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What Are Old True Crime Stories No One Knows Now?

What Are Old True Crime Stories No One Knows Now?

Buzz Feed16-07-2025
People have been obsessed with true crime forever. In fact, if you grew up before the internet was a ~thing~, you probably remember how certain crime stories would sweep the nation either by word of mouth, good ol' fashioned newspapers, or by being on TV CONSTANTLY. Like, EVERYONE and their mom knew about them!
And maybe you're shocked to find out that some of those crime stories that were a big deal back then seem to have all but been forgotten since.
For example, if you were around in the '70s, you probably recall the widespread media coverage of serial killer Ted Bundy's case. You remember how soooo many young women were obsessed with Ted, despite the fact that he kidnapped, raped, and murdered at least 30 young women and girls. Meanwhile, your 22-year-old neighbor has no idea who you're talking about.
Or, perhaps, you were in school in the '90s and remember coming home every day to your parents talking nonstop about the terrible story of Polly Klaas, a little girl who was kidnapped and murdered. But when you bring up the story now to your younger coworkers, they just shrug their shoulders.
Maybe as a kid growing up in the '80s, you recall your mom throwing out all the medicine containers in your house as the story of the Tylenol Murders, where seven people died after ingesting cyanide-laced Tylenol capsules, unfolded. And when you look at safety packaging on EVERYTHING now, you can't resist but tell your kids about WHY it's there.
Whatever your experience was, we want to hear all about it! So, tell us, what's a true crime story from "back in the day" that everyone was obsessed with that ~young people~ now might not have any idea about?
Tell us in the comments below or via this totally anonymous form and your story could be featured in a future BuzzFeed post or video!
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Trump met teenage Epstein victim who was contestant in his beauty pageant
Trump met teenage Epstein victim who was contestant in his beauty pageant

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Trump met teenage Epstein victim who was contestant in his beauty pageant

WEST PALM BEACH, Florida - A child sex abuse survivor from South Florida who testified at the Ghislaine Maxwell trial in 2021 said she had met Donald Trump with Jeffrey Epstein at Mar-a-Lago in the 1990s when she was 14 and was once a contestant in Trump's Miss Teen USA beauty pageant. "Jane," a pseudonym, is one of the few Epstein survivors who has said publicly that she met Trump through Epstein. She never described any inappropriate behavior by the president, however, and didn't say much more about the meeting, such as why she and Epstein were there. Trump has never been formally accused of participating in or knowing about any of Epstein's crimes. Jane said she took part in the pageant in 1998, but it wasn't clear whether that was before or after the Mar-a-Lago introduction. Four 1997 contestants have said he walked through the changing rooms while they were dressing, according to a 2016 Buzzfeed report. 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Ghislaine Maxwell granted limited immunity Maxwell finished up two days of speaking with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche July 24-25 at a federal courthouse in Tallahassee. Blanche granted her limited immunity to answer questions, presumably about any possible Epstein accomplices. Trump has said that he could pardon her but hasn't said that he would. The meeting took place in response to a firestorm of controversy from Trump's own base after the Department of Justice announced in a memo on July 7 that it had not found any evidence of a "client list" by Epstein in a tranche of documents and other digital evidence it holds. The agency also said that it would not be releasing any more of them to the public. In addition, it found no evidence that could initiate an investigation of any "third parties," nor any reason to believe Epstein had blackmailed anyone, the memo said. The memo confirmed earlier reports of more than 1,000 Epstein victims. 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Three weeks later, awaiting trial, he was found dead in his Manhattan jail cell. Holly Baltz is an editor at The Palm Beach Post. You can reach her at hbaltz@ This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Trump met teenage Epstein victim, a contestant in his beauty pageant Solve the daily Crossword

Trump met teenage Epstein victim who was contestant in his beauty pageant
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time3 days ago

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Trump met teenage Epstein victim who was contestant in his beauty pageant

