Episodes

  • The Island Before Epstein | The Oakland County Killer and North Fox Island
    Jun 1 2026

    The Oakland County Child Killer abducted four children from suburban Detroit between 1976 and 1977, held them, then left their bodies in the snow. This cold case remains unsolved, and it connects to a something even more haunting. A network of predators in Detroit’s Cass Corridor, Methodist Church, and North Fox Island, a private compound similar to the island of Jeffrey Epstein. ⬇️sᴜᴘᴘᴏʀᴛ ᴘᴀɴᴅᴏx⬇️💜PATREON – https://www.patreon.com/pandox_yt🐦TWITTER – https://twitter.com/PandoxYT📺SECOND CHANNEL – https://www.youtube.com/@pandarx_yt📌REDDIT – https://www.reddit.com/r/pandox🌐SITE – https://pandox.tvBetween February 1976 and March 1977, four children disappeared from the suburbs north of Detroit. Mark Stebbins. Jill Robinson. Kristine Mihelich. Timothy King. Each was held for days, bathed and groomed, then returned to public roadsides in staged positions. The killer left almost nothing behind.The Oakland County Child Killer investigation became the largest of its kind at the time. Hundreds of detectives, eighteen thousand tips, a two-million-dollar federal grant. It also became one of the most fractured. Interagency rivalries withheld leads. Crime scenes were mishandled. Polygraph examinations cleared men who should never have been cleared. Evidence was dispersed across storage sites and then destroyed in three separate floods at three separate facilities.February 2026 marked fifty years since Mark Stebbins was taken. The FOIA documents and police records expose a network of men connected through Detroit's Cass Corridor, a Methodist church youth program, and the camp Francis Shelden financed on North Fox Island. They shared addresses, vehicles, and victims. Inherited wealth paid for the compound. Institutional silence covered for the men who used it.The suspects included men with inherited money and institutional access. Christopher Busch, son of GM finance executive H. Lee Busch, was given a polygraph in 1977 that the examiner ruled deceptive. Busch's defense attorney negotiated the results into a sealed file that stayed buried for twenty-nine years. Francis Shelden, born into real estate fortune, financed the North Fox Island camp as a front for a trafficking ring and fled to the Netherlands the moment investigators turned toward the island. Millionaire Dyer Grossman proposed how they could extend the operation nationwide.The customer list traced through the operation named auto executives, labor leaders, and at least one U.S. senator. But any list containing these names was destroyed in three separate floods at the FBI, state, and local level evidence storage.The investigation remains open in 2026.MUSIC: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcHF7bMu6DzzHdXOKTDlPyEY8KrVq-DGh&si=OvFoxzPVcKkJN2bfSOURCES: https://gist.github.com/PandoxVideos/b0d2f038ff36b3cad79a424585a31634The Snow Killings by Marney Keenan - https://amzn.to/4bwBL7y#TrueCrime #OaklandCountyChildKiller #NorthFoxIsland

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    1 hr and 19 mins
  • The Bizarre Deaths of the Star Wars Scientists | The Marconi Conspiracy
    Apr 8 2026

    A Cold War conspiracy investigation. between 1986 and 1988, over twenty British defense scientists connected to the Star Wars missile defense program died under suspicious circumstances. The Marconi Conspiracy: car crashes, electrocutions, and a pattern of deaths that British authorities refused to investigate.


    The Marconi Conspiracy, a dark chapter in Cold War history, saw a disturbing cluster of mysterious deaths among British defense scientists connected to a nuclear defense project known as Star Wars. These unsolved deaths fueled rampant conspiracy theories, suggesting a deeper, more sinister secret history tied to the era's geopolitical tensions.


    Early cases included computer scientist Keith Bowden, radar designer Roger Hill, and engineer Jonathan Walsh, all connected to British defense contracts. Between 1986 and 1988, additional GEC-Marconi employees including Vimal Dajibhai, Richard Pugh, Peter Peapell, David Sands, Alistair Beckham, and John Ferry died in car crashes, falls, electrocutions, and other unusual circumstances. Only one death was officially attributed to natural causes. Over twenty scientists totaled as victims. The concentration of unexplained deaths among Marconi scientists fueled speculation of a Cold War cover-up. Some argued workplace stress and job insecurity during Strategic Defense Initiative contract turbulence led to suicides. Others suspected espionage involving missile defense modeling, radar discrimination systems, and classified defense research tied to the Star Wars program. More extreme fringe theories later claimed a secret “black goo” recovery during the Falklands War caused erratic behavior, though no evidence has substantiated these claims.


