Current:Home > Stocks'The Coldest Case' is Serial's latest podcast on murder and memory -Cryptify
'The Coldest Case' is Serial's latest podcast on murder and memory
View
Date:2025-04-27 19:17:12
In Kim Barker's memory, the city of Laramie, Wyo. — where she spent some years as a teenager — was a miserable place. A seasoned journalist with The New York Times, Barker is now also the host of The Coldest Case in Laramie, a new audio documentary series from Serial Productions that brings her back into the jagged edges of her former home.
The cold case in question took place almost four decades ago. In 1985, Shelli Wiley, a University of Wyoming student, was brutally killed in her apartment, which was also set ablaze. The ensuing police investigation brought nothing definite. Two separate arrests were eventually made for the crime, but neither stuck. And so, for a long time, the case was left to freeze.
At the time of the murder, Barker was a kid in Laramie. The case had stuck with her: its brutality, its open-endedness. Decades later, while waylaid by the pandemic, she found herself checking back on the murder — only to find a fresh development.
In 2016, a former police officer, who had lived nearby Wiley's apartment, was arrested for the murder on the basis of blood evidence linking him to the scene. As it turned out, many in the area had long harbored suspicions that he was the culprit. This felt like a definite resolution. But that lead went nowhere as well. Shortly after the arrest, the charges against him were surprisingly dropped, and no new charges have been filed since.
What, exactly, is going on here? This is where Barker enters the scene.
The Coldest Case in Laramie isn't quite a conventional true crime story. It certainly doesn't want to be; even the creators explicitly insist the podcast is not "a case of whodunit." Instead, the show is best described as an extensive accounting of what happens when the confusion around a horrific crime meets a gravitational pull for closure. It's a mess.
At the heart of The Coldest Case in Laramie is an interest in the unreliability of memory and the slipperiness of truth. One of the podcast's more striking moments revolves around a woman who had been living with the victim at the time. The woman had a memory of being sent a letter with a bunch of money and a warning to skip town not long after the murder. The message had seared into her brain for decades, but, as revealed through Barker's reporting, few things about that memory are what they seem. Barker later presents the woman with pieces of evidence that radically challenge her core memory, and you can almost hear a mind change.
The Coldest Case in Laramie is undeniably compelling, but there's also something about the show's underlying themes that feels oddly commonplace. We're currently neck-deep in a documentary boom so utterly dominated by true crime stories that we're pretty much well past the point of saturation. At this point, these themes of unreliable memory and subjective truths feel like they should be starting points for a story like this. And given the pedigree of Serial Productions, responsible for seminal projects like S-Town, Nice White Parents — and, you know, Serial — it's hard not to feel accustomed to expecting something more; a bigger, newer idea on which to hang this story.
Of course, none of this is to undercut the reporting as well as the still very much important ideas driving the podcast. It will always be terrifying how our justice system depends so much on something as capricious as memory, and how different people might look at the same piece of information only to arrive at completely different conclusions. By the end of the series, even Barker begins to reconsider how she remembers the Laramie where she grew up. But the increasing expected nature of these themes in nonfiction crime narratives start to beg the question: Where do we go from here?
veryGood! (2611)
Related
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- John Wilson brags about his lifetime supply of Wite-Out
- BTS star Suga joins Jin, J-Hope for mandatory military service in South Korea
- A concert audience of houseplants? A new kids' book tells the surprisingly true tale
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Many states are expanding their Medicaid programs to provide dental care to their poorest residents
- Christina Hall and Tarek El Moussa Celebrate Daughter Taylor Becoming a Teenager
- Three dead in targeted shooting across the street from Atlanta mall, police say
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Salt water wedge in the Mississippi River threatens drinking water in Louisiana
Ranking
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- A bombing at a checkpoint in Somalia killed at least 18 people, authorities say
- Pope Francis insists Europe doesn’t have a migrant emergency and challenges countries to open ports
- UK regulators clear way for Microsoft and Activision merger
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Crashed F-35: What to know about the high-tech jet that often doesn't work correctly
- As the world’s diplomacy roils a few feet away, a little UN oasis offers a riverside pocket of peace
- Brian Austin Green and Sharna Burgess Are Engaged
Recommendation
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
2 dead, 2 hurt following early morning shooting at Oahu boat harbor
First-of-its-kind parvo treatment may revolutionize care for highly fatal puppy disease
How Jessica Alba's Mexican Heritage Has Inspired Her Approach to Parenting
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Birthplace of the atomic bomb braces for its biggest mission since the top-secret Manhattan Project
Phil Knight, Terrell Owens and more show out for Deion Sanders and Colorado
Powerball jackpot winners can collect anonymously in certain states. Here's where