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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.💀🗝🖤

Late last month in Anderson County, South Carolina, two kids were down by a creek in the Homeland Park area when they noticed bones along the bank. At first, it didn’t seem like anything unusual, they thought they were animal bones, but once adults got involved, it became clear pretty quickly that wasn’t the case.

Investigators came out and started going through the area more carefully, and over time they ended up recovering more than 70 human bones scattered around that stretch of land. The county coroner said the condition of the remains, along with roots growing through and around them, points to them being there for a long time, possibly more than a decade. A forensic anthropologist from Clemson is now involved, trying to figure out exactly what they’re looking at and how many individuals may be represented.

Based on that estimate, these remains would likely date back to cases from at least the mid-2010s or earlier. There’s no confirmed connection to any specific person right now, but it does narrow the window investigators would be looking at as they start comparing records.

For now, everything comes down to identification and whatever the analysis can pull from the remains. Whether it leads to one name or several is still unknown.

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Late last month in A

There’s a documentary that came out a few weeks back that kind of slipped under the radar, for me anyway. Apparently it follows two brothers who just showed up in British Columbia saying they’d been raised out in the wilderness with their family, completely off the grid.

Wild Boys: Strangers in Town goes back to 2003, when Will and Tom Green arrived in the small town of Vernon with that story, and people just… went with it. That was until journalists and local authorities started took a closer look. It’s based on the popular 2022 podcast Chameleon: Wild Boys, and is now streaming as a two-part series on Paramount+.

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I saw that CeCe Moore just made a really excellent point about the Nancy Guthrie case, and it completely puts one small detail in a different light, no pun intended.

In the doorbell footage outside her Tucson home, the person seen approaching appears to be holding a flashlight in their mouth while moving around the entryway. At first glance, it just looks like a practical way to keep both hands free in the dark. But that single detail might matter more than anything else collected so far.

Right now, the DNA from inside the home is described as a complex mixture, which has made things harder to sort out, and without the flashlight, attention turns to where a cleaner sample might exist.

If it was held in someone’s mouth, that contact could have transferred onto their hands once it was removed, and then onto something else inside the home like a light switch or door handle close by.

When you add in facts like DNA collection can be surprisingly nuanced and often comes down to the experience of the team on scene, especially when it comes to what gets swabbed and what doesn’t. In this case, the lead investigator had never handled a case like this before, so it’s possible there are surfaces inside the home that were never tested and could still hold a clean sample.

So instead of focusing only on what was obvious, the answer could come from something much more ordinary that didn’t stand out at the time. Let's hope Pima County is listening.

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I saw that CeCe Moor
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