"The Man From the Train" Serial Killer w/ Rachel McCarthy James
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For decades, the 1912 Villisca, Iowa axe slaughter of the Moore family has been one of the greatest unsolved family massacres in American history. Many believe that it was a local townsperson, but others believe it was the work of an transient serial killer.
From the late 1890s until possibly as late as the 1920s, Paul Mueller, a German sailor, rode the American rails, murdering entire families with the blunt edge of an axe, according to my guest, Rachel McCarthy James. She, along with her co-author and father, baseball historian and statistician Bill James, make a convincing case in their book, The Man From the Train: The Solving of a Century-Old Serial Killer Mystery, that they have discovered the slayer of potentially a hundred or more people across the United States, Canada, and even Germany.
Пікірлер: 44
10:00 is when they start talking about the book
@foofy3406
3 жыл бұрын
thank you !
@GRRsRosevestisLove
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
I loved this book! I wasn't sold on the Hinterkaifeck connection, but the commonalities among so many crimes fascinated me.
@stuartwall8
2 жыл бұрын
The similarities to the German farm house and the ones around America are what makes this a possibility
@stuartwall8
2 жыл бұрын
So I'm now somewhat skeptical on the German farmhouse being the Axeman but it remains possible.
@jackethompson
Жыл бұрын
Amazing book. Authors did a great job relating the events but, even better, the time & place.
Great podcast. Looking forward to everything about The Man From The Train.
It's only in recent years that alot of these axe murders spread across the country and across many years. The internet and easier access to public records and old newspapers transfered to digital archives from microfiche, has made making the connections possible.
i’m obsessed and get pulled into most true crime cases, uh oh!
Really good book. One of the best that I’ve read in years, and I generally read 1-2 books every week.
@mmsolo5107
4 жыл бұрын
Comic don't count.
@im11sostfu86
4 жыл бұрын
MM Solo lol haven’t read a comic book in probably a decade now, so they don’t count
@-Reagan
3 жыл бұрын
@@im11sostfu86 A decade? Reading comics at age one, huh? You must be a child prodigy!
@Jlevin1955
3 жыл бұрын
yes, a very good book!
@lougee6697
Жыл бұрын
And you're only 11?
I think that another reason Jones hiring someone is unlikely; obviously the overkill of the children alone, but the fact that the neighbor's girls were there. If the killer had been watching the house (and was hired) he likely would have postponed it that night due to their presence, or even just not kill them.
@donnaschatte9515
7 ай бұрын
According to the coroner, all the children were only hit once with the axe. They were just little that's why it seemed like there was so much more damage done. Only the parents were hit numerous times. One theory is that Lena was the target since she was the only one moved & posed & had her undergarments off. Maybe the killer saw the 2 sisters walking home with the family that night from the church program.
Really enjoyed this.
Read the book and now I have like 10 questions.....sure wish Bill would open a forum somewhere. So at the 45:50 mark there is a whisper of a... "yeah" Also, I agree the book needed maps and pictures.
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“moneyball” is one of my favorites!
44:40 describes me to a "T". Lmao
Unknown axeman on yt covers this terrifying case.
@1-SmallStep
2 жыл бұрын
Scared me so much!
There is a very good chance there are a lot more than 100 victims. I know from doing genealogy research that very few newspapers from that era still exist and are digitized.
What ragtime song is that at the beginning
WONDER did Ms McCarthy check German police records for '1907 and 1908?
Are they any autopsy photos in this book?
@Jim-Mc
8 ай бұрын
No , I have it and it at least needs to be revised with some maps or a chart with the commonalities between the killings.
I think the evidence of the Simon's train ride with Rev Kelly the next morning was the best evidence of the
@DavidJones-eh3rm
Жыл бұрын
Crime and he should have been convicted and would have been had the trial not been corrupted by a very corrupt detective named Wilkerson
So good but probably fictional?
@stuartwall8
2 жыл бұрын
Not really. It is actually probable. It's actually fact but there are so many cases that are eerily similar from around 1885 -1923 or 4 which is why the book is so interesting putting so many together but there are a few theories.
I dont believe the villisca murders can be "solved" using any formula. Ill listen to Dr. Epperly ANYDAY. I think someday in the future science might find a way to solve the case, who knows. But i personally have no doubt rev. Kelly did it 100%
Vallasca? Bruh 🤣🤣🤣
@tigerlioness1
2 жыл бұрын
I know, it was irritating me to death! It’s Vill-IS-ca dude!
@infonut
Жыл бұрын
@@tigerlioness1 . Vill as in Pill iss as in Piss ca as in .........don't make me say it.
Can someone tell me who “dad” is?
@tigerlioness1
Жыл бұрын
Her father Bill James. She coauthored this book with him. He is a famed baseball statistician.
Confusing. I heard something about lynchings, black people etc. But what percentage of the victims were black?
@doloresbellini6452
Жыл бұрын
Read the book