For Want of a Nail

Rachel

A podcast about small mistakes that lead to big disasters. Disasters, fires, plane crashes, spree killings, institutional breakdowns, murders...let's talk about awful things that didn't have to happen, and the ways in which they should have been prevented. read less
True CrimeTrue Crime

Episodes

"Mom, I've done something terrible":  The final rampage of Laurie Dann
Jun 19 2023
"Mom, I've done something terrible": The final rampage of Laurie Dann
The young man stands in the sunwashed kitchen, sweat still drying on his skin. He cannot take his eyes from the young woman standing a few feet away, the young woman dressed only in a T-shirt and a plastic garbage bag wrapped around her waist. The young woman holding a gun on himself and his mother.  The young woman is agitated, fretting. She claims to have been raped, and to have shot her rapist, but she will not allow them to call 911 and refuses their offer of clothing. And she will not put the gun down. All that she will do is call her mother on the phone and say, “Mother, it's bad.” When the man asks to speak to her mother, the young woman passes him the phone. But the woman on the other end of the line is calm, almost to the point of being disinterested. Her husband is not home, and she does not have a car, so she has no way of getting there to help her distressed daughter. No, she cannot take a cab. He cannot believe his ears. Her daughter has been raped, has killed a man, and is now in his home, threatening him and his mother with a gun. But no, she insists, seeming to find nothing noteworthy or distressing about his words. As the young man stares at the intruder, sunlight gleaming off the handgun in her grip, he hears her mother say, “Make sure she gets home safe.” Join us as we take a deep dive into the infuriating and tragic story of Laurie Dann and Nicky Corwin, and see just how the rampage of May 20, 1988 could have been prevented.
"A tiny little thing": The Rana Plaza Collapse
Sep 1 2022
"A tiny little thing": The Rana Plaza Collapse
The young man weeps as he stands at his window. For months his mind has been dominated by the memory of falling masonry, his ears ringing with the screams of the dying, his nose choked by the stench of decomposing flesh. When he closes his eyes he can see them, the ones he was unable to save. The famous image, a woman with her head thrown back, a man with his arms around her and his head laid on her chest, blood running down his face, both of them encased in dust and crumbled concrete, locked in a final embrace. When he closes his eyes he can hear those he was able to save, their screams and the grinding of the hacksaw blade biting into bone, their limbs smashed beyond repair. There is no help. There is no respite. None then, and none now. He opens the bottle, pours the liquid over his head. For a moment, the pungent smell of gasoline mercifully covers the stink of rot. It was two weeks of his life, only two weeks of his 27 years, but it has dominated his mind and broken his spirit, and he can take no more.  A few moments later, his neighbours shriek in horror as a flaming body drops from the young man's window. By the time the flames are beaten out, the screams have been silenced. He could take no more. And he is far from the only one.  This is the Rana Plaza garment factory collapse. Join us for a deep dive into the world's worst non-deliberate structural collapse, and Bangladesh's worst industrial disaster, and the failings that lead to the deaths of over 1100 men, women, and children.
The Pink Death: The Iraq Poison Grain Disaster
Jul 27 2022
The Pink Death: The Iraq Poison Grain Disaster
The children are hungry, clamouring around their mother in the hot, dusty home. Their mother dusts her hands with flour and begins to flatten out the dough, pressing it into discs with her strong fingers before opening the tannour to press them against the hot, clay walls. A few minutes later she pulls the steaming bread from the oven, and the children squeal in delight as she hands out the fresh loaves. It's the pink bread, the bread made with the special flour their father brought home, and the bright colour delights them even more than the flavour. Their mother smiles, brushing the pinkish flour from her hands. She has no way of knowing that she has just fed poison into the mouths of her children. The children have no way of knowing that the bright pink colour that so enchants them is a sign that this bread is deadly. And as the mother nurses her newborn and marvels at what a well-behaved, quiet baby she has, she cannot know that her daughter never cries because she has already suffered crippling brain damage. The Iraq Poison Grain Disaster was a mass poisoning that occurred in rural Iraq during late 1971 and early 1972.  Join me as I take a deep dive into why poisoned wheat and barley was released to the public, why the public didn't understand the danger of what they had received, and how the government made everything worse.  Like so many other disasters, the Iraq Poison Grain Disaster could have been prevented, and I'm going to tell you how.