From chilling cold cases to baffling disappearances, cinema has long been fascinated by real-life mysteries. Join us as we explore compelling films inspired by actual unsolved cases that continue to perplex investigators and intrigue audiences. From serial killers to supernatural phenomena, these stories remind us that truth can be stranger than fiction.
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00:00Jimmy, I'm sorry I came as soon as I got here.
00:02You got in this morning.
00:04Welcome to WatchMojo, and today we're counting down our picks
00:07for films inspired by unsolved historical mysteries.
00:12Poor Betty. The problem wasn't too many enemies, it was too many friends.
00:18Number 20. Escape from Alcatraz.
00:21In 1962, three inmates pulled off one of the most infamous prison breaks in history
00:25by escaping from the heavily fortified Alcatraz.
00:28Is it true no one's ever bust out of here?
00:32That's all they're telling me.
00:34Jesus.
00:35Their daring attempt became the focus of this 1979 movie,
00:39starring Clint Eastwood as the mastermind of Frank Morris.
00:42You still reading that Bible?
00:45Oh yeah, it's opening up all kinds of new doors.
00:48As depicted in the film, Morris and his accomplices chiseled through cell vents,
00:53crawled through a utility corridor, and set off on an improvised raft,
00:57all without being caught.
01:00Their absence wasn't noticed until the next morning, by which time, they were long gone.
01:04Morning, Sergeant. What have you got?
01:07Photos and a notebook of Clarence Anglin.
01:10Funny-looking bag must have been made from a raincoat.
01:13Even with an extensive search, no bodies were found.
01:17The FBI eventually concluded they likely drowned, but some folks believed otherwise.
01:22While the film's ending hints at a successful escape, there's no proof the men survived.
01:36Number 19. The Bank Job.
01:39Some aspects of this Jason Statham-led heist movie may be dramatized,
01:43but the real 1971 robbery was just as wild.
01:47A bank.
01:49A bank. As in rob.
01:54How would you know about a bank?
01:56Inspired by a Sherlock Holmes story,
01:59a gang of thieves tunneled their way into a Lloyd's bank from a shop two doors away.
02:04While the robbery was still in progress,
02:06a radio buff overheard their walkie-talkie chat and alerted the police.
02:10Police here. Can I help you?
02:11Yes. I'm a ham radio operator, and I think I may be overhearing a robbery in progress.
02:16His first warning was dismissed,
02:18but after recording the gang's conversations,
02:21authorities launched a frantic search.
02:23A month after the heist, some members of the crew were caught, but not all.
02:27The film unravels the mystery of whether the stolen content
02:31included compromising photos of Princess Margaret.
02:34But to this day, nothing has been confirmed.
02:37I think what these robbers were really after were photographs.
02:41Photographs of a certain royal princess.
02:43How do you know that?
02:44Well, because on this point I believe my captive.
02:47No man could withstand the pain we inflicted on him.
02:50Number 18.
02:51Changeling.
02:52This tale unfolds a parent's worst nightmare.
02:55Angelina Jolie stars as Christine Collins,
02:58a mother whose child goes missing,
03:00only for the police to return the wrong kid six months later.
03:05Boy, this age, it changes so fast.
03:08We've compensated for that in our investigation.
03:10And there's no question that this is your son.
03:14That is not mother.
03:15When she refuses to accept this imposter,
03:18she's branded an unfit mother and sent to an asylum.
03:22As bizarre as it sounds,
03:23this happened to the real Christine in the late 1920s.
03:27Has this been going on for a long time?
03:28People changing, becoming something other than what they are?
03:32People don't change.
03:33You don't think people change?
03:36No, that's not what it is.
03:40Her fight against the police exposed deep corruption.
03:43But the real tragedy was her son's fate.
03:46It was later discovered that Christine's nine-year-old, Walter,
03:49was among the victims of the Wineville Chicken Murders.
03:52Though the killer's mother confessed to the crime,
03:54Christine never gave up hope and continued searching for her son.
03:59Maybe Walter's out there having the same fears that he did.
04:02Afraid to come home and identify himself or afraid he'll get into trouble.
04:08But either way, it gives me something I didn't have before tonight.
04:14What's that?
04:16Hope.
04:17Number 17.
04:19Eureka.
04:19Starring Gene Hackman as a gold prospector,
04:23Eureka follows a man who strikes it rich during the final days of the gold rush.
04:27Hey!
04:28Freda!
04:31Freda!
04:32Years later, he's a restless tycoon who has a strong dislike for his daughter's husband.
04:38Get out of my house!
04:39It's only gold, Jack.
04:41Like all things, it'll pass.
04:43And when he does, I'll send him back to you.
04:45The film's tension increases as he clashes with his unscrupulous business partners,
04:50only to meet a violent end at the hands of a ruthless gang.
04:54Though the film has several shortcomings, here's the kicker.
04:58It's actually loosely based on the grisly murder of Harry Oakes,
05:02a wealthy gold miner in the 1930s.
05:04He was killed under mysterious circumstances,
05:12and the prime suspect, his son-in-law, was later acquitted.
05:16Decades later, the case remains an unsettling enigma,
05:19with no resolution and no justice.
05:22Once upon a time, I was Jack McCann, I had a name.
05:32I don't know how much longer I could hold on to that one.
05:35Number 16.
05:36The Pursuit of D.B. Cooper
05:38In 1971, the infamous D.B. Cooper hijacked an aircraft headed to Washington
05:43using a fake bomb threat.
05:45There'll be just a few seconds because things are a little bit tense out here.
05:48His ruse was successful, and he secured $200,000 in ransom
05:52before parachuting into oblivion.
05:55Despite one of the biggest FBI manhunts,
05:57no one knows if he survived or where some of the money went.
06:01This 1981 film takes that mystery and runs with it.
06:13But anyone expecting a deep insight into the real heist
06:16may be disappointed, because the film draws from J.D. Reid's 1980 novel,
06:21Freefall, adding its own twists.
06:24Cooper becomes Jim, a clever ex-military man,
06:27dodging an agent while his estranged wife gets dragged into the mess.
06:31All right, so you expect me to just drop everything
06:34and go off with you
06:36and forget about all that stuff that's ever happened?
06:40Absolutely.
06:42It's far from fact, but still an entertaining ride.
06:45So, what are you going to do with it?
06:47With what?
06:49The money.
06:52Oh, yeah.
06:54Number 15.
06:55Fire in the Sky
06:56In 1975, a group of loggers were driving down a forest road
07:00when they noticed a strange light.
07:02What's that?
07:04What's that thing?
07:05According to his crew's account,
07:10Travis Walton got out of the truck
07:11and was struck by a beam of light.
07:14Terrified, his peers fled.
07:16And when they returned minutes later,
07:18Walton was gone.
07:19I, uh, I searched the woods,
07:23but he wasn't,
07:27there was nothing.
07:30They reported the incident to the police,
07:32who, with no trace of Walton,
07:34suspected foul play.
07:35Five days later, Walton returned,
07:38claiming he'd been taken aboard an alien spacecraft.
07:42Mr. Walton,
07:43can you tell me what they look like?
07:46Can you tell me how many of them there were?
07:48Some believe his outlandish account
07:51was influenced by a made-for-TV movie,
07:53and over time,
07:54clues hinted at a possible hoax.
07:57Still, no one's cracked the case completely.
08:00The film Fire in the Sky retells Walton's wild story,
08:03amping up the horror for thrills.
08:18Number 14,
08:21Memories of Murder.
08:22Between 1986 and 1994,
08:25an elusive serial killer terrorized South Korea,
08:28brutally murdering 15 women and girls in rural areas.
08:32Despite efforts to stop him,
08:34he evaded capture for 30 years.
08:36But in 2019,
08:50his luck ran out,
08:52as Lee Chun-jae was finally unmasked.
08:55Already in prison for killing his sister-in-law,
08:58he also confessed to the Hoseong murders,
09:01though he was never prosecuted for them.
09:03Back in 2003,
09:16when Memories of Murder hit the screens,
09:18this killer's identity was still unsolved.
09:21Director Bong Joon-ho
09:23expertly captures that dark time
09:25through the perspectives of two detectives
09:27trapped in an endless chase
09:29for South Korea's first confirmed serial killer.
09:41Number 13,
09:43The Vanishing.
09:44How far would you go for the truth?
09:47Rex and Saskia are a young couple on vacation.
09:50They stop at a gas station,
09:52and Saskia goes in to get some beverages,
09:54and never returns.
09:56Obsessed with finding her,
10:03Rex's persistence leads him
10:05to the man who abducted her,
10:06who offers him a chilling proposition.