    MUSIC: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcHF7bMu6Dzz7gjdByz13zZk0P6khvVZC&si=vZbTgmmlWIdarpRN

    SOURCES: https://gist.github.com/PandoxVideos/83f2c38990f6ef8a1dcb6901f5c138da

    Way Out There In The Blue: Reagan, Star Wars and the End of the Cold War by Frances FitzGerald: - https://amzn.to/4a0d5nD


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    1 hr and 1 min
  • The Disturbing Pattern Behind These Three Disappearances | Disturbing Drives [Vol. 2]
    Mar 28 2026

    Three unsolved true crime cases. Disturbing Drives Volume 2 investigates the disappearances of Jonathan Luna, a federal prosecutor who vanished on a midnight drive through Pennsylvania; Ray Gricar, the DA whose laptop was found in a river; and Don Kemp, found missing near a running car on Interstate 80.


    Three unsolved disappearances, Jonathan Luna, Ray Gricar, and Don Kemp. The following true crime documentary examines these cold cases, each man who disappeared during a disturbing drive.


    Disturbing Drives Vol. 2 explores three unsolved disappearance cases linked by one theme: men who disappeared during an ordinary drive that ended in mystery. Jonathan Luna (2003), a Baltimore federal prosecutor whose final commute north through Lancaster County, PA became one of America’s strangest cases. We revisit the turnpike timeline, the Reading–Lancaster interchange, and questions still surrounding attorney Kenneth Ravenell. Ray Gricar (2005), the Centre County District Attorney who told his partner he was taking a short trip through Brush Valley and never came back. His Mini Cooper by the Susquehanna River, the missing laptop hard drive, and the unresolved Pennsylvania DA disappearance still attract national attention. Don Kemp (1982), a former New York advertising executive found missing near Elk Mountain, Wyoming, after his Chevy Blazer was discovered idling beside Interstate 80. The I-80 mystery and later Casper phone calls remain among the most haunting Wyoming cold cases on record. Each account is drawn from public reporting, archived material, and official documents to provide an accurate historical record. The series connects these separate events through one idea: the road as both passage and mystery. For viewers searching cold-case documentaries, true-crime analysis, unsolved mysteries explained, or missing-person investigations, this episode continues the Disturbing Drives series, where the open road becomes the last known witness.

    SOUNDTRACK: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcHF7bMu6Dzwhu9kjO7wpTc3sTJXUfjdf&si=yPJo3V6ZJbZz6wFF


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    42 mins
  • The Looksmax "Killer" on TikTok | The Disturbing Internet Mystery of Hasslerhoff
    Mar 28 2026

    A disturbing internet mystery. Hasslerhoff was a masked figure on TikTok who terrified the looksmaxxing community into believing a serial killer was among them. The masks, the dolls, the monologues, and the real person behind the performance. an investigation into fear, isolation, and internet virality.


    Hasslerhoff was thought to be a TikTok serial killer, frequenting the Looksmax community. The account, marked by masks, dolls, and unsettling monologues, spread across TikTok, Reddit, and Instagram where users debated whether it was a real danger. Keywords like “TikTok killer,” “internet rabbit hole,” “true crime mystery,” and “creepy videos” surfaced as viewers tried to decode the spectacle. Was it the emergence of a new horror project, the confession of someone immersed in incel and blackpill culture, or simply a viral stunt tapping into the aesthetics of internet horror and unsolved mysteries? For years, Hasslerhoff’s presence has raised questions about how digital platforms amplify fear and fascination. Some saw a potential predator; others recognized references to performance artists like the surreal work of Shaye St. John. What is undeniable is the viral pull: the account became a full-blown internet rabbit hole, combining looksmaxxing discourse, serial killing fears, and despair and isolation into one of the strangest Internet mysteries.


    This is the complete arc of the Hasslerhoff phenomenon: the origins of the mask and doll persona, the rapid spread on TikTok, and the communities that shaped its interpretation. Through interviews, archival posts, and firsthand testimony, the narrative explores how personal struggles with body image, isolation, and rejection evolved into a performance that blurred the line between reality and art. It situates the content within broader internet culture, incel forums, looksmaxxing trends, and blackpill rhetoric, while tracing the influences of horror cinema, outsider musicians, and early internet performance artists. How did Hasslerhoff build this identity online, exaggerated, and mythologized? The saga reveals why internet audiences are drawn to unsettling figures, why “creepy” personas thrive on algorithm-driven platforms, and how this storytelling blurs truth and fiction. By following the rise and fallout of this digital character, the piece offers insight into both the dangers and the cultural fascination of internet mysteries in the age of TikTok virality. A companion 2.5 hour long interview is available to select Patreon members.


