Crimery
CRIMERY is a long-form true crime podcast that goes beyond headlines to examine the people, psychology, and systems behind some of the most disturbing crimes in American history.
Each episode is built from original research, police records, court documents, and contemporary reporting — presented with narrative restraint and respect for victims and their families. CRIMERY focuses not just on what happened, but how it was allowed to happen, and why certain cases continue to haunt communities decades later.
From unsolved disappearances and cold cases to infamous crimes hidden behind public personas, CRIMERY strips away myth, rumor, and sensationalism to reveal uncomfortable truths — about power, violence, silence, and the cost of looking away.
This is not fast crime.
This is not speculation disguised as storytelling.
These are carefully constructed investigations into crimes that still matter.
Crimery
THE SUSAN REINERT MURDER: HOW A TEACHER PROGRAMMED A KILLING (PART 2)
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
September 18, 1992: the Pennsylvania Supreme Court overturns Jay C. Smith’s conviction—and bars a retrial for prosecutorial misconduct so extreme the court says trying him again would violate double jeopardy. After 13 years in prison—seven on death row—Smith walks free. Meanwhile, William Bradfield remains locked up on three consecutive life sentences.
And the children—Karen Reinert (11) and Michael Reinert (10)—are still missing.
In Part 2, the case shifts from a murder investigation into a system-level collapse: hidden evidence, jailhouse testimony, courtroom strategy, and the constitutional ruling that ended the Commonwealth’s ability to prosecute Smith forever. We follow the investigation’s most disturbing throughline—how “programming” can look like prediction, how an alibi can look like architecture, and how silence can become the final lock on an ending no one can recover.
In this episode:
- The Supreme Court ruling that freed Jay C. Smith and permanently barred retrial
- The investigation timeline and why Bradfield’s alibi raised red flags
- The jailhouse confession testimony—and the credibility war around it
- Brady violations, prosecutorial misconduct, and how the system broke the case
- The haunting question that remains: where are Karen and Michael?
Content warning: violence against women and children.
Check out our website at crimery.show
Music: "No Copyright True Crime Investigation Music"
Artist: Soundridemusic
https://youtube.com/@soundridemusic
CRIMERY
Tip line & inquiries: crimerypod@gmail.com
If you found this episode valuable, follow, rate, and review in your podcast app it really helps others find the show.
Legal: Everyone mentioned is presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Content may include descriptions of violence. Listener discretion advised.
©2025 CRIMERY. All rights reserved.