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DNA at heart of Arizona trial. Aspiring model's killer fights to clear his name. Plus, Relisha Rudd.

November 06, 2025 /

This episode covers the murder trial of Ian Mitchum, the case of Karen Hearn Slover, and updates on several ongoing criminal cases. Guests include Brittany Morris and Karen Eisert.

Ian Mitchum is accused of murdering Allison Feldman in Scottsdale, Arizona, in 2015. The episode discusses the evidence collected, including DNA analysis that led to Mitchum's arrest three years later. Allison's father, Harley Feldman, expresses his desire for justice.

Karen Eisert discusses the case of Karen Hearn Slover, who was murdered in 1996. New DNA evidence has emerged, leading to renewed efforts by the Illinois Innocence Project to clear the names of Karen's ex-husband and his parents, who were convicted of her murder.

The episode also includes updates on the Brian Koberger case, where he faces new charges related to the murder of Sandra Birchmore, and the ongoing search for Relisha Rudd, a missing girl whose case has gained renewed attention.

Listeners are encouraged to engage with the stories and consider the implications of the cases discussed.

TLDR

Ian Mitchum's trial for Allison Feldman's murder and new developments in the Karen Hearn Slover case are highlighted, along with updates on other criminal cases.

Episode

28:40
00:00:00
Hey, good morning. You're listening in to the Dateline story meeting. We can go ahead and get started.
00:00:07
Yeah, let's go. Let's go. Our producers are catching up on breaking crime news. So it sounds like you just snapped too, right?
00:00:14
This fraudulent insurance claim kind of hints at this double life. There's a Fitbit that actually shows a spike in your heartbeat and then it just goes flat.
00:00:26
Welcome to Dateline True Crime Weekly. I'm Andrea Canning. It's November 6th, and here's what's on our docket.
00:00:33
In Illinois, a convicted killer is fighting to clear his name, and the names of his parents, too.
00:00:39
They said that there was nothing that links this family to the crime. In Dateline Roundup, Brian Koberger back in court, a verdict in the college professor murder trial, and updates in the Sandra Birchmore case.
00:00:52
A new indictment claims that by killing Birchmore, he also caused the death of her unborn child.
00:00:57
Plus, an eight-year-old girl went missing from a homeless shelter in 2014. A new documentary is looking for answers.
00:01:04
We're hoping that someone with information can help us close this chapter in this missing person's case.
00:01:12
But before all that, we're heading to an Arizona courthouse for the long-delayed murder trial of a man accused of killing a 31-year-old sales rep.
00:01:20
A few days after Valentine's Day in 2015, Allison Feldman was found beaten to death in her Scottsdale, Arizona home.
00:01:30
At first, detectives believed Allison's killer was someone she knew. They interviewed her boyfriend and one of her exes.
00:01:37
They questioned a UPS driver who left her his phone number and checked out tips about her pharmacist.
00:01:43
In total, they interviewed nearly 500 people and took the DNA of more than 70, But still, the case went cold.
00:01:51
Until three years later, in a stunning development, the police announced they'd arrested a man by the name of Ian Mitchum.
00:01:59
He had no apparent connection to Allison, but they said cutting-edge DNA analysis proved Mitchum was the killer.
00:02:06
Here's Allison's dad, Harley Feldman, talking to NBC affiliate News 12 in Phoenix.
00:02:11
I want to make sure that he doesn't get away, that he's put away for hopefully the rest of his life.
00:02:17
What Harley didn't know is that it would take another seven years for the case to go to trial.
00:02:23
Mitchum pleaded not guilty, and his defense team challenged the legitimacy of the DNA all the way to Arizona's top court.
00:02:30
Here to tell us more about the courtroom deadlock behind the delay and what we can expect when the trial starts next week is Dateline Field producer Brittany Morris.
00:02:39
Hey, Brittany. Hi, Andrea. To start, take us back to what happened the day Allison was murdered.
00:02:44
So it was a Wednesday and she wasn't answering her phone. She wasn't responding to text messages. This was very unlike her. So that afternoon, Alison Feldman's boyfriend decided to go check on her. He let himself into her house and found Alison lying in a pool of blood.
00:03:05
We later learned that she had been sexually assaulted and died from asphyxiation and blunt force trauma to the head.
00:03:14
Oh, this is awful. Allison's brutal murder really puzzled investigators. It stumped them because Allison was loved by everyone that knew her.
00:03:26