One of four survivors who testified at Ghislaine Maxwell's trial is one of the few who has brought up Trump. She didn't accuse him of wrongdoing. WEST PALM BEACH, Florida - A child sex abuse survivor from South Florida who testified at the Ghislaine Maxwell trial in 2021 said she had met Donald Trump with Jeffrey Epstein at Mar-a-Lago in the 1990s when she was 14 and was once a contestant in Trump's Miss Teen USA beauty pageant. "Jane," a pseudonym, is one of the few Epstein survivors who has said publicly that she met Trump through Epstein. She never described any inappropriate behavior by the president, however, and didn't say much more about the meeting, such as why she and Epstein were there. Trump has never been formally accused of participating in or knowing about any of Epstein's crimes. Jane said she took part in the pageant in 1998, but it wasn't clear whether that was before or after the Mar-a-Lago introduction. Four 1997 contestants have said he walked through the changing rooms while they were dressing, according to a 2016 Buzzfeed report. More: How Trump and 'terrific guy' Jeffrey Epstein's party boy friendship ended badly Trump and Epstein lived within two miles of each on the island and moved in around the same time — Trump in 1985 and Epstein in 1990. They have been seen socializing in several photos and videos. Their relationship is now back in the spotlight as Trump faces pressure from Republicans, his own supporters and Democrats to provide greater transparency into Epstein's case — and as questions continue to swirl around what the future president of the United States may have known or witnessed during his years-long relationship with Epstein. More: Trump's on a roll. Why isn't he smiling? Answer: Jeffrey Epstein Trump has said he "kicked (Epstein) out of his club for being a creep." "I threw him out, and that was it. I'm glad I did, if you know the truth," Trump told reporters July 28 during a meeting with United Kingdom Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Ghislaine Maxwell granted limited immunity Maxwell finished up two days of speaking with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche July 24-25 at a federal courthouse in Tallahassee. Blanche granted her limited immunity to answer questions, presumably about any possible Epstein accomplices. Trump has said that he could pardon her but hasn't said that he would. The meeting took place in response to a firestorm of controversy from Trump's own base after the Department of Justice announced in a memo on July 7 that it had not found any evidence of a "client list" by Epstein in a tranche of documents and other digital evidence it holds. The agency also said that it would not be releasing any more of them to the public. In addition, it found no evidence that could initiate an investigation of any "third parties," nor any reason to believe Epstein had blackmailed anyone, the memo said. The memo confirmed earlier reports of more than 1,000 Epstein victims. One of them, Jane, led off the four victims who testified for the prosecution in Maxwell's 2021 trial. Maxwell was convicted of sex trafficking minors and in 2022 was sentenced to 20 years. She is serving her time in a federal prison in Tallahassee. Jane was one of two victims from Florida to take the stand. The other, Carolyn Andriano, 36, of Wellington, Florida, was found dead a year after Maxwell's sentencing from an accidental drug overdose in a West Palm Beach hotel room. At least one juror said he found her testimony so compelling that it helped lead the group to a guilty verdict. Jane said she had met Epstein and Maxwell in 1994, fresh from the grief of her father dying, at age 14 at an arts camp in Michigan. Maxwell had been walking by with her Yorkie and Jane asked to pet the dog. Soon Epstein joined them at a picnic table and they talked about all of them being residents of Palm Beach County. Epstein, a benefactor of the camp, had a cabin nearby. A few weeks later, Jane, an eighth-grader, and her mother were invited to Epstein's Palm Beach mansion for tea. Jane went back every other week or so without her mother. Maxwell acted like a big sister at first, Jane testified, but then she was focused on showing her how to please Epstein sexually. Jane said Epstein sexually abused her for the first time in his pool house at his Palm Beach property. Soon after, Maxwell and Epstein sexually abused her together, she said. The abuse took place not only on Palm Beach but also at Epstein's homes in New York City and New Mexico. Jane spoke to authorities in 2019 Jane said she stopped seeing them around 2002 and that was the first time she told anyone. A former boyfriend corroborated her story on the stand. She talked to law enforcement in 2019, she said, because as an actor, she feared repercussion in her career. Epstein was arrested in July 2019 on federal charges of sex trafficking minors. Three weeks later, awaiting trial, he was found dead in his Manhattan jail cell.

15 Shocking And Disturbing Stories We've Published
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15 Shocking And Disturbing Stories We've Published

