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Highway to Hell

Monte Mader
Highway to Hell
Último episodio

36 episodios

  • Highway to Hell

    36. All Power- No Accountability: Epstein Part 2

    24/02/2026 | 1 h 20 min
    After his sweetheart deal in 2008, Epstein was able to reintegrate into life and maintain his trafficking ring without any loss in wealth, associations or connections.
    This episode tracks his life and dealings from 2008 to his death in 2019, the aftermath of his cruelty, the arrest and trial of Ghislaine Maxwell and the recent release of the Epstein files.
    As of now, no man involved with Epstein and his human trafficking has been arrested in the US
    Sources
    The source list is way too big for the show notes but is available upon request at [email protected]
  • Highway to Hell

    35. Boys will be Boys & The Sweetheart Deal - Jeffrey Epstein Part 1

    18/02/2026 | 1 h 37 min
    **Please forgive some slight changes as this had to be recorded remotely*
    Please support the show at patreon.com/highwaytohellpodcast
    3 million more Epstein files were released and yet in the US there has been no further investigation, no arrests. Files that detail the rape, murder, cannibalism of children result in no arrests.
    The release of the files almost extend Epsteins story- a man of deception, greed and who skated through his life with absolutely no accountability. The middle class Jewish boy, born into an average Brooklyn jewish family but who called himself "poor, smart, and desperate to be rich". Desperate for the elite and the luxury of New York, and then the world.
    A man, who with no college degree who was hired to teach at the elite Dalton school anyway because of his proficiency at math. He was inappropriate with teenage girls but removed quietly- no accountability, no embarrassment for the school. But a parent who met him there brought him into Bear Sterns, with no degree, no qualifications, and when his deceit ran out, he was released quietly. Epstein then shaped himself as the financial advisor of the elite of the elite. He only needed one client, and he found it in Leslie Wexner who gave Epstein all of the keys to his kingdom. When Epstein misappropriated funds, basically gave himself a New York mansion, they settled quietly out of court- no accountability, no embarrassment.
    If any single person had exposed Epstein for who he was, the files likely wouldn't exist. And when he finally did get caught for abusing minors, the district attorney and FBI cut him the sweetheart deal of a lifetime. 12 hours a day in jail for 13 months, getting to work in his private office, privacy and a non prosecutorial agreement for all his friends who participated in trafficking and raping minors. They went so far as to lie to his victims about it.
    No accountability. No embarrassment. Boys will be boys after all.
    Sources
    ABC News. (2020, January 24). Billionaire businessman Leslie Wexner refuses to reveal full scope of Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged thefts. ABC News.
    Alon, S. (2009). The evolution of class inequality in higher education: Competition, exclusion, and adaptation. American Sociological Review, 74(5), 731–755.
    Barak, G. (2015). The crimes of the powerful: Marxism, crime and deviance. Routledge.
    Bernstein, M. (1996). The education of the Jewish community: Class, culture, and schooling. University Press.
    Bourdieu, P. (1986). The forms of capital. In J. Richardson (Ed.), Handbook of theory and research for the sociology of education (pp. 241–258). Greenwood.
    Brown, J. K. (2018, November). Perversion of justice [Investigative series]. Miami Herald.
    Brown, J. K. (2021). Perversion of justice: The Jeffrey Epstein story. William Morrow.
    Budd, K. M. (2024). Responding to crimes of a sexual nature: What we really want is no more victims. The Sentencing Project.
    CBC News. (2019, August 7). Victoria’s Secret owner says disgraced financier Epstein stole $46M from him. CBC News.
    CBC News. (2020, November 11). U.S. Justice Dept. report finds “poor judgment” exercised in Jeffrey Epstein case. CBC News.
    Center for American Progress. (2022, December 13). America’s broken criminal legal system contributes to wealth inequality. Center for American Progress.
    CBS News. (2019, August 11). Jeffrey Epstein may have taken “vast sums” from Victoria’s Secret billionaire Leslie Wexner. CBS News.
    Clarke, M. (2023). Responding to crimes of a sexual nature: What we really want is no more victims. The Sentencing Project.
    Collins, R. (1979). The credential society: An historical sociology of education and stratification. Academic Press.
    Cooley, A., & Ron, J. (2002). The NGO scramble: Organizational insecurity and the political economy of transnational action. International Security, 27(1), 5–39.
    FULL LIST OF SOURCES AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST
    [email protected]
  • Highway to Hell

    34. The Curious Case of Jon Benet

    10/02/2026 | 1 h 29 min
    A ransom note was found on the stairs of the Ramsey house on December 26, 1996. Patsy Ramsey quickly called police and reported that her daughter, JonBenét, was missing. The police treated it as a kidnapping since the three page ransom note demanded $118,000, the exact Christmas bonus, her father John had received.
    Police failed to secure the entire scene, failed to search the house thoroughly,but several hours later John Ramsey searched the house himself and found JonBenét’s body in a small basement room. She had suffered a severe skull fracture and had been strangled with a homemade garrote fashioned from a broken paintbrush handle and cord.
    An unusually long ransom note written in the families home, physical evidence from the family on her body, no sign of forced entry but also- no indications of prior abuse. Perhaps one of the strangest cold cases in US history.