By all accounts from friends and family, she did not have any known enemies. Yeah. So let's talk about what kind of evidence, if any, was left behind that indicated who might have done this.
00:03:38
So according to the probable cause affidavit, there were at least three separate sets of DNA found at the crime scene.
00:03:46
There was Allison's DNA, her boyfriend's DNA, and one unknown DNA sample. And investigators told me that they ruled this boyfriend out as a suspect, but that did not happen immediately and decided to turn their attention to making an identification for that unknown DNA.
00:04:06
So Brittany, I'm assuming they put it into CODIS, which is a national DNA database.
00:04:12
Did they get a match at all? No match. After that, investigators did something controversial.
00:04:18
So years into their investigation, police submitted that unknown DNA for what they call a familial test.
00:04:26
At that time, it was a very new technique and it was only being used in 12 other states.
00:04:32
Listeners might be wondering if it's the same technology as genetic genealogy. It's a little different than that.
00:04:41
Familial testing involves running DNA samples through government databases. So people who are already known to law enforcement, genetic genealogy involves running those DNA samples through private databases.
00:04:56
Anyway, that familial testing revealed that the unknown DNA likely came from a relative
00:05:02
of a convict named Mark Mitchum. He was in prison here in Arizona for an unrelated offense.
00:05:11
So investigators found that Mark had a brother named Ian, and he was actually arrested for
00:05:18
a DUI just a couple miles from her home around the time of the murder? Yeah. And at that time, he consented to giving a blood sample. The Scottsdale Police Department decided to test that blood sample against the unknown male DNA found at Allison's home. And it was a match. Mitchum's arrest and how investigators identified him as their suspect was really big news in the Valley.
00:05:48
We did the familial DNA search which we have never been able to do before This is the first one in the history of the state of Arizona It the first case ever submitted and we were able to link it on the first time we tried it Ian Mitchum at the time of his arrest told police he did not know Allison and said several
00:06:05
times that he had never been in her home and did not know why his DNA was there.
00:06:10
So, Brittany, then ahead of Ian Mitchum's murder trial, his defense team raised questions
00:06:15
that would really have a big impact on this case. They asked if the state's DNA evidence
00:06:20
was admissible in trial. What was their argument? that it was against Ian Mitchum's Fourth Amendment rights to use that DNA evidence at trial.
00:06:32
The defense team said that the blood sample given during his DUI arrest should have been destroyed
00:06:39
years before. The defense team also argued he had not consented to his 2015 DNA sample being used in
00:06:49
that way. The prosecution hit its first major roadblock when the trial judge agreed with the
00:06:54
defense. Yeah, the judge ruled the state could not use their DNA evidence. An appeals court
00:07:01
later overturned that ruling in 2023. And then the Arizona Supreme Court agreed. They said while
00:07:09
police did violate Mitchum's rights, the DNA evidence could still be used in a trial.
00:07:15
And the poor family, friends, you know, all these delays. It's been 10 years since Allison's murder.
00:07:21
Yes, a devastating amount of time. And what's so incredible is their strength. Allison's dad,
00:07:29
Harley, is in the courtroom for every single hearing. All right. So finally, Ian Mitchum heads to trial next week. Court documents,
00:07:40
they're giving a preview really of what the defense's strategy will be. That's right. We learned that Mitchum's defense team is pointing a finger at a person
00:07:49
police pursued as a potential lead during the murder investigation. This person was Allison's
00:07:56
pharmacist and made comments that implicated him in the homicide. He viewed Allison's dating profile
00:08:03
and lived near her. And the man being implicated by the defense, has he made any comments?
00:08:09
So as of now, Dateline has not spoken with this person, but he was in court last week with his
00:08:15
attorney. And his attorney told the court his client plans on pleading the fifth.
00:08:21
Okay, Brittany, thank you. So many moving pieces still in this case as the trial finally gets
00:08:25
underway. Thank you so much for bringing us the latest from the courtroom in Arizona.
00:08:29
You are so welcome. Thank you for having me. Coming up, a man who was convicted, along with his parents,
00:08:38
of murdering his ex-wife is fighting to clear their names. on september 27th 1996 police found an abandoned car on the side of interstate 72 in central
00:08:58
