The Wapaka Cold Case
    A 30-year-old unsolved case finally gets a breakthrough with DNA evidence.
    “At one point, they even exhumed the body of a potential suspect.”
    @ 03m 41s
    December 25, 2025
  • The Crystal Rogers Case
    A puzzling case with no smoking gun, showcasing the challenges of cold cases.
    “It's just a big puzzle and you just start putting more and more of the pieces together.”
    @ 06m 08s
    December 25, 2025
  • Lori Vallow Interview
    A gripping interview with the doomsday mom, revealing her unsettling demeanor.
    “It was quite an experience.”
    @ 17m 11s
    December 25, 2025
  • Victim Impact Statement
    A powerful statement reveals the deep loss felt by the victim's family.
    “She didn't have to go.”
    @ 23m 56s
    December 25, 2025
  • Brian Koberger's Plea
    Koberger admits to multiple murders, shocking many with the straightforward confession.
    “Yes.”
    @ 28m 33s
    December 25, 2025
  • Menendez Brothers' Fight
    The ongoing battle for freedom faces new challenges with a new DA in place.
    “That seems unlikely.”
    @ 30m 22s
    December 25, 2025

Episode Quotes

  • Could this be it?
    The Dateline Correspondents' Year in Review: Year of The Cold Case
  • It changes you forever, and there is no pretending otherwise.
    The Dateline Correspondents' Year in Review: Year of The Cold Case
  • She didn't have to go.
    The Dateline Correspondents' Year in Review: Year of The Cold Case
  • It wasn't right.
    The Dateline Correspondents' Year in Review: Year of The Cold Case
  • He took her from you.
    The Dateline Correspondents' Year in Review: Year of The Cold Case
  • It may, and it seems a little less likely now.
    The Dateline Correspondents' Year in Review: Year of The Cold Case

Key Moments

  • Cold Cases01:25
  • Investigator's Commitment10:39
  • Family Determination22:02
  • Victim's Voice24:23
  • Legal Drama27:01
  • Murder Confession28:33
  • Menendez Update30:21
  • Holiday Traditions31:00

Tension Over Time

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown