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Murder, She Told - Trish Haynes: Tragedy in Rural New Hampshire

Trish Haynes: Tragedy in Rural New Hampshire

08/31/21 • 69 min

5 Listeners

Murder, She Told

2018 - Grafton, New Hampshire.

The family of a New Hampshire missing person, Trish Haynes, was asked to keep a large secret. 25-year-old Trish was no longer missing. They'd found her... months ago. But New Hampshire police wanted them to keep this under wraps. They weren't allowed to tell anyone their beloved Trishie's remains had been found. To the public, she was still a missing person...

Six months later, Trish's Great Aunt Valorie had had enough, and she went public to the media that Trish had not only been murdered, she'd been dismembered and dumped in the pond while her killers still walked free.

When the family started peeling back the layers of Trish's final days, they quickly realized the people responsible may be closer to home than they thought, hiding in plain sight.

Sources and photos: https://www.murdershetold.com/episodes/trish-haynes

Connect on Instagram @murdershetoldpodcast

Support the show here

Have a story that needs to be told? Submit it to [email protected]

If you know anything about the murder of Trish Haynes, I urge you to contact the New Hampshire State Police at 603-223-4381.

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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2018 - Grafton, New Hampshire.

The family of a New Hampshire missing person, Trish Haynes, was asked to keep a large secret. 25-year-old Trish was no longer missing. They'd found her... months ago. But New Hampshire police wanted them to keep this under wraps. They weren't allowed to tell anyone their beloved Trishie's remains had been found. To the public, she was still a missing person...

Six months later, Trish's Great Aunt Valorie had had enough, and she went public to the media that Trish had not only been murdered, she'd been dismembered and dumped in the pond while her killers still walked free.

When the family started peeling back the layers of Trish's final days, they quickly realized the people responsible may be closer to home than they thought, hiding in plain sight.

Sources and photos: https://www.murdershetold.com/episodes/trish-haynes

Connect on Instagram @murdershetoldpodcast

Support the show here

Have a story that needs to be told? Submit it to [email protected]

If you know anything about the murder of Trish Haynes, I urge you to contact the New Hampshire State Police at 603-223-4381.

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Previous Episode

undefined - Searching For Answers: The Murder of Robert Joyal, Part Two

Searching For Answers: The Murder of Robert Joyal, Part Two

3 Recommendations

1998 - Portland, Maine.

On the night of April 4th, 1998, 18-year-old Robert Joyal was stabbed to death in front of 50 people in the Denny's parking lot in Portland, Maine. A month after the murder the police made an arrest... but over the course of the next two years, the state's case would slowly unravel, leaving a potential killer to walk free.

How is a case that had up to 100 potential witnesses still unsolved to this day? Dive into the investigation, what went wrong, and why this case, despite having anywhere between 40 and 100 witnesses, still isn't solved.

Hear Rob's story told through his brother, Marc, in the conclusion of this two part special on the life and death of Robert Joyal and a family's 20-year search for answers.

If you know anything about the murder of Robert Joyal, I urge you to call the Portland Police Department's tip line at 207-874-8584.

Detailed sources can be found on murdershetold.com

Connect on Instagram @murdershetoldpodcast and on Facebook

Support the show here

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Next Episode

undefined - Cape Breton Three: The Boys on the Tracks

Cape Breton Three: The Boys on the Tracks

3 Recommendations

1970 - Smyrna Mills, Maine.

In the early morning hours of July 10th, 1970, a freight train struck and killed three Canadian boys on the Bangor and Aroostook Railway Line in the wilderness of Smyrna Mils, Maine. Within hours, the Sheriff determined the incident was a tragic accident—that they were sleeping on the train tracks, for reasons that can't be explained—and completely dismissed the possibility of foul play.

But not everything seems to add up, and 50 years after the mysterious incident, the family, friends, and community of Sydney, Cape Breton in Nova Scotia are asking the questions their community didn't ask in 1970, and reviving this tragic story that's seemingly been lost with time.

This is the story of the Cape Breton Three—Kenny Novak, Terry Burt, and David Burrows.

All sources for this episode can be found on murdershetold.com.

Connect on Instagram @murdershetoldpodcast

Support the show here

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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