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Red Tree Crime

Red Tree Crime

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Red Tree Crime is a true crime podcast that goes beyond headlines to explore the psychology of crime, police interrogations, and real investigative footage. Each episode breaks down real criminal cases, focusing on behavioral analysis, interrogation tactics, and the critical moments that lead suspects to reveal the truth.
This podcast is for listeners who want to understand not just what happened, but how and why crimes unfold, through a calm, detailed, and analytical true crime narrative.Copyright Red Tree Crime
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  • Mom Realizes Detective Discovered Her Horrifying Secret
    Apr 17 2026
    A child dies of a rare seizure disorder. The autopsy shows something else. The detective sits across from the mother in an interrogation room. He slides a photograph across the table. A receipt for a poison she never mentioned.

    In Minnesota, Jennifer Latham told doctors her two-year-old son Chase died from a seizure. But when forensic toxicologists tested his liver tissue, they found a lethal concentration of a chemical used in snow globes . Latham had searched online for how to kill a child. She had purchased the poison weeks earlier. She had watched her son die in agony. Then she called 911 with tears in her voice. The detective noticed she never asked what killed him. She already knew.

    In other cases, mothers have smothered children and blamed SIDS. They have drowned toddlers in bathtubs and called it an accident. They have starved infants and claimed they were just small for their age. The mask is always the same: the grieving mother who cannot understand why God took her baby. The detective's job is to show her the evidence that God had nothing to do with it.

    Turn down the lights, put on your headphones, and press play because the mother's tears are real. But they are not for the child. They are for herself.
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    41 Min.
  • SOLVED_ The Case of Kim Barry _ Australia_s Most Wanted Man
    Apr 17 2026
    A teenage shop assistant goes out dancing on a Friday night. She never comes home. A coal miner on his buck's night meets her at the disco. Hours later, he returns to the party alone. Kim Barry is in his spare room with her skull shattered by a spanner.

    The next morning, while his brother slept in the next room, Graham Gene Potter carried Kim's body to the bathroom. He used a hacksaw to remove her head and fingers, making identification nearly impossible. Her torso was dumped below a mountain lookout at Jamberoo. Her head and fingers were found three weeks later in a garbage bag, along with Potter's own dressing gown and bedsheets [citation:1].

    Potter served just fifteen years for the murder, then walked free in 1996 [citation:3]. What followed was a descent into organized crime. He ran drug shipments worth hundreds of millions, allegedly conspired to kill underworld figures, and in 2010, he vanished. For twelve years, he was Australia's most wanted man, hiding in plain sight with fat suits, wigs, and aliases like Josh Lawson and Peter Adams [citation:6].

    In 2022, police finally caught up with him in a squalid house in Ravenshoe, Far North Queensland. Asked if he ever thought he would be caught, Potter laughed. No, he said [citation:5].

    Turn down the lights, put on your headphones, and press play because the man who cut off a teenager's fingers to hide his crime spent twelve years running from justice—and got caught living as Ned.
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    47 Min.
  • How A Rolex Unravelled A Killers Web Of Lies _ The Case Of Albert Walker
    Apr 17 2026
    A fisherman pulls a body from the sea. No wallet. No ID. Just a Rolex on the wrist and a tattoo on the hand. Six weeks later, that watch would expose one of the most cunning fugitives in Interpol history.

    On July 28, 1996, a Brixham trawler netted the body of a man six miles off the Devon coast [citation:2]. The corpse had a gash to the back of the skull, pockets turned inside out, and a 25-year-old Rolex Oyster Perpetual still ticking on his wrist [citation:3][citation:5]. With no missing person report filed, detectives had no idea who they were dealing with.

    The watch told the story. A shake in the mortuary brought its self-winding mechanism back to life [citation:3]. Using Rolex's meticulous service records, investigators traced serial number 154402 to a shy ex-soldier named Ronald Platt [citation:5]. That single clue opened a door into the world of Albert Walker—Canada's most wanted fugitive, a man who had already stolen Platt's identity and was living as him [citation:1][citation:7].

    Walker had defrauded clients of millions, fled to England with his teenage daughter posing as his wife, and murdered Platt when he threatened to expose the deception [citation:8]. The Rolex didn't just identify the victim—it calculated the time of death. Forensic tests proved the watch took 44 hours to wind down. It stopped on June 22. Platt died on June 20. GPS data from Walker's yacht placed him exactly there [citation:6].

    Turn down the lights, put on your headphones, and press play because the most expensive watch in the world couldn't save him. But it did catch his killer.
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    32 Min.
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