The Mysterious & Forgotten Disappearance of Kathy Goad
Publisher |
gone cold podcast
Media Type |
audio
Podknife tags |
Society & Culture
Texas
True Crime
Categories Via RSS |
News
Society & Culture
True Crime
Publication Date |
Aug 15, 2022
Episode Duration |
00:44:28
On November 11th, 1982, 20-year-old Kathy Mae Goad took the day off work to run some errands in the Fort Worth, Texas suburb of Hurst. She never made it back to the east Fort Worth home she shared with her husband, who reported her missing that evening. The Fort Worth Police believed that Kathy had simply left her husband and more or less refused to investigate the case. But authorities in her Kentucky hometown felt very differently. They sent one of their best detectives to Texas to investigate. In the first two days of Commonwealth of Kentucky Attorney’s Detective Glen Wood’s visit, he uncovered information that strongly pointed to a suspect in Kathy Goad’s disappearance. Twelve years after Kathy went missing, a mysterious letter sent to FWPD attempted to connect her case with one of the city’s most talked about mysteries – the Fort Worth Missing Trio. Still, the 20-year-old has never been found and no one has ever been held accountable for whatever happened to her. If you have any information on the disappearance of Kathy Mae Brownfield Goad, please contact the Texas Department of Public Safety’s Missing Person’s Clearinghouse at (512)424 5074 or (800)346-3243If you’d like to learn more about the disappearances of Rachel Trlica, Renee Wilson, and Julie Moseley, the Fort Worth Missing Trio, you can listen to gone cold’s 7 part series from December 2020 – January 2021Support independent music and our friend Kash Mojo by purchasing his debut single “Galveston Gone” on Spotify, YouTube, DistroKid, or Apple MusicPlease donate to help get #JusticeForLeonLaureles at gofundme.com/f/leon-laureles-private-detective-and-memorial/If you’d like to donate to law enforcement investigations that need funding or upload your DNA into a database used only for law enforcement investigations, go to DNAsolves.com/The Fort Worth Police Department still has nearly 1,000 unsolved cases dating back to 1959. You can help our diligent Cold Case Detectives by donating to the Fort Worth Cold Case Support Group at fwpdcoldcasesupport.org/Find gone cold – texas true crime on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram by using @gonecoldpodcast and on YouTube at: youtube.com/c/gonecoldpodcastThe Park City Daily News, The Louisville Courier Journal, The Los Angeles Times, and Police Reports were used as sources for this episode #JusticeForKathyGoad #MissingTrio #FortWorthMissingTrio #JusticeForReneeJulieAndRachel #FortWorth #FortWorthTX #Texas #TX #BowlingGreenKY #Kentucky #KY #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #ColdCase #Missing #MissingPerson #Unsolved

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