http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=57_t2BFZaK8So basically this movie look pretty awesome, but why i really bring it up, is because it's based off where i live. They dont mention the city or anything..at least not in the trailer. But the story is based of the true story of these murder's that happened in wineville (now called Mira Loma) which is literally right down the street from me. I passed wineville ave everyday going to school lol In September of 1928, the Los Angeles Police Department, acting on a tip as to the whereabouts of a missing Canadian boy in the area went to the "Northcott Ranch" a small chicken farm located in present day Mira Loma, California. There they discovered the missing boy, Sanford Clark. Under questioning, Clark claimed that he had been kidnapped by his uncle Gordon Stewart Northcott, the son of the owner of the farm. Northcott had apparently kept Clark prisoner on the ranch, physically abusing him and threatening to kill the boy if he fled. Clark claimed that Northcott and he had abducted and murdered as many as twenty children between the ages of nine and twelve. Clark was able to lead police to the graves of some of the victims. Northcott was arrested near Vernon, British Columbia after having fled to his native Canada. The Los Angeles Police Department was also involved in a scandal as a result of this case. Arthur Hutchins, Jr., a runaway from Illinois and originally from Iowa, claimed he was the missing Walter Collins so he could get a free trip to California. The police considered the case closed and tried to convince Walter's mother, Christine Collins, that Hutchins was her son. When she refused to believe it, she was placed in the psychiatric ward of the Los Angeles County General Hospital. Only after Hutchins admitted he was not Christine Collins' son, ten days later, was she released. It is this aspect of the case depicted in the 2008 film Changeling. Because Walter Collins' body was never found at the Northcott's chicken ranch, Christine Collins believed that he was still alive. In October of 1930, Northcott sent a telegram to Ms. Collins, saying that he had lied when he said that Walter was not one of his victims. He said that he would tell her the truth if she came to visit him, but when Ms. Collins arrived and confronted him, he claimed that he did not know anything about it and was innocent. Five years after Northcott's execution, one of the boys that Northcott allegedly killed was found alive and well. As Walter Collins' body had not been found, Christine Collins still hoped that Walter had survived. She continued to search for him, unsuccessfully, until she faded into obscurity without ever knowing her son's fate. The last public record of Christine Collins is from 1941, when she attempted to collect a $15,562 judgment against Capt. J. J. Jones, retired police officer, in Superior Court Investigators found an axe and bones, hair and fingers from three of the victims buried in lime near the chicken house at the Northcott ranch near Wineville, hence the name "Wineville Chicken Coop Murders." Wineville changed its name to “Mira Loma” on November 1, 1930, due in large part to the negative publicity surrounding this case. Wineville Avenue, Wineville Road, Wineville Park and other geographic references provide reminders of the community's former name. Source: Wineville Chicken Coop Murders - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia