45 Global Unsolved Mysteries For Anyone Who Likes Their Coffee With A Side Of True Crime
The disappearance of Nancy Guthrie has turned ordinary people around the world into armchair detectives. The 84-year-old mother of Today show host Savannah Guthrie is believed to have been taken from her Arizona home in the early hours of 1 February. At the time of publication, she's still not been found despite hundreds of investigators working on the case and more than 20,000 tips from the public being called in.
Guthrie's disappearance is just one of hundreds of thousands of cases that have remained unsolved since the 1960s — and that's only in the United States. Someone recently asked, "What’s the arguably best-known (and scary) unsolved mystery in your country?" and more than 1,000 comments came pouring in as people took a short break from dissecting doorbell footage from Tucson, or coming up with their own conspiracy theories.
In honor of those like Madelaine McCann and JonBenét Ramsey, Bored Panda has put together a list of mysteries from around the world that have never been forgotten and need to be solved...
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I am from japan and my english is bad sorry. if you ask japanese people what is scary unsolved mystery many say the sos incident of mt asahidake. it happen in 1989 in hokkaido. details are so crazy. helicopter was looking for hikers and saw huge sign on ground made of logs spelling s o s. they land and found skeleton but here is the crazy part. the skeleton was female but missing hiker was man. also the logs were giant white birch trees and experts say impossible for one person to move them. need 5 or 6 men but no footprints found.
the most scary part is tape recording. in backpack they found tape and played it. it was man voice screaming s o s help me i can not move. sounds not like human but like someone copying human. police play tape to parents and they say not our son voice. so who make the sign? local rumor in hokkaido says after police took body the sos sign appear again. logs back in same spot but nobody climb mountain. rumor is the thing making sign is not human but a mimic or yokai. it learned that sos brings humans which is food from sky. the tape was not distress call it was like duck call for humans. even today we get scared seeing birch trees.
Hundreds of investigators have been working around the clock to figure out how 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie vanished from her home in the middle of the night. Guthrie is the mother of Today show host Savannah Guthrie, and the case has captured the attention of people around the world.
Countless groups have popped up on social media as ordinary people try to help solve the mystery, and the FBI has revealed that it's received more than 20,000 tips from the public. Despite this, the elderly woman remains missing, and nobody has been formally charged or arrested in connection with her disappearance.
There are fears from some quarters that the Nancy Guthrie case — like many others — may go "cold." But what does this even mean?
I'm still wondering where Shelly Miscavage, wife of David Miscavage the head of Scientology, is.
Like any other freakish cult, we can at least guess something terrible happened to her.
"A cold case is just that—an investigation of a crime, usually a violent one, where all leads have been exhausted, and the trail has gone cold," explains the FBI site.
According to A&E TV, which has a crime and investigation department, criminal cases are generally considered to go 'cold' when no progress—no new evidence, lab results, or suspects—has occurred for about a year.
There are hundreds of thousands of cases that remain unsolved in the United States alone, with families of victims left to live with the uncertainty of not knowing what happened to their loved ones.
I'd say lake Bodom m*****s, an unsolved triple homicide that happened in the 60's. Four teenagers went camping on lake Bodom and three of them had their skulls crushed with a stone. The famous metal band Children of Bodom is named after the m*****s.
What happened to the 4th? It doesn't say anything about him?
Aaron Benzick is the founder of the non-profit "Solve the Case." It's an organization that works toward finding missing persons and solving cold cases with modern technology and the internet.
He says that an old, unsolved case means just as much as a current case to the family of the victim. "I would argue that some of these older cases can be even more important because those families are stuck without answers for so long," Benzick told A&E TV. "That lack of follow-up from law enforcement [leaves] some of the families thinking that cases are being looked at when they may not be."
The hinterkaifek m*****s. In 1922, A whole family was k****d in their house in the small village of hinterkaifek.
The mysterious thing about the m*****s are that the m******r seemed to live on the property a few days after they k****d the family. They ate the food in the house, fed the animals on the property and used the fireplace.
A few days before the m*****s, one of the daughters of the family reported hearing steps on the attic but nothing/no one was found.
It´s Hinterkaifeck in Bavaria. Here the full story: T*** m*******s ******s** ****sd*f***** ****g*g**** j**** ****e t****** ******m** m*****s g**** **d**** ******* - and that´s how it happened!
Since no one said it, I nominate the lost MH 370 for Malaysia.
