20/20 - The Hand in the Window: 'The Other Me'
Episode Date: December 3, 2025There was the charming Shawn Grate, who looked good on the outside — but a different version of him lurked just beneath the surface. To catch new episodes early, follow "The Hand in the Window" for... free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This is Deborah Roberts. I'm here with another weekly episode of our latest series from
2020 and ABC Audio, The Hand in the Window. Remember, you can get new episodes early if you follow
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A few days after Sean Great was arrested for kidnapping,
rape, and murder,
Ashland County prosecutor Chris Tunnell gave a press conference,
covered by local ABC News affiliate, W.E.WS.
I want to say something very important.
Ashland County is a safe place to live.
We've not seen crimes of this magnitude in a very long time.
There's no reason for people in this county to live in fear.
Grade was behind bars in the Ashland County Jail.
This man who had been living in Ashland for less than two months
had shattered the town's sense of safety.
Investigators had begun learning the rough outlines of Great's life
before his killing spree.
He said his mother had abandoned him when he was a kid.
He'd started getting in trouble with the law at the age of 20.
He'd racked up convictions for burglary, abduction, and brandishing a knife at his ex-girlfriend.
He had a son and two daughters with three different women.
Throughout his adult life, Great had moved from town to town in rural Ohio.
Detective Kim Major had learned that Great was good at charming people.
His appearance helped with that.
Sean's own mother is quoted as saying,
yes, he's good looking, but the devil's good looking too.
She said that about our son.
She did.
Ted Bundy was good looking and charming,
and he was able to seduce women because of that.
Yes, he was.
Is there a comparison, a similarity to Sean Greeney?
In the manipulation piece of this, the calculating yet opportunistic ways, absolute parallels in that, and the fact that they were both charming or they're both handsome, and to think that he used, used those things to land himself in these situations is just incredible.
There was the charming Sean Great who looked good on the outside,
and the violent Sean Great, who lurked just beneath the surface.
From ABC Audio in 2020, I'm John Kinyos, and this is The Hand in the Window.
Episode 5, The Other Me.
To learn more about these different sides of Sean Great,
we spoke with two people who knew him well,
not as the murderer, Sean Great,
but simply as Sean.
Christina Hildreth met Sean Great about a decade before he showed up in Ashland.
Christina had just moved from Texas to a small town in Ohio.
And I met him then, and he was just,
he was just very friendly
and he just had a way that
you know
it made you feel like you were important
like many people
Christina was charmed
by Great's piercing eyes
just such a blue
and they just
just the way they looked at you
you know it made you feel like
you were the only one
he wasn't you know
paying attention to nobody else
it was all about you
it's just blue eyes
You know, they're very, very attractive, very magnifying, very, just, he had great eyes.
Christina said Great never asked her out on a date or made plans to meet up.
He just sort of showed up at her house when he wanted to, which was fine with her back then.
Sean was very charming and good looking, and it was just, oh, he's here, okay, great.
you know let's figure out something to do eventually they started a romantic relationship and at first
that relationship was fun they hiked fished and made the best of the rural area they lived in
grade continued to be charming and he seemed happy but things started to change when he moved into
christina's house i never put sean on the lease sean never had a house he just moved himself
in.
Once they lived together, Christina started to see a different side of great.
His charm started slipping away.
He'd be very friendly, very nice, and one little thing would just send him over the edge,
and he was mad.
He just had a way of really, really making you feel horrible.
I spent a lot of time in tears over things he said.
Christina said she and Sean Great were in a relationship for five years
but she said that in that time she never learned much about his past
beyond that he wasn't close to his family
and that he really did not like his mom
he said anytime I ever asked my mom for anything
all she tells me is pray or go to church that God will fix it
Christina said that as a continued living together, things got worse and worse.
She said Gray didn't like her two kids and he didn't have a job.
Instead, she said, he spent the day making wooden signs, which he engraved with sayings
and the names of people and schools.
