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Episode 8: The Delphi Case — Part 2
In Episode 8 of The Casewalker Chronicles, we continue our examination of the Delphi case by focusing on the forensic evidence presented in the investigation.
Following the timeline established in Part 1, this episode examines the reported recovery of an unfired cartridge and the toolmark analysis used to associate that cartridge with a firearm.
This episode does not reconstruct events or present theories.
It examines how evidence is interpreted.
Using the Casewalker Evidence Book Method, we analyze how firearm-related toolmarks are created, how cartridges may be marked without being fired, and how those markings are compared within forensic examination.
We clearly distinguish between documented information, expert interpretation, and the limitations of this type of evidence—particularly where conclusions rely on pattern comparison rather than statistical certainty.
This episode focuses on the structure and limits of forensic evidence, and how those limits shape what conclusions can be supported.
This episode reflects our investigative commitment:
Every method.
Every limitation.
Only what the record supports.
⚠️ Listener Note:
This episode discusses the murders of two minors and the forensic examination of evidence within a criminal investigation that has resulted in a criminal prosecution. Listener discretion is advised.
🔦 Missing Person Spotlight:
This episode includes a spotlight on Kylin Hammons, a 16-year-old missing from Indianapolis, Indiana.
Full documentation, sources, missing-person spotlights, and episode updates are available at: www.thecasewalkerchronicles.com
Support The Casewalker Chronicles
If you value independent, evidence-based investigative work, you can support the research and production behind the show.
Patreon (monthly support)
https://www.patreon.com/cw/TheCasewalkerChronicles
Ko-fi (one-time support)
https://ko-fi.com/casewalkerchronicles
Support helps fund:
-> research time
-> public records requests
-> document review
-> podcast production
Support the show
By Lacey and NicolasEpisode 8: The Delphi Case — Part 2
In Episode 8 of The Casewalker Chronicles, we continue our examination of the Delphi case by focusing on the forensic evidence presented in the investigation.
Following the timeline established in Part 1, this episode examines the reported recovery of an unfired cartridge and the toolmark analysis used to associate that cartridge with a firearm.
This episode does not reconstruct events or present theories.
It examines how evidence is interpreted.
Using the Casewalker Evidence Book Method, we analyze how firearm-related toolmarks are created, how cartridges may be marked without being fired, and how those markings are compared within forensic examination.
We clearly distinguish between documented information, expert interpretation, and the limitations of this type of evidence—particularly where conclusions rely on pattern comparison rather than statistical certainty.
This episode focuses on the structure and limits of forensic evidence, and how those limits shape what conclusions can be supported.
This episode reflects our investigative commitment:
Every method.
Every limitation.
Only what the record supports.
⚠️ Listener Note:
This episode discusses the murders of two minors and the forensic examination of evidence within a criminal investigation that has resulted in a criminal prosecution. Listener discretion is advised.
🔦 Missing Person Spotlight:
This episode includes a spotlight on Kylin Hammons, a 16-year-old missing from Indianapolis, Indiana.
Full documentation, sources, missing-person spotlights, and episode updates are available at: www.thecasewalkerchronicles.com
Support The Casewalker Chronicles
If you value independent, evidence-based investigative work, you can support the research and production behind the show.
Patreon (monthly support)
https://www.patreon.com/cw/TheCasewalkerChronicles
Ko-fi (one-time support)
https://ko-fi.com/casewalkerchronicles
Support helps fund:
-> research time
-> public records requests
-> document review
-> podcast production
Support the show