Tales From The Glovebox podcast artwork

PODCAST · true crime

Tales From The Glovebox

The video version of every story is available on YouTube. Find Tales from the Glovebox at youtube.com/@talesfromtheglovebox and watch the full experience any time.Tales from the Glovebox is a true crime and mystery podcast for the drive home, the late-night walk, and the long stretch of highway where your mind starts to wander. Every episode is built around a real case, a forgotten history, or the kind of event that made the news once and then quietly disappeared. Some of these stories happened a few towns over. Some happened a hundred years ago and still don't have a clean answer. All of them carry the feeling that this could have happened to anyone, because most of the time, it happened to someone exactly like you.Settle in. The road is dark, the miles are open, and somewhere between here and wherever you're headed, a story is going to unfold that you won't see c

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    Found Dead in a Field. Do the Notes Know Why?

    On June 30th, 1999, a woman was driving alone down a rural road near West Alton, Missouri, when something at the edge of a cornfield caught her eye. She pulled over. A man was lying face down in the dirt, fully dressed, in the middle of a hot Missouri summer. He had been there for days. His name was Ricky McCormick, he was 41 years old, and he lived fifteen miles away. He had no car. There was no bus service to that road. Nobody had reported him missing. And nobody could explain how he got there.Investigators from the Major Case Squad in St. Louis worked every angle they could find. The medical examiner could not confirm a cause of death, though a head injury was suspected. What they did know was that Ricky had last been seen three days earlier at an Amoco gas station in St. Louis, and between that sighting and that cornfield, there was nothing. No witnesses, no trail, no explanation for the fifteen miles between those two points. That detail alone told investigators something. Either the people close enough to notice his absence were too afraid to call, or the people who knew what happened were not about to pick up the phone. Ricky McCormick was the kind of man who was easy to overlook. And someone had counted on that.2 suspects emerged. His former boss, a man named Baha Hamdallah, had a reputation for being volatile and things had not ended well between him and Ricky. A second name surfaced in December of that year when word got back to investigators that a local drug dealer named Gregory Knox had told someone he killed a man from that Amoco station. Both men stayed on the radar for years. Neither was ever charged.When investigators searched Ricky's clothing they found two small folded pieces of paper in his pants pocket. Handwritten, thirty lines across two pages, capital letters and numbers and dashes and parentheses arranged in patterns that repeated with the precision of a system someone had built deliberately. The notes went to the FBI's Cryptanalysis and Racketeering Records Unit, the people who handle coded messages for the most complex investigations in the country. They worked it for years. They could not crack it.The case went cold. Twelve years passed.In March of 2011, the FBI officially ruled Ricky's death a homicide and released photographs of both notes to the public, asking for help. The response was enormous. Mathematicians, amateur codebreakers, and puzzle solvers from around the world sent in theories. The American Cryptogram Association, one of the oldest codebreaking organizations in the country, took a run at it and hit the same wall. People who knew Ricky said he had been writing notes like this since childhood, pages of the same strange symbols, and everyone around him thought it was just something he did.Here is what made the notes so confounding. Ricky McCormick could barely write his own name. His mother confirmed it. He had dropped out of high school and spent his adult life getting by on disability and whatever work he could find. And yet the system inside those notes was sophisticated enough to defeat every codebreaker who examined them for more than twenty-five years. Maybe he was smarter than anyone around him ever knew. Maybe those two pieces of paper contain the name of whoever drove him out to that field. As of today, nobody has been able to read them.Ricky McCormick's murder remains officially unsolved. The notes remain uncracked. The FBI has never closed the case.For the FULL experience, watch this story as a Video on our YouTube channel here:youtube.com/@talesfromtheglovebox

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

The video version of every story is available on YouTube. Find Tales from the Glovebox at youtube.com/@talesfromtheglovebox and watch the full experience any time.Tales from the Glovebox is a true crime and mystery podcast for the drive home, the late-night walk, and the long stretch of highway where your mind starts to wander. Every episode is built around a real case, a forgotten history, or the kind of event that made the news once and then quietly disappeared. Some of these stories happened a few towns over. Some happened a hundred years ago and still don't have a clean answer. All of them carry the feeling that this could have happened to anyone, because most of the time, it happened to someone exactly like you.Settle in. The road is dark, the miles are open, and somewhere between here and wherever you're headed, a story is going to unfold that you won't see c

HOSTED BY

Your Night Driver

CATEGORIES

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Tales From The Glovebox have?

Tales From The Glovebox currently has 1 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Tales From The Glovebox about?

The video version of every story is available on YouTube. Find Tales from the Glovebox at youtube.com/@talesfromtheglovebox and watch the full experience any time.Tales from the Glovebox is a true crime and mystery podcast for the drive home, the late-night walk, and the long stretch of highway...

How often does Tales From The Glovebox release new episodes?

Tales From The Glovebox has 1 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Tales From The Glovebox?

You can listen to Tales From The Glovebox on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Tales From The Glovebox?

Tales From The Glovebox is created and hosted by Your Night Driver.
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