• The Bride Who Texted Goodbye: Vanishing on the Wedding Day - True Crime
    Sep 19 2025

    On the morning of her wedding, 28-year-old teacher Lauren Mitchell sent a single, cryptic text to her maid of honor: “Tell him I’m sorry. Goodbye.” Hours later she vanished.

    In the Episode we unravel how a missing-bride mystery turned into a criminal investigation.

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    3 Min.
  • Digital Footprints: How Your Phone Can Convict You - True Crime
    Sep 19 2025

    Every tap, swipe, and text leaves a trail. Police call it “digital exhaust.” In this special extended episode of Text Me When You’re Dead, we take listeners inside three real-world cases to show exactly how phones, apps, and metadata solve crimes.

    From a hit-and-run driver caught through a fitness app, to a domestic abuser undone by deleted texts, to a cold-case murder reopened thanks to Google location history, this 20-minute deep dive reveals the hidden world of digital forensics. Hear from experts who decode metadata, explain cell-tower triangulation, and trace deleted messages back to their senders.

    If you’ve ever wondered how much your phone really knows about you — and how that information can end up in a courtroom — this episode is your essential guide.

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    4 Min.
  • Ghosted Forever: The Dating App Predator Who Hunted in Plain Sight - True Crime
    Sep 19 2025

    Dating apps are supposed to bring people together — but what happens when someone uses them to hunt?

    In this Episode of Text Me When You’re Dead, we tell the story of Maya Brooks, a 26-year-old graduate student who matched with a charming stranger on a dating app. When she stopped replying, he began tracking her every move through the very apps meant to keep her safe.

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    3 Min.
  • Murder by Emoji: When Playful Symbols Hide Deadly Threats - True Crime
    Sep 18 2025

    Emojis are supposed to be harmless tiny pictures of faces, hearts, and animals. But what if they’re used to hide deadly intentions?

    In this Episode of Text Me When You’re Dead, we tell the story of Kayla Nguyen, a 23-year-old barista who began receiving strange emoji-only messages from a secret admirer. She thought it was a joke until the messages predicted where she’d be, and then she vanished.

    This fictionalized composite case, based on real-world digital forensics, reveals how investigators decoded the symbols, tied them to a stalking suspect, and exposed a murder plot. It’s a chilling look at how even the most innocent icons can become evidence.

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    3 Min.
  • The Babysitter’s Final DM: An Instagram Story That Solved a Murder - True Crime
    Sep 18 2025

    On a warm July night, 19-year-old babysitter Sophie Carter posted a quick Instagram Story a blurry photo of the backyard with the caption: “weird car out front 😬.” Two hours later, she was dead.

    In this episode of Text Me When You’re Dead, we examine how a fleeting social media post became the key to identifying her killer. Through digital forensics, geolocation tags, and eyewitness tips triggered by that post, detectives were able to reconstruct Sophie’s final hours and unmask a predator who thought no one was watching.

    This story built from composite details based on real investigative techniques — shows how even disappearing messages leave permanent traces and how social media is transforming modern detective work.

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    3 Min.
  • BTK’s Fatal Email: The Metadata That Unmasked a Serial Killer - True Crime
    Sep 18 2025

    For decades, the BTK killer “Bind, Torture, Kill” taunted Wichita authorities with letters describing his crimes. He vanished for years, then re-emerged in the early 2000s with a new question: could police trace him through a computer disk and email? He thought the answer was no.

    In this episode of Text Me When You’re Dead, we take you inside the cat-and-mouse game between BTK and investigators — a game that ended when metadata from a single church computer pointed straight to Dennis Rader. Discover how old-school forensics met new-school digital tracking, and how a serial killer’s arrogance finally led to his capture.

    If you’re fascinated by true crime, cyber evidence, and the moment technology changed detective work forever, this is the story that defined the digital era of policing.

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    4 Min.
  • The Last Text: How Three Words Solved a Murder - True Crime
    Sep 18 2025

    In the premiere of Text Me When You’re Dead, We investigates the chilling disappearance of 21-year-old college student Emily Parker. At 11:47 p.m. she sent a cryptic message to her roommate: “He’s here.” Thirty minutes later, her phone went dark — and so did the trail.

    This episode follows the digital breadcrumbs left behind: the final text, a hidden draft message, and the suspect who thought he could outsmart investigators. Discover how modern detectives use cell-tower pings, deleted messages, and metadata to crack cases that once seemed unsolvable.

    If you’re fascinated by true crime, digital forensics, or the stories behind the last messages victims send, this gripping debut sets the tone for the entire season. Subscribe now so you never miss an episode of Text Me When You’re Dead.

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    4 Min.