    Sources
    Books
    Steve Thomas. JonBenét: Inside the Ramsey Murder Investigation. St. Martin’s Press, 2000.
    Lawrence Schiller. Perfect Murder, Perfect Town. HarperCollins, 1999.
    James Kolar. Foreign Faction. Ventus Publishing, 2012.
    Paula Woodward. We Have Your Daughter. Prospecta Press, 2016.
    Paula Woodward. Unsolved: The JonBenét Ramsey Murder 25 Years Later. City Point Press, 2021.
    Cyril Wecht & Greg Saitz. Who Killed JonBenét Ramsey?. Onyx Books, 1998.
    Primary / Official Documents
    Boulder Police Department. Case reports, warrants, affidavits, and investigative summaries (1996–2000).
    Boulder County District Attorney’s Office. Grand jury proceedings and charging documents.
    Federal Bureau of Investigation. Forensic analysis support reports (DNA testing, handwriting analysis, behavioral science input).
    Colorado Bureau of Investigation. Laboratory reports and forensic testing records.
    Boulder County Coroner’s Office. Autopsy report of JonBenét Ramsey, December 27, 1996.
    Grand Jury Indictment (People v. John and Patricia Ramsey), 1999 (publicly released redacted indictment, 2013).
    Major Contemporary Journalism / Archives
    The Denver Post investigative coverage archive (1996–present).
    Rocky Mountain News historical coverage archive.
    The New York Times national reporting on the investigation and legal developments.
    CBS News case timeline and documentary reporting.
    ABC News investigative specials and interviews.
    Court TV trial analysis and case coverage (archived).
    Documentaries / Long-form Reporting (use cautiously but commonly cited)
    The Case of: JonBenét Ramsey. CBS.
    JonBenét Ramsey: What Really Happened?. ABC News.
    Dateline NBC special episodes on the case.
  • Highway to Hell

    33. Quiver Over Care- The Story of Andrea Yates

    02/02/2026 | 1 h 24 min
    Andrea Yates, a Texas mother of five, drowned her children in a bathtub on June 20, 2001, shocking the nation. She immediately confessed to police and was later found not guilty by reason of insanity. Her medical history showed years of severe postpartum depression and psychosis, multiple hospitalizations, and suicide attempts. Doctors had warned her husband, Rusty Yates, that further pregnancies could worsen her condition and that she should not be left alone with the children. These warnings went unheeded.
    Rusty and Andrea adhered to a strict conservative Christian framework that emphasized traditional gender roles, homeschooling, and isolation from secular influences. Andrea gave up her nursing career to become a full-time mother, homeschooling all five children while managing household duties under increasing mental strain.
    A significant influence was evangelical street preacher Michael Woroniecki, whose writings and sermons the Yateses followed closely. Woroniecki preached that women must be submissive and that modern society was spiritually corrupt. He taught that mothers could lead their children to damnation by failing to follow God’s will. Andrea, in her delusional state, internalized these messages and believed her children were spiritually doomed.
    This religious pressure, combined with extreme isolation and untreated psychosis, shaped Andrea’s belief that killing her children was a way to save them from eternal suffering. Her statements after the killings reflected this belief, as she said she was trying to be a good mother and protect her children from Satan. Her case remains one of the most deeply tragic examples of how rigid religious ideology and untreated mental illness can collide.

    Sources:
    Texas v. Yates, 99-CR-2990 through 99-CR-2994, Harris County District Court, trial transcripts and court records, 2002.
    Texas v. Yates, retrial transcripts and court records, Harris County District Court, 2006.
    Yates v. State, 171 S.W.3d 215 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2005), Texas Court of Appeals opinion overturning the first conviction.
    Resnick, Phillip J. “Filicide in the United States.” American Journal of Psychiatry, 126(3), 1969, 325–334.
    Resnick, Phillip J. expert testimony in State of Texas v. Andrea Yates, 2002 and 2006.
    Dietz, Park. expert testimony in State of Texas v. Andrea Yates, 2002.
    Spinelli, Margaret G. “Maternal Infanticide Associated With Mental Illness: Prevention and the Promise of Saved Lives.” American Journal of Psychiatry, 161(9), 2004.
    Friedman, Susan Hatters, and Deborah Hensel. “Child Murder by Mothers: A Critical Analysis of the Current State of Knowledge and a Research Agenda.” American Journal of Psychiatry, 162(9), 2005.
    Journal of Forensic Sciences. maternal filicide and postpartum psychosis (2000–2010 issues).
    National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI). Educational materials on postpartum mental illness and psychosis.
    Michael and Debi Woroniecki, Mission to the World ministries newsletters, sermons, and correspondence admitted to evidence
    Hassan, Steven. Combating Cult Mind Control. Rochester, VT: Park Street Press, 2015 edition.
    The New York Times. “Texas Mother Found Guilty in Drowning of Her Children.” 2002; and follow-up reporting
    Houston Chronicle. Brian Rogers and staff. Ongoing coverage of the Yates case, 2001–2006.
    The Washington Post. “Yates Conviction Overturned” and related trial coverage, 2005–2006.
    Los Angeles Times. “Depression, Religion and the Yates Family Tragedy,” 2002 investigative reporting.
    Associated Press. National wire service reports on the Yates arrests, trial, appeals, and retrial, 2001–2006.
    ABC News. 20/20. “The Andrea Yates Story” broadcast segments and transcripts.
    NBC News. Dateline NBC. Andrea Yates case episode and transcripts.
    A&E Network. The Crimes That Changed Us, Season 1, Episode “Andrea Yates,”
    Investigation Discovery. The Cult Behind the Killer, Andrea Yates
    Cummins, Eric. “Religion, Motherhood, and Mental Illness: The Andrea Yates Case.”
  • Highway to Hell

