Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Matt Murphy (homicide prosecutor)
Episode Date: November 27, 2024Matt Murphy (The Book of Murder) is a former Homicide prosecutor and current legal analyst for ABC News. Matt joins the Armchair Expert to discuss the importance of telling the victims storie...s over the killers, the craft of picking a jury, and his nerves the first time he was at a crime scene. Matt and Dax discuss the parallels between their childhoods, the experience of working with detectives, and the horrific crimes of Rodney Alcala. Matt discusses how his job skews his worldview, the mental toll of not having enough evidence when you know someone is guilty, and if murder is reflective of the times. Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Watch new content on YouTube or listen to Armchair Expert early and ad-free by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/armchair-expert-with-dax-shepard/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Expert,
experts on expert.
This is a real departure from previous experts
in the most exhilarating way.
This was a riveting.
Mm-hmm.
And it's a ding, ding, ding from Monday's episode.
Yes, from Anna Kendrick.
Because of her new movie, Woman of the Hour,
our guest, Matt Murphy, was a technical advisor on it,
as well as an actual prosecutor on the case.
Matt Murphy is a former homicide prosecutor
and a current legal analysis for ABC News.
Maybe you've seen him there.
And he spent two decades assigned to the sexual assault
and homicide units of the Orange County
District Attorney's Office, which you'll learn in this,
is the third biggest in the country.
Three million people under their purview.
Yes.
He has tried some of the most headlining murder cases
of all time.
A lot of shit was happening in Orange County
that I kind of didn't realize.
Yeah, he's like Golden State killer.
A lot of them.
Dirty John.
Yeah.
He has a book out called The Book of Murder,
A Prosecutor's Journey Through Love and Death,
which is fantastic.
It's so good.
And he profiles all these different cases he's worked on,
as well as educates you a ton on how the actual mechanics
of that job work, which I find fascinating.
And then his own personal journey,
which is this job took an enormous toll
on the rest of his life.
Yeah.
Yeah. This was awesome.
I loved Matt Murphy.
I hope you do too.
Ooh.
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wherever you get your podcasts. He's an out-champion. He's an out-champion. He's an out-champion.
He's an out-champion.
He's an out-champion.
He's an out-champion.
He's an out-champion.
He's an out-champion.
He's an out-champion.
He's an out-champion.
He's an out-champion.
He's an out-champion.
He's an out-champion. Devilishly, devilishly so. And I'm being sincere now.
It has to be a little bit of an advantage
when you're a prosecutor to be handsome.
It'd be preferable that the jury likes to look at you, right?
You know what's tough is for the women,
pretty women prosecutors, it's brutal.
It is.
Because people don't take them seriously.
As a guy, you walk in the bailiffs,
your buddy, you talk about fantasy football,
the court clerk wants to set you up
with her divorced friend.
And a lot of the women have it tougher
because half the women on the jury
will want to hate her for her suit.
And the court reporter is jealous.
The men feel emasculated that she's smarter than them.
So they hate her on the jury.
It's a mind-fielder.
So Matt, this'll be a fun interview for us
because we've not had anyone weirdly in this realm.
We've had a lot of defense attorneys on
as they tend to write books.
Yeah, so we've not had a prosecutor on
and I can't tell you how immediately,
how many questions I realized I had.
Oh, I love it.
Yeah, first of all, you're a California native
which is weird.
Yeah, I grew up, actually we were just talking about it,
not far from here.
Really?
Yeah, I grew up in Beverly Wood.
Why don't I know where Beverlywood is?
Nobody knows where it is.
It's not Beverlywood.
It's where the Neuroranchal Park is by Fox Studios.
Oh yes, yes.
So literally, Cheviot Hills.
Okay, so it's the second part of Cheviot Hills
on the other side of Motor.
Okay.
So it's basically Cheviot Hills.
And what did mom and dad do that you were living there?
My dad was a doctor, mom was a nurse.
Met at L.A. County General.
Oh, that's gonna be cute.
They were working together?
They were working together.
Yeah, it sounds cute.
I don't think two humans have hated each other more.
I should not exist.
I kinda nerd out on some of these astronomy things.
And somebody tried to calculate the odds of humans existing
with like Jupiter and absorbing all the asteroids
and like whatever that list is, I'm the least likely person to actually exist.
How long did they stay married?
