Casefile

Last updated

Casefile
Casefile True Crime Podcast.jpg
Presentation
Hosted byAnonymous host
Genre True crime
LanguageEnglish
Production
ProductionMike Migas
Theme music composed byMike Migas, Andrew Joslyn
Audio formatPodcast
No. of episodes271 cases (317 episodes)
Publication
Original release9 January 2016
Provider iTunes, Google Podcasts, SoundCloud
LicenseCommercial
Related
Website casefilepodcast.com

Casefile is an Australian crime podcast that first aired in January 2016 and is hosted by an Australian man who remains anonymous. The podcast, produced by Casefile True Crime Podcast, is usually released on a Saturday for three consecutive weeks, with a bonus episode on the fourth week. The series deals with solved or cold criminal cases, often related to well-known murders and serial crimes. Unlike a number of similar podcasts, the series is fully scripted and narrated, while relying primarily on original police or mass-media documents, eyewitness accounts, and interview or public announcement recordings. [1]

Contents

Many early episodes relate to Australian cases (e.g., Port Arthur or the Snowtown murders), although notable crimes from the UK and the US were increasingly featured, [2] and well-known cases from other countries have also been included. Larger and more-complex cases have received multiple-week serialised broadcasts, and case updates to previously aired cases are also provided from time to time. The series has been well received, and has won a number of awards since its debut.

Production

Casefile first aired on 9 January 2016 [3] and was conceived by an anonymous Australian host who started producing the show in 2015 in his spare room. [2] [4] The host had just had surgery and was listening to a lot of podcasts and true-crime shows (e.g. The Joe Rogan Experience , Hardcore History , Serial , and Making A Murderer) at the time, and felt encouraged by Joe Rogan to make his own based on in-depth research and a storytelling style. [5] According to several sources, the host remains anonymous because he wants the show to focus primarily on the stories, facts, and the questions raised. [5] [6] [7]

In its current format, the 2024 Casefile team consists of the host/narrator, two composers, a creative director, a digital media/designer, and three researcher/writers (and a producer for the Portuguese version). [8] It has also had a producer/composer, "since about episode 7", which led to the first six episodes being reworked. [5] Researchers have also travelled internationally to access primary resources in some cases, such as former researcher and co-writer Anna Priestland, [9] who travelled from Melbourne to visit the UK National Archives in Kew in 2017 to examine police files on Myra Hindley. [2] Since 2018, a number of cases have also been written and researched by the Australian author Eileen Ormsby.

Episodes

Most episodes remain publicly available once released. One episode, Case 55 (Simone Strobel, released 15 July 2017), was removed due to legal issues, although general details of the podcast itself are still publicly available. [10] [11] [12] Others (Cases 19 (Snowtown, released 14 May 2016) and 30 (The Claremont Serial Killer, released 20 August 2016)) have been temporarily removed with the intention of updating and/or improving them. [13] [14]

Reception

Along with the recent rise in true crime podcasting, as seen in series such as Serial or S-Town , the show was reviewed positively by several sources. [4] [5] [15] [16] [17] One early review focussed on the differences to similar shows noticeable in the production, such as its sombre music and limited host editorialising, while also avoiding the use of primary materials by simply replaying news clips, emergency calls, and interviews. [18] Other reviewers have commented on the strengths of the show's research, on its extensive reviewing of people and places in their cultural context, and on its impact on the genre. [7] In contrast, factors such as the lack of host transparency, the length and detail of some episodes or series, and the lack of variety of format have been regarded as criticisms. [19]

In Australia, the podcast has consistently been in the top 10 since May 2016. [20] By episode 99, the show was appearing in the podcast charts in 107 different countries. [21] Download statistics by iTunesChart.net show that Casefile had charted in the top 100 in 5 regions, with peak ranking positions including: Australia (2), Canada (9), Germany (68), United Kingdom (11), and United States (7). [22] Overall, as of July 2019, individual episodes have been downloaded more than 275 million times. [23] As of 2022, it was still being downloaded over 2 million times a month. [24]

Awards

Since 2016, the show has received numerous awards:

Each case includes a corresponding page on the Casefile Presents official homepage, which details information such as special thank-yous, official support phone numbers, and websites (for Australia, the UK, the US, Canada and New Zealand), other credits, and resources (such as books, websites, videos, documents, articles, maps, wanted posters, and suspect sketches). Warnings are regularly given at the start of podcasts due to the graphic content. It is available via numerous sites. [28] Since 2018, a companion YouTube channel also offers the show's episodes.

