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  • On the outside, 18-year-old Caleb Ray Diehl was a normal teenager living a relatively normal teenage life. He was born and raised in a small town – Nocona, Texas – and extremely close to his family. After celebrating his 18th birthday party at his Mom’s house, Caleb prepared to make the hour and a half drive to his sister’s house in Bedford, where he was living while he finished high school. He never made it, and he’s not been seen since. When someone the Diehl family knew began making strange claims concerning Caleb’s disappearance, it was confusing. The man was close to them, and it was unimaginable he’d try to muddy the waters just to save Caleb’s mother worry. So, was it for a more nefarious purpose? Part 1 of 2.

    If you have any information about the disappearance of Caleb Ray Diehl, please contact the Montague County Sheriff’s Office at (940) 894-2871.

    From Jaimie Beebe of Strictly Stalking, check out The Last Trip at: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-last-trip/id1715813037

    You can support Gone Cold – Texas True Crime and listen to the show ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Find us at https://www.gonecold.com

    Follow gone cold on Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and X. Search @gonecoldpodcast at all or just click linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    TexomasHomepage.com, the series Never Seen Again, The Wichita Falls Times-Record, Justice.gov, nbcnews.com, newschannel6now.com, and arrest / search warrant affidavits were used as sources for this episode.

    #JusticeForCalebDiehl #WhereIsCalebDiehl #CalebDiehl #NoconaTX #MontagueCounty #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast #Unsolved #ColdCase #GoneCold #GoneColdPodcast #UnsolvedMysteries #TrueCrime #Disappeared #Vanished #MissingPerson #Missing

  • The people of Paris, Texas and Lamar County mourned the loss of hermit 79-year-old Auvord Bevans Braithwaite Jones, many in an
unconventional way. On February 1st – just a few days after Auvord’s body was found, tourists of the macabre descended upon his series of shacks on the outskirts of town, looking, likely, for his hidden fortune as if he were some kind of exiled leprechaun. “Keep out by order of Lamar Cty. Sheriff” signs be damned. Newspaper man Bill Jackson wrote a “tribute” to Auvord in which he proceeded to condescend to the newly deceased man, though, perhaps, unintentionally. But while the city of Paris kind of lost its mind or way, County Attorney Jim Thompson and Sheriff Lonnie Player were hitting the case hard but without evidence, they were forced to round up the usual suspects and try to get one to sing. Part 2 of 2.

    If you have any information about the 1963 murder of the Auvord Jones, please contact the Paris Texas Police Department at (903) 784-6688.

    You can support Gone Cold – Texas True Crime and listen to the show ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Find us at https://www.gonecold.com

    Follow gone cold on Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and X. Search @gonecoldpodcast at all or just click linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    True Detective Magazine, The Paris News FBI.gov, The El Paso Times, The Eagle, The Valley Morning Star, and the Austin American-Statesman were used as sources for this episode.

    #JusticeForAuvordJones #Paris #ParisTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast #Unsolved #ColdCase #GoneCold #GoneColdPodcast #UnsolvedMysteries#TrueCrime #hermit #paris #paristx #texas #livingofthegrid #offthegrid #unsolved #unsolvedmurder #coldcase #lamarcounty #lamarcountytx

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  • He had an alibi. He didn't have a violent history. And it seemed almost impossible to imagine the crime could have been committed by just one man. But Ronald Trimboli's DNA test, performed in the infancy of DNA testing, in the 1980s, was a match. Is it possible he was innocent of the triple murder he was convicted of? IN THE BLOOD presents all the evidence, including evidence jurors were not privy to, and asks you, the audience, for your verdict. The crime took place in Texas in 1985, but it echoed across decades, through multiple trials, a DNA re-test, and the discovery of new evidence, now.

    Hosted by Ben McKenzie (Southland, Gotham).