They were married for 10 years,
probably talked to each other for at least one.
Well, my sister is two years younger than me,
so at least eight years, they, you know.
Okay.
What kind of doctor was he?
GI.
He started doing rehab centers.
Probably made a lot of money doing that.
He did, and he got in like in the late 80s.
He was one of the pioneers.
Anthony Kiedis in Scar Tisss. He was one of the pioneers.
Anthony Kiedis and Scar Tissue.
You ever read that book?
I haven't, but I know Anthony and I know his story.
That's a good read.
So he actually talks about my dad in that book.
Oh, he did.
What drove him maybe working in the county?
No, no.
He's like hopeless alcoholic for a long time.
Your dad was?
Both my parents.
Oh, interesting.
I'm a thoroughbred, baby.
Did your dad get sober?
Yeah. And then he wanted to'm a thoroughbred baby. Did your dad get sober? Yeah.
And then he wanted to open a treatment center.
Yeah, he was sort of like a passion life, big AA guy.
In 1975 he got a DUI,
and it was undignified experience for him,
and he was a prominent dude, and he got sober.
My dad got his fourth DUI, he was gonna go to prison,
and he went to rehab.
And it stuck?
It stuck.
Yeah, he died sober.
So it's an interesting experience to grow up in AA, right?
I was in AA kid.
Me too.
Really?
Did you go to like, Allateen?
Made me go.
I lived with him in high school
because my mom was still drinking.
And he was a legit guy.
He was all in.
It was like a religion to him.
Was he in A Course in Miracles or ACOA
or all the other fringe outgrows of the 80s AA?
ACOA?
Yeah, all children of the 80s.
Oh.
Yeah, yeah.
When I moved in, that was the condition.
I had to go to allotine meetings.
Matt, you've heard me say this.
Yes.
So I never lived with my dad.
They got divorced when I was three.
And then in ninth grade,
he had gotten in a terrible car accident
and he needed someone to help him.
And I was about to get murdered
at the new high school I was gonna go to.
So many kids hated me.
So I moved in with him and he said,
yeah, come in, there's virtually no rules,
you have no curfew, but you have to go
to one meeting a week.
Holy shit, this is so funny.
And so I started going to like, Alatine or whatever it was.
He encouraged me to go to like the Al-Anon portion.
I was like, these aren't my folks.
I'd rather be in an actual AA meeting.
So I was going to AA meetings before I ever had a problem.
I ultimately did have a big problem.
So I moved in in ninth grade.
Now is the rule, no curfew, no nothing.
I had to go to an al-teen meeting a week
and the rules basically were, I mean this is kind of bad,
but don't get caught with whatever I was doing
because I heard a thousand times
I'm not going to bail you out of jail.
And I mean we used to go to punk shows down the street
from where we are right now,
including the Red Hot Chili Peppers back in the day.
Oh really?
Oh, fun.
I mean, they were more funk back then.
We are both tall lanky gentlemen
that were in the punk scene, living with Dad,
having to go, hey, this is pretty fucking nuts.
Private school?
No, I went to public school.
Okay, so I went to public school up to ninth grade,
and then I went up going to Loyola
with actually a bunch of Los Filos kids.
Oh, no kidding.
Yeah.
Wow.
Do you live here still?
Manhattan Beach.
Okay. Yeah, and then I'm splitting time between here and New York now. Wow. Do you live here still? Manhattan Beach. Okay.
Yeah, and then I'm splitting time
between here and New York now.
Okay.
You are the correspondent for ABC News?
ABC for True Crime.
All Things Murder or Mayhem.
Oh boy.
Okay, so let's find out.
So this is incredible that you had that experience.
Because the group of friends is so unique.
The kids I met in there were a blast
because they were already fucked up and got sold here.
Totally.
And a bunch of kids that you could really relate to.
I had friends who came from really nice families.
My family was so fucked up that when I got in there
with those kids, they were sort of my people.
Did mom ever get sober?
She got sober at 75.
Wow. No way.
Right when I thought I was completely done.
And she was a nurse, so she retired.
And like a lot of retired people,
she went off the rails completely.
Yeah, of course. And a friend of hers called in a welfare check,
and they went in and she was a 4'2 blood alcohol level.
And that's what finally kicked in.
I came in as she was in a coma.
They found her passed out.
