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WILDCIDE

WILDCIDE

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Wildcide is a unique true crime podcast that blends the most outrageous real-life cases with expert insights from professionals across the criminal justice field. Hosted by sisters Chelsea, an allied health professional, and Bailey, an experienced therapist, the show delves deep into the psychological and sociological dimensions of each case. With their combined expertise, they aren’t afraid to tackle complex, hard-hitting topics while weaving in just enough light-heartedness to balance the intensity. This approach hopefully helps keep our show engaging and relatable, creating a close-knit community of listeners affectionately known as the Wildciders.Copyright 2023 All rights reserved. Biografías y Memorias Ciencias Sociales Crímenes Reales
Episodios
  • Corporate Manslaughter? The Byford Dolphin and Paria Disasters
    Apr 1 2026

    At first, they were called tragic accidents. Sudden, devastating events that seemed to end in the water, in the chamber, in the final moments no one could take back. But as investigations unfolded, the questions began to change — from what happened to who was responsible, who made the decisions that led there, and who failed when lives were still hanging in the balance. In this episode, we explore the Byford Dolphin disaster and the Paria diving disaster through the lens of negligence, corporate responsibility, and systemic failure. While Paria would later raise the question of corporate manslaughter, both cases reveal how preventable deaths can grow out of unsafe systems, ignored risks, delayed action, and choices made long before the disaster itself. Because sometimes the real story is not just how people died. It is how those deaths became possible in the first place — and what happened after.

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    54 m
  • MMIW: The Winnipeg Serial Killer (Part 2)
    Mar 25 2026

    In Part 2 of this case, the investigation into Jeremy Skibicki reveals the full scope of what happened inside a small apartment in Winnipeg and how multiple women became connected to one of the most disturbing serial murder cases in modern Canadian history. As investigators reconstruct timelines, search landfills for evidence, and piece together Skibicki’s confession, the case expands far beyond a single murder investigation and becomes a national conversation about missing and murdered Indigenous women, systemic failures, and the value placed on vulnerable lives.

    This episode covers the discovery of multiple victims, the role of forensic and digital evidence, Skibicki’s confession, the landfill search controversy, and the 2024 trial that ultimately led to his conviction for four counts of first-degree murder. But even after the verdict, the story was not over. Because one victim was still known only as Buffalo Woman — and it would take years before she would finally be given her name back.

    This is Part 2 of the Jeremy Skibicki case — a story about violence, vulnerability, justice, and the women whose lives should never be reduced to a headline.

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    1 h y 3 m
  • MMIW: The Winnipeg Serial Killer (Part 1)
    Mar 18 2026

    Three women vanish from the same area of Winnipeg within weeks of each other. At first, their disappearances don’t raise widespread alarm—lost phones, unstable housing, and the realities of life on the margins make it easy for cases like these to slip through the cracks. But their families knew something wasn’t right.

    Then, on a cold morning in May 2022, a man searching through a dumpster makes a discovery that changes everything. Human remains. As investigators work to identify the victim, they uncover a name: Rebecca Contois. And with that confirmation, the case shifts from a missing persons investigation to something far more disturbing. Because Rebecca isn’t the only woman who’s gone missing.

    Morgan Harris. Marcedes Myran. And Buffalo Woman, a victim who would remain unidentified for three years after her murder. All Indigenous. All last seen in the same area. All disappearing within weeks of another.

    As detectives begin retracing Rebecca’s final movements, their investigation leads them to a quiet apartment building just steps from where her remains were found. Inside, they begin to uncover something that suggests this may not be an isolated crime—but part of a much darker pattern.

    By the end of Part 1, investigators are no longer asking whether a murder occurred.

    They’re asking how many.

    Resources:

    Hope for Wellness Help Line for Indigenous Peoples: 1-855-242-3310 National Domestic Violence Hotline (U.S.): 1-800-799-7233 StrongHearts Native Helpline: 1-844-7NATIVE

    If this case moved you, consider learning more about the crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls, and Two-Spirit People and supporting organizations doing this work.

    MMIWG2S+ National Action Plan: Government of Canada National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Final Report Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs Native Women’s Association of Canada Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak Canadian Human Rights Commission resources on MMIWG Winnipeg Bear Clan Patrol Siloam Mission, Winnipeg N’Dinawemak – Our Relatives’ Place, Winnipeg

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    41 m
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