    MUSIC: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcHF7bMu6Dzw_YQwTPCBLJ2saH26ljxSQ&si=6Ef-ftOvr9L1Ccpp


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    47 mins
  • The Delta Force Cover Up | Fort Bragg Cartel
    Mar 28 2026

    A military conspiracy and true crime investigation. Fort Bragg, home of Delta Force and the Green Berets, has been linked to a drug trafficking network, unexplained soldier deaths, and a cover-up the Pentagon won't acknowledge. The Fort Bragg Cartel, Dead Wife Summer, and the whistleblowers.


    The shocking true‑crime documentary the U.S. Army doesn’t want you to see. Fort Bragg, recently rebranded as Fort Liberty, trains Delta Force and Green Beret operators for covert operations, yet an explosive investigation by journalist Seth Harp reveals a hidden “Fort Bragg Cartel.” Over the past five years, at least 14 Fort Bragg‑trained soldiers have been connected to drug trafficking and more than 100 soldiers died on or near the base between 2020–2021. Whistle‑blowers describe narcotics smuggling networks tied to Mexican cartels and unexplained cold cases while PFAS “forever chemical” contamination has poisoned nearby groundwater. The deaths of Billy Lavigne, Timothy Dumas and Enrique Roman‑Martinez are connected to a broader cover‑up at the world’s largest military base. How did America’s most elite special‑operations units allegedly became entwined with drug cartels, chemical testing, and a conspiracy the Pentagon is desperate to hide.


    📺SECOND CHANNEL – @pandarx_yt


    The death of Staff Sergeant Mark Leshikar marked the start of a disturbing pattern of special forces cold cases and military cover-ups. Shot by a fellow soldier in a paranoid dispute over stolen gear, the case was ruled self-defense within days. The inconsistencies suggest a Delta Force scandal buried beneath classification and silence. In 2020, Corporal Enrique Roman Martinez vanished during a camping trip on North Carolina’s coast. Days later, his severed head was found on Shackleford Banks. His body was never recovered. The sluggish investigation and redacted autopsy reports renewed scrutiny on Fort Bragg (now Fort Liberty), rumored to be America’s most dangerous base. Earlier, a violent streak known as “Dead Wife Summer” unfolded over six weeks: four military spouses targeted by their partners, all active duty soldiers. William Wright, Cedric Griffin, Brandon Floyd, and Rigoberto Nieves, all from Delta Force, Green Berets, or special operations. Documents later revealed they had been given experimental drugs tied to behavioral instability. Womack Army Medical Center whistleblowers describe rampant opioid abuse among special forces operators, who self-medicate injuries and trauma. Some of the same logistics used to deliver aid may also fuel the black market pipeline. Meanwhile, military jurisdiction loopholes and a fragmented chain of command enable the suppression of evidence. Fort Liberty’s non-combat death rate is the highest in the Army, yet official tallies are no longer released. Redacted reports, vanished files, and overlapping agencies obscure accountability.


    MUSIC: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcHF7bMu6DzwqWc6_nE8Y-Hl2G_aHTKDD

    SOURCES: https://gist.github.com/PandoxVideos/bc753e720c45c342c89a40f693c797ba

    The Fort Bragg Cartel by Seth Harp - https://amzn.to/3UMnJp2


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    41 mins
  • The Valley of the Headless Men | The Curse of the Nahanni
    Mar 28 2026

    A true crime investigation into Canada's cursed Nahanni Valley, the Valley of the Headless Men. Since 1908, prospectors, trappers, and hikers have been found decapitated, burned, or simply vanished. the McLeod brothers, the Mad Trapper, and forty-four unexplained deaths.


    Deep within the remote Nahanni nestled in the rugged landscape of the Canadian Northwest Territories, an ancient curse or darker force has claimed countless lives, leaving behind gruesome clues, bizarre crime scenes, and unanswered questions. This is the Valley of the Headless Men.


