20/20 - The After Show: Since You've Been Gone
Episode Date: July 21, 2025The 20/20 team explores the case that went from runaway teen to homicide investigation. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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Hi, everybody. Welcome to 2020 the after show. I'm Deborah
Roberts. And today we're diving into a case
that people in Phoenix, Arizona have been haunted by
for two decades when 17 year old Alyssa Turney
disappeared on the last day of her junior year
of high school.
Authorities at first believed it looked
like a classic runaway case.
There was even a note saying she was leaving for California.
But eventually as authorities began to explore testimonies
from her friends, they look at her stepfather, Michael Turney.
This episode of 2020 explores the twists and turns
of that case and there were many,
including a false confession from a serial killer,
the discovery of pipe bombs,
and a murder trial acquittal of Alyssa's stepfather.
A lot to dig into.
Our 2020 team was there from the beginning,
even sitting down with Michael Turney twice along the way.
Joining me now to talk a little bit more about it
is Mary Ellen Resendez-Shweezo,
one of our editorial producers who was along for quite a ride with this story.
Hey, Mary Ellen.
Hi, Deborah. Good to be here.
You and I have worked on a number of stories together.
Often when I come out West, you're on a story and you dig into them and you know
all the details, you know, from having, you know, been involved in them for a while.
And it's always been such a pleasure working with you.
Same. Love working with you, Deborah.
This case, we already know that it had quite the twist with investigators
going from thinking Alyssa was a runaway, then initially putting their effort
into investigating whether her stepfather might have something to do with it.
So before you and I jump in, let's listen to a clip
and remind our listeners of the details of this story with correspondent John Quinones.
The last time I set foot on this dusty desert road between Phoenix and Los Angeles was 2009.
I was reporting on a vibrant teenage girl named Alyssa Turney. She had disappeared in 2001. And to this day, some wonder if this unforgiving and lonely landscape might hold secrets of her fate.
17-year-old Alyssa Marie Turney was...
Disappearance and presumed death of 17-year-old Alyssa Turney.
Alyssa Turney hasn't been seen in more than seven years.
Just a bombshell arrest tonight tonight almost 20 years after Phoenix teen
Alyssa Turney vanished. My report on her case went on to have a life of its own. This is the story of
Alyssa Turney. A girl was described. Showing up in countless stories about Alyssa on the internet and
podcasts and recently it was even at the center of a trial aimed at answering
once and for all what really happened to Alyssa. Wow you hear John there talk
about our involvement in the case for a long time 2020 and you know this happens
sometimes in these stories we have a history and this one goes back to 2009
right? It does we did our first show in 2009.
At that time, Alyssa's case had gone cold,
but it caught the attention of these two missing person
detectives in the Phoenix Police Department,
William Anderson and Stuart Sommershoe.
Those names start to become very familiar with her case,
and it caught their attention when a Florida convict,
Thomas Hymer, confesses to killing Alyssa.
We hadn't heard anything about Alyssa until this time.
He then recants that confession, though, after they kind of confront him
and they bring some pictures. He says it's not Alyssa.
And people don't think she ran away, I mean, when you're starting to talk to people, right?
Yeah, she was reported as a runaway by her father,
but police are starting to suspect she didn't run away.
Something is afoul with this. Now, up until this time, because she was a runaway, there
wasn't a huge police investigation. There also wasn't a lot of media coverage, and we're
going to kind of get into that a little bit later. Michael Turney says all along he has
been searching for his daughter, Alyssa, and he's been working with the Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
He goes to California.
He's putting up flyers, this effort of looking for Alyssa.
And then he agrees to give John Quinones an exclusive interview.
And it's that interview that ends up getting used a decade later in court.
It catches these two detectives' attention
because they say Michael wouldn't grant them an interview.
And it's also where his children kind of start questioning
what really happened to their sister.
The story.
Yeah, he's talking to us, but not so much to authorities.