It's always been puzzling how a thing as big as that just vanished without any sign. They are about to search for it again so I hope the families would have closure this time.
I hope these families get closure too. At least hopefully they get to know for sure what happened. It won't bring the people back, of course, but it's better than the nothing they've got (and the repeated, I'd imagine, episodes of perhaps getting their hopes up when the investigation is reopened only to find nothing).
Many cold cases date back decades, and that's because there was limited technology back in the day to solve cases.
"In the 1970s and '80s, and even into the early '90s, you were limited to what you could do with a fingerprint," says the former head of Cobb County's Cold Case Unit, Detective John Dawes. "By the time we're looking at cold cases in 2014, we had access to check that lifted print from a crime scene…to see if we could find a match through the Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS)."
Dawes adds that in the mid-1980s, DNA analysis didn't exist yet. "But when we came across a case where there was blood [at a crime scene] that we believed to be a suspect's... we still collected it. Because even back then, they could do some typing to classify the blood."
Fast forward decades, and those specimens can now be used to crack cold cases.
I guess technically it wasn't *in* our country however Madeleine Mccann is probably the most famous missing British child.
It's only the most famous because of the coverage it still gets. Not everyone has forgotten Ben Needham.
Dawes says technology has been "invaluable to a detective" because it grows every day. But despite advancements in technology, Benzick argues that the biggest breakthrough in cold cases isn't coming from DNA work.
"It's actually coming from people who know something coming forward, detectives following up in interviews, knocking on that door, following up on a witness [who says], 'Hey, I've been waiting for you to follow up on this for years,'" he reveals.
Barry and Honey Sherman. Canadian billionaire and his wife found m******d in their home in late 2017. Their bodies were found in the indoor pool area staged like statues they had in another room. This h**h profile m****r investigation has gone cold.
For Italy I’d say Emanuela Orlandi’s disappearance.
She was a 15-year-old Vatican citizen who went missing on June 22, 1983 in Rome after she finished her routinely music lessons at school. Her schoolmates, who were the last people who saw her, claim that the last time they saw Emanuela was at the bus stop where she told her friends she wouldn’t take the bus with them because it was too crowded. She never made it back home.
Her disappearance still haunts Italians and after more than 40 years it’s still a mystery than everyone has heard about. She was never found and it’s still unknown if she is still alive or not (even though it’s highly likely that she’s died at this point).
Her family and the public opinion generally agree that the Vatican state has something to do with her disappearance and that people in the h**h places don’t want anyone to discover the truth because of the scandal it would cause.
Many tracks have been followed, including that it was a political kidnapping related to the attempted m****r of Pope John Paul II by Mehmet Ali Agca (who still claims that Emanuela is still alive hidden somewhere in either France or Switzerland).
The disappearance of another 15-year-old girl just a month before Emanuela’s (Mirella Gregori, disappeared on May 7, 1983) and the unsolved m****r mystery of a 17-year-old girl (Katty Skerl, found dead on January 21, 1984), both in Rome, have also been linked to the Orlandi case.
I think I watched a dramatization of this a while ago. Didn't they finally find remains in a building's attic a few years ago?
The Nancy Guthrie case has become somewhat of a circus on social media, with armchair detectives, Youtubers, and ordinary citizens doing their own investigations — parallel to the FBI and the sheriff's office. But while internet sleuthing can harm a case, Benzick believes it can also help to solve it — if done right.
"Social media is 100% doing more good than bad. Is there noise out there that frustrates things and affects families in a significant way? 100%," he says. "There are some people who take these stories and sensationalize them simply for the views and turn them into entertainment. What social media does is it gets these cases visible and gets them in front of people who are in the area who may have known something."
The "Frog Boys" Case. In 1992, five kids aged between 10~14 went up a small mountain to find lizard eggs and went missing, the president himself made a special order to find the boys so all the police and military did a nationwide search, while big corps printed millions of posters and included the boys' photos on their products in effort to find them. all of their skeletal remains get found on the same mountain 11.5 years later.
Some assumed they got lost and passed away due to hypothermia but this theory quickly got overturned because investigators found out 3 of the boys sustained damage on their skull which were made when they were still alive. Till this day nobody knows what really happened, various theories exist but they have their own flaws. We literally have 0 clues or evidence. The statue of limitations for this case expired in 2006, so it's impossible to punish the m******r(s) even if they turned themselves over.