The signs were scattered all over her house.
Christina said he rarely did chores and was often mean.
and moody.
She wanted to split up
but said that Great refused to leave the house.
She didn't know what to do.
One night, after they got into a fight,
he exploded.
He started hitting and choking her in the bedroom.
He hit her hand so hard,
it felt like it broke one of her fingers.
I managed to get up and I'm sitting at the end of the bed
and I'm like, look what you did to me.
And he's still, he's very, very angry and he walks over and he grabs me
and he's got me by the back of the pants and like the back of my hair
and he's trying to drag me off to the bathroom.
And as he's trying to drag me through the door,
I'm trying to fight to stay in the bedroom.
And I'm like sitting there thinking to myself,
what, you know, what is it going to do with me in the bathroom?
Christina said she started pleading with great.
If her hand was broken, she couldn't cook, clean, work, and support them.
How am I going to do this and pay our bills with my hand like this?
And I had, you know, I had to change the whole thing from, this is what you, you know, look what you did to me, you know, on and on to how am I going to take care of it?
Her plea worked.
They went to the ER and once Great left the room,
Christina said she told the nurse to shut the door.
And I said, he did this.
She's like, well, we thought so.
The police were called in to take Christina's statement.
An authority said Sean Great ran out of the ER.
When Christina left the hospital, she went to stay at her mom's place.
Great still didn't have a key to her house, but she was worried he'd find a way in.
Once in a while, she'd go back to the house to pick up some of her things.
The house seemed empty, but it felt off like someone had been there.
Christina reported to the police that Sean started to call her
and describe everything she had done while she was in the house.
as if he was somehow watching her every move.
Eventually, Christina said,
Gray told her how he was doing this.
He says, I've been living in the couch.
He said, when you came in, you were sitting on me.
So then I kind of pulled the couch away from the wall,
and he had cut a slit into the back of the couch.
and he was crawling in and out of the couch
through the back of the couch
and he would stay in the couch
in the daytime
and he would come out at night
Christina said
Sean Great admitted to living
inside her couch
the next time
Christina had to go to the house
she called the police beforehand
She wanted officers to search the place before she went in.
And they go into the apartment.
And that's saying, you know, they're bringing Sean out in handcuffs.
And the policeman's like, we found him in your closet.
In 2010, Sean Great was found guilty of domestic violence for the attack that fractured Christina's finger and sent her to the ER.
He was sentenced to six months in prison.
I do believe that if I wouldn't have changed my attitude
and the way I talked to him,
I truly believe Sean would have killed me in that bathroom.
Their years together still haunt her.
My kids are like, Mom, you need to get out,
you need to do something, you need to date,
you can't stay in this house day after day by yourself.
with no one
and that's where I'm at
I don't
I don't trust anybody
other than my kids
to this day
Christina doesn't understand
Sean Great's frightening
and violent
turn
why did it come to this
why did you let it be like this
you know why did you turn
into this.
He started out absolutely charming, wonderful.
And then little by little, he just turned we're evil.
There's nothing honestly nice about Sean.
He can portray that.
He can make you believe 100% he's the nicest person you'll ever meet.
And all in all, there's nothing nice there.
He's completely evil.
After serving his time for domestic violence,
Sean Great moved to Mansfield,
another small town about 20 minutes from Ashland.
He got married there, and he and his wife had a daughter.
But less than a year later, they got divorced,
and she was given full custody of their child.
In 2013, his ex-wife filed for an order of protection
against Great.
She claimed he was threatening her and her family.
The order was granted.
Great stayed in Mansfield,
which is where he became friends
with a man named Tim Dennis.
He seems like a really nice guy,
and I thought, I like this guy.
The two met at a local market
where Great was selling his wooden signs,
the ones that once filled Christina's house.
Tim was drawn to,
to Sean's easy-going personality.
They played pool,
cooked together,
and relaxed in Tim's hot tub.
Just good, fun, friend things to do, you know.