    Listen to IN THE BLOOD on Apple Podcasts or at voyagemedia.fm/show/in-the-blood/

  • On January 24th, 1963, A. Jones, as the townsfolk of Paris, Texas knew him, picked up a couple things at the grocery store. Then, he stopped by the drugstore on his way home. Auvord, his actual name, lived on the northeast outskirts of town. Though he could be seen around town plenty, and was a friendly, intelligent, and gracious man to speak with, he was as much a stranger as he was a local. That night, something happened to 79-year-old Auvord Jones at the primitive shack he slept in. At some point, he was bludgeoned in the head and left for dead in the unusually cold winter snap that’d come through. While there is no actual proof that the man had a secret stash of money in a shack on the property he owned, there was plenty of talk of a hidden fortune there. Other facts contradict that notion, but police still believe that Auvord was murdered for that reason. His violent demise angered the community, stumped police, and began a mystery that remains unresolved to this day. Part 1 of 2.

    If you have any information about the 1963 murder of Auvord Jones, please contact the Paris Texas Police Department at (903) 784-6688.

    You can support Gone Cold – Texas True Crime and listen to the show ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Find us at https://www.gonecold.com

    Follow gone cold on Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and X. Search @gonecoldpodcast at all or just click linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    #JusticeForAuvordJones #Paris #ParisTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast #Unsolved #ColdCase #GoneCold #GoneColdPodcast #UnsolvedMysteries#TrueCrime #hermit #paris #paristx #texas #livingofthegrid #offthegrid #unsolved #unsolvedmurder #coldcase #lamarcounty #lamarcountytx #TrueDetective

  • In June of 2001, 51-year-old Sharon Ware Davis dropped off her daughter at a bus stop near the Red Bird Neighborhood of Dallas, Texas. They exchanged “I love yous,” and Sharon went on her way. She was supposed to get ready for a training class for her job, which was an elementary school teacher. She never made it. In fact, Sharon hasn’t been seen since. Her husband Ron Davis avoided speaking with police for weeks after lawyering up within several days of Sharon’s disappearance. Family and friends say the man was abusive toward Sharon, who filed divorce from him just two days before she went missing. Her husband’s behavior, and controversy surrounding nearly everything he touches, never stopped. In fact, it only got stranger.

    If you have any information about the disappearance of Sharon Ware Davis, please contact the Dallas Police Department at (214) 670-5389.

    If you’re experiencing domestic abuse, please get help by calling the National Domestic Abuse Hotline at 800-799-SAFE, or 800-799-7233. You can also text “start,” S-T-A-R-T to 88788 or visit thehotline.org

    You can support gone cold and listen to the show ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Find us at https://www.gonecold.com

    Follow gone cold on Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and X. Search @gonecoldpodcast at all or just click linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    The Dallas Morning News, WFAA TV, The Dallas Observer, CharleyProject.org, and court documents were used as sources for this episode.

    #JusticeForSharonWareDavis #WhereIsSharonWareDavis #Dallas #DallasTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast #Unsolved #ColdCase #MissingPerson #Disappearance #Vanished #UnsolvedMysteries

  • After the initial investigators working the murder of 18-year-old Cheryl Ann Callaway moved on, and the case had long gone cold, the voluminous file fell on the lap of Arlington, Texas Police Sgt. Dennis Rhoten. Rhoten hit the ground running, but eventually, like Sgt. Mike Adair and Detective Mike Leyman before him, began grasping at straws. In 1981, he looked at recently arrested serial killer Ted Bundy. Then, in 1983, Sgt. Rhoten, like the rest of Texas law enforcement, caught Henry Lee Lucas fever. None of those things panned out. Could Cheryl’s killer have been right under their noses the entire time? Part 3 of 3.

    Special thanks to Steve Harris and former Arlington detectives Mike Leyman and Sgt. Mike Adair for their contributions to this episode

    If you’re in the market for Girl Scout Cookies, or would like to donate to the Cookies for Heroes Program, you can help Alice reach her goal by using the following link. Alice says, “thanks for supporting the Girl Scouts!” digitalcookie.girlscouts.org/scout/alice241168?fbclid=IwAR0pOJNsnaxTejVAWjcDXe6kGZifKEwA8wYpbCjQf6i059Muo_Oalire0k0

    You can support Gone Cold and listen ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Visit Gone Cold – Texas True Crime online at https://www.GoneCold.com

    Find us on Facebook, X, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram by searching gonecoldpodcast or go to: linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Sources: The Fort Worth Star-Telegram and WFAA TV

