• 141: The Disappearance of Ilonka Cann: A Coroner’s Jury Speaks
    Jun 30 2026


    On May 26, 1970, twenty-six-year-old Ilonka Cann vanished from the rural Pennsylvania farmhouse she shared with her husband and fifteen-month-old son.

    The day before, she had spoken with her parents in Ohio and talked about coming home for a visit that summer.

    She never made that trip.

    In the weeks and months that followed, investigators searched fields, ponds, and woodlots surrounding the isolated property where Ilonka was last believed to have been seen. Her family spent decades searching for answers as the case slowly faded from public memory.

    More than fifty years later, renewed interest in Ilonka's disappearance led to new searches, a coroner's inquest, and testimony that cast the events of May 1970 in a very different light.

    In 2024, a coroner's jury concluded that Ilonka Cann died by homicide at the hands of another person.

    This episode examines the disappearance of Ilonka Cann, the decades-long search for answers, and what it means when official recognition arrives generations after a woman goes missing.

    📍 Huntington Mills, Pennsylvania | May 26, 1970

    📖 Featuring an original poem written and read in her honor by Aimee Baker.

    ➡️ Help bring attention to missing and unidentified women—subscribe and share this episode.

    📍 Find us on Instagram & Facebook.

    📚 Get Aimee’s book, Doe, now available via University of Akron Press, Bookshop.org, and Amazon.

    📰 For more women-centered true crime content, subscribe to Aimee’s newsletter, GIRLHUNT.

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    49 mins
  • 140: The Empty Seat: The Disappearance of Thora Chamberlain
    Jun 23 2026


    On November 2, 1945, fourteen-year-old Thora Chamberlain left school in Campbell, California, expecting to attend a football game that evening.

    Her friends saved her a seat.

    Thora never arrived.

    Witnesses later reported seeing her speaking with a man dressed as a serviceman before getting into his vehicle. Within weeks, investigators focused on Thomas McMonigle, a local laborer with a history of violence. Over the course of the investigation, McMonigle gave multiple confessions, led authorities to key pieces of evidence, and was ultimately convicted of Thora's murder.

    But investigators never found the one thing that mattered most.

    Thora herself.

    More than eighty years later, Thora Chamberlain remains one of California's earliest no-body homicide victims. Her body has never been recovered.

    In this episode, we examine the disappearance of Thora Chamberlain, the investigation that followed, and the evidence that secured a conviction despite the absence of a body.

    This is a story about loss, memory, and the empty seat left behind when a child never comes home.

    📍 Campbell, California | November 2, 1945

    📖 Featuring an original poem written and read in her honor by Aimee Baker.

    ➡️ Help bring attention to missing and unidentified women—subscribe and share this episode.

    📍 Find us on Instagram & Facebook.

    📚 Get Aimee’s book, Doe, now available via University of Akron Press, Bookshop.org, and Amazon.

    📰 For more women-centered true crime content, subscribe to Aimee’s newsletter, GIRLHUNT.



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    56 mins
  • 139: The Women Who Talk to the Dead: A Conversation with Katherine Schweit
    Jun 16 2026


    Most people assume that unidentified persons' cases are actively investigated, that somewhere, someone is still working to restore a name to the dead.

    But the reality is often far more complicated.

    This week, She Goes by Jane presents a special interview with author and former FBI agent Katherine Schweit about her new book, Women Who Talk to the Dead: The True Story of 200 Forgotten Murder Victims and the Relentless Pursuit of Justice by an FBI Agent and a Detroit Police Detective.

    Together, we discuss the unidentified dead of Detroit, the challenges of solving decades-old cases, and the investigators who refuse to let victims disappear into forgotten file boxes and evidence rooms. We also explore media neglect, institutional barriers, and the quiet, persistent work required to restore names and histories to those who have been lost.

    At the end of the episode, actress Mary Lynn Rajskub reads Aimée Baker's poem "Detroit, and Other Sorrows," a meditation on memory, absence, and the lives that remain even when names are forgotten.

    Because every unidentified person was once known. And every name returned is a story reclaimed.

    📍 Detroit, Michigan | 1950s-Present

    📖 Featuring an original poem written in honor of one of Detroit’s formerly unidentified Jane Does read by Mary Lynn Rajskub.

    ➡️ Help bring attention to missing and unidentified women—subscribe and share this episode.

    📍 Find us on Instagram & Facebook.

    📚 Get Katherine’s book,The Women Who Talk to the Dead, now at Bookshop.org.

    📰 For more women-centered true crime content, subscribe to Aimee’s newsletter, GIRLHUNT.



    More about Katherine Schweit:
    Katherine Schweit is an author, attorney, former Chicago prosecutor, and career Federal Bureau of Investigation special agent who helped jail bank robbers, kidnappers, and domestic terrorists, while working daily with local police investigating and responding to mass casualty and active shooter incidents. A native of Detroit, Ms. Schweit earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Michigan State University. She earned a law degree at DePaul University and joined the Cook County prosecutor’s office as an assistant state’s attorney.

    More about Mary Lynn Rajskub:
    Mary Lynn Rajskub is a comedian, actress and writer, best known for playing ‘Chloe’ on the Fox drama 24 and ‘Gail the Snail’ from It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia.

    This spring, Mary Lynn will co-star in the Netflix series, North of North, and she premiered her second hour-long stand-up special, Mary Lynn Rajskub: Road Gig, on YouTube in December. Her book, FAME-ISH: My Life At The Edge Of Stardom, is a comedic look at Mary Lynn’s awkward and endearing missteps on the road to becoming fame-ish.

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    52 mins
  • 138: Lois and Karen Williams: A Mother, Daughter, and the Shadow of Melvin Chelcie Carr
    Jun 9 2026


    In January 1967, Lois Williams and her 17-year-old daughter Karen disappeared from their apartment on East 21st Street in Indianapolis, Indiana. Inside, everything appeared untouched: coats hanging in the closet, a lamp left burning, and Karen’s schoolbook still open where she had been studying the night before.

    Neither woman was ever seen again.

    Years later, investigators would begin to suspect local service station owner Melvin Chelcie Carr — a man accused of violence against women and girls spanning decades, including rape, coercion, kidnapping, and sexual assault. After Carr’s shocking death in 1977 alongside the bodies of three murder victims, authorities reopened older disappearances connected to him, including the case of Lois and Karen Williams.

    Police excavated Carr’s garage and backyard searching for evidence. They never found Lois or Karen.

    In this episode, we examine the disappearance of Lois and Karen Williams alongside the disturbing pattern of violence surrounding Melvin Chelcie Carr, a man some investigators feared may have been responsible for far more crimes than were ever proven.

    More importantly, we remember Lois and Karen themselves: a mother and daughter whose lives were interrupted, whose absence was deeply felt, and whose story deserves to be told with care.

    This episode contains discussions of sexual violence, coercion, violence against women and children, and suspected serial violence.

    📍 Indianapolis, Indiana | January 25, 1967

    📖 Featuring an original poem written in her honor, read by Megan Storm, host of the podcast A Simpler Time.

    ➡️ Help bring attention to missing and unidentified women—subscribe and share this episode.

    📍 Find us on Instagram & Facebook.

    📚 Get Aimee’s book, Doe, now available via University of Akron Press, Bookshop.org, and Amazon.

    📰 For more women-centered true crime content, subscribe to Aimee’s newsletter, GIRLHUNT.

    More about Megan Storm: Megan is the creator and host of A Simpler Time True Crime, a podcast that revisits unsolved cases from decades past and challenges the idea that a simpler time was necessarily a safer one. Through thorough research and a victim and survivor-centered approach, Megan explores forgotten mysteries, overlooked victims, and the lasting impact these cases have on families and communities.

    Her interest in true crime began long before she ever picked up a microphone. Growing up, Megan spent evenings watching true crime shows with her mom while her dad worked night shifts, an experience that sparked a lifelong fascination with criminal investigations, unsolved mysteries, and the pursuit of justice.

    One of Megan's favorite parts of podcasting is partnering with victims' families, survivors, and advocates to help tell stories with care and accuracy. She is passionate about amplifying voices that might otherwise go unheard and working alongside those closest to a case to support their shared goal of keeping stories alive and answers within reach.

    In addition to hosting the podcast, Megan has spent more than 15 years working in human services leadership. Her background in advocacy, investigation, and problem-solving informs her approach to storytelling, helping her examine cases with both curiosity and compassion.

    When she's not researching a case, Megan can usually be found training for a race, trying a new recipe, planning her next trip, cheering on Buffalo sports teams, or driving her two kids from one activity to the next.

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    51 mins
  • 137: Clackamas County Jane Doe: The Victim Richard Marquette Said No One Would Remember
    Jun 2 2026


    In June 1975, investigators followed serial killer Richard Marquette into the woods near Oregon’s Clackamas River. There, buried beneath the soil of a popular campground, they uncovered the remains of an unidentified woman—a victim Marquette reportedly claimed no one would ever look for.
    More than fifty years later, she is still known only as Clackamas County Jane Doe.
    In this episode, we examine women whose lives were taken by Richard Marquette, one of Oregon’s lesser-known serial killers, who was once added to the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted List after the murder of 23-year-old mother Joan Caudle. We also examine the story of Betty Wilson, a woman who traveled across the country hoping to build a safer life before becoming one of Marquette’s victims.
    But at the center of this story is the unidentified woman buried near the Clackamas River in 1975—a woman whose name, family, and history remain unknown.
    This episode explores violence against women, institutional failures, parole decisions, unidentified homicide victims, and what it means for a woman to remain unnamed for more than half a century.

    📍 Oregon | 1961-1975

    📖 Featuring an original poem written in their honor, read and written by our host, Aimee Baker

    ➡️ Help bring attention to missing and unidentified women—subscribe and share this episode.

    ➡️ Support our work by joining us on Patreon where you’ll get exclusive benefits

    📍 Find us on Instagram & Facebook.

    📚 Get Aimee’s book, Doe, now available via University of Akron Press, Bookshop.org, and Amazon.

    📰 For more women-centered true crime content, subscribe to Aimee’s newsletter, GIRLHUNT.

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • 136: Patricia Weeks & Cynthia Jabour: The Unsolved Mysteries Case of Robert Weeks
    May 30 2026


    Patricia Weeks, Cynthia Jabour, and Carol Ann Riley disappeared years apart after ending relationships with the same man: Robert Weeks, whose case would later be featured on Unsolved Mysteries.

    In 1979, Patricia Weeks vanished from Las Vegas shortly after divorcing Robert Weeks and gaining custody of their four children. More than a decade later, Arizona real estate agent Cynthia Jabour disappeared after telling friends she planned to leave him as well. Then, in 1986, it happened again. Nurse Carola Ann Riley went missing after trying to end her relationship with Robert.

    Their cases shared disturbing similarities: planned dinner dates, abandoned vehicles, missing personal belongings, and a man who repeatedly claimed the women had disappeared on their own.

    Their stories are about coercive control, violence against women, and what it means when justice arrives long after someone is gone.

    If you have information related to these cases, please contact the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department at (702) 828-2907.

    📍 Las Vegas, Nevada | 1968 and 1980

    📖 Featuring an original poem written in their honor, read by Ruby Wilde and Melissa Mae, hosts of the Bloody Besties podcast.

    ➡️ Help bring attention to missing and unidentified women — subscribe and share this episode.

    📍 Find us on Instagram & Facebook.

    📚 Get Aimee’s book, Doe, now available via University of Akron Press, Bookshop.org, and Amazon.

    📰 For more women-centered true crime content, subscribe to Aimee’s newsletter, GIRLHUNT.

    More about Ruby Wilde and Melissa Mae:
    Bloody Besties is your true crime podcast with best friends who have known each other since elementary school.

    Hosts are Forensic Scientist Ruby Wilde presenting little known cases to Melissa Mae, the daughter of police officers and true crime addict who will be the one to bring you fun facts about our episode.

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    48 mins
  • 135: The Evidence Left Behind: The Disappearance of Toni Bachman (Part 2)
    May 30 2026


    When Toni Bachman disappeared from White Bear Township, Minnesota in April 1997, investigators initially faced uncertainty. Some believed she may have left on her own. But as police searched the family home, disturbing evidence began to emerge—evidence that challenged the idea that Toni had simply walked away.

    In Part 2 of this two-part series, we follow the investigation into Toni Bachman’s disappearance as it shifted from a missing persons case to something far darker. Inside the Bachman home, authorities uncovered blood, tissue, and signs of violence. Yet despite mounting evidence, no arrest came for years.

    This episode explores the long aftermath of Toni’s disappearance: the changing explanations, the pressure placed on Norman Bachman’s children to recount what they witnessed, allegations of violence that followed, and the decades-long wait before charges were finally filed.

    Nearly eighteen years after Toni vanished, a confession would offer answers—but not closure.

    Because Toni Bachman has never been found.

    If you have information about the disappearance of Toni Bachman, please contact the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office at 651-266-9670.

    📍 White Bear Township, Minnesota | April 25, 1997

    📖 Featuring an original poem written in her honor, read by actress Astrid Rotenberry.

    ➡️ Help bring attention to missing and unidentified women—subscribe and share this episode.

    📍 Find us on Instagram & Facebook.

    📚 Get Aimee’s book, Doe, now available via University of Akron Press, Bookshop.org, and Amazon.

    📰 For more women-centered true crime content, subscribe to Aimee’s newsletter, GIRLHUNT.


    More about Astrid Rotenberry:
    Astrid Rotenberry is a New York–based actress best known for her role as Catherine Kelly in Netflix’s His & Hers. Other credits include The Four Seasons, Law & Order: SVU, and the upcoming Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed on Apple TV+. Originally from Tennessee, she holds a BFA in Theatre Performance and is passionate about making the arts accessible and encouraging young artists to pursue their dreams.

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    42 mins
  • 134: Missing After Logging Off: The Disappearance of Toni Bachman (Part 1)
    May 12 2026


    In 1997, as the internet connected strangers across state lines, Minnesota-native Toni Bachman formed a close bond with a man in West Virginia. Friends say she was thinking seriously about change. About leaving. About building a future that looked different from the life she had.

    Then she disappeared.

    At first, there were questions no one could answer. Did Toni leave her marriage behind? Did she run away to begin a new life? Or did something happen inside the home she shared with her husband and stepchildren?

    In Part 1 of this two-part series, we explore Toni’s life before she vanished: her marriage, devastating personal losses, career instability, and the online relationships that became a source of comfort during one of the hardest periods of her life.

    If you have information about the disappearance of Toni Bachman, please contact the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office at 651-266-9670.


    📍
    White Bear Township, Minnesota | April 25, 1997

    📖 Featuring an original poem written in her honor, read by actress Astrid Rotenberry.

    ➡️ Help bring attention to missing and unidentified women—subscribe and share this episode.

    📍 Find us on Instagram & Facebook.

    📚 Get Aimee’s book, Doe, now available via University of Akron Press, Bookshop.org, and Amazon.

    📰 For more women-centered true crime content, subscribe to Aimee’s newsletter, GIRLHUNT.



    More about Astrid Rotenberry:

    Astrid Rotenberry is a New York–based actress best known for her role as Catherine Kelly in Netflix’s His & Hers. Other credits include The Four Seasons, Law & Order: SVU, and the upcoming Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed on Apple TV+. Originally from Tennessee, she holds a BFA in Theatre Performance and is passionate about making the arts accessible and encouraging young artists to pursue their dreams.

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    34 mins