At 75, of course.
At 75, 4'2.
She would have lived to be 160 if she had been there.
Yeah, I know.
Scotch-Irish genes, you know?
And she had to be a 5.0 at least at her peak.
Oh my God.
For that event.
Was she in your life?
Oh yeah, yeah.
I love my mom forever.
She died a couple years ago.
Well you have to, because dad leaves
and now he's the bad guy and she's-
But he lived with his dad.
I lived with her and then I moved in with him in ninth grade
because she was a mess.
And my brother and sister too.
How do you get college bound from this childhood?
I wanted to get the hell out.
Where'd you go to college?
UCSB.
So I'm 15 years old.
I grew up surfing here.
I took a surf trip with a bunch of buddies.
Like when your first friend gets his driver's license,
and then you're packing like eight kids into the car
because now you have freedom.
We went up there and there's a place
called Campus Point at UCSB.
You live in Santa Barbara for a spell.
For one year, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
And I was lured there by visiting Ivy
right out of high school and I was like, get real.
Disneyland has nothing on happiest place on earth.
Yeah, yeah, it's impossible.
And I went up there, I'd never been,
I'm 15 years old and we roll on it,
it's like one of those classic Southern California days
and the one day of the year that Campus Point is firing.
So it's the best wave I've probably ever seen at that point
and there's beautiful girls everywhere on bikes.
And it's like, where the hell is this?
And that was it, all I wanted to do.
It's like I found the next phase.
Okay, so you got BA at UCSB.
And then where'd you go to law school?
San Diego.
Went down there.
Lived on the beach for another three years.
Okay, you were just chasing beach lifestyle.
I was.
I got the sun damage to prove it, unfortunately now.
And when you were going after a law degree,
was it your intention to be a prosecutor or a defense
attorney?
I kind of stumbled into it.
I started a sexual assault education program
as an undergrad because we could make fraternity pledges
and sorority pledges go.
So like I got your classic women's center orientation
and where they were yelling at all is for being men.
And then I had a friend that got sexually assaulted.
It was actually somebody I was dating
when I was on Semester at Sea and I came back
and it was a horrific experience.
So I thought I could maybe take a different approach.
It caught on, so that caught the eye of the FBI.
And this woman, Kathy Harper, her whole thing was
sexual assault, that was her background,
with the DA's office.
I got recruited by the FBI and by her.
In law school or?
In law school.
Yeah, okay.
It was kind of cool.
And this fancy PI firm offered me a track
to make a bunch of money.
I decided I'd give the DA's office a whirl.
Boy, really quick, you asked 23-year-old me,
I'm probably going to the FBI.
I want to kick some doors down.
It looked really, really cool.
But the rule back then was that they wouldn't assign you
to an area where you went to college,
where you grew up, where we went to college, where you grew up,
where you went to undergrad.
I'm a talentless surfer, trust me.
Way too lanky, but I loved it,
and I just wanted to keep doing it.
So at age 23, I was like,
this means I can't surf anymore, which is the logic.
Totally.
Of a frigging, you know, 23 going on 15 year old.
So I thought, DA's office,
my plan was to do it for three years.
And then at the end of my first day
as a junior law clerk in 1992, I was hooked.
I knew it's what I wanted to do.
The longer you stay, the more interesting it gets,
the more skill you get as a trial lawyer.
And that office back then, it was a trial philosophy.
So they really wanted you to get as skilled as you could.
It's like a craft, picking a jury.
And I sucked so bad when I first started,
but it starts getting more and more fun and stressful.
And then you start doing felonies
and then it gets more interesting.
I kind of resisted mentors for a long time.
And then I don't know what it was,
but I had a couple of these guys take me under their wing.
And then I really felt like I had an actual teacher.
So I'd go in and try things in a courtroom.
And then you'd start dealing with real victims.
I went to sexual assault and I spent four years there,
and when you sit down with a crying mom
whose kid has been sexually abused,
sexual abuse is so ubiquitous,
and so many of us have had that happen to us over the years.
I've had juries where the judge, they'll ask a question,
have you or anybody close to you been a victim
or experienced something similar?
I've had every hand go up in the box, 12 out of 12 jurors.
So then you start dealing with that,
and with real pedophiles, the predatory ones especially,
you do some good when you get one of those guys
on a tough case.