I'll never understand statute of limitations on things like m u r d e r or crimes against children or anything like that
There was an Australian Prime Minister called Harold Holt. One morning he went for a swim at the beach and never returned. No body has ever been found.
There's lots of crazy conspiracy theories about what happened. My favorite I've heard is that he was secretly a spy for China and hitched a ride on a Chinese submarine.
Benzick argues that social media platforms are "very targeted to geographic areas," and this is beneficial when it comes to solving crimes and cold cases. He says that the more visibility a case gets, the more likely it is that it'll end up in front of someone who knows something... The goal, he explains, is to make sure the victims are never forgotten.
Dawes agrees. If he had to give one piece of advice to detectives working in a cold case unit, it would be this: "Never give up. The only way you solve these cases is to never let them sit."
He died in London but he was Welsh - MI6 ‘employee’ Gareth Williams was found dead in a large bag that was locked shut with a padlock. He had a large quantity of designer women’s clothes in his house despite him not having a partner (of either gender).
Known flippantly as the ‘Spy in a bag’ case.
The official story was that he'd done it to himself, which, come the fu*k on
Possibly the disappearance of the Beaumont children.
From wiki: Jane Nartare Beaumont (born 10 September 1956), Arnna Kathleen Beaumont (born 11 November 1958) and Grant Ellis Beaumont (born 12 July 1961), collectively referred to as the Beaumont children, were three Australian siblings who disappeared from Glenelg Beach near Adelaide, South Australia, on 26 January 1966 (Australia Day) in a suspected abduction and m****r.
The case received worldwide attention and is credited with causing a change in Australian lifestyles, since parents began to believe that their children could no longer be presumed to be safe when unsupervised in public. Police and media speculation has linked the disappearances to the Adelaide Oval abductions of 1973. Interest in the case has continued for more than half a century. As of 2018, a A$1 million reward has been offered for information related to the cold case by the South Australian government.
The family m**ders is pretty messed up also. One suspect was caught and died in prison recently but he never disclosed any useful information.
I live in Adelaide where this took place. It is extremely sad the parents, Jim & Nancy Beaumont, had their lives suddenly interrupted by the disappearance of all three of their children. Gone, never to be found, not knowing what happened. The overwhelming grief would have been devastating. So much so, their marriage did not last and they spent over half of their lives apart and with no answers. I cried when I read of both their deaths - Nancy in 2019 at 92; Jim in 2023 at 97. I hope they were reunited with their beautiful children for eternity.
I just learned about her, really interesting case!
In Mexico, sadly there are many but the most notorious one in these years was Debahni Escobar.
She attended three parties with two friends. They move by Uber, so they agree with the driver who takes them to the first party to move them to the other two places but charging for the trip outside the app, kinda as a personal driver. (Kinda common here tbh)
When they are in the third party, seems like Debanhi gets drunk and her two friends decide to call the uber driver to take their friend home so they could remain in the party.
But then, according to the driver something happens between Debanhi and him and that he left her in the middle of the road. It was like 3-4 am, she allegedly was being difficult. The driver took a picture of her just where he left her and sent it to her friends. Sadly this is the last picture of her seen alive.
Hours later her parents realize she is missing and they start looking for her with the authorities.
The area around the girls attended the party is an area soundrounded by motels (love hotels), factories and outdoor venues. So it not like a normal neighborhood. All places near were allegedly checked by the police.
There was a motel (love hotel) near the venue of the last party Debahni attended and it had a water tank. Authorities claimed to have checked the water tank.
A week later, her body was found there.
Plenty of rumours and speculations around it.
Some people blamed the uber driver, some others said the friends tried to prostitute her, a random guy was blamed too.
Even the motel posted a weird promotional video of the motel with an interesting fitting song too. (Para poder llegar a ti - Ramon Ayala)
There was recorded videos of security cameras of Debahni inside the motel alone and outside the party arguing with her friend and other people.
Poor girl, had three autopsies.
To this day, I don't think people knows what happened.
To leave a young woman in the middle of the road at 3am is just horrible. If she's being 'difficult' take her to a police station. This is just irresponsible and cruel.
Lars Mittank disappeared in Bulgaria after behaving quite strangely. The disappearance didn't happen in Germany, but since he is from Germany and was actually on his way home, I think it still fits.
Another one was the YOGTZE case but they actually closed the case last year. And well, it was just an accident, so no mystery at all.