illinois the engine was running the headlights were on but the car's driver 23 year old karen
00:09:05
herne slover was nowhere to be found a few days later in a lake miles away a boater made a
00:09:11
horrifying discovery. A garbage bag containing a body part. Law enforcement soon found more bags
00:09:18
and more body parts nearby. It was Karen. A years-long investigation led to the arrests of
00:09:25
Karen's ex-husband, Michael Slover Jr., as well as both of his parents. In 2002, a jury found them
00:09:33
all guilty of Karen's murder. But now, almost three decades since Karen's death, the case is
00:09:39
back in court with bombshell new evidence that could turn this case on its head.
00:09:45
Here to bring us up to speed is Karen Eisert, an anchor with NBC-owned station WAND in Decatur,
00:09:51
Illinois. Thanks for coming on the podcast, Karen. Thank you so much for having me.
00:09:56
Let's just start by telling us a little bit more about the victim in this case, Karen Hearn Slover. She was an aspiring model. Her friends described her as beautiful inside and
00:10:08
out and she just got a divorce from her husband, Michael Slover Jr. They had a three-year-old son,
00:10:15
Colton, at the time. Okay, so as we said, the mystery begins on September 27, 1996,
00:10:21
when police found a car on the side of a highway. Yeah, so Karen was last seen leaving work at the
00:10:29
Herald and Review, which is a local newspaper in Decatur. She worked in advertising there
00:10:34
and that was the last time anybody had seen her. But her car was found and the car belonged to David Swan, her boyfriend,
00:10:42
and he had told police that she had had some car issues and so he had lent her his vehicle.
00:10:48
We mentioned the gruesome discovery of Karen's dismembered body days later. Where does the investigation go from there?
00:10:55
Yeah, so now it's why did this happen? Who did this? Investigators obviously looked at her boyfriend, David Swan.
00:11:03
They checked him out. He had an alibi at the time that all of this was unfolding on the 27th.
00:11:08
And so then it started to asking people around town. Well, there was a story that had been told that three people in Decatur had kind of claimed
00:11:18
that they knew the details of what happened to Karen. And so police obviously looked at these three people closely as well, but ruled them out.
00:11:26
So what comes next is the ex-husband. What did the police learn about the relationship between Karen and her ex-husband?
00:11:35
Yeah, so friends had described that their relationship was just a little rocky. And now they're divorced and they have their son Colton.
00:11:45
And so there became issues with the custody over Colton. Karen had an opportunity to go out of state to model.
00:11:54
And that obviously threw a wrench in this custody issue So police don just look at Michael Jr They go a step further and not something you hear every day They start looking into Michael parents Michael Sr and Jeanette
00:12:10
Yeah. And what I really thought was very interesting in the case was they looked closely at the business that Michael Sr. owned.
00:12:19
And they had noticed that there were certain concrete cinders is how I would describe them.
00:12:24
that they noticed was on the property, but they also found those same cinders in the car that
00:12:30
Karen was last seen in. They also saw it in the plastic bags that Karen's body parts were in as
00:12:37
well. So they really wanted to take a look at the Miracle Motors property that Michael Sr. owned.
00:12:43
And they were able to dig up dirt. They have these five-gallon buckets, and in those buckets,
00:12:48
they end up finding buttons, and they looked closely at the brand. They looked closely at,
00:12:53
is this exactly the button that it is of the jeans that she would wear? And it was.
00:12:58
Wow. So finally, three years after Karen's death, authorities charged Karen's ex-husband,
00:13:03
Michael Slover Jr., and both of his parents with Karen's murder. All three Slovers were found
00:13:09
guilty after a five-week trial. Michael Sr., Michael Jr. sentenced to 65 years each. Jeanette
00:13:15
got 60 years. Things seemed pretty set, but now this case is back in the news all over again.
00:13:21
Well, yeah, the Slovers have always maintained their innocence, and they have been fighting to appeal their conviction since their sentencing date.
00:13:31
The Illinois Innocence Project stepped in, and about 10 years ago, they were able to get a judge to grant them more DNA testing on evidence that was collected from the crime scene.
00:13:42
And that's where we are now because the Innocence Project has claimed that they have found two profiles on the duct tape that was wrapped over those plastic bags that Karen's body was found in.
00:13:55
