The Less Dead copertina

The Less Dead

The Less Dead

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If you listen to a lot of true crime, you already know there is an invisible script most stories follow. We are used to hearing about the "perfect" victim—stories that comfortably fit into a neat, marketable headline. But the reality of who vanishes or gets hurt in this country is a lot messier, and a lot darker, than what fills our national feeds.

In criminology, the term "Less Dead" describes a class of victims who are essentially marginalized twice: first by their attacker, and second by a system and a society that looks at their lifestyle, their race, their income, or their struggles, and decides their absence isn't worth a headline.

In this episode, host Erica crumples up that template and throws it in the trash. We travel across the entire state of Indiana—from the far northern borders down through Indianapolis and into our southern river communities—to look past the official silence, past the frozen case files, and shine an unyielding spotlight on six names that never got the urgency or headlines they deserved. Because a human life isn't valued by a flawless background. We all carry the exact same weight.

  • – Intro: Demolishing the "perfect victim" narrative and defining the systemic apathy behind the criminology term, the "Less Dead."
  • – Case 1: Alexandra "Alex" Anaya (Hammond, IN): A 13-year-old child abducted from her home in 2005, whose horrific, premeditated case became caught in a devastating administrative limbo across state lines.
  • – Case 2: Crystal Grubb (Bloomington, IN): A mother of two whose 2010 disappearance and murder were heavily overshadowed by socioeconomic divides, illustrating a staggering disparity in community and media response.
  • – Case 3: Angie Barlow (Indianapolis, IN): A fierce, intelligent 23-year-old woman who built her own digital safety net before a private party gig in 2016, only to have her right to safety erased by public judgment of her profession.
  • – Case 4: Diamond Bynum & King Walker (Gary, IN): A highly vulnerable 21-year-old woman living with a rare genetic disorder and her 2-year-old nephew who vanished into thin air in 2015, facing rigid bureaucratic hurdles that delayed the initial response.
  • – Case 5: Larissa Sam (Indianapolis, IN): A young mother, talented musician, and dancer who disappeared after her shift in 2015, whose case reveals the cold, calculated digital footprints left behind by predators exploiting systemic blind spots.
  • – Case 6: Andi Wagner (Evansville, IN): A beloved daughter and mother whose exhausting struggle with housing instability and substance use disorder was used as an active eraser by public bulletins, despite major federal and state forensic interventions in 2024.
  • – Conclusion: A call to action for the true crime community to look past the labels, street names, and lifestyles, and remember that the right to justice is absolute.

Thanks for listening and until next week, keep digging, stay safe, and remember what's lurking just beneath the Indiana surface.

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