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Coffeehouse Crime

Coffeehouse Crime

By: Coffeehouse Crime
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Coffeehouse Crime is a true crime podcast that delivers calm, detailed, and respectful storytelling of real criminal cases. Each episode focuses on thorough research, clear timelines, and factual narration, allowing listeners to understand how crimes unfolded without sensationalism. With a documentary-style approach, this podcast is ideal for listeners who appreciate structured investigations, real evidence, and thoughtful crime analysis.Copyright Coffeehouse Crime Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Evil Mother Kills Cops_ Acts Like A Victim
    Apr 9 2026
    She smiled for the cameras. She cried for the jury. She played the grieving mother who had lost everything. But behind the tears, she was the monster who murdered law enforcement officers in cold blood.

    In this episode, I uncover the shocking true crime stories of mothers who killed police officers and then pretended to be the victims. These women weaponized their gender, their tears, and society's instinct to believe a mother's grief. From staging crime scenes to framing innocent men, their manipulation knew no bounds. Based on real police reports, interrogation footage, and courtroom testimony, this episode exposes the evil that hid behind a mother's mask.

    Turn down the lights, put on your headphones, and press play — because her tears were never for the dead. They were for herself.
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    31 mins
  • The Kato Family Murders_ Japan_s Darkest Unsolved Mystery
    Apr 9 2026
    A toddler sat at his kitchen table, playing with toys in silence. His mother lay dead a few feet away. And somewhere in the suburban streets of Nagoya, a bleeding woman vanished into thin air — never to be seen again.

    On November 13, 1999, Namiko Takaba was murdered in her own apartment while her son Kohei watched from his high chair. The killer was female, blood type B, with a perm and a deep wound on her hand. She washed her injury in the family bathroom, fled through Inou Park, and was spotted twice by witnesses — then disappeared completely. Despite DNA evidence, a preserved crime scene kept frozen in time, and a ¥3 million reward, the case remains unsolved after 25 years. Her husband Satoru still pays rent on the apartment, preserving both his wife's blood and the killer's. This is Japan's most haunting cold case.

    Turn down the lights, put on your headphones, and press play — because the woman who killed Namiko is still out there.
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    26 mins
  • The Dumbest Criminals Ever
    Apr 9 2026
    They robbed a bank and left their ID on the counter. They tried to outrun police on a bicycle. They posted their crimes on Facebook live. And then they asked: "How did they find me?"

    In this episode, I uncover the dumbest criminals ever caught — the ones who made law enforcement's job embarrassingly easy. From a burglar who got stuck in a chimney to a car thief who called 911 for directions, these are the moments when stupidity met swift and hilarious justice. Based on real police reports, bodycam footage, and news coverage, this episode will make you laugh, cringe, and wonder how some people survive long enough to commit crimes. Turn down the lights, put on your headphones, and press play — because criminals have never been this dumb.
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    20 mins
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