Now, what are you making of him?
He's intense.
There's no doubt he's an intense character
and, you know, very protective father.
All I can say till hell freezes over, I didn't do a damn thing to my daughter.
Did you kill her?
No. Absolutely not.
Oftentimes these stories that we stumble upon have just had local attention.
And, you know, nobody really has been talking about them in a big way on a national scale. So when you're having suddenly national attention focused on a story,
I mean, obviously, if somebody is missing, that makes a big difference.
How did that impact this case to start off?
Well, there was a big need to find answers.
I mean, when you're talking about someone who's missing, those first 24, 40 hours are crucial.
We're talking seven years later when we're coming on board this.
And when police are actually going
and starting to interview people.
So our first show did not necessarily create
the momentum for detectives to look at Michael Turney.
They had been a year into their investigation
after reopening it,
and they were looking at him as a person of interest. Local podcaster Octavia McHenry said after watching the ABC
interview with Michael Turney, she was inspired to start a podcast.
That podcast starts in 2017. Sarah Turney, who is Alyssa's younger sister by
five years, she tells McHenry that she had supported her father but after watching her father's interview with John, she starts to have doubts
little by little. Her confidence is sort of chipping away here. She
says she wasn't aware that her father had taken her out of school. And then now
suddenly they're hearing it on 2020. Yes. You know it's interesting because
sometimes people sit down to do these interviews with us and maybe they have a
certain expectation of how it's going to go but in this case it kind of shined a
different light on him. You've been a reporter in Phoenix for a long time. This
story was clearly being talked about out there. You can't have a disappearance of
a young teen girl and people not talking about it. What had you been hearing over the years and what was sort of the general
thinking in that community and in the area? What was known?
I don't recall a lot from her initial disappearance and that might be because
she was reported as a runaway. You know, we don't tend to cover, there are so many
runaway cases and while our hearts go out to all the families, we don't tend to cover there are so many runaway cases. And while our hearts go out to all the families,
we don't tend to cover them unless there's a dangerous component. Let's say it's a minor
that took off with a 30-year-old or, you know, if they've taken off without their insulin.
But we do cover missing persons cases, especially if they're in danger. And investigators told us
in their interview, and they testified in court to the jury, it
is the same for them.
A report of a runaway is handled very different than a report of a missing person.
And according to them, runaways will typically resurface.
There's something, they show up at a relative's house, they take money out of a bank, or they
use a credit card.
Missing people don't.
And Alyssa has never been seen
since she was taken out of school in 2017.
You know, you raise a very interesting point
because we all do hear these stories about missing people,
but it is fascinating that the way a case is reported
influences how it's being investigated,
how much, you know, police and detectives
are digging into it.
Mary Ellen, don't go away because when we come back, authorities ratchet up the investigation
into Alyssa's disappearance and make some surprising discoveries.
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We're back now with Mary Ellen Resendez-Schweizo who helped produce Since You've
Been Gone. It was the story of a list attorney's disappearance more than 20
years ago which we reported on for 2020
on multiple occasions, by the way.
And Mary Ellen, we talked about the fact
that original ABC reporting was very influential
for the Turney family.
Seeing this man interviewed by our reporter
and folks having a chance to sort of see him
in a different light.
Tell me a little bit about that,
because when we jump into a story we think we're just
reporting the story but to have an impact on the family is really kind of
interesting. I think it always really helps to have the family participate
with us too because it kind of gives us some insight. In this first case Sarah
Turney, the sister, participated along with two of her brothers. She also became
very active afterwards,
trying to solve her sister's disappearance.
At one point, Sarah turns to TikTok,
and this is covered also nationally,
to keep her sister's name in the media.
And she develops this huge following.
She eventually even creates her own podcast,
which now brings attention to not just her sister's case, but other unsolved cases.
So she really began to become an advocate in this case.
Eventually, law enforcement, of course, are intrigued and they search Michael Turney's
home.
