Unsolved Murders and the Missing
Welcome to the home of Unsolved Murders and the Missing, the definitive audio investigative series focusing on the shadows and secrets of Springfield, Ohio.
In a city with stories that deserve to be told, we dive deep into the cold cases and disappearances that have left families searching for answers for years. We don’t just recount the facts; we push the boundaries of what is known.
Unsolved Murders and the Missing
Why Listen?
We believe that justice has no expiration date. What sets Unsolved Murders and the Missing apart is our commitment to the truth.
Every episode features never-before-released information—details previously held close to the vest by those involved, now brought to light to help crack these local mysteries wide open.
When to Tune In
Join the search for the truth every single week.
When: Every Tuesday
Time: 7:00 PM EST
Dedicated exclusively to the Springfield, Ohio area.
Join the Search
Do you have a tip or information regarding a case we’ve covered? Justice starts with a single voice. Follow us on social media for case files, crime scene maps, and episode updates.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Nikki Lyn Forrest Cold Case
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Nikki had been staying with her godmother, Bobbie Slater, at 705 Young Street. An argument over "house rules" occurred, resulting in Nikki being asked to leave. She packed her belongings, including her progesterone medication, indicating her intent to maintain her high-risk pregnancy.
Before leaving Piqua, she sent a reassuring text to her stepmother, Tammy Weddington. The message stated she was "OK" and vaguely mentioned moving out of state with a friend—the last digital footprint she would ever leave.
“A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes.”
- Mark Twain

Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Amanda Ward Romine Cold Case
“A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes.”
- Mark Twain
The Story of Amanda Ward-Romine
In the summer of 2013, the air hung thick over Springfield—a physical weight pressing down on limestone and asphalt, trapping heat and secrets in equal measure. Through the heart of this landscape runs Buck Creek, a waterway that was once the lifeblood of milling and industry but had become, in the local psyche, something more opaque. A place of recreation, yes—boaters and fishermen casting lines into the C.J. Brown Reservoir—but also a place of concealment. The water was deep, the currents beneath the dam treacherous, the surrounding woods dense enough to swallow a secret whole.
It was here, in this geography of decay and natural beauty, that the tragedy of Amanda Lyn Ward-Romine would unfold. Not a tragedy of sudden, inexplicable violence, but of slow, grinding inevitability.
