Mugshot Mysteries
Putting mysteries in the lineup. True crime podcast investigating unsolved cases, cold cases, paranormal phenomena, and the stories that won't let you sleep.
Hosts Kathryn and Gabriel dive deep into historical crimes, infamous outlaws, unexplained mysteries, and modern cases that divide America with the kind of dark humor and chemistry that makes hour-long deep dives fly by. From vintage mugshots to ghost ships, from exorcisms to healthcare scandals, from disappeared outlaws to haunted houses: if it's unsolved, unexplained, or unforgettable, we're putting it in the lineup.
What we cover: True crime (historical and modern), cold cases, paranormal investigations, unsolved murders, conspiracy theories, forgotten criminals, and the mysteries that still haunt us. Expect thorough research, psychological analysis, skepticism mixed with curiosity, and two hosts who aren't afraid to disagree, joke, or go down rabbit holes together.
Our vibe: Smart storytelling meets dark comedy. We take the cases seriously but not ourselves. Because sometimes the best way to examine a murder, a haunting, or a centuries-old mystery is with a partner who gets it...and isn't afraid to call you out when you start believing in ghost pirates.
New episodes drop weekly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Mugshot Mysteries
Ruth Snyder: Femme Fatale, Tabloid Murderess and the Electric Chair
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
⚠️ OLD FORMAT EPISODE - New listeners should start with Season 1, Episode 1
January 1928: New Yorkers awoke to a front page screaming DEAD! Beneath it was a blurred photo of a woman in the electric chair, captured at the moment of death. That woman was Ruth Snyder, a Queens housewife whose affair and insurance plot spiraled into one of the Jazz Age's most infamous crimes.
THE STORY: Ruth Snyder (32) married to Albert Snyder, art editor | Unhappy marriage | 1925: Began affair with corset salesman Henry Judd Gray | Convinced Gray to help kill husband for $96,000 insurance (double indemnity) | March 20, 1927: Staged burglary at Queens home | Chloroformed, strangled, bludgeoned Albert with sash weight | Left Gray's tie pin at scene | Claimed burglar attacked her | Police immediately suspicious | Both arrested within days | Trial became tabloid circus | Nicknamed "Ruthless Ruth," "Viking Ice Matron," "synthetic blonde murderess" | Both convicted December 1927 | Executed Sing Sing, January 12, 1928 | Ruth first woman electrocuted in NY in 10 years | Gray executed minutes later
THE INFAMOUS PHOTO: Daily News photographer Tom Howard smuggled ankle-mounted camera into execution | Snapped photo at electrocution moment | Published with "DEAD!" headline | Sold over 1 million copies | Sparked massive media ethics debate | Still debated today
WHAT WE EXPLORE: How housewife became "ice woman" femme fatale | Insurance murder plot that inspired film noir | Tabloid journalism turned trial into carnival | Gender double standards: motherhood vs. murderess | Death as spectacle | Why execution photo still shocks | Cultural impact on noir films and theater
THE CULTURAL IMPACT: Inspired Billy Wilder's "Double Indemnity" (1944) | Basis for Sophie Treadwell's "Machinal" (1928) | Referenced in countless noir films | Execution photo became iconic capital punishment image | Changed tabloid photography forever
THE TRIAL: Packed courtroom | 162 witnesses | Defense claimed Gray manipulated Ruth | Prosecution portrayed Ruth as cold seductress | Both blamed each other | Jury deliberated 98 minutes | Death sentence for both | Mother of 9-year-old daughter | Public divided on executing a mother
SOURCES: Smithsonian Magazine | Metropolitan Museum of Art | Murder-Mayhem | Time | New York Times trial archives | Tom Howard photographer biography | Court records
DISCLAIMER: For educational/entertainment purposes only. Based on historical court records and cultural analysis. We are not legal experts. Views explore gender, media, and crime in historical context, not endorsement of sensationalism. Ruth Snyder and Judd Gray were convicted and executed. We respect victim Albert Snyder and acknowledge the serious nature of murder. This examines how media, gender bias, and public spectacle intersect in criminal justice.
PS: Forgive the scratchy voice—recorded while sick. Call it my "Jazz Age rasp."
She became the crime photo that changed journalism forever.
📸 Can't get enough? Follow @MugshotMysteries on TikTok and Instagram for mugshots, unsolved mysteries, and the stories we couldn't fit (because Gabriel went on another tangent).
⭐ Rate us if you enjoyed this. Seriously, it's how the algorithm gods bless us.
🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen so you never miss an episode.
Thanks for hanging with us. See you next time with another face, another crime, and probably another debate between us.
Stay curious. Stay suspicious.