They discovered a lot.
They did.
Police and forensic psychologist Aaron Nelson tell us they had no idea what they were walking
into.
Now, just a
reminder this is in the early 2000. This is a time when home surveillance cameras
were not common like they are today. But Michael Turney had surveillance cameras
both outside and inside his home. He even had one in a vent. He would record
everyone's phone calls. The incoming calls, the outgoing calls.
Investigators told John Quinones they were looking for this eight-hour tape from the
day that Alyssa was last seen, the audio tape from a call that she allegedly made to the
home after she disappeared.
So there's all these phone calls.
This is what investigators go in looking for.
Why did you record so much? The videos are recorded because I love my family.
Those are home videos that I've recorded since I can remember. But weren't these surveillance
cameras in the house? Yeah, there's very few of those. Those aren't home videos. No, those
aren't home videos. Those are for my protection of my house. So for security? Yeah, most of it's for security. Why? Because I want to spy on everybody?
So from Michael Cherney's perspective, he feels like he's assisting in the
investigation by handing over some of these tapes. But from the detective's
point of view, they're like, hold on a second. If you have this videotape, do you
have any videot video tapes of the
day that Alyssa went missing? And Michael Turney says to police, no, I don't have it.
But why didn't you hang on to the surveillance video from the day Alyssa
disappeared? There was nothing on the tape. They were told that. I saved it and
said, you want me to give you this tape? A detective told me, he said, no man, this is just a runaway.
I don't need all that stuff.
So now police are asking,
is it possible that you have a recording
of that phone call that you say
Alyssa made to you early that morning?
No.
It was, when Alyssa called,
it was like four or five o'clock in the morning.
And you know, if I don't reset the tape,
then I have to do it that morning and reset it,
turn the tape over.
Would have been great to have that tape.
They're looking for what was alleged
to be a runaway note too, right?
They are.
They don't like to call it a goodbye note.
And the reason they don't like to call it a goodbye note
is because they say nowhere in there
does Alyssa say she's actually leaving.
I mean, she says she wants to go to California, but she doesn't say she's leaving.
And they can't actually prove when the note was actually written.
So this is one of the items that they're looking for when they go into Michael Turney's house.
What they find instead are explosives.
Michael Turney downplays the explosives in his interview telling Quiñones they were just a few firecrackers,
just enough to get attention for Alyssa's case.
What did you have in your house?
Firecrackers, a few things to make it some noise,
start a fire.
So when I blew my head off,
at least it would make some kind of noise
and maybe some national news would pick it up.
I wanted the attention brought to Alyssa.
Investigators arrested Michael Turney after pipe bombs and numerous guns were found inside
the home.
These things weren't in there.
They were not in that house.
The discovery of these bombs changed the entire focus of the investigation.
They filed charges against Michael Turney for possession of these bombs.
That kind of shifts things.
How did it affect Alyssa's case?
Well, it's no longer a Phoenix Police investigation.
It now becomes a federal investigation
and a federal case.
The federal case puts Michael Turney behind bars.
Michael Turney ends up admitting
to illegally possessing these 26 pipe bombs.
He pleads guilty to unlawful possession of an unregistered, destructive device, and he
ends up being sentenced to 10 years in prison.
In the end, he serves about seven of those 10 years.
He's released in 2017.
And meanwhile, while I say it becomes this federal investigation, there's still Alyssa
who's missing.
And that is still the Phoenix police investigation.
And they're still looking into that.
They are.
They're still going through the case, slow, methodical, sifting through the evidence from
the seizure.
But they never get a body.
And it still remains that way today.
Did you look for forensic evidence and did you find that?
The home that they had been living in when she disappeared,
yes, we did an in-depth forensic review of that home.
We did luminol, we're looking for blood,
we're looking for body fluids.
We checked through the backyard,
but no violent crime scene is identified.
And it's sort of hard to make that case,
but they are still suspicious of him.
