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On August 4, 1964, the bodies of the three men were found after an informant nicknamed "Mr. X" in FBI reports passed along a tip to federal authorities. [5] [9] They were discovered underneath an earthen dam on a 253-acre farm located a few miles outside Philadelphia, Mississippi. [10] All three men had been shot. [4]
It was featured in “The Buried Bodies Case” in 2016 on the podcast RadioLab. [1] It has also been dramatized in the 1987 TV film Sworn to Silence, [26] and a 2003 episode of the TV series Law & Order, "Bodies.” [27] In 2017, Fargo producer Noah Hawley announced the development of a feature film based on the case. [28]
Film opens with a little girl, Julie (Sophi Knight), wakes up to find herself in a small concealed room, confused at what is happening. When the room starts filling with cement from all corners, the girl cries for her father, but the cement only continues to rise, and eventually she is buried alive through the film opens with a grim discovery: sixteen bodies are found entombed within the walls ...
The Snowtown murders (also known as the bodies in barrels murders) were a series of murders committed by John Justin Bunting, Robert Joe Wagner, and James Spyridon Vlassakis between August 1992 and May 1999, in and around Adelaide, South Australia. A fourth person, Mark Haydon, was convicted of helping to dispose of the bodies.
In 1976, gunmen stormed a school bus carrying 26 children – ages 5 to 14 – and their bus driver in Chowchilla, California. As part of a ransom plot, they drove the hostages into a rock quarry ...
Ghostwood is a 2006 supernatural thriller film directed by Justin O'Brien and produced by Ned Dowd. [1] Executive Producers were Mairead Killian, Tom Higgins, John Slazenger and Noel Lourdes. Plot
Although no trace of either was ever found, Laso was arrested and convicted for the murders after he was caught faking evidence intended to make people believe that the victims were alive. It is suspected that the bodies were buried in a land plot owned by Laso at the time, which was later expropriated to build a road. [43] [44] [45]
Cemeteries -- grand and all-but-forgotten -- dot our landscape. Here are their stories -- and the stories of Angelenos who found their final rest there.