10:08As nightmarish as it seems,
10:20this tale draws partially from true events.
10:23Tim Crabbe,
10:24author of the novella Behind The Vanishing,
10:26was struck by a newspaper article
10:28about a female tourist
10:29who went missing during a bus trip.
10:31While many details were fabricated for fiction,
10:34that real-life case
10:35planted the seed for this thriller.
10:38But unlike the real woman,
10:39Saskia doesn't get a happy ending.
10:57Number 12,
10:58Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.
11:01In Martin McDonough's gripping crime drama,
11:04Frances McDormand plays a grieving mother
11:06outraged by the police's failure
11:07to apprehend her daughter's killer.
11:09So, she rents billboards at strategic locations,
11:12calling out the chief of police for his inactions.
11:15Right now, there ain't too much more we can do.
11:18Could pull blood from every man and boy in this town
11:21over the age of eight.
11:24Their civil rights laws prevents that, Mrs. Hayes.
11:27The idea struck McDonough during a trip
11:30when he spotted a couple of billboards
11:32accusing a man of killing his wife, Kathy Page,
11:36and slamming the police for their incompetence.
11:39What's with the new attitude, Dixon?
11:41Your mama been coaching you?
11:44No.
11:46My mama
11:47doesn't do that.
11:49This haunting imagery sparked his 2017 film,
11:53and McDormand's fierce character
11:55was born from the director's vision
11:56that only a fierce mother
11:58could have placed those billboards.
12:00Not much is known about the real case,
12:02but this movie sure proves that inspiration
12:04can spark from raw, real pain
12:07in the unlikeliest corners.
12:09Yeah.
12:10Still no rest.
12:15How come I wonder?
12:17Because there ain't no God,
12:19and the whole world's empty,
12:20and it doesn't matter what we do to each other?
12:21I hope not.
12:26Number 11.
12:27Rear Window
12:28In Alfred Hitchcock's classic thriller,
12:30James Stewart plays an adventurous photographer
12:33stuck at home with a broken leg.
12:35Bored to death,
12:36he begins spying on his neighbors.
12:39The New York State sentence for a peeping Tom
12:42is six months in the workhouse.
12:43Oh, hello, Scott.
12:45They got no windows in the workhouse.
12:47When a man's wife suddenly vanishes,
12:49and he begins acting suspiciously,
12:51Jeff becomes convinced he murdered her.
12:53Why?
12:56Why would a man leave his apartment
12:58three times on a rainy night
13:00with a suitcase
13:01and come back three times?
13:04For Mrs. Thorwald's mysterious fate,
13:07Hitchcock drew from two real cases.
13:09The 1910 murder of Corrine Henrietta Turner
13:12and the 1924 killing of Emily Kay,
13:15both at the hands of their partners.
13:18Mrs. Thorwald's ring being a pivotal clue
13:20in discovering the truth
13:21mirrors Harvey Crippen's slip-up
13:24in Turner's murder,
13:25while the search for the victim's head
13:27echoes grim details of Kay's case.
13:30Though both murderers met the gallows,
13:33some details of their crimes
13:34remain shrouded in mystery.
13:36Say something.
13:40Say something.
13:41Tell me what you want.
13:42Number 10.
13:43The Strangers
13:44Strangers writer-director Brian Bertino
13:46was directly influenced by the Manson killings
13:48and the accompanying true crime book
13:50Helter Skelter.
13:51However, many critics and academics
13:53also note strong similarities
13:54with a quadruple homicide
13:55that occurred in 1981.
13:57Do I have one?
14:00Are you a sinner?
14:02In April of that year,
14:03Glenna Sharp,
14:04two of her children,
14:04and a family friend
14:05were killed in Keddie, California.
14:07It happened 40 years ago this month.
14:09I sat down with the two main detectives
14:11on this case
14:12who say they are close to solving this
14:14once and for all.
14:15The historic event
14:16bears many similarities
14:17with the strangers,
14:19including the isolated setting,
14:20the breaking in due of a private residence,
14:22and the vicious nature of the killings.
14:24You don't have to do this.
14:27You can stop now.
14:29Please!
14:30The main suspects in the case
14:32are Martin Smart
14:33and his friend John Bobaday.
14:35But they both died
14:36without being charged
14:37thanks to a tragically bungled investigation.
14:40Number 9.
