In the 1970’s and 80’s, women’s bodies started to surface in the Connecticut River Valley between New Hampshire and Vermont. One woman survived her vicious attack, was stabbed 27 times and left for dead. This survivor's name is Jane Boroski and she is the host of Invisible Tears Podcast.
Is her case related to the other cases? This is unknown. Why? Because ALL the cases STILL remain unsolved, including Jane's. Are all the cases related and the work of a serial killer? That is unknown as well, but law enforcement did form a task force in the 1980’s to investigate all of them.
While Jane's story is a miraculous one, it doesn't end the night she was attacked. The trajectory of her life changed, and Invisible Tears Podcast covers her story and her story afterwards. It's raw, transparent and emotional. On this journey, Jane joined forces with her co-hosts, Amanda and Drew and together they have become a voice for the voiceless. They advocate for those who cannot advocate for themselves and cover missing and murder cases while remaining factual and engaging with empathy. The team also focuses on mental health and other advocates doing amazing work! A part that has been forgotten in the true crime community, but they aim to help pioneer that shift in conversation.
Jane, Amanda and Drew, are some of the founding members of the New Hampshire Coalition of Families of the Missing and Murdered. Alongside the family of Trish Haynes, Maura Murray’s family, Denise Robert’s family, the non profit victim advocacy project “Light The Way” and the Gabby Petito foundation, the coalition helps victims and families with support and resources and help them to find truth and answers. The justice system in New Hampshire is broken and this coalition is determined to change that.
The Invisible Tears team is transparent and opinionated - never claiming to be anything they are not. They aren’t law enforcement, they aren’t private investigators or journalists. They are true victim advocates who care and want to help families.
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In the 1970’s and 80’s, women’s bodies started to surface in the Connecticut River Valley between New Hampshire and Vermont. One woman survived her vicious attack, was stabbed 27 times and left for dead. This survivor's name is Jane Boroski and she is the host of Invisible Tears Podcast.
Is her case related to the other cases? This is unknown. Why? Because ALL the cases STILL remain unsolved, including Jane's. Are all the cases related and the work of a serial killer? That is unknown as well, but law enforcement did form a task force in the 1980’s to investigate all of them.
While Jane's story is a miraculous one, it doesn't end the night she was attacked. The trajectory of her life changed, and Invisible Tears Podcast covers her story and her story afterwards. It's raw, transparent and emotional. On this journey, Jane joined forces with her co-hosts, Amanda and Drew and together they have become a voice for the voiceless. They advocate for those who cannot advocate for themselves and cover missing and murder cases while remaining factual and engaging with empathy. The team also focuses on mental health and other advocates doing amazing work! A part that has been forgotten in the true crime community, but they aim to help pioneer that shift in conversation.
Jane, Amanda and Drew, are some of the founding members of the New Hampshire Coalition of Families of the Missing and Murdered. Alongside the family of Trish Haynes, Maura Murray’s family, Denise Robert’s family, the non profit victim advocacy project “Light The Way” and the Gabby Petito foundation, the coalition helps victims and families with support and resources and help them to find truth and answers. The justice system in New Hampshire is broken and this coalition is determined to change that.
The Invisible Tears team is transparent and opinionated - never claiming to be anything they are not. They aren’t law enforcement, they aren’t private investigators or journalists. They are true victim advocates who care and want to help families.
S6 EP2: Spreading Awareness About Filicide - Interview With Hope Hooton
Invisible Tears
58 minutes
1 week ago
S6 EP2: Spreading Awareness About Filicide - Interview With Hope Hooton
S6 EP2: Spreading Awareness About Filicide - Interview With Hope Hooton
In this episode of Invisible Tears, Jane and Amanda sit down for a interview with Hope Hooton. Hope's mission is to spread awareness and education about filicide - a silent pandemic she knows about all too well. Hope shares her story, why she is advocating so hard for this awareness and what she and other families are doing to help change laws so they can help to save children! It's a powerful and emotional interview. One you don't want to miss!
Support hope by visiting her website at:
Voices Against Filicide – https://voicesagainstfilicide.odoo.com
Connect with Hope Hooton:
Email: hopeinthepain@gmail.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hope_in_the_pain/
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@hope.in.the.pain
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Hopeinthepain
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hopeinthepain
Check out and subscribe to her podcast:
Podcast – Voices Against Filicide
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/325I2ym4axloA9pYRQxhPp?dlsi=88d22465fb194619&si=
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/voices-against-filicide/id1831354515
Follow or Visit Invisible Tears everywhere at:
https://linktr.ee/invisibletearspodcast
Subscribe to Our Patreon and get ad free and extended episodes:
https://www.patreon.com/cw/InvisibleTearsPodcast
Episode Produced/Edited by Amanda Bedard
Intro/Outro Music by Amanda Bedard
Other music credits/Ad Spot:
Unexplained mystery introoutro-136159
Music by William McDonald from Pixabay
Podcast Cover Art designed by Emiley Burriss
Other Visual Assets designed/photographed by:
Amanda Bedard
Aubriana McMahon
Jane Boroski
Jessica Parker
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Invisible Tears
In the 1970’s and 80’s, women’s bodies started to surface in the Connecticut River Valley between New Hampshire and Vermont. One woman survived her vicious attack, was stabbed 27 times and left for dead. This survivor's name is Jane Boroski and she is the host of Invisible Tears Podcast.
Is her case related to the other cases? This is unknown. Why? Because ALL the cases STILL remain unsolved, including Jane's. Are all the cases related and the work of a serial killer? That is unknown as well, but law enforcement did form a task force in the 1980’s to investigate all of them.
While Jane's story is a miraculous one, it doesn't end the night she was attacked. The trajectory of her life changed, and Invisible Tears Podcast covers her story and her story afterwards. It's raw, transparent and emotional. On this journey, Jane joined forces with her co-hosts, Amanda and Drew and together they have become a voice for the voiceless. They advocate for those who cannot advocate for themselves and cover missing and murder cases while remaining factual and engaging with empathy. The team also focuses on mental health and other advocates doing amazing work! A part that has been forgotten in the true crime community, but they aim to help pioneer that shift in conversation.
Jane, Amanda and Drew, are some of the founding members of the New Hampshire Coalition of Families of the Missing and Murdered. Alongside the family of Trish Haynes, Maura Murray’s family, Denise Robert’s family, the non profit victim advocacy project “Light The Way” and the Gabby Petito foundation, the coalition helps victims and families with support and resources and help them to find truth and answers. The justice system in New Hampshire is broken and this coalition is determined to change that.
The Invisible Tears team is transparent and opinionated - never claiming to be anything they are not. They aren’t law enforcement, they aren’t private investigators or journalists. They are true victim advocates who care and want to help families.