    #JusticeForCherylAnnCallaway #Arlington #ArlingtonTX #TarrantCountyTX #FortWorth #FortWorthTX #Murder #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #GoneCold #GoneColdPodcast #ColdCase #UnsolvedMurder #Homicide #UnsolvedMysteries #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast

  • As Arlington Police Crimes Against Persons Detectives Mike Leyman and Sgt. Mike Adair continued to investigate the January 30th, 1974, murder of 18-year-old Cheryl Ann Callaway, answers seemed to get more and more elusive. Interviews with friends, family, and coworkers provided virtually no potential motive. An exhaustive search of VIN numbers of cars matching the suspect vehicle provided by witnesses led nowhere. Then, Sgt. Adair said, began the “grasping at straws” period of the investigation. Part 2 of 3.

    Special thanks to former Arlington detectives Mike Leyman and Sgt. Mike Adair for their contributions to this episode, and to our pal Kathleen Barnett for making that happen

    If you’re in the market for Girl Scout Cookies, or would like to donate to the Cookies for Heroes Program, you can help Alice reach her goal by using the following link. Alice says, “thanks for supporting the Girl Scouts!” digitalcookie.girlscouts.org/scout/alice241168?fbclid=IwAR0pOJNsnaxTejVAWjcDXe6kGZifKEwA8wYpbCjQf6i059Muo_Oalire0k0

    You can support Gone Cold and listen ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Visit Gone Cold – Texas True Crime online at GoneCold.com

    Find us on Facebook, X, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram by searching gonecoldpodcast or go to: linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Sources: The Fort Worth Star-Telegram, The Grand Prairie Daily News, and WFAA TV

    #JusticeForCherylAnnCallaway #Arlington #ArlingtonTX #TarrantCountyTX #FortWorth #FortWorthTX #Murder #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #GoneCold #GoneColdPodcast #ColdCase #UnsolvedMurder #Homicide #UnsolvedMysteries #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast

  • One detective called the slaying of Cheryl Ann Callaway “the most vicious murder in Arlington’s history.” Arlington Police Crimes Against Person Unit Detectives Sgt. Mike Adair and Mike Leyman call it the one that got away. On January 30th, 1974, just months before she was to be married, 18-year-old Cheryl’s life was taken. The murder was brutal and unimaginable, and the killer, it seemed, came out of nowhere
and struck out of a motivation that remains unclear 50 years later. No one who knew Cheryl could imagine who would have a reason to kill the young women; she had no enemies. Arlington Police Detectives Sgt. Adair and Leyman, who still think about the only crime they couldn’t solve together, hit the ground running. Evidence lacked at the scene of the crime, and Leyman and Adair knew at the get-go they were up against a tough case. Part 1 of 2.

    Special thanks to former Arlington detectives Mike Leyman and Sgt. Mike Adair for their contributions to this episode, and to our pal Kathleen Barnett for making that happen

    If you’re in the market for Girl Scout Cookies, you can help Alice reach her goal by using the following link. Alice says, “thanks for supporting the Girl Scouts!” digitalcookie.girlscouts.org/scout/alice241168?fbclid=IwAR0pOJNsnaxTejVAWjcDXe6kGZifKEwA8wYpbCjQf6i059Muo_Oalire0k0

    You can support Gone Cold and listen ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Visit Gone Cold – Texas True Crime online at GoneCold.com

    Find us on Facebook, X, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram by searching gonecoldpodcast or go to: linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Sources for this episode: The Fort Worth Star-Telegram, ArlingtonHistory.org, and WFAA TV

    #JusticeForCherylAnnCallaway #Arlington #ArlingtonTX #TarrantCountyTX #FortWorth #FortWorthTX #Murder #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #GoneCold #GoneColdPodcast #ColdCase #UnsolvedMurder #Homicide #UnsolvedMysteries #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast

  • In July of 1991 26-year-old Don Tate took his 5-year-old daughter Boston on a camping trip to Big Bend National Park in Brewster County, Texas. The day after they were supposed to have returned but had not, Boston’s mother and Don’s ex-wife asked Rangers at the park to issue a request to locate. Don and Boston never came out of Big Bend, not alive. Later that day, Don’s brutalized body was found. A few days after that, Boston’s burned remains were discovered in her father’s van. Investigators scrounged to find evidence and a motive, while park visitors and villagers across the Rio Grande in Mexico spoke of the involvement of drug smugglers. Later that year, in December, a scandal in neighboring Presidio County involving the son of a prominent rancher and a drug warrior sheriff further fueled the talk of traffickers executing Boston and Don.

