Watch full video on YouTube
Thank you for delving into the mysteries with us. Your thoughts and theories breathe life into these stories, transforming mere narratives into a collective quest for truth and understanding. Do you have a case that haunts your thoughts or a theory that could unravel mysteries yet unsolved? Share your insights and suggestions in the comments below—we're eager to hear from you. For those who wish to dive deeper and stay connected with our ever-growing community, sign up for our newsletter. Here, you'll find exclusive content, behind-the-scenes looks, and personal updates directly from us to your inbox. Let's continue this journey together, exploring the darkest corners of true crime, guided by curiosity and a shared desire for justice. Remember to Subscribe, Like, Comment, and Share, building our community one case at a time. Your engagement not only supports our mission but enriches our collective exploration of the unknown.
Join Our Newsletter
Get the latest crime news and updates directly to your inbox. [newsletter]
32 Comments
Props to whoever made the music
This story was just covered by the podcast My Favorite Murder. I had never heard of Frances Glessner Lee, and I'm so impressed and inspired by her determination and expertise.
Anyone know the song at the beginning?
I need someone to please explain the doll house with the baby, mom on the bed and dad down dead
Does anyone know the music used in this video? I really like it, but I can't find it anywhere
Bad
She's THE International Harvester heiress and she is not well known enough, for She's a genius. A hero way before her time.
What an amazing body of work.
I mean i understand its for observation, but it breaks my heart to not see a solution for closure, even if it is just a doll
I bet Conan wants to see this!
I was watching this video like 4 years ago and my mom took my phone and saw this and thought I was suicidal😭😭
Someone should do this in the sims
When I was in highschool Forensic Science, our teacher set up something like this so we could learn to gather clues and details
That class was fun
i would love to visit there and be a detective for a day.
Man dr ea
I think these are amazing, the detail in these 'nutshells' is the kind of thing most miniaturists aspire to. I love them. I want to know where she found all the wallpaper prints and fabrics that look true to scale, before printers and the dollhouse scale paper etc was something you could find.
she was the original true crime content creator
Reminds me of “Miniature Killer” from CSI
I read her autobiography, and she was an amazing woman. I highly recommend it.
Somebody who's training took you into the extra credit room where there was a person on the bed and certain things are scattered and you have to determine what is wrong with the person you're looking at what is going on and you have to observe everything my new detail I really find that her attention to detail in these miniatures teach what my fellow students in my course did not see I got the extra credit bonus as did my partner because when I'm looking around the room I'm looking at every aspect of that room I'm looking at every detail of that room every minute aspect is if it's a photograph and her making those crime scene photos into the Miniatures those little nutshells is more than just important it's a teaching tool that could be used for anything not just for police work it could be used to teach people in the medical profession to look at the details of a room you may have to come into to treat a patient and unfortunately the only way you basically learn these things is if you have experience at looking at the whole picture is at work and seeing it three-dimensionally in your mind most people can't do that for me that second nature. Those Miniatures show us an invaluable aspect of a crime scene that we would not normally even think to look at we wouldn't think to look at every single little detail is something facing the right ways that facing the wrong way we wouldn't think to look at those tiny little details and those details are important because they tell things the smallest things can tell you the biggest things and sometimes the biggest things can tell you nothing… When are teacher asked me how did I know to look at I mean I literally stopped and I started to process the room in my mind looking at every single aspect of what I was seeing to try to find details I looked literally from top to bottom every little corner every little nook and cranny every little tiny detail and what every single person who did that room missed but my including my partner by the way I did not miss it was that the pill box on the side that said aspirincertain details about the bottle itself told me that I should look in that bottle because there may be something there there were certain details about it it looks like a box that had already been used and should have been discarded but was not discarded therefore there was more to it than meets the eye and it turned out I was right, there were other things and again I'm the only one non police officer in the room I'm taking the course to up my grades for the course that I'm really it's a medical course that I'm trying for and I need the great extra grade so I took this course while they're taking the course in order to know how to deal with a situation that when they come into it there may be a person who is ill and how to deal with it. The cops and chorus trying to convince me to become a criminologist at the very least in a police officer if I wanted to but at the time I wasn't certain what I wanted to be perfectly honest I take in this course mostly to bring up a grade point average and because I did have a background in emergency medicine it was just a way to get a better grade. I did tell the teacher how I made my evaluations of that room and the patient on the bed and how I came to my conclusions and why I bothered to look in the pill box and you know the aspirin box and certain other factors that got us the extra points and put us on top on the last exam.
Because you need that attention to detail if you don't have that attention to detail you will miss out on important information it's about how to gather that information how to think outside the box and how to look at a scene when you come into it most people really don't look at things they don't see things because they're not paying attention to the details they're not looking at the details you know we think of TV shows like Monk and the fact that he's paying every little attention to details but actually it's exactly like these dioramas he is paying attention to the details that we should be paying attention to if we want to understand what we're looking at but most people don't.
Why did she make them perfect?
Well if she didn't then what's the point? Ain't we learning to gather evidence??
I’ve always wanted to see these irl… they’re so beautiful to me
I woeld love to see a museum of these. I bet there is a crime fanatic (come on, there always at least one person or more) that has a collection of these type of dollhouse. This actullay reminds me of the 1992 Movie. "Dollhouse murders"(?)
These are so fascinating! I wish that there were more interactive online sources to really get a look at all the details, I'm morbidly fascinated but live in another continent from the Smithsonian!
This reminds me of episodes of CSI: Las Vegas.
I would love to see these in person
The real toy story of terror
I love the editing
Dollhouse Murders was a great book
Ooo imagine if you could get a VR experience in these doll houses. That would be hella creepy but also a fun way of learning how to find these smaller details.
yo i wonder all the name of soundtrack from this backgrounvideo