14:40The Mothman Prophecies
14:42The Mothman is one of the most enduring legends
14:44in modern American folklore.
14:46Between November 1966 and December 1967,
14:50the West Virginian city of Point Pleasant
14:52was inundated with sightings of the Mothman.
14:55Famously described as a large man-bird hybrid,
14:57the Mothman became a national sensation
14:59when ufologist John Keel
15:01published his investigative book
15:03The Mothman Prophecies.
15:04Before Mothman things took off around here,
15:07it was pretty much dead.
15:09Like, even when I was growing up,
15:10Main Street was empty.
15:11He argued that the Mothman
15:13was a supernatural creature
15:14with connections to the Silver Bridge,
15:16which collapsed in December of 1967,
15:18killing 46 people.
15:20Keele's famous book was turned into a movie in 2002,
15:31starring Richard Gere as a journalist
15:32who becomes entangled in the mystery.
15:34The enjoyment of this one hinges entirely
15:36on how much stock you put into the Mothman legend.
15:39And what if nothing happens?
15:42What if there's no great tragedy, John?
15:45What'll you do then?
15:46Number 8.
15:46Mesmerized.
15:48And what they have to say
15:49is the following.
15:51We do not know
15:53how Oliver Thompson died.
15:56Starring Jodie Foster and John Lithgow,
15:58Mesmerized is loosely based on the mystery
16:00of the Pimlico Poisoning.
16:02Named after the London district
16:03in which it occurred,
16:04this event concerns the bizarre death
16:06of Edwin Bartlett.
16:07Bartlett had been found dead
16:09with chloroform in his stomach.
16:11However, no one could figure out
16:12how it got there,
16:13as his throat and larynx
16:14were free of burns.
16:28Bartlett's wife Adelaide
16:29was arrested and charged with the death.
16:31However, a significant lack of evidence
16:33resulted in her acquittal.
16:35No one knew how the chloroform
16:37got into Edwin's stomach,
16:38with some arguing that Edwin
16:39gulped it down quickly
16:40to end his own life.
16:42We do not know
16:43how Oliver Thompson died.
16:47And if, gentlemen,
16:49we do not know this,
16:51how can we possibly give the blame
16:53for his death
16:53to a frail woman?
16:55Adelaide Bartlett later disappeared
16:57from public record,
16:58taking any potential answers with her.
17:00Number 7.
17:02The town that dreaded sundown.
17:04The people of Texarkana
17:05were not enjoying ice cream
17:07and sunsets during the summer of 1946.
17:09Instead, they were locking themselves
17:11inside their homes
17:12and watching the police
17:13patrol their neighborhoods.
17:15It was the town that dreaded sundown,
17:17and that's because
17:17the phantom killer was on the loose.
17:19The past two weeks,
17:20this place has been a madhouse.
17:24You don't suppose
17:25you could get some of your units
17:26to check some of those
17:27lovers' park and hangouts, do you?
17:30The evasive culprit
17:31had killed five
17:32and attacked eight
17:33throughout the preceding spring,
17:34with all of the crimes
17:35occurring on weekend nights.
17:36The killer was never caught
17:38or identified,
17:39although many experts believe
17:41it was career criminal
17:42Yul Sweeney.
17:43Yul Sweeney,
17:44car thief,
17:45habitual criminal,
17:46long-time con.
17:47In the end,
17:48a lot of the evidence
17:49does seem to point to him,
17:50and thus,
17:51mystery solved.
17:53Well, maybe not.
17:55The story greatly inspired
17:56the cult slasher,
17:57which was filmed in the real area
17:59and employed the locals as extras.
18:01To mirror reality,
18:02the killer's face
18:03is never seen.
18:04And if you should ask people
18:05here on the streets
18:06what they believe happened
18:07to the phantom killer,
18:10most would say
18:11that he is still living here
18:12and is walking free.
18:15Number six,
18:16Willow Creek.
18:18Like the Mothman prophecies,
18:19Willow Creek wants you
18:20to believe in a mythological creature.
18:22I'm Jim Kessel.
18:24I'm here at the Trinity National Forest
18:25along Route 96,
18:27also known as
18:28the Bigfoot Byway.
18:31Perhaps the most legendary object
18:32of modern American folklore,
18:34Bigfoot has generated
18:35endless discussion
18:36throughout the years.
18:37How far away was she
18:38when you first saw her?
18:39Just across the creek.