Great seemed to see Tim as a confidant.
Great would text him about his family and emotions.
But things in their friendship took a drastic turn
when Tim said Great asked to borrow money.
Great's only.
income was from selling his wooden signs.
And I told him, Sean, I said, I'm sorry.
I said, I've just made it a policy not to loan out money.
I've had so many bad dealings in the past.
Tim said great snapped.
He sent a barrage of angry texts.
You just rot and die with your money and your bedbugs are, I'm putting curses on you.
bedbugs are coming to your house, roaches are coming, all this stuff.
He just went on and on and on.
And then he makes this statement.
He says, meet the other me.
Honestly, I just froze.
When that statement hit, it's like, okay, all of a sudden, the first thing hit my mind is a monster.
Tim saw Great one more time after those texts, but said he seemed different.
Angry, dark, and even a little scary.
After being good friends for a couple of years, they lost touch in early 2016.
When Tim Dennis heard that Sean Great was accused of kidnapping, rape, and murder,
he had a hard time understanding how his charming friend had become so violent.
There's two persons living inside of him, and that's the only way that I'm ever able,
and that may or may not even be his situation,
but it's like my only way of being able to reconcile the two.
In summer 2016, Sean Great was on the run.
He was wanted in Mansfield on a child support warrant.
Authority said that when a police officer stopped him,
Great fled into the woods and that officers chased him on foot but lost him.
Even a canine unit wasn't able to track him down.
Soon after Gray turned up in Ashland,
he continued his pattern of charming people and then rapidly turning on them.
Detective Kim Major had gotten Sean Great to confess to his deadly violence.
But still, she had this nagging feeling that she was somehow missing something,
that there was more to learn about who Sean Great was and what he had done.
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Two days after Sean Great was arrested, Detective Kim Major and Detective Brian Evans went to meet with Great at the Ashland Jail.
Major and Evans had both been working the case, but this was the first time that the two long-time colleagues and friends would be talking to Sean Great together.
September 15, 2016, I had 1443.
The detectives were there to show Sean Great the complaint against him,
which listed all the charges he faced.
But before they did that, Detective Major wanted another chance to interview Great.
I told him there was a solid chance I wouldn't get to talk to him anymore
because he's going to be represented by an attorney.
While they settled into the interview room,
Detective Evans introduced himself to Sean Great.
Hi, how are you? I never got to meet here.
And then Detective Major asked Great,
if there was anything else,
he wanted to get off his chest.
He said there was.
What's that?
Great pause.
for a few seconds, then softly, he said he had been thinking about it.
Great said he couldn't get the year, right? Okay. Great said he wasn't sure of the exact year, but he wanted to talk about a cold case from around 2005 or 2006, a full decade earlier.
He said a murder victim was found in nearby Marion County, but the body was never identified.
I'm thinking her name was Dana. I totally forget her name after a while, Dana.
Great said Dana traveled door-to-door selling magazines and had sold a subscription to his mom,
but he said his mother never got those magazines.
And then all I heard my mom just complaining, Greg.
Great said he felt he had to do something about his mom's complaints.
At that time, Grayd was living in his grandparents' house.
He said a woman came by to sell magazines.
Grade assumed she was Dana, the salesperson who spoke with his mom.
He invited her in.
First, we sat in the kitchen.
around the bar of stools
and just sit there for a minute
and I was just feeling
raged.
Okay.
So I was like, hey, come on them back here.
Show you my ball cards.
Like baseball cards collection?
Yeah, all sports.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
And there she comes.
So I saw her when I fronted her.
So you're going to rip me off
like you did my mom.
What did she say?
She said, who's your mom?
I said, oh, so you do it a lot to people.
Yeah, I mean?
According to Great, he pulled Dana into the living room
and strangled her until she passed out.
Then, he dragged her to the basement,
but she woke up.
I panicked.
He ran upstairs.
I grabbed the knife.
I stabbed her in the neck.