And they say that that DNA profile on that duct tape does not link the Slovers to it.
00:14:01
They say one of them is a female. It's not Jeanette's. And then they also claim that there was a fingerprint found in blood on the railing of the bridge where she was found.
00:14:11
they say that that was a DNA profile that does not link the Slover family as well.
00:14:16
The Innocence Project has claimed that this was almost like a botched investigation.
00:14:21
They said that there was no eyewitnesses, there was no weapon, there was nothing that links this family to the crime.
00:14:27
We should say that the police and the prosecutor stand by their original investigation
00:14:32
and still believe the Slovers murdered Karen. So what happens now with the DNA samples?
00:14:38
We know, of course, that there's CODIS. I would imagine that the Illinois Innocence Project wants this to be run through that.
00:14:44
Right. So CODIS for Illinois is actually run by the Illinois State Police. The Illinois State Police are saying you cannot put this DNA that you have collected into the system.
00:14:56
Why? Well, yeah, their reasoning is we don't know how you got it. We don't know where you obtained this.
00:15:03
And so for them, they think it would jeopardize almost the entire database by just entering in this.
00:15:09
as they say, a random evidence into their database, into their system that they have to manage.
00:15:15
All right. So, Karen, there was a hearing last week in this case to discuss this new DNA. What
00:15:19
happened? So basically what they've done is the Illinois Innocence Project says that it has an
00:15:25
expert that can prove that this DNA was collected correctly and that it needs to be submitted into
00:15:31
CODIS. The AG's office representing the Illinois State Police saying, no, no, this can't go into
00:15:38
system. So now in the new year, we're going to have a hearing where these experts are going to
00:15:43
testify in front of a judge to decide if this DNA goes into the system. Okay, so I mean, here's yet
00:15:50
another crazy element to this story is that Michael Slover Jr., he's out of prison, but his parents
00:15:58
both died. Yeah, so Michael Sr. died in 2022 while serving his sentence. Jeanette actually died
00:16:07
earlier this year. And so when I asked the Illinois Innocence Project, you know, Michael Jr. is already
00:16:12
on parole at this point. Why keep pushing? They say that this family is innocent. And so they're
00:16:18
going to keep pushing no matter what to try to overturn this conviction. How do Karen's family
00:16:24
and friends feel about this case being opened up again? We've been able to hear from a couple of
00:16:28
her friends and everyone just really wants this case to go to bed. They don't want to be insensitive
00:16:34
of any way, but it's more or less like just let Karen Hearn Slover lie in peace.
00:16:40
Yeah. Thank you so much for bringing us all this insight into this case. Thank you so much.
00:16:48
Up next, it's time for Dateline Roundup. We've got updates in the Brian Koberger and Sandra
00:16:54
Birchmore cases, plus a new quest for answers in the case of an eight-year-old who disappeared
00:16:59
from a homeless shelter in Washington, D.C. Welcome back to the show. For this week's roundup, we're joined by Dateline producer Mike Nardi.
00:17:21
Hey, Mike. Hey, Andrea. So this is a story I know well, of course, Mike. We're off to Massachusetts for an update in a case that I've been covering for more than a year now,
00:17:31
the alleged murder of 23-year-old teacher's assistant Sandra Birchmore, a very disturbing
00:17:37
case. Mike, just remind us of it. So Sandra was found dead in her apartment in February 2021.
00:17:43
The local medical examiner ruled her death a suicide. But three years later, federal prosecutors
00:17:48
charged a former police officer by the name of Matthew Farwell with murdering Sandra and staging
00:17:54
the scene to look like a suicide Prosecutors alleged he was trying to cover up a relationship with Sandra that started years ago when she was a minor and enrolled in a police explorers program at the Stoughton Police
00:18:05
Department. He was one of the instructors. So Matthew Farwell has denied having sex with
00:18:11
Sandra Birchmore when she was underage and has pleaded not guilty to the murder charge.
00:18:16
But this week, the stakes seem to be getting higher for him. Farwell was hit with an additional
00:18:22
criminal charge. What's that all about, Mike? So Sandra was pregnant at the time of her death,
00:18:28
and Matthew Farwell has been charged with violating a federal law that protects unborn
00:18:32
children. A new indictment claims that by killing Birchmore, he also caused the death of her unborn
00:18:37
child. So if convicted, he'll face a mandatory life sentence. In this superseding indictment,
00:18:43
