
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us Fan Mail
Eight women were found dead in Jennings, Louisiana. Nobody’s been held responsible.
That’s the case.
This all happens in Jefferson Davis Parish. Small town. Water everywhere. Canals, drainage ditches, roadside drops. If you’ve ever been down there, you already know—there are a lot of places where something can be left and not found right away. And when water gets involved, whatever was there doesn’t stay long.
We walk through it from 2005 to 2009 and stick to what actually holds up. Where the bodies were found. How close they were to each other. What lines up, and what doesn’t. The problem is, there isn’t one clean pattern. Same general area, same kind of recovery locations—but the details don’t lock in.
Then you get into who these women were. Same circles. Drugs. Unstable housing. Survival sex work. Whether it should matter or not, it does—because it affects how fast people react when someone disappears.
And then it starts to break down.
There are reports and allegations tied to local law enforcement. Some of it documented. Some of it coming from people in the community. We keep that line clear. But once that gets introduced, everything gets harder to trust. People stop talking, or they never talk in the first place.
We also run it through Kade Mercer to see if this even fits a normal serial case. It doesn’t really. No clean escalation. No consistent method. The only thing that holds is access—access to the same group of people, and access to places where bodies can be dropped.
At some point, you’re not looking at a clean theory anymore. You’re looking at a mess.
And that’s where it still sits.
Listen to the episode, then decide for yourself what you think actually happened in Jennings.
“Thank you for listening to Things I Want to Know.
You want these stories, and we want to bring them to you — so hit the support link and keep this circus, and the mics, alive.
Then do us a favor and rate and subscribe; it helps the show find more people like you — the ones who like their mysteries real and their storytellers unfiltered.
And if you want to wear a little of this madness, grab some Andrea-approved gear at paulgnewton.com.
We make t
Support the show
Things I Want To Know
If you enjoy the show, or you just like supporting people who refuse to shut up, grab some merch at PaulGNewton.com. It keeps the lights on and the caffeine flowing.
By Paul G Newton4.9
1414 ratings
Send us Fan Mail
Eight women were found dead in Jennings, Louisiana. Nobody’s been held responsible.
That’s the case.
This all happens in Jefferson Davis Parish. Small town. Water everywhere. Canals, drainage ditches, roadside drops. If you’ve ever been down there, you already know—there are a lot of places where something can be left and not found right away. And when water gets involved, whatever was there doesn’t stay long.
We walk through it from 2005 to 2009 and stick to what actually holds up. Where the bodies were found. How close they were to each other. What lines up, and what doesn’t. The problem is, there isn’t one clean pattern. Same general area, same kind of recovery locations—but the details don’t lock in.
Then you get into who these women were. Same circles. Drugs. Unstable housing. Survival sex work. Whether it should matter or not, it does—because it affects how fast people react when someone disappears.
And then it starts to break down.
There are reports and allegations tied to local law enforcement. Some of it documented. Some of it coming from people in the community. We keep that line clear. But once that gets introduced, everything gets harder to trust. People stop talking, or they never talk in the first place.
We also run it through Kade Mercer to see if this even fits a normal serial case. It doesn’t really. No clean escalation. No consistent method. The only thing that holds is access—access to the same group of people, and access to places where bodies can be dropped.
At some point, you’re not looking at a clean theory anymore. You’re looking at a mess.
And that’s where it still sits.
Listen to the episode, then decide for yourself what you think actually happened in Jennings.
“Thank you for listening to Things I Want to Know.
You want these stories, and we want to bring them to you — so hit the support link and keep this circus, and the mics, alive.
Then do us a favor and rate and subscribe; it helps the show find more people like you — the ones who like their mysteries real and their storytellers unfiltered.
And if you want to wear a little of this madness, grab some Andrea-approved gear at paulgnewton.com.
We make t
Support the show
Things I Want To Know
If you enjoy the show, or you just like supporting people who refuse to shut up, grab some merch at PaulGNewton.com. It keeps the lights on and the caffeine flowing.

369,956 Listeners

2 Listeners

8 Listeners