Their names echo through true crime history like dark John Wayne Gacy, the Zodiac Killer, Richard Ramirez, Aileen Wuornos, Charles Manson, Ted Bundy, and the Golden State Killer. Their infamous deeds have been exhaustively chronicled across every medium imaginable. But beyond these household names lies a shadow world of equally chilling cases that rarely make headlines or streaming television documentaries.
The True Crime Case Histories series plunges readers into this darker territory, presenting 176 meticulously researched cases that prove the most disturbing crimes often occur far from the spotlight. Spanning decades and drawing from extensive police records, court documents, and firsthand accounts, this comprehensive collection of fifteen volumes reveals stories that many have tried to forget—or deliberately buried.
While mainstream media often sanitizes crime coverage for mass consumption, True Crime Case Histories takes a different approach. Each account presents an unflinching, fact-based examination of human depravity in its rawest form. From small-town murders that shattered quiet communities to serial killers who operated in plain sight for years, these pages contain 176 stories that will challenge your understanding of human nature.
Jason Neal is a Best-Selling American True Crime Author living in Hawaii with his wife, who is also an author writing Women's Fiction as G.T. London. Jason started his writing career in 1989 as a music industry publisher and wrote his first true crime collection in 2019.
As a boy growing up in the 80s just south of Seattle, Jason became fascinated with true crime stories after hearing the news of the Green River Killer so close to his home. Over the coming years, he would read everything he could get his hands on about true crime and serial killers.
As he approached 50, Jason began to assemble stories of the crimes that have fascinated him most throughout his life. He’s especially fascinated by cases solved by sheer luck, amazing police work, and groundbreaking technology like early DNA cases and, more recently, reverse genealogy.