I Never Saw It Coming
True Crime Stories of the People No One Ever Suspected. The Hidden Lives of Ordinary People Who Became Criminals
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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J. D. Roberts
This title uses virtual voice narration
Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
A devoted family doctor who made house calls for twenty years. A church council president who sang in the choir on Sunday mornings. A decorated military commander who transported heads of state. A father who appeared on television and begged for his family to come home.
They were trusted completely. And they used that trust as a weapon.
I Never Saw It Coming examines ten of the most shocking true crime cases of the modern era — not for the crimes themselves, but for the question that haunts every case: How was this possible for so long, in plain sight, with no one who knew them ever seeing it coming?
Drawing on official inquiry reports, court records, confession transcripts, and the accounts of investigators and survivors, J.D. Roberts — author of Why Con Artists and Pickup Artists Always Succeed — takes readers inside the psychology of the sustained double life. How ordinary people build surfaces so convincing that even the people who loved them saw nothing. Why trust — the most human of instincts — becomes the most exploitable of vulnerabilities. Why the sentence spoken after every case like these is almost always true.
I never saw it coming.
The ten cases in this book span continents, professions, and decades. Harold Shipman, the English family doctor who killed over 250 patients and signed their death certificates. Dennis Rader — BTK — who spent thirty years as a church president and compliance officer while murdering ten people and writing letters to police from the same community. Charles Cullen, the nurse who moved through nine hospitals over sixteen years while institutions quietly passed him along rather than report what they suspected. Alex Murdaugh, heir to a South Carolina legal dynasty spanning a century, who stole nine million dollars from his own clients and murdered his wife and son. Israel Keyes, who buried murder kits across the country in advance and flew to distant cities to use them, leaving no pattern, no geographic signature, nothing to find.
And more.
In between each case, Roberts examines the mechanisms that made these cases possible: the respectability shield, the architecture of the double life, the specific ways that professional authority, community standing, and the simple passage of time make the most dangerous people invisible. The findings are unsettling. The conclusions are honest.
The surface is usually real. These ten people prove that sometimes it isn't.
Includes: case summaries, comparative analysis of all ten cases, selected bibliography, and resources for further reading.
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