• Mystery at the Maternity Ward
    Mar 2 2026

    On the morning of Tuesday, March 6th, 1962, Binghamton General Hospital felt like any other maternity ward in America. Dozens of newborns lined up behind glass. Nurses moving quickly. Parents resting upstairs, believing their babies were safe in the nursery.

    It was admittedly busy, but nothing about that morning suggested that anything was amiss.

    The earliest signs were subtle. A baby refusing a bottle. Another on the pediatrics floor crying inconsolably. One mother insisted something was off while trying to bottle feed, only to be told her daughter was just “fussy.” A nurse noticed the whole floor seemed to be fussy, fickle eaters.

    By Friday, the maternity ward would completely erupt into crisis. Babies would begin vomiting, seizing and slipping away faster than staff could chart their symptoms. The nurses found in the staff office, breaking down while the doctors would be scrambling to recover & to find the cause.

    The truth of how it happened — and who was blamed — would raise deeper questions about the hospital culture, and the dangerous confidence America had placed in modern maternity care. Sources:

    https://www.pbs.org/video/the-salt-babies-zkdws8/

    https://time.com/archive/6625294/medicine-death-in-the-formula/

    https://www.nytimes.com/1962/03/12/archives/6-babies-die-in-2-days-at-binghamton-hospital-salt-found-in-sugar.html

    https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=DS19620530.2.47&e=-------en--20--1--txt-txIN--------

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    26 Min.
  • Lives Lost on Lisi Lane
    Feb 23 2026

    March 22nd, 2013.

    A quiet residential street in Binghamton. Lisi Lane.

    Inside one home on that street, police would discover a crime scene so brutal that even seasoned investigators were shaken.

    This is the story of betrayal, domestic violence, obsession, and a case that would take six years — and two trials — to bring justice.

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    18 Min.
  • The Binghamton Clothing Company Fire
    Feb 16 2026

    By the summer of 1913, Binghamton, NY was booming.

    It was the fastest-growing city in New York State. Fifteen thousand people had arrived in just three years. New neighborhoods appeared almost overnight. Factories lined the rivers. The local economy was boosted. Downtown hummed with streetcars, storefronts, the sound of industry and the sidewalks were packed with people.

    On Tuesday morning, July 22nd, the city awoke, already overheated.

    At 8 a.m., the temperature had already climbed into the high eighties. Windows were thrown open along Court Street. Chocolates melted in shop windows. Gas lamps baked the insides of photography studios. And at the Binghamton Clothing Company on Wall St. every window and door stood open in a losing battle against the heat.

    Inside, 111 people were already at work. And the hum of the sewing machines up on the 4th floor could be heard on the streets below. Looking back, the record breaking heat feels like an eerie premonition of what was to come that fateful July afternoon at the Binghamton Clothing Company.

    SOURCES:

    “Devil’s Fire” WSKG Public Media Documentary: https://www.pbs.org/video/the-devils-fire-3lpvou/

    https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=198174

    https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=256771

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1913_Binghamton_Factory_fire

    https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/binghamton-clothing-factory-fire-monument

    https://www.nytimes.com/1913/07/24/archives/the-fire-at-binghamton.html

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    52 Min.
  • The Murder of Kelley Clayton
    Feb 9 2026

    On September 29th, 2015, a 40-year-old woman named Kelley Clayton was found brutally murdered in her own home in Elmira, New York. She was stabbed more than a dozen times while her children slept upstairs.

    At first glance, it looked like a nightmare scenario: an unknown intruder, a violent home invasion, a family torn apart.

    But as investigators would soon discover, the truth wasn’t hiding in the shadows.

    It was sitting right at the kitchen table.

    This is the story of Kelley Clayton, who she was, how she died, and how the person responsible tried, and failed, to get away with murder.

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    19 Min.
  • Who Killed Keisha Roman?
    Feb 2 2026

    It’s been difficult for me to write about this case because it seems like each time I've sat down to write, I pull up my sources and I’m hoping to find something that simply isn’t there. I want to know more about Keisha but there is so little information out there about her or about her death that it’s been frustrating trying to figure out how to tell her story–because there isn’t a story here. There’s just small fragments of a larger, much more sinister story.

    All we know is that on March 22, 2009 Keisha Roman went missing from her home on Oak St in Binghamton, NY. Months later on September 21 of that same year her skeletal remains were found in Susquehanna County, Pa near the Susquehanna river–her body was found in a boat launch near a marina.

    Since the discovery of her remains in 2009, there have been no details released about the case or the investigation. There have been no answers for Keisha’s family & there have been no suspects ever named in the murder of Keisha Roman.

    https://www.truecasefiles.com/2024/10/the-disappearance-and-murder-of-keisha.html

    Submit a Tip: https://www.binghamton-ny.gov/government/departments/police-department/submit-a-tip

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    16 Min.
  • Missing & Murdered
    Jan 26 2026

    Some disappearances don’t fade.

    They linger — because they are unresolved.

    In small towns, especially, when a missing child becomes part of the landscape. A name whispered. A memory that refuses to settle.

    This is the story of two teenage girls who vanished within a year of each other — in towns just miles apart — along the New York–Pennsylvania border.

    One girl was never found.

    The other was found murdered.

    And decades later, their stories remain strangely, hauntingly connected. This is the stories of Mary Lou Bostwick & Sharon Coston.

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    17 Min.
  • The Disappearance of Bethanie Dougherty
    Jan 19 2026

    In the early morning hours of April 2nd, 2008 police received a call that a woman’s screams were heard near the 500 Block of Jennings Creek in Killawog, NY. Killawog is located just north of Whitney Point, NY and only about 15 minutes north of Binghamton. When the police arrived at the location they did their due diligence, but found nothing out of the ordinary. What the police were unaware of, at that time, is at the exact time when the 911 call originally came in, Bethanie Lynne Dougherty mysteriously vanished from her home directly next door from where the call was made. Since that morning, there has been no sign whatsoever of where Bethanie could’ve gone or who is responsible for taking her. In this story, I’m going to share what happened in the evening leading up to Bethanie Dougherty’s disappearance and everything we know about her case. This case is truly a night mare, something truly out of the Twilight Zone.

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    20 Min.
  • The Burning Truth
    Jan 12 2026

    In the quiet hours before dawn on March 17th, 2011 — St. Patrick’s Day — the city of Binghamton was asleep.

    Then, at 3:30 a.m., flames erupted on the front porch of a home at 20 Milford Street.

    Inside were seven members of the Aissa family.

    Six would escape.

    One would not.

    Seventeen-year-old Jeffrey Aissa — a twin, a brother, a son — never made it out.

    And for nearly fifteen years, the truth about what happened that night would remain buried beneath smoke, silence, and unanswered questions.

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    16 Min.