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The Skeleton Key Chronicles is your daily source for curated true crime, apocalyptic culture and other curious content.💀🗝🖤
The real-life case that inspired the book and later the 1984 television film The Burning Bed, starring Farrah Fawcett, traces back to this very night in 1977 in the small town of Dansville, Michigan.
Francine Hughes had already divorced her husband Mickey years earlier. Their marriage officially ended in April 1971, but despite that, he moved back into the house, ensuring she would never truly be free from him, as he continued to control nearly every aspect of her life. The couple had four children together who also lived in the home, and the situation between them remained volatile in the years that followed.
On the evening of March 9, tensions inside the house escalated again after Mickey returned home intoxicated. When he eventually fell asleep, Francine told the children who were home to put on their coats and wait in the car outside. She then poured gasoline around the bed and ignited it.
Afterward, she drove straight to the local police station and told officers what had happened.
The case that followed drew national attention. At trial, a jury found Hughes not guilty after her attorneys argued she had been in a temporary mental state brought on by years of instability in the home. The proceedings later became closely associated with what came to be known as the battered woman defense.
Francine's story later became the subject of the 1980 nonfiction book The Burning Bed by Faith McNulty, which was adapted into the television film starring Farrah Fawcett. When it aired in 1984, the movie reached a massive audience and helped bring the realities of domestic abuse into public conversation across the United States.
In the years that followed, Francine rebuilt her life. She remarried country musician Robert Wilson, trained as a nurse, and largely stayed out of the public eye. Francine Wilson passed away on March 22, 2017 at the age of 69.
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In the early hours of March 8, 2014, Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappeared from civilian air traffic controllers’ radar screens while en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. There were 239 people on board, including passengers and crew, and less than an hour after departure the aircraft went mechanically dark and disappeared from radar. Malaysian military radar continued tracking the aircraft as it turned away from its planned route, flying back across the Malay Peninsula and continuing west until it eventually disappeared from radar coverage.
The search for the missing aircraft would stretch on for more than three years and eventually become the most extensive effort in the history of aviation. Early search operations focused on the South China Sea before investigators expanded the search area west toward the Andaman Sea.
But later analysis would point investigators in an entirely different direction, suggesting the aircraft had traveled south into the remote southern Indian Ocean, something that seemed increasingly likely when pieces of aircraft debris began washing ashore along coastlines in the western Indian Ocean, several of which were eventually confirmed to have come from Flight 370.
After more than three years of combing vast stretches of ocean without locating the aircraft, the international effort was suspended in January 2017. When a final report was released the following year, investigators were still unable to say with certainty what had happened. Another attempt was later made by the private exploration company Ocean Infinity, but that effort also ended without locating the plane.
Despite years of multinational search efforts and detailed analysis of satellite data, the aircraft’s location and the sequence of events leading to its disappearance have never been confirmed. The case was revisited in a 2023 Netflix documentary that took a closer look at the evidence and the many competing theories, offering a deep dive into what may have happened that night. Earlier this year a renewed search started once again for flight MH370 in the southern Indian Ocean.
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The film Fargo was released thirty years ago, on this day in 1996. The Coen Brothers opened the movie with a claim that it was based on a true story, though they later acknowledged that line was meant as a bit of satire aimed at the whole “true story” aspect of filmmaking.
Even so, parts of the plot were loosely inspired by real events the filmmakers had come across over the years, which helped give the story its grounded and strangely believable tone.
They also drew on several real-life cases while shaping parts of the story. One was the 1963 case of Carol Thompson in St. Paul, Minnesota, where her husband Eugene brought too many players into a scheme to end her. Another was the 1972 case of Virginia Piper, the wife of a Minneapolis banker who was taken in an elaborate plot but later found safe. Then there was the now-famous wood chipper scene, which was partly inspired by a 1986 case in Newtown, Connecticut involving Richard Crafts and the way he attempted to conceal what happened to his wife, Helle Crafts.
Each of those cases is complex and interesting in its own right, and certainly worth a trip down the rabbit hole. As for Fargo, I definitely recommend checking out the film if you’ve never seen it.
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