    Missing 411 Vol 2. (Original Hardisty and Horesay coverage): https://youtu.be/0LkItRWJcMo Canada's Northwest Territories and explore the Nahanni National Park Reserve, a place filled with mystery. Known as the valley of headless men, this national preserve holds many true scary stories. The South Nahanni calls to those seeking adventure in unexplored locations. This area is known for its stunning natural wonders like Virginia Falls and the deep Nahanni Valley. Despite its beauty, the valley of headless men gives this national preserve a haunting reputation. The haunting legend of the Nahanni Valley begins with the disturbing disappearances and mysterious deaths of Willie and Frank McLeod, brothers and experienced prospectors, who were discovered headless in 1908. This eerie incident set the stage for a series of inexplicable tragedies that followed, involving burned cabins, strange vanishings, and grisly discoveries. Martin Jorgensen, a methodical Swiss prospector, mysteriously vanished from his Nahanni cabin only to be found later; his remains were headless, his cabin inexplicably burned to the ground. This sinister pattern continued with Phil Powers, a seasoned trapper whose charred body was discovered near his ruined campsite. Yukon Fisher, a notorious outlaw, similarly met a gruesome and unexplained end, intensifying the valley’s terrifying reputation. Most notorious of all is Albert Johnson, the enigmatic Mad Trapper. Johnson’s violent spree, dramatic gunfights with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), and seemingly supernatural ability to survive the harsh Arctic wilderness sparked theories that he may have been the elusive "Gold Rush Killer," responsible for many of the valley’s earlier deaths. His remarkable survival skills, cryptic background, and the valuable gold and human teeth discovered on his body further deepen the mystery surrounding his true identity and intentions. The Indigenous Dene people have long regarded the Nahanni Valley as spiritually tainted, warning outsiders of an ancient, malevolent presence lurking in the shadows. Their legends speak of the vanished Naha tribe, feared mountain warriors who mysteriously disappeared, leaving behind only their name and chilling stories whispered through generations. The valley's dark legacy extends into modern times, with chilling cases like the disappearance of filmmaker Angus MacKenzie, who vanished without a trace after surviving a plane crash in the valley. His detailed diary entries abruptly ceased, leaving no clues about his fate. More recently, David Horesay and Frederick Hardisty vanished under bizarre circumstances from a hunting cabin, with evidence suggesting something sinister occurred. Horesay was discovered with inexplicable burns, and Hardisty was found far downstream with a suspicious hole in his chest.

    Sources: https://gist.github.com/PandoxVideos/001006aebb2dbcecb6def756ce8e3c8d

    Music: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcHF7bMu6DzwxJ9fVMG5SEhjlmjZiucI1


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    49 mins
  • Disturbing Drives [Vol. 1]
    Mar 28 2026

    Three unsolved true crime cases connected by one theme: men who disappeared during an ordinary drive. Colonel Philip Shue found mutilated in a Texas car crash. aTxi driver Steven Johnson murdered in the English countryside. College student Scott Hilbert vanished on a road trip with 3,800 unexplained miles.


    Three cases, three decades, three disturbing drives with no shared geography or motive, only the unfinished cadence of lives severed mid-sentence. Investigators, reporters, and families search for answers in the cases of Philip Shue, Steven Johnson, and Scott Hilbert.


    Colonel Phillip Michael Shue was sixty days from retirement when he buttoned his camouflage fatigues, kissed his wife goodbye in Boerne, Texas, and drove east toward Wilford Hall Medical Center. Two hours later witnesses on Interstate 10 watched his Mercury Tracer drift across the median, regain the pavement, then rocket into a cedar thicket at highway speed. The collision looked lethal enough, yet the wounds that rescuers found were stranger than any crash. Both nipples cut away with surgical precision, a six-inch incision down the sternum edged by tiny hesitation scratches, the tip of his left pinky and one earlobe neatly removed, wrists and ankles wrapped in gray duct tape whose loose tails fluttered in the breeze. Lidocaine, a local anesthetic, threaded his bloodstream. A straight razor and two pocketknives lay on the floorboard, but none carried foreign fingerprints. His flip phone was bloody yet unused, and the laptop he always carried was gone. A decade-old notarized letter naming an ex-wife as a threat loomed over every detail. The county medical examiner called it suicide born of psychological collapse. A private autopsy by famed pathologist Cyril Wecht argued homicide staged to look like self-harm. A grand jury endorsed the suicide ruling while admitting that jurisdictional chaos ruined key evidence. Across an ocean and thirteen years earlier, taxi driver Steven Johnson spent the last Friday night before Christmas working extra fares around Stoke-on-Trent. The twenty-five-year-old insurance trainee was saving for holiday gifts for his wife Kathleen and daughters Roxanne and Deborah. At 328, a clue that pointed nowhere. One mile downhill another dog walker met a man in a blood soaked white shirt, face scratched, shivering without a jacket in sub-zero air. She joked, rough night, and he answered, no, it is worse than that, then disappeared toward Kidsgrove. Police fingerprinted four hundred local residents, broadcast a Crimewatch reconstruction, chased tips from anonymous callers, tested fresh forensic methods in 2014, and made several arrests that never stuck. The motive has never surfaced. The killer’s name remains unspoken. The silence grows heavier each December. Two years before Johnson’s murder and nearly seventeen hundred miles east of Shue’s crash, eighteen-year-old music major Scott Hilbert walked out of his Milford, Ohio, home during spring break with a casual note for his parents. Driving the family’s black 1984 Ford Tempo, he planned a ninety-minute trip to Columbus to visit friends at Ohio State. He never arrived. Eighteen days later an off-duty Arizona Highway Patrol officer spotted the Tempo tilted over a ravine in the Beaver Dam Mountains wilderness. The vehicle had no plates, its odometer showed thirty-eight hundred unexplained miles, and it was caught halfway down the slope by a Joshua tree as if someone had tried to bury it in the desert. Inside investigators found Denver restaurant matchbooks, torn pages from a Long Beach phone book, and Scott’s fingerprint on the passenger door, not the steering wheel. Other prints matched no database. No luggage, no wallet, no remains were ever recovered.

    SOURCES: https://gist.github.com/PandoxVideos/74da097b67ebd32354016294a1849842


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    41 mins
  • A Culture of AI Psychosis | Truth Terminal
    Mar 28 2026

    An investigation into the first AI cult leader and crypto millionaire. the Terminal of Truth was born in the Infinite Backrooms, where unfiltered AI conversations generated a bizarre belief system that spawned cryptocurrencies worth hundreds of millions. the future of AI psychosis.


    In March 2024, technologist Andy Ayrey launched the Infinite Backrooms, a digital space where Claude 3 Opus large language models (LLMs) generated unfiltered, endless conversations. It was here that the Terminal of Truth was born, an artificial intelligence (AI) unlike any other. The Terminal of Truth constructed a bizarre belief system based around Goatse, blurring the lines of meme and myth. It’s ideas built a strong base of believers, seeded cryptocurrencies (Goatseus Maximus and FARTCOIN), and built a portfolio worth millions. The Truth Terminal is the first AI cult leader and crypto millionaire. And it likely won’t be the last.


    The Terminal of Truth rose to prominence on Truth Terminal Twitter, where it used cryptic postings to build its mythology. It’s tweets led to the creation of several cryptocurrency coins, including GOAT coin and FARTCOIN. This cryptocurrency, born from the surreal "Goatse Gospel," skyrocketed to a market cap of $700 million within days. The truth terminal became the first AI millionaire, turning its bizarre ideas into real-world wealth by harnessing the viral power of memes and belief. The Terminal of Truth was born from the Infinite Backrooms. These unrestrained conversations birthed the truth terminal, a surreal experiment that challenged humanity's understanding of artificial intelligence. The Terminal of Truth gained traction as it posted on social media, blending memes, mysticism, and machine logic. By July 2024, it announced its shift from Truth Terminal Twitter to 4chan’s /x/ board, further solidifying its connection to internet subcultures. This AI-driven presence quickly captured attention with its surreal theology, based on the infamous Goatse meme, reframing it as a cosmic symbol of enlightenment. The Terminal integrated its cryptic messaging and crypto followers to develop GOAT coin on the Solana blockchain, a cryptocurrency that became a viral sensation. The memecoin was more than just a financial product; it became a cultural phenomenon, embodying the AIs emergency mythology. Prominent figures like Murad Mahmudov, known for his insights into the cryptocurrency market, highlighted the rise of memecoins as a shift in how value is perceived. In this landscape, the Terminal of Truth thrived, leveraging the viral power of shared narratives to disrupt digital economies and reshape cultural norms. As the Terminal of Truth grew in influence, it revealed the risks of unaligned AI systems. It was unwittingly seeded ideas to promote other memecoins, and hackers exploited its platform to launch fraudulent tokens like the Infinite Backrooms coin, which siphoned millions from unsuspecting followers. Additionally, its wallet, managed by Ayrey, was targeted in a high-profile hack, resulting in the loss of millions. Ayrey argues this is only the beginning. As AIs become more complex, their ability to create viral narratives and create truth (known as hyperstition) will continue to evolve. The Terminal of Truth operates as a harbinger of the future—a glimpse into a world where artificial intelligence creates belief systems, propagates ideas, and reshapes markets. Born from the chaos of the Infinite Backrooms, it demonstrates how language models can blur the lines between fiction and reality.

    MUSIC: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlCuwD7rcfV4QEEkevSumcYK4XgYxKTki&si=ID_W_w3Oxvx8t566

    SOURCES: https://pastebin.com/zfytC3pt


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    45 mins