we also learned that Sandra Birchmore was around eight to 10 weeks pregnant at the time of her
00:18:48
murder. I know she was very excited about it. Farwell has yet to be arraigned for this additional
00:18:54
charge, so no plea has been entered yet. But right now, his murder trial is scheduled for October
00:18:59
2026. Yep. And we'll have to wait and see if this additional charge impacts that trial's timing.
00:19:06
Okay, so up next is Brian Koberger. He was back in court this week. He's, of course, the man who
00:19:11
pleaded guilty earlier this summer to killing four University of Idaho students. What is the latest
00:19:16
with this case. So Kohlberger pled guilty to killing Kaylee Gonsalves, Madison Mogan,
00:19:23
Ethan Chapin, and Zana Kernodle in their off-campus home back in 2022. He was back in
00:19:29
court on Wednesday for a scheduled restitution hearing. In this hearing, an Ada County judge
00:19:34
heard arguments about whether the convicted killer should pay for funeral urns that were recently
00:19:39
purchased by the Gonsalves and Mogan families to carry the victim's ashes. Right. His defense team
00:19:46
said Koberger has no income and no chance of making money anytime soon because of his four
00:19:51
consecutive life sentences. The judge said he'll issue his ruling at a later date. Also this week,
00:19:56
Mike, and for the first time publicly, we saw photos of some of the evidence that tied Koberger
00:20:02
to the murder early on in the investigation. And I know one of those items was that K-bar,
00:20:08
the knife, the knife sheath. Right, right. The Idaho State Police released thousands of documents
00:20:15
related to the Koberger investigation, including photos of that knife sheath you were talking about
00:20:19
that Koberger left at the scene of the crime. Which is, you know, chilling when you actually see it.
00:20:27
And finally, we have a verdict in the murder trial of Jorge Rueda Lenderos, the man accused
00:20:32
of murdering American University professor Sue Ann Markham. Mike, Lester talked about this trial
00:20:37
on the podcast last week, but if you could just give everyone a quick recap. Sure. So 15 years ago, Sue Ann Markham was found dead inside her Bethesda, Maryland home. She died as a result of blunt force trauma and asphyxiation. A year after her death, authorities issued a warrant for the arrest of her friend and business partner, who was hiding out in Mexico until his arrest in 2023.
00:20:59
three. So prosecutors told the jury that Landeros had seduced Markham into handing over hundreds of
00:21:05
thousands of dollars, taken out a life insurance policy on her and then killed her. Take a listen
00:21:11
to Prosecutor Debbie Feinstein. When he met Sue, he had found a mark. He had found someone that was
00:21:18
vulnerable to his charms. So, Mike, after an eight day trial, the jury came back with a verdict.
00:21:23
What did they decide? They found Landeros guilty of second degree murder, which carries a maximum
00:21:28
sentence of 30 years behind bars. When will Landeros be sentenced? His sentencing is scheduled
00:21:34
for February 6th. Okay, Mike, thank you so much for all these updates. Thanks for having me.
00:21:41
For our final story this week, we wanted to talk to two people who may be familiar to you from
00:21:47
season one of our podcast series, Dateline Missing in America. Derica and Natalie Wilson.
00:21:53
They are the founders of the Black and Missing Foundation, an organization dedicated to shining
00:21:58
a spotlight on cases involving missing people of color. If you have white, blonde-haired, blue-eyed, the world wants to jump in and help.
00:22:07
And for missing women and young girls of color, even men, their cases are not taken seriously.
00:22:14
Nearly 40% of missing persons in the U.S. are people of color. And Black children make up about 33% of all missing child cases.
00:22:23
But Derek and Natalie are here today to talk about one case in particular. R-E-L-I-S-H-A.
00:22:30
R-E-L-I-S-H-A. That's a nice name. How old are you? Eight. That is the voice of Relisha Rudd talking in 2014 to someone from the charity,
00:22:41
the Homeless Children's Playtime Project. She was living with her family in a Washington, D.C. homeless shelter at the time.
00:22:48
Shortly after this interview was taped, Relisha went missing. She was last seen with the shelter's janitor at a nearby motel.
00:22:55
Last week on what would have been her 20th birthday, the Black and Missing Foundation
00:23:00
premiered a two-part documentary called The Vanishing of Relisha Rudd, A Cold Case Reexamined.
00:23:06
Derika and Natalie are here to tell us why it was so important to them to tell her story.
00:23:11
Thank you both so much for being here. Thank you for having us. Thank you. So before we get to Relisha's case, tell us more about your organization, the Black and
00:23:20
Missing Foundation. We are the sole nonprofit organization that focuses primarily on missing people of color.
00:23:29
My background is media relations to bring that visibility. Derricka's is law enforcement to get the resources needed from law enforcement so that we can get the community engaged.
00:23:41
Many times we are the last resort for these families. And we have thousands of missing persons in our database, and they simply want answers as to what happened to their missing loved ones.
00:23:54
Yeah. So, ladies, tell us about Relisha Rudd. She was going to a local school in the D.C. area in elementary.
00:24:00
and then she just stopped showing up? So yes, she lived in a shelter with her family and she was attending a local school.
00:24:11
By the time she was declared missing, 18 days had passed since she was last spotted at school or the shelter where she lived.
00:24:19
What does her mom say? Why did it take her mom so long to say why she wasn't attending school?
00:24:26
Well, we actually haven't heard from her mother. The school, they are the ones that actually reported Relisha missing.
00:24:34
They elevated it to law enforcement. Let's talk about this janitor, Khalil Tatum, who worked at the shelter.
00:24:41
Relisha's mother allowed him to care for her on certain occasions. How did this dynamic work, and why was he even in her life in any way beyond cleaning the shelter?
00:24:51
There is a no-fragmentization policy that was in place. However, that was violated because Khalil Tatum gave gifts to Relisha and her mother.
00:25:03
We don know why her mother felt so comfortable turning her over to him The last sign of Relisha Live there chilling security camera footage you show in the documentary of her walking down a motel hallway with Khalil Tatum
00:25:21
Yes. And the question that we have is we see her going into the room, but we never see her coming out.
00:25:29
Assistant Chief of Police Diane Groom said that that hotel was known for a lot of things,
00:25:34
and sex trafficking was one of them. So authorities started looking for Tatum and made a horrifying discovery.
00:25:42
They found his wife shot dead in another motel, and a few days later they found Tatum's body in a city park,
00:25:48
but no sign of Relisha. NBC News 4 covered the story. The man wanted for kidnapping an eight-year-old girl and killing his wife is found dead.
00:25:57
Police say Tatum killed himself in the same park where they've been searching for Relisha Rudd for the last five days.
00:26:04
Actually, we were out there at Kiddoworth Park searching for Relisha when Tatum's body was found.
00:26:13
Allegedly a gunshot wound self And so what we are hopeful is that when he passed away that everything didn go to the grave right We know that someone out there knows something There are so many people
00:26:30
that was in that shelter. The Department of Justice has reported that children experiencing
00:26:36
poverty and housing insecurity are more vulnerable to kidnapping or trafficking.
00:26:42
You argue in your documentary that the social safety net in D.C. failed to protect Relisha.
00:26:48
I mean, the fact that it took 18 days to even report her missing. But we would not have known about this case if that vigilant educator didn't bring it to everyone's attention, that something just wasn't right.
00:27:03
I think everyone can learn from that person. You know, see something, say something.
00:27:08
Where can our listeners watch your documentary? So they can go to our YouTube channel. It's the Black and Missing Foundation YouTube.
00:27:17
Okay, great. Derek and Natalie, thank you for sharing Relisha's story, but also for all the
00:27:23
amazing work that both of you do and for helping so many families in many different ways Thank you so much Thank you so much That it for this episode of Dateline True Crime Weekly
00:27:38
To get ad-free listening for all our podcasts, subscribe to Dateline Premium. Coming up this Friday,
00:27:45
a brand new story Dateline has been working on for years. The murder of Crystal Rogers, a mom of five,
00:27:51
devastated her small Kentucky town. But her murder wasn't the first in Bardstown, and it wouldn't be the last.
00:27:58
America's most beautiful small town. Now, people are wondering what is going on here.
00:28:04
Watch The Trouble in Bardstown at 9, 8 Central on NBC. Thanks for listening. Dateline True Crime Weekly is produced by Carson Cummins and Caroline Casey.
00:28:15
Our senior producer is Liz Brown-Kurloff. Production and fact-checking help by Audrey Abrahams.
00:28:20
Veronica Mazzica is our digital producer. Rick Kwan is our sound designer. Original music by Jesse McGinty.
00:28:27
Paul Ryan is executive producer. And Liz Cole is senior executive producer of Dateline.
00:28:32
Okay, bye. Bye.

