“I usually spend my time looking into other people’s business, not letting them look into mine. But a writer caught up with me and convinced me that my ‘process’ was worth a few words. Personally, I think he just liked the way I take my coffee. He seems to think I’m some kind of relic from a better era—I’ll let you decide if that’s a compliment or a diagnosis. Here’s the piece if you’re into that sort of thing.”
— P. Cliffman
FEATURE ARTICLE | APRIL 2026
The Vault Cracks: Why the Man Behind the Upcoming ‘Wed. Drain. Repeat.’ is Finally Talking
By: J.J. Sterling Special Correspondent for The Backlot Ledger
The Peninsula Hotel’s bar is quiet at 3:00 PM, but Pressley Cliffman looks like a man who’s spent too many decades in a parked car in an alley. He’s the Title Investigator and PI who provided the forensic skeleton for up and coming author Grant Vale’s new psychological suspense novella, Wed. Drain. Repeat. But as I sit across from him, I realize the book is just the tip of a very cold, very deep iceberg.
The “Unfit” Files
Cliffman isn’t a “consultant” in the Hollywood sense. He’s a thirty-year law enforcement veteran—from beat cop to the Special Victims Unit—who retired into the “Underworld of Paper.” He’s the guy attorneys call when a divorce turns into a disappearing act.
But when the “Author” started mining Cliffman’s files for the book, they ran into a problem: way too much truth.
“We realized early on that the story was a monster,” Cliffman says. “But for every detail that made the book, there were ten more that didn’t fit. Side-stories, international trails, psychological hits that were too sprawling for a single spine. And then there’s the forty years of other cases I’ve been sitting on. Stuff that doesn’t have a home, but wants to be told.”
The Accidental Podcaster
The result is Cliffman’s Notes, a podcast that was originally suggested by the media “suits” as a promotional tool. But for Cliffman, it’s turned into something else: a long-overdue outlet.
“The media people told me it would be ‘good for the brand,’” Cliffman says with a dry, cutting smirk. “I told them I don’t have a brand, I have a file cabinet. But once I started talking into the mic, I realized I’d been keeping this junk inside for a long time. It’s... cathartic, I guess. If you can call reliving a train wreck cathartic.”
The Roadmap to Nowhere (and Everywhere)
Unlike your typical scripted true-crime show, Cliffman’s Notes doesn’t have a rigid GPS. It’s guided by whatever ghost is rattling Cliffman’s cage that week. He’s already providing the “fictional” backstory for a second book in the series, and the podcast has become the dumping ground for the details that are too gritty even for the sequel.
“I’m not sure where the show is going,” he admits, adjusting his jacket. “Sometimes it’s a deep dive into a German consulate file. Other times, it’s me trying to explain why a man breaks over a Saturday morning omelette. It’s the ‘Noise’ that the Author couldn’t use. It’s the stuff that didn’t fit, but wouldn’t stay buried.”
The Credibility Anchor
In an industry full of “inspired by true events” fluff, Cliffman is a jarring dose of reality. He’s the third party we all wish we had on speed dial. The man who doesn’t aim to comfort, but to confirm.
As we finished our drinks, I asked him if he ever misses the silence of the shadows.
“Every day,” he said. “But like I say, the truth doesn’t knock. It jimmies the lock. I figured it was time I stopped holding the door shut and just let the sunlight in.”
The Final Word: The Man Who Isn’t There
As we stood to leave, I caught a glimpse of Grant watching the exchange from a nearby table. When I asked if we’d be seeing Cliffman on the talk-show circuit or the “true crime” convention stages, the answer was a flat, immediate head-shake.
“Pressley doesn’t seek the spotlight, and he sure as hell doesn’t need it,” the Author told me later. “He’s spent forty years being the man you don’t see until it’s too late. This interview? This is a rarity. He has no plans to be an ‘influencer’ or a brand ambassador. He’s a voice in the background—a storyteller who happens to have the receipts. He’s here to provide the forensic backbone for the books and a little catharsis for himself on the podcast. After that? He’s going back to the Glades, back to the paper-chase, and back to the shadows where he’s most comfortable. If you want to find him, don’t look for a red carpet. Look for a trail of jimmied locks.”
‘Wed. Drain. Repeat.’ is scheduled for release later this year. For the raw, unedited ‘noise’ of the investigation and forty years of back-alley secrets, find Cliffman’s Notes wherever you get your podcasts.