18:41About like from here
18:42across the creek.
18:43The cryptid's popularity
18:44skyrocketed in the late 60s
18:46with the Patterson-Gimlin film,
18:48which purports to show Bigfoot
18:49sauntering around
18:50the woods of Northern California.
18:52The short film serves
18:53as a microcosm
18:54of the Bigfoot debate,
18:55with some screaming hoax,
18:56while others insist
18:57on its authenticity.
18:59The Patterson-Gimlin film
19:00is directly referenced
19:01in the found-footage film
19:02Willow Creek,
19:03which sees a couple
19:04traveling into the forest
19:05to film their own Bigfoot video.
19:07I'm here with my girlfriend,
19:08Kelly Monteleone,
19:09where we plan on retracing
19:11the famed 1967
19:12Patterson-Gimlin footage
19:14and our search for Bigfoot.
19:16It's an undertaking
19:17that many have done,
19:18hoping to catch a glimpse
19:19of America's greatest legend.
19:21Number 5.
19:22The Entity.
19:24A cult favorite,
19:25The Entity is about
19:25a single mother
19:26named Carla Moran,
19:27who is sexually assaulted
19:29and terrorized by a poltergeist.
19:31Mom, Mom, there's nobody here.
19:33Call the police.
19:34Call the police.
19:35Mom, there's no one in the house.
19:37The front door's locked.
19:38Moran is directly based
19:39on Doris Byther,
19:40a woman who reportedly
19:41experienced paranormal events
19:43in the mid-70s.
19:45Byther contacted
19:45parapsychologist Barry Taff
19:47and relayed that she had been
19:48assaulted and stalked
19:49by a malicious entity.
19:51But when my son came in,
19:52there was nobody there.
19:54Right.
19:54And what did he think?
19:57Your son.
19:57You thought I was dreaming?
20:01Mm-hmm.
20:03And what do you think happened?
20:04Taff didn't believe
20:05the assault claims,
20:06but nevertheless
20:07agreed to investigate
20:08Byther's house.
20:10He and assistant
20:10Kerry Gaynor
20:11reportedly experienced
20:12significant poltergeist activity,
20:14and Taff labeled it
20:15an official haunting.
20:17I mean,
20:17I'd rather be dead
20:18than living the way
20:19I've been living.
20:21Do you understand that?
20:23Yes, I can understand that.
20:25Yes.
20:26Others are more skeptical,
20:28arguing that Taff
20:28was a poor investigator
20:30who misinterpreted
20:31harmless events
20:31as paranormal evidence.
20:34Number 4.
20:35The Black Dahlia
20:35Directed by Brian De Palma
20:37and starring an A-list cast,
20:39The Black Dahlia
20:40is based on
20:41James Elroy's
20:42semi-fictional novel
20:43of the same name.
20:44The story is based
20:45based on the famous case
20:46of The Black Dahlia.
20:48Investigation of
20:49Puppahev's abdominal cavity
20:51reveals no free-flowing blood,
20:54intestines,
20:55stomach,
20:56spleen,
20:56liver,
20:57all removed.
20:58Real name Elizabeth Short,
20:59the Dahlia was infamously killed
21:01in 1947,
21:03and her death remains
21:04one of the most tantalizing
21:05unsolved mysteries
21:06in modern history.
21:08Elroy's novel
21:08blends fiction with fact,
21:10basing much of the story
21:11in reality
21:12while making up
21:13various fictitious elements.
21:15One of Elroy's inventions
21:16is a character named Ramona,
21:17who was eventually revealed
21:18to be the killer.
21:19She looks
21:20so like mine, Maddie.
21:24It was
21:25the coolest joke.
21:28De Palma carried this
21:29over into his film,
21:31with Fiona Shaw
21:31playing the murderer.
21:33In real life,
21:34no one has the faintest idea
21:35as to who killed
21:36Elizabeth Short.
21:38The basic rule
21:39of homicide apply.
21:41Nothing stays buried forever.
21:44Corpses,
21:45ghosts,
21:46nothing stays buried forever.
21:49Number 3.
21:50From Hell
21:51The very name of Jack the Ripper
21:53is synonymous with unsolved crimes.
21:55Back in 1888,
21:57an unknown person
21:58terrorized the seedy London district
22:00of Whitechapel,
22:01killing at least five sex workers.