So he serves his time, as you said,
then he's released, but not long after that,
he is brought in again,
and this time on second-degree murder charge,
as you said, even though they don't really have
all the goods there.
But had anything big changed in the case at that point?
No, there wasn't really anything new changed in the case at that point?
Now there wasn't really anything new. There's no smoking gun.
And I think that was the big problem in the case. Now,
between 2017 and 2020,
the relationship between Michael Turney and Sarah starts to disintegrate.
She starts participating in podcasts about Alyssa where she's questioning her father's innocence.
And then, as we mentioned before, she starts her own podcast.
Sarah makes this huge push to have charges filed against her father.
And eventually the evidence is presented to a Maricopa County grand jury and Michael
Turney is indicted on the evidence.
Turney, though, pleads not guilty.
He maintains his innocence throughout the whole trial
and he still does today.
No body, no crime scene.
And so, you know, there's a reason to question
whether he is guilty of anything.
Yeah, anytime you go to court with a case
where there's no body, no crime scene,
it's an uphill battle.
And I think the prosecutors knew that.
The federal charges, they aren't able to bring those in because they can't prejudice the jury with bringing in, you know, charges of conviction. It might lead the jury to convict him even though
they may not have the evidence. So the federal charges can't be brought in to the trial.
In opening statements, prosecutor Vincent Burdino
lays out the evidence of a very controlling father
with no boundaries.
And he talks about these contracts
where Alyssa had to sign off.
Strange contracts.
And then of course, what surprises us,
the prosecution uses a couple of clips
from John Quinone's interview with Michael Turney.
Yeah, that's the thing. I mean, you know, and this has happened to us before in other stories we've covered.
The defense team sort of treats these clips as hearsay. They don't believe they're really,
it's really any evidence. They instead paint Alyssa as this sort of unruly child throughout
the trial, but they knew they had a job to do.
And that was, you know, to prove
that Michael Turney didn't do it
or that there wasn't enough evidence against him.
Yeah, yeah, it was gonna be a tough case.
I mean, for everybody all around.
Well, we're gonna take another quick break.
And when we come back, wow,
you're gonna take us to the courtroom
because there was a scene there that nobody expected.
And then Michael Turney sits down with us again.
Stay with us.
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So Mary Ellen, you were in court when Michael Turney's defense team asked the judge to
throw out the case.
That happens all the time.
You know, they keep making arguments throughout that, you know, the prosecution has no real
case here.
But then a shocker, the judge actually agrees.
And I'm sure that had to be stunning for you and everybody else in the courtroom.
Yeah, it's not unusual for the defense team to bring up, you know, any type of motion
to throw out the case.
That's pretty common.
What's not common is the judge actually agreeing with them.
That just threw me for a loop and also the entire courtroom.
I was in the courtroom that day.
Was there a gasp?
There were a lot of jaws that were just dropped.
I just remember the judge was sort of like walking us through, you know,
his ruling. He was just kind of taking us along. And so there was this build in the
courtroom. That build leads to confusion. And it's not just us that's confused. I mean,
the defense table also looks a little confused. And I can remember the photographer that we
had in turning and looking at me. And it's almost like we're talking with eyes, and he's looking at me like, is this happening?
And I'm thinking, am I hearing what I think I'm hearing? And then he pretty much says it. He's dismissing the case. He's going to, you know, let Michael
Turney, you know, out of jail. I mean shocker. Exactly. As he's walking us
through with this ruling, he agrees with the prosecution that there's enough
evidence to say, Alissa isn't alive. But then he says these words, and this is
what shocks the courtroom. He says, substantial evidence does not exist to warrant a conviction and he grants the defense their motion
ordering the defendant be released. The case never even makes it to the jury.
Incredible and obviously it had to be shocking not just to the bystanders, but to Turney himself. We've got a clip here of defense attorneys,
then prosecutors, and finally Michael Turney reacting
to the news of his case getting thrown out.
