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Frankston was supposed to be safe. A place you walked through. A place you didn't think about.
In the winter of 1993, that illusion collapsed.
Three young women—Deborah Fream, Elizabeth Stevens, and Natalie Russell—were murdered in public spaces across this quiet Australian suburb. No connection. No warning. No pattern anyone could avoid.
This episode of Crime Stands Still strips away the mythology of serial killers and focuses on what made the Frankston murders so destabilizing: they were random, opportunistic, and happened in plain sight.
Stay through the final minutes for why the Frankston murders still shape how women move through public space—and why randomness may be the most unsettling motive of all.
👉 For deeper insight into surviving the mind games of a psychopath, get my book Surviving a Psychopath. https://kerriedroban.com/surviving-psychopath
✅ Join my Masterclass: https://kerrie-zhivago.mykajabi.com/surviving-a-psychopath
Could YOU spot a psychopath?
Take the Quiz: https://kerrie-zhivago.mykajabi.com/free-mini-quiz
"Richly told, grippingly crafted-Kerrie Droban's podcasts are drama of the highest order...you don't just hear the story. You visit a world you could never imagine, led by a guide who knows what to look for!" D'artagnon Goldfarb
👉 Don't miss exclusive true crime analysis and behind-the-scenes content—subscribe to my newsletter today: https://kerrie-zhivago.mykajabi.com/newsletters/the-droban-chronicles-behind-the-screams-and-inside-true-crime/subscribe
Links Facebookfacebook.com/KerrieDroban Linkedinlinkedin.com/in/kerrie-droban Instagraminstagram.com/kerrie_droban
By Kerrie DrobanFrankston was supposed to be safe. A place you walked through. A place you didn't think about.
In the winter of 1993, that illusion collapsed.
Three young women—Deborah Fream, Elizabeth Stevens, and Natalie Russell—were murdered in public spaces across this quiet Australian suburb. No connection. No warning. No pattern anyone could avoid.
This episode of Crime Stands Still strips away the mythology of serial killers and focuses on what made the Frankston murders so destabilizing: they were random, opportunistic, and happened in plain sight.
Stay through the final minutes for why the Frankston murders still shape how women move through public space—and why randomness may be the most unsettling motive of all.
👉 For deeper insight into surviving the mind games of a psychopath, get my book Surviving a Psychopath. https://kerriedroban.com/surviving-psychopath
✅ Join my Masterclass: https://kerrie-zhivago.mykajabi.com/surviving-a-psychopath
Could YOU spot a psychopath?
Take the Quiz: https://kerrie-zhivago.mykajabi.com/free-mini-quiz
"Richly told, grippingly crafted-Kerrie Droban's podcasts are drama of the highest order...you don't just hear the story. You visit a world you could never imagine, led by a guide who knows what to look for!" D'artagnon Goldfarb
👉 Don't miss exclusive true crime analysis and behind-the-scenes content—subscribe to my newsletter today: https://kerrie-zhivago.mykajabi.com/newsletters/the-droban-chronicles-behind-the-screams-and-inside-true-crime/subscribe
Links Facebookfacebook.com/KerrieDroban Linkedinlinkedin.com/in/kerrie-droban Instagraminstagram.com/kerrie_droban