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Texas Wine and True Crime - From Texas Wineries to Unsolved Mason Mysteries: Live Podcasting Bonus Magic

From Texas Wineries to Unsolved Mason Mysteries: Live Podcasting Bonus Magic

04/22/25 • 44 min

Texas Wine and True Crime

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A fading sun over Robert Clay Vineyards set the stage for Texas Wine and True Crime's season finale—an intimate gathering where hosts Brandy and Chris Diamond peeled back layers of Mason's hidden history through unsolved murders spanning more than a century.
Standing at a crossroads in their podcast journey, the Diamonds announced their leap into video content after four years of audio-only episodes. "Our faces have been somewhat obscured for the past four and a half years," Chris explained, signaling an evolution for their 162-episode-strong show that pairs Texas wines with true crime narratives.
The evening's exploration began with Jimmy Schuessler's 2001 murder—a case approaching its 24th anniversary without resolution. Investigators found Schuessler had bled to death on his couch after suffering a blow to the head outside his remote home. Blood trails revealed his tragic final moments: the struggle at his truck, his attempt to clean himself in the bathroom, and his eventual collapse in the living room. The location of his house—difficult to find unless you knew where it was—suggests his killer wasn't a random drifter but someone from his business dealings or personal life.
Traveling further back, the hosts unraveled the heartbreaking case of 17-year-old Adele Kaufman, murdered in 1892 while walking home from school. Found by her father on a path he had specially cleared for her safety, Adele's brutal killing left few clues beyond a bloodied stone and evidence of a horse tied nearby for hours. The killer had washed bloody hands in a stream before vanishing into history. "Every unsolved case gives us theories, but little closure," Brandy reflected as audience members contributed local knowledge that textbooks and archives could never capture.
What makes these stories resonate isn't just the mystery, but their connection to place—how they echo through generations in communities where everyone knows your name but some secrets remain buried. Follow Texas Wine and True Crime as they expand their storytelling through video while continuing to give voice to victims whose stories deserve to be remembered, glass of Texas wine in hand.

www.texaswineandtruecrime.com

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Send us a text

A fading sun over Robert Clay Vineyards set the stage for Texas Wine and True Crime's season finale—an intimate gathering where hosts Brandy and Chris Diamond peeled back layers of Mason's hidden history through unsolved murders spanning more than a century.
Standing at a crossroads in their podcast journey, the Diamonds announced their leap into video content after four years of audio-only episodes. "Our faces have been somewhat obscured for the past four and a half years," Chris explained, signaling an evolution for their 162-episode-strong show that pairs Texas wines with true crime narratives.
The evening's exploration began with Jimmy Schuessler's 2001 murder—a case approaching its 24th anniversary without resolution. Investigators found Schuessler had bled to death on his couch after suffering a blow to the head outside his remote home. Blood trails revealed his tragic final moments: the struggle at his truck, his attempt to clean himself in the bathroom, and his eventual collapse in the living room. The location of his house—difficult to find unless you knew where it was—suggests his killer wasn't a random drifter but someone from his business dealings or personal life.
Traveling further back, the hosts unraveled the heartbreaking case of 17-year-old Adele Kaufman, murdered in 1892 while walking home from school. Found by her father on a path he had specially cleared for her safety, Adele's brutal killing left few clues beyond a bloodied stone and evidence of a horse tied nearby for hours. The killer had washed bloody hands in a stream before vanishing into history. "Every unsolved case gives us theories, but little closure," Brandy reflected as audience members contributed local knowledge that textbooks and archives could never capture.
What makes these stories resonate isn't just the mystery, but their connection to place—how they echo through generations in communities where everyone knows your name but some secrets remain buried. Follow Texas Wine and True Crime as they expand their storytelling through video while continuing to give voice to victims whose stories deserve to be remembered, glass of Texas wine in hand.

www.texaswineandtruecrime.com

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undefined - Mason County Courthouse Arson: A Texas Town Under Siege

Mason County Courthouse Arson: A Texas Town Under Siege

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A courthouse engulfed in flames. A community watching helplessly as history burns. And one man's terrifying 24-hour crime spree that changed Mason County, Texas forever.
District Attorney Tonya Ahlschwede and Assistant DA Havana Schmidt take us deep inside one of rural Texas's most complex criminal investigations - the 2021 Mason County courthouse arson. What began as a house fire quickly escalated into something far more sinister when Nicholas Miller deliberately torched the historic courthouse while first responders were distracted battling the initial blaze.
"We all sat around the square with everybody else in town and watched it burn," recalls Schmidt, who witnessed the courthouse fire before later joining the prosecution team that would bring Miller to justice. The prosecutors meticulously reconstruct the night's events, revealing how one calculated arson transformed into an extended crime spree involving armed robbery, vehicle theft, and culminating in a dramatic 60-mile high-speed chase broadcast live on Facebook.
The investigation required extraordinary coordination between local law enforcement, Texas Rangers, and forensic experts to piece together evidence from multiple crime scenes spanning several counties. With over 200 exhibits presented during trial, prosecutors faced the daunting challenge of connecting all elements of Miller's rampage while demonstrating his clear premeditation through recovered text messages and online posts.
This conversation offers rare prosecutor insights into a case that struck at the heart of a small community where "we all know each other, grow up together." Despite Miller's attempt to disrupt the justice system by literally burning it down, Mason County's resilience shines through - the courthouse has been rebuilt, and as Ahlschwede proudly notes, "the justice system is still intact, despite somebody trying to burn down the courthouse."
Have you experienced how close-knit communities respond to tragedy? Share your thoughts and subscribe for more true crime stories that reveal the complex human dynamics behind headline-making cases.

https://www.texaswineandtruecrime.com/

www.texaswineandtruecrime.com

Texas Wine and True Crime - From Texas Wineries to Unsolved Mason Mysteries: Live Podcasting Bonus Magic

Transcript

Speaker 1

All right . Well , I am Brandy Diamond .

Speaker 2

And I'm Chris Diamond .

Speaker 1

And we are Texas Wine and True Crime .

Speaker 1

We work with Texas wineries . They send us wine , we pair them with dishes , we talk a little bit of true crime .

Speaker 2
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