The Aarushi Talwar m****r case happened in 2008 in Noida, India. Aarushi Talwar, a 14 year old girl, was found dead in her bedroom. At first, people thought the family’s helper, Hemraj, had k****d her because he was missing. But the next day, his body was also found on the roof of the same house. Both were k****d with a sharp weapon.
The police investigation was confusing and changed many times. In the beginning, the police suspected Aarushi’s parents, Rajesh and Nupur Talwar. Later, the Central Bureau of Investigation took over the case, but even they gave different possible explanations. In 2013, a court said the parents were guilty and sent them to jail for life. However, in 2017, the Allahabad H**h Court said there was not enough clear proof against them and freed them,, Even today, many people feel the case is not fully solved. It became one of India’s most talked about crime cases and raised questions about police work and media reporting.
A movie called Talvar was made in 2015 based on the case. It showed different possible versions of what might have happened.
The m****r of our prime minister Olof Palme.
For the Netherlands it's Dascha Graafsma. A 16 year old girl who left a bar at 2am and was hit by a train at 5.45. The death was ruled a s*****e almost immediately despite Dascha being a happy social girl that loved life. The investigation was closed. It becomes strange when you know she was not just hit almost 4 hours after leaving the bar, but also 5km from the bar, and nowhere near her home or any location familiar to her. It becomes even stranger when you find that the police never really investigated what happened in those almost 4 hours. It becomes even stranger when you hear she had d***s in her system where her friends swear they never did d***s. It becomes even even stranger when you look deeply into the given statements by the traindriver, who claimed he honked the horn 3 times and that Dascha was looking at him with her arms spread. However forensic investigations found Dascha was hit in her back and none of the passengers of the train nor people living next to the track heard any horns, only the loud bang when the train hit Dascha.
The parents, frustrated with the police investigation hired their own investigators and found a whole lot of evidence, from her phone and ID in completely different locations, to camera footage showing her walking in strange locations but also missing camera footage from several directions. But most importantly, they found that her watch kept track of her movements, and she only moved several hunderd meters, but nowhere near the 5km to the train tracks. The parents also found out that a guy who texted Dascha strange messages that same night, that the police claimed was a child so they didn't really investigate, was in reality a 27 year old guy with a criminal record.
The two Dutch tourists that went missing while hiking on the 2010's. All that was found were some belongings and a boot with a foot still on it, then the case went cold.
RIP Kris Kremers and Lisanne Froon.
The disappearance of the boy scout Marco Aurélio. He disappeared during a hiking trip at the Marins peak after the lead scout got injured and sent Marco Aurélio ahead of the group to mark their way down back to camp. The group followed his markings up to a point until it stopped and got lost themselves, a day later the group arrived at camp (should have been just a couple of hours) coming from a different side of the mountain because they got horribly off track, but Marco wasn't there to rendezvous. His disappearance mobilized the largest search party in Brazil's history involving the firefighters, police and thousands of volunteers. 40 years have passed but the boy has never been found.
There was a similar story in Australia, but I can't remember the details, even his name.
The "Vanishing Triangle" of Ireland. Between 1993 and 1998, 8 women disappeared without a trace in area roughly along the Irish east coast. Strongly suspected to be the work of a serial k****r. The prime suspect is a violent s**t bag by the name of Larry Murphy, caught in 2000 as he tried to strangle a woman he kidnapped and r***d in Wicklow mountain. But the investigators couldn't connect him to the previous missing women. So he served a 10 years sentence for the r**e and attempted m****r, and left the country after that.
Maybe the beast of gevaudan, it's was an animal who k****d and often ate around 100 people, mostly kids and women and injured many survivors, between 1764 and 1767 in the region of gevaudan, modern day lozere.
It looked like a dog/wolf but was definetly not a wolf according to survivors, people said it was the size of a veal. Many hunters and soldiers were deployed to k**l it, some swore they hit it with bullets but it got back up right away and the killings kept happening after. people often reported attacks that happened at different areas at the same time which gave a kind of supernatural vibe to it, the chuch at the time called it a curse by god to punish the farmers of the area who were straying away from god.
It quickly became a state scandal and the king was being ridiculed by its rival countries. The killings finally stoped after an animal was k****d, the autopsy described it as a canid, that looked kinda like a wolf and kinda like a dog. there's a theory that there were 2 or 3 of these animals and they were a litter which explained the attacks at different places at the same time. with each k*****g of an animal who was strongly suspected of being the beast the killings diminished, until the final one. Many many innocent wolfs were k****d by the army and hunters to try to solve the problem.