    32. Skinwalkers & The Navajo Nation

    27/01/2026 | 1 h 32 min
    In this episode, we step into one of the most unsettling corners of American folklore: the legend of the skinwalker.
    Rooted in Navajo (Diné) tradition, the skinwalker—often called yee naaldlooshii, “with it, he goes on all fours”—is not a cryptid or campfire monster, but a deeply serious and taboo figure tied to witchcraft, shapeshifting, and the deliberate misuse of spiritual power. Medicine men who, in a search for power, violated the deepest laws of the Dine to hold that power. We explore the cultural origins of the story, what skinwalkers are believed to be within traditional belief systems, and how colonization, fear, and modern media distorted those teachings into horror mythology.
    From sacred law to whispered warnings, we trace how the legend moved from protected Indigenous knowledge into pop culture fascination—and why many Navajo people still refuse to discuss it openly.
    Then we shift into the modern era: Skinwalker Ranch, strange sightings across the Southwest, and firsthand accounts from ranchers, travelers, and locals who describe encounters they still can’t explain. The episode includes real stories—unsettling, personal experiences that blur the line between folklore, psychology, and the unknown.
    Then we end with a breathtaking road trip through the majesty of the Navajo nation.
    Listener discretion advised: discussions include disturbing imagery and intense personal encounters.

    Sources
    Blackhorse Lowe & Dustinn Craig (Diné filmmakers). Interviews and cultural commentary on Navajo witchcraft taboos and the dangers of public discussion/misrepresentation.
    Brugge, David. Navajos in the Catholic Church Records of New Mexico, 1694–1875. University of New Mexico Press.
    Denetdale, Jennifer Nez. Reclaiming Diné History: The Legacies of Navajo Chief Manuelito and Juanita. University of Arizona Press.
    Hale, Berard. Origin Legends of the Navajo Night Chant. Yale University Press.
    Iverson, Peter. Diné: A History of the Navajos. University of New Mexico Press.
    Kluckhohn, Clyde. Navajo Witchcraft. Beacon Press. (Foundational anthropological study of witchcraft accusations, yee naaldlooshii beliefs, and social function of “skinwalker” narratives.)
    Luckert, Karl W. Navajo Mountain and Rainbow Bridge Religion. University of Utah Press.
    Matthews, Washington. Navajo Legends. American Folklore Society.
    Reichard, Gladys A. Navajo Religion: A Study of Symbolism. Princeton University Press.
    Schwarz, Maureen Trudelle. Molded in the Image of Changing Woman: Navajo Views on the Human Body and Personhood. University of Arizona Press.
    Witherspoon, Gary. Language and Art in the Navajo Universe. University of Michigan Press.
    Witherspoon, Gary. Navajo Kinship and Marriage. University of Chicago Press. (Helpful for understanding hózhó, balance, and why witchcraft is framed as social rupture.)
    Young, Robert W., and William Morgan. The Navajo Language: A Grammar and Colloquial Dictionary. University of New Mexico Press. (For correct terminology like yee naaldlooshii.)
    Skinwalker Ranch / modern paranormal claims (separate from traditional Diné belief)
    Kelleher, Colm A., and George Knapp. Hunt for the Skinwalker: Science Confronts the Unexplained at a Remote Ranch in Utah. Paraview Pocket Books.
    Knapp, George, and Colm Kelleher. Skinwalkers at the Pentagon. Mystery Wire.
    Shermer, Michael. “The Utah UFO Ranch and the Problems with Paranormal Investigation.” Skeptic Magazine.
    Ziegler, Charles. “Folklore, UFO Mythmaking, and the Misappropriation of Indigenous Legend.” Journal of American Folklore.

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Welcome to Highway to Hell, the unique crossroads where wanderlust meets mystery. Every episode, I take you on a journey to breathtaking destinations around the globe, unveiling not just the beauty of travel but the shadows that lurk behind the postcard-perfect views. From unsolved mysteries to infamous crimes, I explore the darker tales hidden within the world's most enchanting locales. So pack your curiosity, keep your wits about you, and join us as we dive deep into the thrilling intersection of travel and true crime. Your adventure into the unknown starts now.
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