    If you have any information about the murders of Boston Michelle and Donald William Tate, please contact the National Park Service Tip Line at 888-653-0009 or submit a tip using their online form: nps.gov/orgs/1563/submit-a-tip.htm

    If you’re in the market for Girl Scout Cookies, you can help Alice reach her goal by using the following link. Alice says, “thanks for supporting the Girl Scouts!” digitalcookie.girlscouts.org/scout/alice241168?fbclid=IwAR0pOJNsnaxTejVAWjcDXe6kGZifKEwA8wYpbCjQf6i059Muo_Oalire0k0

    You can support Gone Cold and listen ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Visit Gone Cold – Texas True Crime online at GoneCold.com

    Find us on Facebook, X, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram by searching gonecoldpodcast or go to: linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Sources: The New York Times, Texas Standard, The Big Bend Sentinel, The Odessa American, One Ranger: A Memoir by H. Joaquin Jackson, National Park Service Ranger Morning Reports, and Death in Big Bend by Laurence Parent

    #JusticeForBostonAndDonTate #BigBend #BrewsterCountyTX #PresidioCountyTX #MarfaTX #Murder #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #GoneCold #GoneColdPodcast #ColdCase #UnsolvedMurder #Homicide #UnsolvedMysteries #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast

  • On the last day of September 1991, off-duty Harris County Sheriff’s Deputy Roxyann Allee took the evening to do some shopping. After buying and browsing, she headed back to her minivan to return home. Little did she know, two men had followed her. As she approached her vehicle, the men accosted and abducted her. Later, her minivan was discovered ablaze on a secluded North Houston street, and later still, a fellow deputy discovered her bullet-riddled body. Her husband, also a Harris County Deputy, and two children were shocked and to this day are haunted by the uncertainty and lack of answers in Roxyann’s murder.

    To be eligible for the cash rewards of up to $30,000, anyone with information on the abduction and murder of Deputy Cpl. Roxyann Allee can provide an anonymous tip by calling Crime Stoppers at 800-252-8477 or by submitting a tip online at p3tips.com/tipform.aspx?ID=650#

    If you're interested in being a true crime podcaster, take a look at the online programs at TrueCrimePodcastTraining.com and use code COLD for $150 off any course.

    You can support Gone Cold and listen ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Visit Gone Cold – Texas True Crime online at GoneCold.com

    Find us on Facebook, X, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram by searching gonecoldpodcast or go to: linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    #JusticeForRoxyannAllee #FallenOfficer #LawEnforcement #Houston #HoustonTexas #HarrisCountyTX #HarrisCountySheriff #Murder #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #GoneCold #GoneColdPodcast #ColdCase #Abduction #KIdnapping #UnsolvedMurder #Homicide #UnsolvedMysteries #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast

  • After the Christmas Day 1980 murder of Cheryl Lynn Springfield, her unclothed strangled body found lying by the Christmas tree, Fort Worth Police Detectives quickly theorized her killer was someone she knew. Upon learning the criminal record of the boyfriend of Cheryl’s roommate Cindy, they set their sights on parolee Barry Dean Kelly. However, evidence was lacking, and Cheryl’s murder went cold. Seven years later, after he was released from prison a second time, Barry Dean Kelly would commit a series of crimes that showed he was absolutely capable of killing Cheryl Springfield. Ever since his convictions for 1987 crimes, he’s been at the top of the suspect list for Cheryl’s slaying in the eyes of several cold case detectives who’ve tried their hand at solving the case. But they always fell short of evidence to charge him and have never moved much past theories based on correlation. For 43 years now, Cheryl’s big sister Jan has called the Fort Worth Police monthly in an effort to keep the case alive. Part 2 of 2.

    facebook.com/justiceforcheryllynn

    If you have any information about the Christmas Dat murder of Cheryl Lynn Tunnell-Springfield, please contact the Fort Worth Police Cold Case Unit at 817-392-4308 or by emailing your tip to [email protected]