22:03With all due respect, sir,
22:05I believe this was done
22:06by someone with at least
22:07a working knowledge of dissection.
22:09Either an educated man,
22:11such as a doctor.
22:11I'm an educated man,
22:12that's preposterous.
22:14No well-bred man
22:15would do this.
22:15This instantly became
22:16the biggest true crime story
22:18of its age,
22:19thanks to the ferocious nature
22:20of the killings
22:21and the media sensation
22:22that it inspired.
22:23We are in the most extreme
22:26and utter region
22:27of the human mind.
22:30A radiant base
22:32where men meet themselves.
22:36It has become legend
22:37by remaining unsolved.
22:38The movie takes its name
22:40from the famous
22:40From Hell letter,
22:42which was a piece
22:42of correspondence
22:43allegedly written
22:44by the killer.
22:45Included with the letter
22:46was half a human kidney.
22:48From Hell.
22:51Well, at least
22:51they got the address right.
22:53The case has inspired
22:54numerous films,
22:55including this horror thriller
22:56starring Johnny Depp
22:57as detective
22:58Frederick Aberlein.
23:00Number two,
23:01The Irishman.
23:02One of the biggest questions
23:03that has plagued America
23:04since the mid-70s
23:05is what the heck
23:06happened to Jimmy Hoffa?
23:07Every decade,
23:08new reports surface
23:09and new searches
23:11are conducted.
23:12All dead ends.
23:13Hoffa was a prominent
23:14labor union leader
23:14who got involved
23:15with organized crime
23:16and disappeared
23:17in the summer of 1975.
23:19His body
23:20has never been found.
23:21In 2004,
23:23an investigator
23:23named Charles Brandt
23:24published the non-fiction book
23:26I Heard You Paint Houses,
23:27which is about
23:28labor union official
23:29Frank Sheeran.
23:30Do you have a show up late?
23:31No.
23:32Do you have any moving violations?
23:33No.
23:33Do you drink on the job?
23:35No.
23:35Do you ever hit anybody?
23:36On a job?
23:38Yeah.
23:38No.
23:39Sheeran claims
23:40to have killed Hoffa
23:41on orders of the
23:42Bufalino crime family,
23:43and this event
23:43is played as gospel
23:44in Martin Scorsese's
23:46film adaptation.
23:47It's important to note
23:48that nothing has been confirmed
23:49and many people doubt
23:50the authenticity
23:51of Sheeran's claim.
23:52Let's get out of here.
23:53Come on.
23:54To this day,
23:55Hoffa's disappearance
23:56remains a mystery.
23:57Before we continue,
23:58be sure to subscribe
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24:00and ring the bell
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24:01about our latest videos.
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24:11This is a different kind
24:16of true crime film.
24:18Rather than focusing
24:19on the killings,
24:20the movie devotes
24:20two and a half hours
24:21to the investigative process.
24:23He stops,
24:24puts it in park,
24:24boom.
24:25I shoot him on the right side.
24:27He slumps right.
24:28Maybe you've got your hand
24:29on his collar
24:30when you shoot.
24:31This makes it all the more frustrating,
24:32because as we know,
24:33the Zodiac killer
24:34was never caught.
24:36One of America's
24:36most notorious serial killers,
24:38the Zodiac took at least
24:39five lives in California
24:41and taunted both police
24:42and media
24:43with boastful letters.
24:44We've got some good things
24:46working for us,
24:48but it takes time.
24:49And to be able to reach out
24:51and pluck this guy
24:51out of the air
24:52isn't done.
24:53They suddenly ceased
24:54communication with the media
24:55in 1974,
24:56following one last letter
24:57and the trail
24:58went freezing cold.
24:59A team calling themselves
25:01the Case Breakers
25:02claimed to have solved
25:03the case in October of 2021,
25:05but experts quickly
25:06cast doubt on their claim.
25:07The case was not,
25:08in fact, broken
25:09and officially remains open.
25:12I can't prove this.
25:14Just because you can't prove it
25:15doesn't mean it's not true.
25:17Easy, dirty Harry.
25:18Which of these
25:19unsolved mysteries
25:20scared you the most?
25:22Let us know
25:22in the comments below.
25:23It's not my son.
25:28Did you enjoy this video?
25:29Check out these other clips
25:30from WatchMojo
25:31and be sure to subscribe
25:32and ring the bell
25:33to be notified
25:34about our latest videos.
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