To this day they still don't know what it was exactly, but probably a wolf/dog hybrid, the bones were not kept.
The autopsy report is called the "rapport marin".
In 1996, a female student at Nanjing University, Diao Aiqing, was dismembered into more than 2,000 pieces. The perpetrator has still not been found to this day. The police are still tracking the suspect.
The Disappearance of Iwona Wieczorek (2010)
The case of a 19-year-old girl who disappeared in Gdańsk. She was returning home from the club after an argument with her friends and she didn't come home. Despite enormous media interest and the work of specialized police department, the case remains unsolved
I still think about the disappearance of Michael Dunahee, missing since 1991.
Lately, I have been thinking more about the disappearance of Lily and Jack Sullivan as we are getting close to the 1 year anniversary.
Edit - Michael was 4 when he went missing. Lily was 6, Jack was 4. All are missing kids.
They were playing outside, alone, out of sight (assuming) at that age? Were they in an enclosed garden, or a fenceless one? If this had happened in the 60s, I wouldn't have been surprised, as it was a usual thing letting young kids play outside out of sight. I (3 yrs old) recall playing out with my brother (5yrs old) back then, regularly crossing a busy main road to reach the nearest park. 😳😳
For us it's the Seuso Hoard. Roman silverware with unclear origin. The most widely accepted theory is it was found by a young guy in 1975, who hanged himself a bit later. Fast forward to 1990, when the hoard is in the UK, with false Lebanese origin documents.
The police later determined that the guy who found it was m******d, rather than the original verdict if s*****e. The hoard was bought by the government of Hungary, and is on display in their Parliament building
The Alcàsser crime (1992) involved the kidnapping, r**e, t*****e, and m****r of three teenage girls from Valencia. The official investigation identified Antonio Anglés (still a fugitive) and Miguel Ricart (convicted and later released) as responsible. The case had massive media impact in Spain.
Years later, the father of one victim and journalist Juan Ignacio Blanco promoted a conspiracy theory claiming, without evidence, that politicians and businessmen were involved in a snuff‑film ring. These accusations led to defamation convictions. Despite the lack of proof, the theory spread widely due to TV exposure.
In France, surely the case of little Gregory.
from Wikipedia: "Grégory Villemin (24 August 1980 – 16 October 1984) was a French boy from Lépanges-sur-Vologne, Vosges, who was abducted from his home and m******d at the age of four. His body was found four kilometres (2.5 mi) away in the River Vologne near Docelles. The case became known as the Grégory Case (French: l'Affaire Grégory) and for decades has received public interest and media coverage in France.[3] The m****r remains unsolved.[4]"
The Bodom murders in 1960. Three youngsters were k****d and a fourth was severely injured while they were camping at Lake Bodom. Was never solved and most suspects have died already.
There are two others that are very popular, murders of two young women at Tulilahti when they were on a biking tour around Finland in 1959 and m****r of Kyllikki Saari in 1953. These three are like the top three unsolved Finnish cases. But I think Bodom is scariest because there were four people attacked, two men and two girls. Best known also for the fact the band Children of Bodom is named after the case, which I think most international fans don't know.
I think there are too many to pick from given the US has more than half of the world’s serial killer cases and they included tens to hundreds per killer where as the rest of the world is usually less than 10 per killer. Many of ours are unsolved.
Maybe Beaumont children or William Tyrrell or Mr Cruel.
When William Tyrrell went missing, my brother was the same age. It was... Really difficult to handle that one. I think they have a fair idea now of who did it but I don't think there's been many updates since?
We've had plenty of scary things that even though they're solved, I still just... Feel sick thinking about them. Jill Meagher, Eurydice Dixon, Courtney Herron (the perpetrator was allowed to go out to restaurants around the corner from where I lived, horrible!!), Isla Bell, Pheobe Bishop, Aya Maasarwe, Phoebe Handsjuk (we all know who did this).
This person is an Aussie or familiar with Australian missing cases/murders. The Beaumonts were mentioned above. William Tyrrell is a fairly recent case (comparatively). The last picture of him is when he was 3, taken while he was wearing a Spiderman costume. He went missing soon after that. Last stage of play is that his foster mother has been recommended for charges including perverting the course of justice and tampering with a corpse (I believe that this was around 2023 or thereabouts). Mr Cruel is/was a rapist/murderer active in the late 80s and early 90s in Melbourne. He attacked and raped at least three girls and was known to have killed at least one, Karmein Chan.