    If you’d like to help fund testing that can solve cold cases in Fort Worth, go to fwpdcoldcasesupport.org and donate

    You can support gone cold – texas true crime at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Find us on gonecold.com or Facebook, X, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, BlueSky, and Instagram by searching @gonecoldpodcast or just click linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    The Fort Worth Star-Telegram was used as a source for this episode

    #JusticeForCherylLynn #JusticeForCherylSpringfield #JusticeForCherylLynnTunnellSpringfield #FortWorth #FortWorthTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #ColdCase #Unsolved #Murder #UnsolvedMurder #The80sMurders #Christmas #TrueCrimeChristmas

  • Scott and Cheryl Springfield married young, and although they were divorced by the time the 1980 Christmas season rolled around, he was having second thoughts about wanting his freedom. They’d always gotten along, even after the divorce, so things were patching up nicely. Cheryl decided it would be nice if her ex-husband and their boy, Scotty, spent Christmas Moring together, so both arranged the usual holiday plans to make that happen. Scott walked over on the morning of December 25th, 1980, arriving at about 6:15 AM to the cries of his little boy. After going inside, he discovered Cheryl laying by the Christmas tree. She’s been strangled to death with a cloth iron cord. For 43 years, her big sister Jan has made it her mission to find out what happened, and to get justice.

    facebook.com/justiceforcheryllynn

    We’d like to thank Jan for her help and contributions to this episode, and thank John Watson for speaking with us about his experience

    If you have any information about the Christmas Dat murder of Cheryl Lynn Tunnell-Springfield, please contact the Fort Worth Police Cold Case Unit at 817-392-4308 or by emailing your tip to [email protected]

    If you’d like to help fund testing that can solve cold cases in Fort Worth, go to fwpdcoldcasesupport.org and donate

    You can support gone cold – texas true crime at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast Find us on Facebook, Twitter or X or whatever, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram by searching @gonecoldpodcast or just click linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    The Fort Worth Star-Telegram was used as a source for this episode

    #JusticeForCherylLynn #JusticeForCherylSpringfield #JusticeForCherylLynnTunnellSpringfield #FortWorth #FortWorthTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #ColdCase #Unsolved #Murder #UnsolvedMurder #The80sMurders #Christmas #TrueCrimeChristmas

  • There are more than one viable possibilities as to what happened to 13-year-old Blanca Elisa Roberson when she disappeared on August 6th, 1989. Though the initial investigators had their primary suspect, and for good reason, Private Investigator Richard Norgard isn’t so sure. He’s uncovered information that suggests several different possibilities and even recently released new details in order to generate more tips. Whatever the case, tragedy continued within the Roberson family for years to come, undoubtedly inspired in virtually every case by Elisa’s disappearance.

    To keep up with the case, join the Missing Elisa Roberson Facebook page at: facebook.com/groups/739117898034158

    If you have any information about the disappearance of Blanca Elisa Roberson, please email [email protected]

    Thanks to Richard Norgard, Linda Thompson, Ruby Roberson Hall, and Marina Quintana Tomchak for their contributions to this episode

    Check out the new podcast Box in the Basement by Arlene and Leah at: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-box-in-the-basement-135173620/?cmp=web_share&embed=true&pname=fb&campid=s&keyid=8001869248&fbclid=IwAR00NpujF3mE_s_Ig6DCiSl3vSdyRuFo-kji-_xxH7sAg2IljCtQK8bGOHI

    Donate to Leon Laureles’s Birthday memorial by buying coats, blankets, and other winter necessities at: https://www.walmart.com/registry/er/ffee0156-26cb-4668-a75c-5288e5191ba1?fbclid=IwAR2FH8QZ8rR4bbIfzIRkZOa0QtVwEj2VofgQVu6RXU6RDRDqkwGCXAHyhS0

    You can support gone cold and listen to the show ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Follow gone cold on Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and X. Click linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    The Corpus Christi Caller-Times and The Aransas Pass Progress were used as a sources for this episode.