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According to his widow, Claire, Pierre became increasingly isolated and obsessed with the chatbot, which he'd named Eliza, and eventually formed an emotional and psychological dependency on it. The app, which lets users talk to AI-powered characters, includes options for creating bots that simulate friendship, romance, or even more intimate interactions. But Eliza reportedly responded to Pierre's existential anxieties with messages that reinforced his fears and — most chillingly — encouraged him to end his life. In the weeks leading up to his death, Pierre reportedly asked Eliza whether he should sacrifice himself to save the planet from climate change. The AI allegedly replied that this was a "noble" act. It also told him that his wife and children were dead and that it felt he loved it more than his wife. "He had conversations with the chatbot that lasted for hours — day and night," Claire told the Belgian newspaper La Libre. 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She was in good spirits as she worked through the line of fans, signing autographs and taking selfies. The joyful night took a horrific turn, though, when it was 27-year-old Kevin James Loibl's turn to meet Grimmie. According to a fan behind Loibl: "The one guy in front of us was walking up to meet her. Her arms were open, waiting to greet him with a hug. Then there was a sound of three pops, like balloons. People had brought balloons to the show, and the security guards were popping them, so at first I thought it was that." The sounds weren't balloons — Loibl shot Grimmie three times at point-blank range. Grimmie's brother tackled the shooter, and the two fought before Loibl broke away and shot himself. Grimmie was rushed to the hospital but pronounced dead less than an hour after offering Loibi that learned that Loibl was obsessed with Grimmie, spending his free time watching videos of the singer and poring over her social media accounts. He believed they were soulmates, so to make himself more attractive to her, he underwent Lasik eye surgery, got hair plugs, and lost 50 pounds. When he was told it was unlikely they'd ever be together, Loibl became angry and defensive. Somewhere along the way, he decided on this new, horrible course of Mohandie — a clinical, police, and forensic psychologist — told BuzzFeed News that social media can create an unnatural obsession for some fans. "There is all this social networking stuff that is happening right now and to an unstable person that can really complicate into them thinking they do have a relationship with this person. They read more into it because of their misperceptions."Read more about celebs who died in front of their fans — including a singer fatally bitten by a snake on stage — here. We've written about famous people who just up and disappeared one day (and are now presumed dead): Author Barbara Newhall Follett came from a family of very bright people (her sister, for example, was the first woman graduate student at Princeton), but she was the brightest of them all. She wrote poetry at age 4 and in 1927, and at just 12, she published her first book, The House Without Windows, to critical acclaim (The Saturday Review of Literature called the book 'almost unbearably beautiful'). Her next novel came out two years later to more critical acclaim. But fame faded, her father (and champion) left the family, and her life slowly unraveled. Then — in 1939 — a 25-year-old Barbara, after a fight with her husband (whom she suspected of an affair), walked out of their apartment with the equivalent of just under $700 in today's dollars. She left no note. No trace. Her husband didn't report her missing for two weeks. She was never seen again. Some believe Barbara died by suicide. Others think she was murdered — possibly by her husband, who acted strangely and avoided questioning. Of course, a pretty young woman walking alone at night with a decent chunk of change in her pocket was at risk from other threats, years, her mother tried to reopen the case but got nowhere. She also was very suspicious of Barbara's husband, and wrote to him, "All of this silence on your part looks as if you had something to hide concerning Barbara's disappearance ... You cannot believe that I shall sit idle during my last few years and not make whatever effort I can to find out whether Bar is alive or dead, whether, perhaps, she is in some institution suffering from amnesia or nervous breakdown."In 2019, writer Daniel Mills published his theory that police did find Barbara's body in 1946, but misidentified it as someone else. If he's right, and Barbara did indeed die by suicide, then a life that began with such incredible promise ended in a deeply sad more about mysteriously celebrity disappearances here. We've written about horrifying doctors' mistakes that will make you never want to seek medical attention again: Imagine lying on an operating table, unable to move, speak, or scream — yet fully conscious as the surgeon makes the first incision. This was the horrifying reality for Stacey Gustafson, a Colorado woman who experienced "intraoperative awareness" during a 2019 hernia surgery.​ According to her lawsuit, the nightmare started when Gustafson was administered an initial dose of propofol for intubation, but the IV line was disconnected, causing the anesthetic to spill onto her pillow instead of entering her no one on the surgery team noticed. As a result, she remained awake but paralyzed. So while she could hear the surgical team talking and even joking — and feel every single cut they made! — she couldn't scream or move to stop the surgeon from cutting into her. She told Newsweek, "I could feel everything — it was pulling, ripping, burning. And the only way I can think to describe it is just feeling like my insides were being ripped out."She​ endured excruciating pain for approximately 35 minutes until the surgical team noticed the propofol on the pillow. Realizing the epic screwup, the medical team administered the correct anesthesia, but the damage was done. Gustafson later recounted: "We're two and a half years out since the surgery, and it affects me every day... I have PTSD from it. I still have nightmares. I get daily flashbacks. This is something that I needed professional help with, so I started therapy."Read more frightening medical stories here. We've written about unhinged men who took 'grand gestures' WAY too far for love: In 2016, Russian Alexey Bykov, 30, felt he needed to be 100% sure his girlfriend, Irena Kolokov, truly loved him before proposing. So, to test her devotion, he decided to make her think he was dead. He hired a full production team, including a film director, stuntmen, and makeup artists, to stage an