He went upstairs, grabbed a knife, and stabbed her in the neck.
Great said he had people over for a bonfire at the house that evening and left her dead body in the basement all night.
He put a couch in front of the basement door
so no one would accidentally find her.
The next morning, he said he dumped her body in the woods.
How do I know that you're not just saying you did something that you didn't do?
How do I know that?
Tell me something that nobody would know.
I did go back after a few months.
And I burned a fire.
I caught her on fire.
fire. Great said he poured some gasoline and watched as flames engulfed
Dana's remains. Like this horse on the highway you've seen me, but I was out of there.
Detective Major had gotten yet another confession from Sean Great. Great said Dana was his first victim.
The first time he had killed.
Just like in her first interview with Great,
Detective Major didn't stop when she got this new confession.
She wanted to understand what made Sean Great decide to kill.
When your mind's going there and you think, I'm going to do that,
what does she look like?
What age?
What are her features?
What does she look like?
I keep my mind open.
Whoever comes first.
Whoever comes first?
Okay.
So it's opportunistic.
A lot of times we get along good and everybody goes home happy.
Everybody goes home safe and everything.
Don't even...
What goes wrong?
What in your...
What happens that makes that switch for you?
What is it?
Great Mumbled.
I don't know.
I really can't explain a lot of.
He begged me through the interview process to help him come up with what his motive was.
He said, why did I do this?
Tell me why you think I did this.
When Detective Brian Evans asked Great about why he murdered,
Great offered another possible explanation.
It's almost like Ashland was too relaxed for a moment, all the people.
They just all content with their jobs and just nobody.
Yeah, everybody got the guard down or...
But I wasn't thinking that way, but now...
Looking back on it, maybe.
Looking back, I'm not trying to justify it either.
I'm totally wrong.
The detective spoke with Sean Great for almost three hours that day,
though a lot of the interview focused on the details of Dana's murder
and Great's other violent crimes.
At times, the back and forth turned...
light-hearted, even funny.
Like when Great described walking between Ashland and Mansfield
so he could get marijuana.
You want to tell us where you got that?
Are you going to protect something?
He's going to protect something. So I'm not going to get it from.
He's holding that back.
That's funny.
Won't give up to, no one gives up the weak guy.
Come on, no one gives up the weak guy.
No one gives up the weak guy.
The detectives leaned into their rapport with Great to get more information from him.
At one point, they asked Great to demonstrate how he strangled his victims.
Was it the carotid artery or was it the hyoid?
Which way did you strangle someone?
Because those things all show up in an autopsy.
At first, Great talked through how he said he typically.
strangled someone.
Let's look at their face and see if I'm getting anywhere.
But the detectives wanted a full demonstration on video, which Sean Great said he'd be willing to do.
Later in the interview, Major brought it up again.
You want to do our little thing?
You okay with that?
You still comfortable with us?
Which would be easier for you to kind of show up or to have like a...
Like a stuffed animal doll teddy bear thing to however you had that.
I can go grab one from these guys or something.
I was thinking I'd demonstrate it on you.
That's what you want to do.
Look at that big smile.
Great wanted to demonstrate his strangulation technique on Detective Evans.
Not on a doll or stuffed animal, not on Kim Major, only on Brian Evans.
This is a pretty violent man, and you said okay?
Yes, well, honestly, at the time of it, you're in there trying to get the best evidence you can,
and when he agreed to do it and said that he would just do it on me, and yes, it just, it's kind of what you do, I guess.
You weren't armed, neither you nor Detective Major.
No.
No, we were not armed.
We did knock on the door and tell the jail staff that this was going to be happening,
so they didn't see him putting me in a chokehold and come in there and tase us or anything
happening.
I also let them know in case something did go bad.
You could have lost consciousness in seconds.
He could have killed you.
I didn't put a whole lot of thought into that again.
It just went to getting the evidence.
Great said he strangled people while they were standing up.
He got up, and so did Detective Evans.
The first thing Great said was, you're taller than the others.
Which was a little eerie at that standpoint, but we went kind of to the back of the wall,
and Detective Major had my cell phone, because that's all we had at the time.
Okay, this is Detective Major.
We have Detective Evans in the room.
Sean Great in the room.
It's September 15, 2016, Time 1704.
Sean's going to demonstrate the way he uses in strangulation of cases that we have been discussing.
Great started by demonstrating how he said he had strangled Elizabeth Griffith.
I was just joking, like, how she wished she would kind of die, you know what I mean?
I was like, so I'll help you.
I'll just go like this, you know what I mean?
And he had to like reach up and kind of got me in a chokehold here.
and then her back of my head, and I would push forward on the head,
which would put anybody's throat or Adam's apple in like the crease of their arm,
and then he just did like a quick flex saying then I would just do that.
And at that point, obviously I felt it.
I kind of have a bigger Adam's apple,
and even so that quick little tense moment that he tensed up,
you could feel that on my Adam's apple.
And I just would lean forward and just press.
I'm videoing it.
I'm trying to keep the camera from shaking.
And I look at Brian's eyes, and I'm thinking, this is not good.
Brian then, he lets go to Brian.
He keeps describing things.
And Brian mouths to me, I'll never do this again.
And you knew from seeing him do this demonstration that he had killed before this way.
It was so fluid.
My son's wrestle.
My husband is a wrestling coach.
his motions were so fluid in what he was doing
how he described that
and I was really taken by
him demonstrating how their breath
would leave their body
he's there
when someone's last breath is leaving their body
and
it's notable to him
It's
I was taken by it
After Sean Great
released Detective Evans
He explained in detail
How he strangled
Each of his victims
And the detectives
They got the evidence they needed
Sean
Thank you
That's a lot to ask somebody
and it's not something people would have to agree to do, so I appreciate that.
Before the interview ended, Detective Major checked again if Sean Great was holding anything back.
Is there anybody else that we're missing that you haven't told me?
Because the other day you said Candace was your first, and that doesn't mean that you're a liar that meant
sometimes there's a reason why somebody doesn't want to say something.
The reason why I hesitated about the years ago when the first one is because
I'm sure everyone would think that there's could be thousands.
Great said if he talked about Dana,
everyone would think there could be thousands of victims.
He said, I'm not that cold.
So you felt like
well if I give her that other one
I'm going to get accused
of a thousand things
that I didn't do. Is that what
you're saying? Yeah, pretty much.
Great
claimed he had gotten everything
all his secrets
out of his system.
He said, I have four
bodies.
He promised me
there were no more, but
there would be some little
clue or some little tip in the
interview that indicated there might be more.
At this point, you realize he's been killing for years.
Do you ask yourself, how deep does this go?
I ask myself that every time, every interview, every day,
through the duration of working the case.
Nearly three hours into the interview,
Detective Major read Sean Great the charges against him
and wrapped things up.
Sean, what questions do you have for Detective Evans for myself?
I'm not too sure about any questions.
It's a moment.
Come on, all, buddy.
But then, just a few days later,
Detective Major would be back to press Sean Great once again,
because, as it turned out,
great, had not told the entire truth.
You, for some reason, held some back,
and I'm going to ask you for your honesty.
Do you know what I'm talking about?
The Hand in the Window is a production of ABC Audio and 2020,
hosted by me, John Quigion.
produced by Madeline Wood, Camille Peterson, Kiara Powell, edited by Gianna Palmer.
Our supervising producer is Susie Lou.
Music and mixing by Evan Viola.
Special thanks to Katie Dendos, Janice Johnston, Michelle Marculus, Caitlin Schiffer, Rachel Walker,
Annalisa Linder, Joseph Diaz, Jonathan Balfazer, Gail Deutsch,
Gary Wynne, Stephanie MacBee, Natalie Cardenas, and Samantha Wanderer.
Josh Cohen is our director of podcast programming.