    #JusticeForElisaRoberson #WhereIsElisaRoberson #AransasPass #AransasPassTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast #Unsolved #ColdCase #MissingPerson #Disappearance #Vanished #NonFamilyAbduction #Abduction #Kidnapping #UnsolvedMysteries

  • In 2016, Elisa Roberson’s case saw the most activity it had since 1989. First, Texas Equusearch came to Aransas Pass to search property once owned by original detectives’ prime suspect. But nothing was found. Then, police took a different approach and used ground penetrating radar and jackhammers, presumably, to break up concrete in the garage under the former Roberson home. Although it was reported in the press that nothing was found a few years later, one person – the prime suspect’s daughter – continued to perpetuate the rumor that Elisa’s body was found. Was it to protect her father, whether or not she knew something?

    To keep up with the case, join the Missing Elisa Roberson Facebook page at: facebook.com/groups/739117898034158

    If you have any information about the disappearance of Elisa Roberson, please contact [email protected], the address for the private investigation

    Thanks to Debbie Green, Linda and Mike Thompson, Ruby Roberson Hall, and Marina Quintana Tomchak for their contributions to this episode

    You can support gone cold and listen to the show ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast Follow gone cold on Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and X. Click linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    The Corpus Christi Caller-Times, The Aransas Pass Progress, and KRIS 6 Corpus Christi were used as a sources for this episode.

    #JusticeForElisaRoberson #WhereIsElisaRoberson #AransasPass #AransasPassTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast

  • When 13-year-old Elisa Roberson went missing in August of 1989, an incorrect detail was assigned to the narrative, and it continued to be reported for decades: the time in which Elisa’s disappearance occurred. Through the dozens of years since Elisa’s missing persons case began, leads were few, and far in between. But some years, like 1994, produced at least a dozen. None offered anything substantive. Something changed in 2016, and in this episode, we’ll discuss the seed that led to even more pain and suffering for the Roberson Family.

    To keep up with the case, join the Missing Elisa Roberson Facebook page at: facebook.com/groups/739117898034158

    In the cover photo: to the left is Ruby and to the right, Elisa

    If you have any information about the disappearance of Elisa Roberson, please contact [email protected], the email for the private investigation

    Thanks to Debbie Green, Holly Hall, Linda and Mike Thompson, Ruby Roberson Hall, and Marina Quintana Tomchak for their contributions to this episode

    You can support gone cold and listen to the show ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Follow gone cold on Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and X. Click linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    The Corpus Christi Caller-Times and KRIS 6 Corpus Christi were used as a sources for this episode.

    #JusticeForElisaRoberson #WhereIsElisaRoberson #AransasPass #AransasPassTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast #Unsolved #ColdCase #MissingPerson #Disappearance #Vanished #NonFamilyAbduction #Abduction #Kidnapping #UnsolvedMysteries

  • Aransas Pass Police Lt. Linda Thompson was making up for lost time on the morning of August 7th, 1989. The evening before, 13-year-old Elisa Roberson vanished, but the Lt., and the department’s Chief of Detectives Mike Thompson, weren’t notified. A bloodhound was quickly brought in from Rockport and widespread searches got underway. But as days turned to weeks, nothing was panning out. When the department started receiving mysterious and anonymous letters from an apparent “tipster” implicating Elisa’s mother’s abusive past boyfriend, was it the information they were looking for?

    If you were ever a part of the CESAR searches for Elisa, please contact us at [email protected]

    If you have any information about the disappearance of Elisa Roberson, please contact [email protected], the email for the private investigation

    Thanks to Linda and Mike Thompson, Ruby Roberson Hall, and Marina Quintana Tomchak for their contributions to this episode

    You can support gone cold and listen to the show ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast
    Follow gone cold on Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and X. Search @gonecoldpodcast at both or just click linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    The Corpus Christi Caller-Times, and The Aransas Pass Progress, were used as additional sources for this episode

    #JusticeForElisaRoberson #WhereIsElisaRoberson #AransasPass #AransasPassTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast #Unsolved #ColdCase #MissingPerson #Disappearance #Vanished #NonFamilyAbduction #Abduction #Kidnapping #UnsolvedMysteries

  • On the late afternoon of August 6th, 1989, 13-year-old Blanca Elisa Roberson, known to most by her middle name, left her home in Aransas Pass and headed to meet a friend halfway between their houses. But Elisa never showed up. Searches for Elisa by friends of the family turned up nothing. Not a clue where Elisa might have gone could be found. After the sun went down, a police report was called in but the responding officer did little more than assure the family that Elisa was probably just with friends and would return soon. But Elisa never came back.