It is crazy how the media picks and chooses what cases it deems worthy of broadcast. In the US, we have over 110 missing children that have been missing for 5 years or longer. We find over 1000 unidentified bodies per year.
Priscila Belfort, sister of boxer and MMA fighter Vitor Belfort, disappeared in 2004 after leaving work for her lunch break. Despite the h**h profile of the case, which involved false confessions and investigations on d**g cartels, no one really knows what happened to her almost 20 years later.
Missing Yamashita’s gold/treasure in the Philippines has legendary status as infamous unsolved mystery. Allegedly hidden in caves and secrets tunnels in the Philippines during WWII by the Japanese, those looted gold and jewels still inspire treasure hunters to find them as it’s claimed to be worth billions of dollars in today’s valuation.
The 1978 Kaikoura Lights Mystery:
*The Kaikoura lights is a name given by the New Zealand media to a series of sightings that occurred in December 1978, over the skies above the Kaikoura mountain ranges of the northeastern South Island of New Zealand. The first sightings were made on 21 December when the crew of a Safe Air Ltd cargo aircraft began observing a series of strange lights around their Armstrong Whitworth AW.660 Argosy aircraft, which tracked along with their aircraft for several minutes before disappearing and then reappearing elsewhere. The pilots described some of the lights to be the size of a house and others small but flashing brilliantly. These objects appeared on the air traffic controller radar in Wellington and also on the aircraft's on-board radar.*
*On 30 December 1978, a television crew from Australia recorded background film for a network show on interviews about the sightings. For many minutes at a time on the flight to Christchurch, unidentified lights were observed by five people on the flight deck, were tracked by Wellington Air Traffic Controllers, and filmed in color by the television crew. One object reportedly followed the aircraft almost until landing. The cargo plane then took off again with the television crew still on board, heading for Blenheim. When the aircraft reached about 2000 feet, it encountered a gigantic lighted orb which fell into station off the wing tip and tracked along with the cargo aircraft for almost quarter of an hour, while being filmed, watched, tracked on the aircraft radar and described on a tape recording made by the TV film crew. A spate of sightings followed the initial report and an Air Force Skyhawk was put on stand-by to investigate any positive sightings.*
Aliens. There are far too many reports, recorded sightings, and even centuries-old paintings to keep denying it.
Isdalen woman, and ''Jennifer Fairgate''. One happened in the West Coast, while the other occurred on the East Coast.
The triple m****r at Lake Bodom on June 5, 1960.
Four friends, all teenagers, were attacked while on a camping trip; one survived and was eventually charged with the m****r, but ultimately found not guilty. Other suspects over the years include several people known to have committed other crimes, and one Russian spy.
There's even a metal band called Children of Bodom.
We all have our thoughts and opinions on what happened, but it would likely be Madeline McCann.
In Germnay I would say the case of Frauke Liebs is realy scary and still unsolved. I never heard of a similar case it is really mysterious.
In Argentina, we found the lawyer in charge of the case that incriminated our former president dead in his hotel room in an apparent s*****e, although many leaked evidence indicate otherwise.
Suicides are common when you're a whistleblower (Boeing), uncovering rich c**t crime (Virginia), and so on.
I read "Sparizione di Emanuela Orlandi" on Wikipedia and it's terrifying. The part about the Vatican is creepy.
Well, this case is famous in my country.
Emanuela Orlandi: so she had Vatican citizenship, but not Italian citizenship ?
She had Vatican citizenship but not Italian? That's some crazy mystery!
The "authors" of this deserve no credit. They mindlessly copied from Reddit or wherever and couldn't be bothered to do any editing. They could easily have removed duplicates, and they should have either removed those without details or researched the details themselves.
I wish that explanations had been included for these to add context. I apologise for being too lazy to do a deep-dive; I tried my best with the Aussie-based ones. When I feel less sleepy (night-time here ATM) I will do a deep-dive, because these people deserve their stories to be heard.
The "authors" of this deserve no credit. They mindlessly copied from Reddit or wherever and couldn't be bothered to do any editing. They could easily have removed duplicates, and they should have either removed those without details or researched the details themselves.
I wish that explanations had been included for these to add context. I apologise for being too lazy to do a deep-dive; I tried my best with the Aussie-based ones. When I feel less sleepy (night-time here ATM) I will do a deep-dive, because these people deserve their stories to be heard.
