• The Dunblane Massacre
    Jun 5 2026

    This episode covers the murder of 16 children and their teacher in graphic detail, including discussion of the predator’s background and systemic failures. Listener discretion is advised. We tell this story with the deepest respect for the victims and survivors.


    All facts in this script are drawn from the following verified sources:

    Primary Sources

    • ​ The Cullen Report (1996) — Public Inquiry into the shootings at Dunblane Primary School, 13 March 1996 (National Archives of Scotland)
    • ​ Hansard: Parliamentary Statement on Dunblane, 16 October 1996
    • ​ Firearms (Amendment) Act 1997 / Firearms (Amendment) (No. 2) Act 1997

    Secondary Sources

    • ​ Britannica: 'Dunblane school massacre' (updated April 2026)
    • ​ Wikipedia: 'Dunblane massacre' (cross-checked against Cullen Report)
    • ​ Smithsonian Magazine: 'How the 1996 Dunblane Massacre Pushed the U.K. to Enact Stricter Gun Laws' (2021)
    • ​ BBC News: 'Dunblane: Families and survivors speak 20 years on'
    • ​ The Scotsman: 'Revealed — the fatal failures behind Dunblane children's massacre' (2005)
    • ​ The Scotsman: 'Who does the 100-year ban protect?' (2003)
    • ​ STV News: 'Dunblane massacre: Timeline of school shooting that shocked a nation'
    • ​ Crime+Investigation UK: 'The Dunblane Massacre'
    • ​ The Guardian archive

    Key Confirmed Facts

    • ​ Date: 13 March 1996, approximately 9:35–9:40 a.m.
    • ​ Deaths: 17 (16 children + 1 teacher + perpetrator = 18 total including Hamilton)
    • ​ Injured: 15
    • ​ Weapons: 4 legally held handguns (2 × 9mm Browning HP pistols, 2 × .357 Magnum S&W revolvers)
    • ​ Ammunition carried: 743 rounds
    • ​ Shots fired by Hamilton: 106 total (105 from Browning pistol, 1 final shot)
    • ​ Duration: approximately 3–4 minutes
    • ​ Hamilton's age at time of attack: 43
    • ​ Snowdrop Petition signatures: 750,000 in 10 weeks; over 1 million by Parliament
    • ​ Firearms banned: Handguns over .22 calibre (Feb 1997), then all handguns (Nov 1997)


    *music: universfield from pixabay

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    29 mins
  • The Vanishing Cyclist: Tony Parsons
    Jun 5 2026

    A 104 mile ride. A shallow grave. Six years of silence.


    This episode deals with the death of a real individual and the profound impact on his family. All facts are verified against Police Scotland statements, Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service sentencing records, BBC Scotland reporting, and the Press and Journal. Where family members are quoted or paraphrased, all material is drawn from on-the-record interviews and court proceedings.


    All facts verified against the following primary and secondary sources:


    1

    Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS) — official sentencing statement, 25 August 2023. Primary source for charges, pleas, and sentences.

    2

    BBC News Scotland — 'Driver who killed cyclist Tony Parsons then buried body is jailed' (August 2023). Confirms A82 location, Bridge of Orchy Hotel sighting at approx. 23:30, excavator detail, £60 stolen, deer cover story, car repair.

    3

    BBC News Scotland — 'How a Red Bull can helped solve mystery of missing cyclist.' Confirms Caroline Muirhead's role, Red Bull marker, arrest dates, body found 12 January 2021. No-comment interviews confirmed.

    4

    Press and Journal — 'Vanishing Cyclist: Timeline of events' (August 2025). Comprehensive chronological account; civil settlement January 2025.

    5

    Press and Journal — 'Tony Parsons widow will never forgive brothers' (August 2025). Margaret Parsons quoted sentiments; Mike Parsons account of phone call.

    6

    Firecrest Films / BBC Murder Case — official series description (2025). Confirms Fort William departure, naval background, charity motivation.

    7

    Alloa Advertiser — BBC Murder Case coverage (August 2025). Prostate cancer survival and charitable intent confirmed.

    8

    The Independent — hit-and-run cover-up report (August 2023). 'Distracted by headlights' account; bicycle hidden behind waterfall.

    9

    Raptor Persecution UK — sentencing blog (August 2023). Auch Estate background; McKellar family prior conviction context.

    10

    ATV Today — BBC Scotland documentary overview (2025). Vicky Parsons quote on denied truth; case overview.

    11

    The Scotsman — documentary announcement (July 2025). Broadcast details confirmed.

    12

    Glencoe sighting (approx. 18:00) and Bridge of Orchy Hotel sighting (approx. 23:30) confirmed by Police Scotland statements quoted in BBC Scotland reporting.



    *music: atlas audio from pixabay

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    39 mins
  • The Scottish Witch Trials
    Jun 5 2026

    Key sources:

    The Survey of Scottish Witchcraft — University of Edinburgh (witches.hca.ed.ac.uk)

    Professor Julian Goodare — Emeritus Professor, University of Edinburgh

    Dr Louise Yeoman — BBC Scotland / National Records of Scotland

    Nicola Sturgeon’s apology speech, International Women’s Day, 8 March 2022

    Daemonologie by King James VI, 1597

    Newes from Scotland, anonymous pamphlet, 1591

    Ashes and Stones by Allyson Shaw (Sceptre, 2023)

    Witches of Scotland campaign — Claire Mitchell QC and Zoe Venditozzi


    *music: Geoff Harvey from pixabay



    Content note for listeners: This episode contains detailed descriptions of judicial torture, execution, and institutionalised violence against women. Listener discretion is advised.

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    40 mins
  • Bible John - The Barrowlands Dancefloor Murders
    May 31 2026

    He quoted the Bible. He danced with strangers. And then he killed them. Glasgow’s Barrowland Ballroom was the beating heart of the city in the late 1960s — and somewhere in its crowds moved a man Scotland has never stopped hunting. This podcast explores the chilling, unsolved case of Bible John, the murders that gripped a nation, and the question that haunts investigators to this day: who was he?


    *music by leberch from pixabay

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    24 mins
  • Burke and Hare - The Anatomy of Murder
    May 25 2026

    Edinburgh, 1828. In the fog-soaked alleyways of the city’s West Port, two Irish labourers discovered something chilling: in a city desperate for scientific progress, a fresh human body was worth a fortune. William Burke and William Hare lured at least sixteen of Edinburgh’s most vulnerable souls to their lodging house, smothering them without trace before delivering the corpses to the celebrated anatomist Dr Robert Knox — no questions asked. Behind the gas-lit lecture halls of one of Europe’s greatest medical cities lurked something monstrous, and when their reign of terror finally unravelled on Halloween night 1828, it would scandalise a nation and haunt Edinburgh forever.


    *music by leberch from pixabay

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    57 mins