    If you have any information about the disappearance of Elisa Roberson, please contact [email protected], the email for the private investigation

    Thanks to Holly Hall, Linda and Mike Thompson, Ruby Roberson Hall, and Marina Quintana Tomchak for their contributions to this episode

    You can support gone cold and listen to the show ad-free at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast Follow gone cold on Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, and X. linknbio.com/gonecoldpodcast

    The Corpus Christi Caller-Times, The Aransas Pass Progress, The Texas State Historical Association online, and AmericanArchive.org were used as sources for this episode

    #JusticeForElisaRoberson #WhereIsElisaRoberson #AransasPass #AransasPassTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast #Unsolved #ColdCase #MissingPerson #Disappearance #Vanished #NonFamilyAbduction #Abduction #Kidnapping #UnsolvedMysteries

  • In the Fall of 1988, everything was headed in the right direction for 31-year-old Cathy Thom. After a childhood and then young adulthood that kept her on the move constantly, she was finally settling into a new job that promised to keep her home in Arlington, Texas with her favorite person in the world – her 10-year-old son, Danny. But in mid-November that year, Cathy vanished without a trace. For a month, her family worried the worst had befallen her, but miraculously, Cathy reappeared. The Arlington Police, however, had a difficult time getting any information from the traumatized woman, giving the folks Cathy said kidnapped and held her in captivity the upper hand.

    If you have any information about the kidnapping and captivity of Catherine Ann Thom, please call the Arlington Police at 817-274-4444.

    You can support gone cold – texas true crime at patreon.com/gonecoldpodcast

    Find us on Facebook, Twitter or X or whatever, TikTok, YouTube, Threads, and Instagram by searching @gonecoldpodcast

    The Fort Worth Star-Telegram and The Dallas Morning News were used as sources for this episode

    #WhoKidnappedCathyThom #Arlington #ArlingtonTX #TarrantCountyTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #Unsolved #ColdCase #MissingPerson #Disappearance #Vanished #Abduction #Kidnapping #UnsolvedMysteries

  • On Halloween, 1989, 30-year-old Sylvia Salinas, owner of Salinas Food Store in Galveston, Texas, stayed behind to stock the shelves while her folks returned home for lunch. At 1:23 PM, police were informed by the company who handles the alarm service for the small grocery, that the silent alarm had been tripped. When a patrolman arrived at the scene, he found Sylvia in a pool of blood, stabbed through the heart with a large knife. Virtually no leads could be produced, and the case went cold almost immediately. Decades later, as forensic DNA science advanced to a point that gave the family hope, a natural disaster dashed those hopes - or did it?

    Special thanks to Christine and Shericka for their contributions to this episode.

    If you have any information about the murder of Sylvia Salinas, please contact Crime Stoppers of Galveston at (409) 763-8477.

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  • On Halloween Eve 2006, 16-year-old Terressa Lynn Vanegas bounced around between friend’s houses. Though she was supposed to spend the night with one of them, those plans fell through unbeknownst to her family. Terressa had other plans, anyway, and the teenager was seen that night by several folks who knew her in her hometown of Dickinson, Texas. But the following day when she didn’t come home from school, Terressa’s family knew something was wrong. Two days later, her body was found in a shallow ditch near her school, Dickinson High. Though there were plenty of witnesses to report last known movements, one person she was seen talking to that night was, apparently, unknown to all of them.

    If you have any information about the murder of Terressa Lynn Vanegas, please call the Dickinson Police Department at 281-337-4700 or Galveston County Crime Stoppers at 281-763-8477

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    David Lohr’s reporting at CrimeLibrary.org, abc13.com, The Galveston Daily News, and The Houston Chronicle were used as sources for this episode.

    #JusticeForTerressaVanegas #DickinsonTX #Houston #Galveston #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #ColdCase #Unsolved #Murder #UnsolvedMurder #UnsolvedMysteries