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Episode Highlights

  • Allison Feldman's Murder Case
    Allison was found beaten to death, leading to a complex investigation.
    “Allison's brutal murder really puzzled investigators.”
    @ 01m 25s
    November 06, 2025
  • DNA Evidence in Ian Mitchum's Case
    Cutting-edge DNA analysis linked Ian Mitchum to Allison's murder, but the trial faced delays.
    “It would take another seven years for the case to go to trial.”
    @ 02m 17s
    November 06, 2025
  • Karen Hearn Slover's Murder Case
    New evidence emerges in the decades-old case of Karen Hearn Slover's murder.
    “Bombshell new evidence that could turn this case on its head.”
    @ 09m 39s
    November 06, 2025
  • Sandra Birchmore's Murder Investigation
    Former police officer charged with murdering Sandra Birchmore, who was pregnant at the time.
    “By killing Birchmore, he also caused the death of her unborn child.”
    @ 18m 32s
    November 06, 2025
  • Relisha Rudd's Disappearance
    The Black and Missing Foundation highlights the case of Relisha Rudd, who went missing at eight.
    “She was last seen with the shelter's janitor at a nearby motel.”
    @ 22m 51s
    November 06, 2025
  • The Disappearance of Relisha Rudd
    Relisha Rudd, a young girl from D.C., went missing under mysterious circumstances.
    “By the time she was declared missing, 18 days had passed”
    @ 24m 11s
    November 06, 2025
  • A Shocking Discovery
    Authorities found Khalil Tatum's wife dead and later Tatum himself, but no sign of Relisha.
    “Police say Tatum killed himself in the same park where they've been searching for Relisha Rudd.”
    @ 25m 57s
    November 06, 2025

Episode Quotes

  • This fraudulent insurance claim kind of hints at this double life.
    DNA at heart of Arizona trial. Aspiring model's killer fights to clear his name. Plus, Relisha Rudd.
  • Oh, this is awful. Allison's brutal murder really puzzled investigators.
    DNA at heart of Arizona trial. Aspiring model's killer fights to clear his name. Plus, Relisha Rudd.
  • We did the familial DNA search which we have never been able to do before.
    DNA at heart of Arizona trial. Aspiring model's killer fights to clear his name. Plus, Relisha Rudd.
  • The Innocence Project has claimed that this was almost like a botched investigation.
    DNA at heart of Arizona trial. Aspiring model's killer fights to clear his name. Plus, Relisha Rudd.
  • We know that someone out there knows something.
    DNA at heart of Arizona trial. Aspiring model's killer fights to clear his name. Plus, Relisha Rudd.
  • See something, say something.
    DNA at heart of Arizona trial. Aspiring model's killer fights to clear his name. Plus, Relisha Rudd.

Key Moments

  • Allison's Murder01:25
  • DNA Breakthrough05:48
  • New Evidence09:39
  • Relisha's Case23:00
  • Missing Persons Database23:44
  • Relisha's School Attendance24:00
  • Tragic Findings25:42
  • Social Safety Net Failure26:42

Tension Over Time

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown