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The Skeleton Key Chronicles was born from a lifelong fascination with mysterious and sometimes macabre subject matter along with a love or research. So come along and check out some of my latest offerings, or as my dear Grandmother used to say, ” Step into my parlor, said the spider to the fly.”

Be sure to check out The Skeleton Key Chronicles on Facebook for your daily true crime fix. I post often and detail some of the most compelling cases in the news that are piquing my interest.

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The Skeleton Key Chronicles

The Skeleton Key Chronicles

The Skeleton Key Chronicles is your daily source for curated true crime, apocalyptic culture and other curious content.💀🗝🖤

Yesterday marked one year since Virginia Giuffre’s passing. On Saturday, people gathered on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. for what organizers called a “butterfly vigil,” a daytime event centered on survivors and advocacy. Family members, supporters, and others showed up to honor her and keep attention on the issues she spent years speaking about.

Giuffre became one of the most recognized voices pushing for accountability, and over time her name stayed tied to ongoing efforts for more transparency around these cases. During the vigil, her brother Sky Roberts told the crowd they would keep going, saying she wouldn’t have stopped until answers were reached, as advocates also called for changes in the law and the release of files.

What she left behind goes beyond her own story. It’s a reminder that one person choosing to speak can change everything, and give others the courage to step forward.

Virginia Lee Giuffre
August 9,1983 ~ April 25, 2025
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Yesterday marked one

In February 1982, 16-year-old Roxanne Sharp was found in a wooded area near the St. Tammany Parish fairgrounds, and her death quickly became the focus of an investigation. She was a young mother from Covington, Louisiana, and had been missing for several days before she was found by people taking part in the Dixie Trail Ride, an annual caravan of covered wagons that travels from Covington to Baton Rouge.

Back then, there wasn’t much for investigators to go on, and detectives later said a culture of fear in the area made people hesitant to speak up. In the years that followed, the case took a number of turns, including a confession from Henry Lee Lucas, who at one point claimed responsibility for crimes across the country. Many of those confessions were later called into question, and his connection to Roxanne’s case was never confirmed.

Then in early 2025, a podcast titled Who Killed Roxanne Sharp? revisited the case and included a tip line for listeners, and over time new information began to come in, including from people who had never previously spoken up. Investigators say those tips, along with advances in DNA technology, helped move the case forward and identify the people involved.

Now, more than forty years later, investigators say four individuals have been taken into custody in connection to her case, all local to the area. Two were already serving time on unrelated cases when they were linked to Roxanne, while another man from Covington was recently taken into custody there, and a fourth was located in Dayton, Ohio and is awaiting extradition back to Louisiana.

It took decades, but people finally speaking up helped close a case that had sat unresolved for years.

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In February 1982, 16
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Nearly 50 years ago, a 16-year-old Tennessee student vanished during a school trip to the Smoky Mountains, while seemingly surrounded by classmates and teachers.

Teresa “Trenny” Gibson was a Bearden High School student from Knoxville. On October 8th, 1976, she was on a class trip to what was then called Clingmans Dome, inside Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

At some point during the hike, Trenny was seen on the Forney Creek Trail heading back toward the parking area. She had been with other students, but somewhere along that stretch, she fell out of view and didn’t make it back with the group. Search crews, park staff, and dogs combed the area, and investigators looked closely at what might have happened, but nothing ever gave them a clear answer.

As the years went on, a couple of small details stuck with her family.
One involved a jacket Trenny had borrowed that day from a classmate named Robert Simpson. She was last seen wearing it, but in photos taken during the search, the same student who loaned it to her appears to be wearing it again. No one ever really explained how it got back to him.

Another alleged detail came from her brother, who later said he noticed Trenny’s comb sitting on that same student’s dashboard not long after the trip. But none of those details were ever met with a clear explanation, right alongside the bigger question of how someone could disappear in a matter of minutes on a trail full of people.

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Nearly 50 years ago,
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