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In the summer of 1997, a cross-country killing spree gripped the United States, ending in one of the most shocking celebrity murders in modern history. At the center of it all was Andrew Cunanan—a charismatic, intelligent young man whose life of deception unraveled into violence.
This episode traces Cunanan’s story from the beginning: his upbringing in San Diego, his father’s financial crimes and abandonment, and Cunanan’s early talent for reinvention. Known for his charm and ability to move within wealthy social circles, Cunanan built a life on lies—fabricated identities, exaggerated wealth, and carefully curated relationships with older, affluent men.
By April 1997, that façade collapsed. What followed was a brutal spree across multiple states. Cunanan murdered Jeffrey Trail in Minneapolis, followed by David Madson, whose body was discovered near Rush City, Minnesota. Days later, he killed Chicago real estate developer Lee Miglin in a particularly violent attack that shocked investigators. His fourth victim, William Reese, was murdered in New Jersey as Cunanan continued south.
The spree culminated on July 15, 1997, when Cunanan assassinated fashion icon Gianni Versace outside his Miami Beach home, igniting an international media frenzy and one of the largest manhunts in FBI history at the time.
In this episode, we examine the timeline of the murders, the psychological profile of Cunanan, and the systemic failures that allowed him to evade capture for so long. We also explore the cultural context of the late 1990s—media sensationalism, homophobia, and public fear—and how those forces shaped both the investigation and Cunanan’s legacy.
This is a story of identity, obsession, and collapse—of a man who constructed a life on illusion, and the deadly consequences when it began to fall apart.
Maureen Orth, Vulgar Favors: Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace, and the Largest Failed Manhunt in U.S. History
Gary Indiana, Three Months Fever: The Andrew Cunanan Story
Federal Bureau of Investigation, “Andrew Cunanan Murder Spree (1997)” (FBI Records / Vault)
Chicago Police Department, Lee Miglin case files and reports (1997)
Miami-Dade Police Department, Gianni Versace homicide investigation records (1997)
San Diego Police Department, background records on Andrew Cunanan
The New York Times archives (April–July 1997 coverage of Cunanan spree)
Los Angeles Times archives (1997 investigative reporting on Cunanan)
Chicago Tribune archives (Lee Miglin murder coverage, 1997)
The Washington Post archives (national manhunt reporting, 1997)
Time, “The Hunt for Andrew Cunanan” (1997)
Newsweek, coverage of Cunanan and Versace murder (1997)
American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace (based on Orth’s reporting)
Vanity Fair, Maureen Orth original reporting on Cunanan (1997–1998)
CNN archives (1997 breaking coverage of Versace murder and manhunt)
Court TV archival coverage and legal analysis of Cunanan case
By Monte Mader5
5454 ratings
In the summer of 1997, a cross-country killing spree gripped the United States, ending in one of the most shocking celebrity murders in modern history. At the center of it all was Andrew Cunanan—a charismatic, intelligent young man whose life of deception unraveled into violence.
This episode traces Cunanan’s story from the beginning: his upbringing in San Diego, his father’s financial crimes and abandonment, and Cunanan’s early talent for reinvention. Known for his charm and ability to move within wealthy social circles, Cunanan built a life on lies—fabricated identities, exaggerated wealth, and carefully curated relationships with older, affluent men.
By April 1997, that façade collapsed. What followed was a brutal spree across multiple states. Cunanan murdered Jeffrey Trail in Minneapolis, followed by David Madson, whose body was discovered near Rush City, Minnesota. Days later, he killed Chicago real estate developer Lee Miglin in a particularly violent attack that shocked investigators. His fourth victim, William Reese, was murdered in New Jersey as Cunanan continued south.
The spree culminated on July 15, 1997, when Cunanan assassinated fashion icon Gianni Versace outside his Miami Beach home, igniting an international media frenzy and one of the largest manhunts in FBI history at the time.
In this episode, we examine the timeline of the murders, the psychological profile of Cunanan, and the systemic failures that allowed him to evade capture for so long. We also explore the cultural context of the late 1990s—media sensationalism, homophobia, and public fear—and how those forces shaped both the investigation and Cunanan’s legacy.
This is a story of identity, obsession, and collapse—of a man who constructed a life on illusion, and the deadly consequences when it began to fall apart.
Maureen Orth, Vulgar Favors: Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace, and the Largest Failed Manhunt in U.S. History
Gary Indiana, Three Months Fever: The Andrew Cunanan Story
Federal Bureau of Investigation, “Andrew Cunanan Murder Spree (1997)” (FBI Records / Vault)
Chicago Police Department, Lee Miglin case files and reports (1997)
Miami-Dade Police Department, Gianni Versace homicide investigation records (1997)
San Diego Police Department, background records on Andrew Cunanan
The New York Times archives (April–July 1997 coverage of Cunanan spree)
Los Angeles Times archives (1997 investigative reporting on Cunanan)
Chicago Tribune archives (Lee Miglin murder coverage, 1997)
The Washington Post archives (national manhunt reporting, 1997)
Time, “The Hunt for Andrew Cunanan” (1997)
Newsweek, coverage of Cunanan and Versace murder (1997)
American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace (based on Orth’s reporting)
Vanity Fair, Maureen Orth original reporting on Cunanan (1997–1998)
CNN archives (1997 breaking coverage of Versace murder and manhunt)
Court TV archival coverage and legal analysis of Cunanan case

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