I’m Beth Larsen and have spent the majority of my adult life in radio in Athens, Ga. and I’ve always been interested in true crime. Athens is home to the University of Georgia and one of the most intriguing murder cases here is the unsolved murder of UGA student Jennifer Stone, unsolved for over 27 years. This 4 episode podcast delves into the initial investigation, suspects, rumors and the current status of the case. This is my first podcast. I hope you enjoy it!

Episode 1 Cold Casing: The Jennifer Stone Murder

Some background information about Athens, Ga and the initial investigation.

Episode 2 Cold Casing: The Jennifer Stone Murder

All the rumors swirling about Jennifer’s murder.

Episode 3 Cold Casing: The Jennifer Stone Murder

Police investigate some good leads and get a huge break in the case.

Episode 4 Cold Casing: The Jennifer Stone Murder

Where the current investigation stands.

Jennifer Stone

Jennifer’s small house in downtown Athens. Looks the same today as it did back in 1992. The door on the right is the one police suspect the killer entered and exited.

The old bus station downtown Athens is now a restaurant.

The back parking lot of the old bus station. Jennifer’s small house is just beyond that wall.

Athens Clarke County Police Department https://athensclarkecounty.com/200/Police

GBI Athens Office https://investigative-gbi.georgia.gov/region-11

Woody Garrison https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSNsEzzW0j1F9V4HIgQaZOQ https://soundcloud.com/woody-garrison

Join the Conversation

  1. Unknown's avatar
  2. Beth Larsen's avatar

2 Comments

  1. How do we get investigators to embrace technology and use phenotyping and genealogy to solve these cases. What are they afraid of? They need to get out of this 1995 way of thinking! I don’t believe the killer is dead. It took 16 years to solve Pamela Crisler’s murder. Her killers criminal history had been misdemeanor charges off and on for 16 years until he was caught bootlegging dvd’s which is a felony!

    Like

    1. Hi Southnbelle!
      Thanks for the comment! I do believe these investigators are using genealogy and perhaps Parabon they just didn’t want to confirm it. I also know some of these dna and genealogy companies are doing more to keep their stuff private. Could just be taking law enforcement longer to get that info, jumping through legal hoops, etc. Thanks again for commenting and I hope you enjoyed the podcast. I’m in the process of getting my next one ready to post.

      Like

Leave a comment