When you win those, you are impacting the lives
of all the victims.
Oh, dozens of people probably, yeah.
And then you get Tom Sutt, which is varsity,
and that's where it gets fascinating.
That's what I wrote my book about,
was that journey showing up and knowing nothing
about murders and starting at ground zero.
And I tried to take the reader
through my experience on that.
Well, let's set the stage.
First and foremost, you're here
because we just interviewed Anna Kendrick
and we just saw her movie, which is great.
It is a factual case.
Of course, it's been artistically interpreted,
but it's a real life case from the 70s.
And as it turns out, you were on that case
in iteration of it.
But you were with the DA's office in Orange County,
which I think this shocked me,
even knowing about Orange County,
but it's the third largest DA's office in the country,
and under your purview is three million people.
Right.
I don't think people would really know that.
New York, and then you got LA, and then Orange County,
and advised for third third depending on the population
I think Detroit I think Atlanta had a really big one for a while
But yeah, it's up to third largest DA's office in the United States. And so you had a
27 year career there 17 of which was with homicide and in that 17 years
You prosecuted and or worked on a lot of the cases we know about from pop culture
Yeah, we're out of the gates dirty John. I read I was like the fucking odds that will meet the person
So that's pretty wild
But I think we start at the beginning because it's a wild ride first and foremost when you were working the sexual victims unit
You were warned by an early mentor. You said the move is to find a buddy.
Hopefully you have one, if someone showed you the ropes.
And they said to you,
your love life is going to be in shambles after this.
And you're like, not a chance.
Because of SVU?
The subject matter.
I mean, it's a variety of reasons.
But Matt was like, I would have been like,
get real, I'm mid-20s.
What are you talking about?
Superman.
Yeah, yeah.
And it was the buddy of mine.
He was a couple years older than me in the office, still one of my best friends about? Superman. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And it was the buddy of mine.
He was a couple years older than me in the office,
still one of my best friends,
and he's like, dude, forget it.
And basically, the women tend to do a lot better
in that unit for whatever reason than the men do.
There's a thing called pornography,
not that I've ever watched it before,
however, it's like one.
You know it exists.
I know it exists.
I read about it.
Anyway, it's like 10 hours a day of anti-porn.
You're immersed up to your eyeballs
in the worst stuff you can imagine
and it doesn't take you long before you realize
it's 99.999% men, you know, male sexuality.
It really does kind of screw with your head a little bit.
That line between normal sexual drive
and healthy relationships.
Well, it's a continuum and you're like,
huh, I'm here, Where does it get pathological?
Right, that screws your head like nothing else.
It's hard not to bring home.
I'd rather see murders for sure.
Honestly, it's a lot easier.
And I mean, a lot of murders,
there's a sex element to them, like Ryan Carr.
I want to get into that.
Golden State Killer was one of mine as well.
Oh my God.
A lot of the serial killers start out
with sex crime fundamentally.
And I talk about this a little bit in the book.
My next book, hopefully if I get another deal,
it's gonna be about serial killers specifically
because I feel like there's so much meat on that bone.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And we're gonna build to that
because I have a lot of sexual questions around that.
It does seem, I mean truly,
it seems like, at least from the stuff I consume,
there seems to be a really ubiquitous
sexual insecurity driving a lot of this.
That's an interesting observation.
I've never heard anybody say that before.
Really?
I think you're exactly right.
An insecurity element.
I gotta think about that.
Like, let's just say, my penis is so small,
I can't be with anyone in the normal way.
Yeah.
But I can force myself on this
and then I can end their experience.
I can give you kind of a newsflash here that nobody knows.
And I don't mind saying it and I hope he's listening.
Joseph D'Angelo, Golden State Killer.
Yeah. Tiny Dick.
Uh-huh. Like Mike Ropeo and Small.
Really? I don't think that's ever come out
in any of the books, but yeah.
I intuitively know that's part of some of these things.
There's something to that.
It's gonna work in tandem with my other hunch
I have about all of them is they're kind of all smart
and they're underachievers.
A lot of them are really smart. And they think they're supposed
to be someone important
because they were intelligent enough to be so
And then they underperformed and be if they have this entitlement
I should have been this and I'm fucking angry. You have no idea how right you are
It's entitlement and there's a myth out there with a lot of serial killers that they're a product of abuse
I've had an issue with it. I showed up looking for Buffalo Bill thinking all serial killers like I saw silence the lambs
I know what it is, you know
Yeah
And I got there and a lot of serial rapists
tend to be super arrogant, entitled,
just like you were saying.
