Leo’s investigation forced the state police to reopen the case. With modern ground-penetrating radar, they searched the old Sheriff’s property—land that had been deemed off-limits for decades. Under the concrete floor of a tool shed, they found a small, rusted locket and the remains of a young woman.
A young investigative journalist, Leo Thorne, returned to his hometown armed with a high-end microphone and a relentless obsession. His podcast, The Solstice Secret , quickly gained national traction. In Episode 33, Leo interviewed a retired gardener who claimed to have seen Julian Vane digging in the woods behind the Vance estate—not on the night of the disappearance, but three days later. [S33E40] Episode #33.40
The specific title "Episode #33.40" for Season 33 most notably refers to the 48 Hours true crime documentary episode titled " The Disappearance of Kristin Smart ," which aired in May 2021. Leo’s investigation forced the state police to reopen
When the cuffs finally clicked around the now-elderly Miller’s wrists, the town of Oakhaven breathed a sigh of relief that had been held for a generation. Elena Vance was finally laid to rest in the family plot, and the podcast's final episode became a landmark in true crime history, proving that even after forty years, the truth eventually finds its way to the light. 48 Hours Season 33 Episodes - Watch on Paramount+ A young investigative journalist, Leo Thorne, returned to
For thirty-three years, the small town of Oakhaven had a ghost that didn't haunt houses—she haunted the town’s collective memory. Elena Vance, the nineteen-year-old heir to the local paper mill fortune, had vanished during a summer solstice party in 1993. No body was ever found, and the prime suspect, a quiet loner named Julian Vane, had moved away shortly after, citing harassment from the local police.
As Leo dug deeper for the season finale, "Episode #33.40," he received an anonymous tip leading him to the basement of the old town library. Tucked inside a 1993 edition of the local gazette was a set of Polaroids that had never been entered into evidence. They showed Elena at the party, laughing, but in the background, a distinctive silver watch was visible on the wrist of someone reaching for her arm. It wasn't Julian Vane's watch; it belonged to the then-Sheriff, Miller.
The case went cold until the fortieth anniversary of the Oakhaven Solstice Festival.