He said it was an accident
In 1975, Leslee Larson was a young newlywed and mother. She disappeared near a river in rural Montana while on a trip with her husband.
He said she slipped into the river and drowned, but years later another wife would die under eerily similar circumstances.
Some true crime cases don't stop at one tragedy.
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Reading about Leslee Larson’s disappearance and the suspicious death of Dennis’s second wife, Kathy Frost, really brought home how some true crime cases expose chilling patterns of tragedy that can span decades. I’ve followed similar cases where so-called accidental deaths often raise red flags once patterns start emerging. In Leslee’s case, the local knowledge that the river was dangerous combined with Dennis’s questionable behavior—returning with dry clothes despite claiming to have jumped in—raises doubt about the official story. It reminds me how crucial it is to look beyond initial explanations in disappearance and drowning cases, especially when relationships are involved. Kathy Frost’s death in Acadia National Park, from an 80-foot fall, parallels Leslee’s experience in a way that can’t be ignored. When Dennis brought Kathy to purchase life insurance shortly after marriage, it sparked warning signals reminiscent of toxic relationship red flags. For anyone interested in true crime, these stories emphasize the importance of victim-centered investigation and the value of podcasts like "She Goes By Jane" that delve into cold cases often overlooked. It also underlines the necessity for communities to share local knowledge about dangerous areas to protect people. Personally, cases like these make me think about how many so-called accidents might hide darker truths, and how endurance and persistence in seeking justice for victims can illuminate crucial details that authorities might initially miss. True crime stories like Leslee’s remind us that sometimes, tragic accidents can be part of a sinister pattern worth uncovering.