Let's listen.
Michael cried when we told him that he was acquitted
and that he was going home.
I think the first thing he said is he couldn't hear,
and so I had to go around the other side
and tell him in the other ear.
And then he said that.
He was like, what just happened?
Like, you're going home.
The judge acquitted you.
I was shocked.
I really was.
I just sat back in total disbelief
and I went on and on and I'm looking around
thinking to myself, is this real?
This can't be real.
This, it's going to end here now.
What was going through your minds?
Abject failure.
Again, it's disappointment.
I've always known that a no-body homicide is so significantly difficult to prove that
I may not convince all those jurors.
The lack of a body.
Yes.
I could have had a hung jury.
I could have gotten a non-guilty.
But for it to be cut off before ever going to a jury,
I didn't see that coming.
So, I mean, that was especially painful.
It was a gut punch.
I...
You know, our goals in this case were to find Alyssa
and to get justice for her.
And we've failed in both those goals. I've still got to look for my daughter. Alyssa and to get justice for her. We've failed in both those goals.
I've still got to look for my daughter.
Alyssa's gone?
No proof that I had murdered her.
Never was.
What about Michael Turney's family?
How did they react?
It was shocking.
It was really shocking.
I mean, a gut punch when you looked
at Alyssa's brothers and sisters in the front row.
It was definitely a gut punch for them.
On the other hand, when you're looking at the defense table, like I said, they were kind of
in shock. We learned afterwards. We did a post-trial interview with defense attorney,
Jamie Jackson, and Olivia Hicks. And I asked them, because I had never seen this in 30 years of covering news and trials, had they ever seen it? And Jamie told us that he turned to Olivia
and said, he's doing this. And Olivia responded, I don't think so. And Jamie
responded back, nope, this is happening. And then Olivia turns to Michael, because
at that point, if you remember, I said Michael turned to Olivia,
and Michael Turney's asking what's going on.
Heads are whipping throughout the courtroom.
Yes, and Olivia says, you're going home.
They kind of quipped that Michael Turney,
because he's kind of hard of hearing
through one of his ears, couldn't hear Olivia.
So Jamie had to actually get up, go around the table
and tell Michael,
you know, you're being acquitted. We cover these stories from time to time. I've been in court
rooms and, you know, it can be very interesting. I mean, it can be very mundane for a while,
but then when there's a big development or a big change like this on the part of a judge,
it can be really intriguing. And in this case, once the charges were dismissed, I mean,
he can't be tried again on those same charges, right?
That's right. Double jeopardy definitely comes in on this case.
He can't be charged again with second degree murder.
And I have to tell you what shocked me and probably those who've seen this
program already after turning his acquittal,
you got some surprising news and this one kind of surprised me.
He was willing to sit down with us again even after the ABC interview had been entered into
court as evidence against him. He's gonna sit down and talk with us again.
You're great at doing your job but wow to get him to do it again. I was in
contact with his lawyers but I will tell you it was not an easy interview to round up at all.
It was surprising. Michael Turner was angry with ABC News and he was angry with 2020.
He was not happy. The clips from our interview made it into his trial.
He kept refusing us for probably three weeks.
We were preparing to go to air without his interview.
And then and while we're doing this, we're kind to go to air without his interview.
And while we're doing this, we're kind of a little bit surprised.
Wow, because we do know that, and he admits that he tends to need to be in control of
things.
And I got a call from Jamie Jackson, his attorney, that said he'll do it.
And we didn't waste time.
We quickly started hammering out a date
that we could get Jamie, Olivia, and Michael Turney into a room. It took
about a week, I want to say it took about a week, but it really was like
for us working fast because of the amount of moving parts that have to come
together. And so I had actually left town and quickly
had to fly back to Arizona in order to be on location
and just make sure that everything got off
the way it was supposed to.