Early in the show's history, updates to cases were also occasionally aired as breakthroughs or other significant events occurred. However, as the podcast evolved, these began to be placed behind a voluntary subscription paywall. In July 2019, it was announced that these updates would now be spun out into an informal companion series, From the Files , to be aired monthly in the show's off week. [29] [30] [31] To replace it, a new patron only show called Behind the Files debuted the same month. It was announced in December 2019, however, that From the Files would be put on hiatus for 2020. [32] In September 2023, it was announced that a new companion podcast "loosely based" on From the Files would be starting, hosted by Raquel O'Brien. [33]

Casefile Presents also produces and releases a number of crime podcasts besides Casefile [34] [35] including: The Vanishing of Vivienne Cameron (2020) – covered in episode 80; Searching For Sarah MacDiarmid (2021); The Detective’s Dilemma (2022); Matty (2022); The Frankston Murders (2023)- covered in episode 23; and, Dragonfly (2023). Since 2020, a Portuguese version of the show, known as Casefile True Crime – Edição Oficial em Português, is also produced. [36]

In August 2022, an official card-based boardgame (similar in play to Cluedo ) was released by Goliath Games, a Dutch game manufacturer. Titled Casefile: Truth & Deception Board Game [37] players, acting as private detectives, try to solve the murder mystery of a businessman. [38]

See also

Related Research Articles

A podcast is a program made available in digital format for download over the Internet. For example, an episodic series of digital audio files that users can download to a personal device to listen to at a time of their choosing. Podcasts are primarily an audio medium, but some distribute in video, either as their primary content or as a supplement to audio; popularised in recent years by video platform YouTube.

The Snowtown murders were a series of murders committed by John Justin Bunting, Robert Joe Wagner, and James Spyridon Vlassakis between August 1992 and May 1999, in and around Adelaide, South Australia. A fourth person, Mark Haydon, was convicted of helping to dispose of the bodies. The trial was one of the longest and most publicised in Australian legal history.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Claremont serial killings</span> 1990s serial murders in Western Australia

The Claremont serial killings is the name given by the media to a case involving the disappearance of an Australian woman, aged 18, and the killings of two others, aged 23 and 27, in 1996–1997. After attending night spots in Claremont, a wealthy western suburb of Perth, Western Australia, all three women disappeared in similar circumstances leading police to suspect that an unidentified serial killer was the offender. The case was described as the state's biggest, longest running, and most expensive investigation.

The backpacker murders were a spate of serial killings that took place in New South Wales, Australia, between 1989 and 1993, committed by Ivan Milat. The bodies of seven missing young people aged 19 to 22 were discovered partially buried in the Belanglo State Forest, 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) south-west of the New South Wales town of Berrima. Five of the victims were foreign backpackers and two were Australians from Melbourne. Milat was convicted of the murders on 27 July 1996 and was sentenced to seven consecutive life sentences, as well as 18 years without parole. He died in prison on 27 October 2019, having never confessed to the murders for which he was convicted.

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Paul Charles Denyer is an Australian serial killer currently serving three consecutive sentences of life imprisonment with a non-parole period of 30 years for the murders of three young women in Melbourne, in 1993. Denyer became known in the media as the Frankston Serial Killer as his crimes occurred in the neighbouring suburbs of Frankston.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">David and Catherine Birnie</span> Australian couple convicted of four murders

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Crawford family murder</span> 1970 murder of the Crawford family in Australia

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Simone Monika Strobel was a 25-year-old German kindergarten teacher and backpacker whose body was found at a sportsground in Lismore, New South Wales, six days after being reported missing from the caravan park where she had been staying. An initial inquest in 2007 found insufficient evidence to lay charges over her death.

References

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  2. 1 2 3 "Podcast becomes global hit as it examines UK's most notorious crimes". Evening Standard. London. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  3. "AMA with the host of Casefile True Crime". WhatPods. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
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  34. "Our Shows". Casefile Presents. Retrieved 10 February 2024.
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