
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us Fan Mail
In April 1999, 70-year-old Guy Pyke pulled into his cousin's driveway in Evans Mills, New York — and never got out of the car. A barking dog kept him away. He backed out, drove north, and was never seen again.
No body. No crash site. No trace of his midnight blue Chevy Blazer. Just silence — for 26 years and counting.
We sit down with Jennifer Wood, Guy's granddaughter, who has spent decades fighting to correct the record, coordinating underwater search teams, and refusing to let her grandfather become a forgotten file. She shares what Guy told his brothers before he vanished — words that take on a chilling new meaning in hindsight.
This is the cold case that has no peaks, no valleys. Just an empty space on a gravestone where a date of death should be.
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. If you have information on Guy Pyke or his 1989 Chevrolet Blazer (VIN: 1GNEV18K7KF176294, plate NY FMS-867), contact the Onondaga County Sheriff's Office at (315) 435-5434.
Support the show
Every Unsolved Case Deserves a Voice.
Somewhere right now, a family is waiting for answers. Not the famous cases that dominate true crime podcasts or fill network television specials — but the other cases. The ones that slipped through the cracks of media attention. The ones where a name was forgotten before it ever had a chance to be remembered.
That's exactly why TheColdCases.com exists.
We are building the most comprehensive repository of lesser-known cold cases the internet has ever seen — a dedicated, searchable archive where forgotten victims finally get a permanent home. Where their names, their faces, and their stories are preserved with the dignity and urgency they deserve. Where investigators, journalists, amateur sleuths, and compassionate strangers can connect the dots that time tried to bury.
But we can't do this alone.
This work takes time, research, resources, and an unwavering community of people who refuse to let the forgotten stay forgotten. Every case we document is hours of careful, respectful work. Every profile published is a renewed chance for justice.
You are the missing piece.
By subscribing at TheColdCases.com/subscribe, you become part of a movement — one that believes every victim matters, regardless of whether a camera was ever pointed in their direction. Your support helps us research more cases, reach more families, and keep these stories alive until answers...
By Dustin Terry | True Crime JournalistSend us Fan Mail
In April 1999, 70-year-old Guy Pyke pulled into his cousin's driveway in Evans Mills, New York — and never got out of the car. A barking dog kept him away. He backed out, drove north, and was never seen again.
No body. No crash site. No trace of his midnight blue Chevy Blazer. Just silence — for 26 years and counting.
We sit down with Jennifer Wood, Guy's granddaughter, who has spent decades fighting to correct the record, coordinating underwater search teams, and refusing to let her grandfather become a forgotten file. She shares what Guy told his brothers before he vanished — words that take on a chilling new meaning in hindsight.
This is the cold case that has no peaks, no valleys. Just an empty space on a gravestone where a date of death should be.
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. If you have information on Guy Pyke or his 1989 Chevrolet Blazer (VIN: 1GNEV18K7KF176294, plate NY FMS-867), contact the Onondaga County Sheriff's Office at (315) 435-5434.
Support the show
Every Unsolved Case Deserves a Voice.
Somewhere right now, a family is waiting for answers. Not the famous cases that dominate true crime podcasts or fill network television specials — but the other cases. The ones that slipped through the cracks of media attention. The ones where a name was forgotten before it ever had a chance to be remembered.
That's exactly why TheColdCases.com exists.
We are building the most comprehensive repository of lesser-known cold cases the internet has ever seen — a dedicated, searchable archive where forgotten victims finally get a permanent home. Where their names, their faces, and their stories are preserved with the dignity and urgency they deserve. Where investigators, journalists, amateur sleuths, and compassionate strangers can connect the dots that time tried to bury.
But we can't do this alone.
This work takes time, research, resources, and an unwavering community of people who refuse to let the forgotten stay forgotten. Every case we document is hours of careful, respectful work. Every profile published is a renewed chance for justice.
You are the missing piece.
By subscribing at TheColdCases.com/subscribe, you become part of a movement — one that believes every victim matters, regardless of whether a camera was ever pointed in their direction. Your support helps us research more cases, reach more families, and keep these stories alive until answers...