And Mary Ellen, when you think about how
we get these stories to air, I mean,
there's a lot of work and calling
to try to get people to come to us.
And you do this on a regular basis and sometimes you're surprised too.
Well, we've got an extended clip of our interview with Michael Turney here.
He had just been released from custody after his acquittal. So let's take a listen.
You know, I've only been out less, well, it'd be a month on the 20th. I feel
like
first off, at any moment are they going to attack me again and throw me back in the
dungeon?
It's there.
I can't get rid of that.
And of course not believing that what is happening is real.
Am I really here?
Am I really out of that draconian dungeon?
I can't shake it.
I'm trying.
And to get back into some kind of physical and mental shape is important.
It's hard to get medical care.
So you can hear in his voice his exasperation, his frustration.
I mean, he is obviously very much proclaiming that he's not only innocent, but nervous about
the future.
Tell me about being in that room.
You mentioned that Turney was intense. I do want to mention, like, I mean,
it's not unusual for defendants to be intense because this is their life on the
line.
He had just spent another three years in jail and he's still kind of stunned
over what happened and whether it really did happen.
So he's very mad at the fact that he has spent this time in jail.
And there were times in the interview that he got heated and we just kind of had
to keep him on track, but he had spent years under investigation. So yeah,
the room was definitely tense at times. And finally, you know,
in the second interview,
what Turney really wanted to tell everybody was that everyone got it all wrong
in thinking that
he was the one that had anything to do with his daughter going missing, especially since
now the judge had ruled in his favor.
Do you think they're ever going to solve this case?
I mean, all these years later, I mean, do you think they'll find evidence of her, of
Alissa?
You would hope so.
I think it's so important for the family.
And you know what?
Phoenix police is always following up on leads.
This is one of the top unsolved cases in Arizona.
People are fascinated by what happened to Alyssa.
Like what, it's just, it's one of those big mysteries.
Michael told us during his interview
that he was gonna continue to try and find his daughter.
Sarah continues to search for Alyssa and for answers and recently posted about some hope in the case,
but there are no confirmed answers as far as anything that we could report.
It might not turn out how they want it to turn out, and I think they're expecting that by now with how many years have passed.
But there's a part of closure
that's kind of relieving to families
when they get that person back
and they can say goodbye in their own way
and they can put them to rest.
That is so important for families of victims.
Absolutely, we hear it all the time
in all these stories we cover.
And these cases continue to captivate us too, especially when there hasn't been an
ending to it. It's you know more than two decades as I said and a case like this
sticks with people there and I'm sure it sticks with you know you too. You've been
working on it for a while. So Mary Ellen you'll keep us up to date and if there is
anything new we'll probably be updating it again.
It was such a pleasure to talk to you.
We don't get a chance to do this very often, only to just work together very quickly.
So thanks for guiding us through the ins and outs of the story.
Thank you, Deborah. Always a pleasure to work with you, too.
See you soon.
All right. That does it for us today on the 2020 After Show.
Make sure you tune in on Friday nights for 2020,
of course, at 9 o'clock Eastern time. The 2020 After Show is produced by Amirah Williams
and Sasha Aslanian with Sean Dooley, Brian Mazursky, and Alex Berenfeld of 2020. Themed
music by Evan Viola. Janice Johnston is the executive producer of 2020. Josh Cohen is the director of podcasting at ABC audio.
Laura Mayer is the executive producer.
Hey, I'm Brad Milky.
If you're hooked on this show, you know how quickly a single story can turn into something bigger, deeper, more complex than anyone first
thought. Well, for a smart, clear breakdown of the day's top stories,
including true crime cases like this one, check out Start Here, the daily podcast
from ABC News. Each weekday morning, my team and I will walk you through what's
happening in the world and why it matters in just 20 minutes from Earth
shaking moves in global politics to fascinating developments in
court cases, we will unpack it all. So follow start here.
Again, that's start here wherever you listen to podcasts.
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