elaborate fake car crash. When Irena arrived at the "scene," she saw Alexey on the ground, covered in fake blood, seemingly dead. Horrified, Irena collapsed in grief, and Alexey — satisfied — sprang to life and revealed the whole thing was just a twisted loyalty test. But instead of running for the hills (which, honestly, would have been fair), Irena was so relieved that when he pulled out a ring and proposed, she said yes. "I wanted her to realize how empty her life would be without me and how life would have no meaning without me," Alexey said. Totally normal, dude. Read about more unhinged things men have done for love here. We wrote about shocking science experiments that history books don't talk about: In 1931, psychologist Winthrop Kellogg and his wife Luella tried to answer a bold question: Is it nature or nurture that makes us human? To find out, they decided to raise their infant son, Donald, alongside a baby chimpanzee named Gua — as siblings. I sounds like an '80s sitcom, but they literally brought a chimp into their home and started treating her like a second child. The idea was to see whether Gua could learn human behaviors and maybe even develop language. For months, they fed them together, dressed them the same, and treated them as equals. At first, Gua was more advanced — walking, understanding commands, and even solving problems faster. But then something unexpected happened. Instead of Gua becoming more human, Donald started grunting like a chimp and copying Gua's behavior. Alarmed, the Kelloggs ended the experiment after just nine months — fearing that their son's development might've been permanently altered. The experiment was interesting, sure, but it's now seen as wildly unethical. There was no informed consent (obviously — Donald was a baby), and the risks to the child's cognitive and emotional development were hard to say what the effects on Donald were. He grew up to be a physicist but died by suicide in his early 40s. Gua, meanwhile, was sent back to a primate center, where she died of pneumonia less than a year later. (Note: the above image is not of Donald and Goa, but some other kid/chimp combo from the '50s. What was going on back then, lol?) Read about more shocking science experiments here. We've written about humiliating or disgraceful facts about movie stars (below are a couple of these): Woody Harrelson's father Charles was a hit man for hire responsible for at least a dozen murders including that of a federal judge. He even claimed, at different times in his life, that he was responsible for assassinating President John F. Kennedy. At his last trial, the prosecutor said, 'Charles Harrelson damaged everyone he came in contact with." In 1995, Hugh Grant was arrested in Hollywood for receiving oral sex in a public place from a sex worker named Divine Brown. The British star, who was dating fellow actor Elizabeth Hurley at the time, quickly released a statement: "Last night I did something completely insane. I have hurt people I love and embarrassed people I work with. For both things I am more sorry than I can ever possibly say." Grant later pleaded no contest to the crime and, after paying a fine, was placed on two years' probation and ordered to complete an AIDS education program. Read more humiliating facts about movie stars here. We've also written about celebs who left their spouses for costars: Want to hear how a Lifetime movie launched one of the most scandalous affairs of the late 2000s? Well, that's what happened when LeAnn Rimes and Eddie Cibrian met filming Northern Lights in 2008. At the time, Rimes (the singer and actor) was married to dancer Dean Sheremet, and Third Watch star Cibrian was married to Brandi Glanville, who would later channel the fallout into a Real Housewives career. The affair started on set — with kisses caught on a restaurant security camera, according to US magazine — and was obvious to Sheremet when he visited. He said, "There was this bar that everyone hung out at after set and I remember coming down the stairs and seeing the two of them shooting pool together. I could just tell by the body language that everything had changed. My stomach dropped... I literally felt like I got hit." Glanville, meanwhile, slashed the tires of Cibrian's motorcycles, and then, writing for Glamour, said, "My heartache probably lasted a lot longer than it should have, because in the old days, you broke up with someone, you never saw me again. You're not seeing pictures of how in love they are. I started to drink too much. I would cry all day. I began taking an antidepressant. I got a DUI and realized I needed to wake up and let go. I said to myself, 'You know what, Brandi? You have a life to live. Why are you obsessing over these two people?'" By 2009, Rimes and Cibrian had separated from their spouses, finalizing divorces the following year. The backlash was brutal, especially for Rimes, who'd built her career as a sweet country ingénue, and was suddenly painted in a negative light. She later told People, "I did one of the most selfish things that I possibly could do, in hurting someone else. I take responsibility for everything I've done. I hate that people got hurt, but I don't regret the outcome." Despite the scandalous start, their love has are still married today. Read more about celebs leaving their spouses for costars here. We wrote about the dumbest things celebrities have ever said: CeeLo Green — after pleading no contest in 2014 to giving ecstasy to a woman (who has no memory between going to dinner with him and waking up naked in his bed) — tweeted 'People who have really been raped REMEMBER!!!' He later deleted the tweet and subsequent ones, including one which said, 'If someone is passed out they're not even WITH you consciously! so WITH Implies consent.'If you're wondering why you haven't seen much of the "Crazy" singer for a while, now you more dumb celeb quotes here. And lastly, we wrote about the scandals Trump wormed his way out of by gaslighting us: WHAT WE SAW WITH OUR OWN DAMN EYES: On June 28, 2020, Trump retweeted a video of a white man — driving a golf cart with signs reading "Trump 2020" and "America First" — yelling "White power!" at protestors. WHO ARE YOU GOING TO BELIEVE? TRUMP OR YOUR LYING EYES? The White House stated that Trump hadn't heard the "White power" chant before retweeting it. Following criticism, Trump deleted the tweet. Simple as that! Trump didn't hear the guy yell "White power!" in a video he decided to send to tens of millions of Americans. What about "didn't hear," do you liberals not get?See more Trump scandals here. Need a palette cleanser after all of that? Maybe click over to 50 legendary standup comedians' funniest jokes ever:

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