They're very, very smart.
A lot of them are spoiled as kids.
They were told they were great,
and then they get out there in the real world,
and women aren't so interested in them.
And there's a component of that, for sure,
and they feel entitled to do it.
I was owed this.
And I'm going to take it.
And they get off on it.
There's kind of this myth out there.
One of the most common questions you get
when you're actually prosecuting those cases
is what made them do it?
And the answer is they fucking wanna do it.
And a lot of times, can I swear on this?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
They wanna do it, it turns them on,
and they get off on it and they feel like
they're entitled to do it. God, powerful.
That's right, they get off on the power.
And they're proving to everyone.
Right, the more sadistic fear and pain
they can inflict on their victims,
the better.
Alcala, you know, Anna's movie.
How do you say his last name?
Alcala.
He grew up in East LA, actually.
Cantwell High School, which is another college prep school.
Oh really?
That was a varsity letterman.
Oh my God.
Genius level IQ, Mensa certified,
the whole deal.
Brother went to West Point, hero in Vietnam.
Totally successful, mother who loved him,
never abused or bullied by anybody.
And the guy probably murdered a hundred people.
Anna Kendrick, I gotta tell you,
so I get a call in the middle of COVID from her people
and it's, hey, Anna Kendrick wants to talk to you
about a movie.
Of course I'll talk to her.
Right away, she was super sensitive about the victims
and wanted to make sure that they were making a movie.
She was sensitive to that.
And the way Orange County works is a little different
than most DA's offices.
It's called a vertical system.
So I was assigned Costa Mesa, Laguna Beach, Newport,
and Irvine.
And then I became one of the two cold case deputies,
which is how I got Alcala.
And we start the night of the murder.
So we'd go to the crime scenes ourselves.
We'd help with warrants, work with the detectives
from the minute the murder happens all the way up.
And then the detective that you're with that night
is with you at council table when the jury comes back
and they're for sentencing.
So it's a real team thing.
So as a result of that, first thing I would do
is meet with the victim's families
after I filed charges and whatever kind of murder it was.
And you bond with those people,
you get really protective of them.
So when she said she wanted to make a movie and wanted to make sure she did it right from the victim's perspective.
Yeah, she's telling their story, not his.
Yeah.
Which I think is admirable.
But it left me with a ton of questions about him, which you can answer.
Yeah, I can answer.
No, I think it's a very cool and respectful approach to it.
The new serial killer to me is the mass shooter, Because it's, to me, very similar. The type, the insecure boy, almost always,
who has trouble with women or girls,
but feels entitled and is on this power trip.
I feel like serial killers have moved into that realm,
and it's the same type of person.
So the FBI would say that's a spree killing
and a little bit different.
The psychology, and I like your theory on that.
For the true blue serial killers,
like the Bundys, the Jack the Rippers,
there's a sexual component.
The school shooter tends to really be that outcast
kind of picked on bullied kid.
I was gonna say the way I've seen those folks
is a little different and I witnessed it so much growing up
in the way I did in the time I did,
which is the system ruined a lot of kids that didn't fit in. There's a lot of kids that are so hurt by that.
I'm not justifying it,
but I think it's a different motivation.
It's not I'm entitled,
it's that you guys are making me suffer so much,
I'm gonna make you suffer back.
It's like a revenge.
It's a different animal.
And I go through kind of the taxonomy of murders.
A domestic violence murder is very different
than a child abuse murder, which is very different
than like a tweaker robbed a 7-Eleven murder.
You know, like the conspiracies to kill for money.
So they're all a little bit different.
You always wind up with a dead body at the end,
but you start seeing some of the same things over and over
if you do them long enough.
Like serial killers love to collect trophies.
It's almost like they go to school for it.
Well, again, they're proud of themselves.
They've proved that they're smarter than everyone else.
For anybody that's interested,
I got into probably the alcohol chapter
more than anything else in the book,
because the deeper you look in serial killers
and the psychological motivations,
to me anyway, the more fascinating it gets.
And when you get into the history of them,
I always thought it was a product of modern American life.
Sort of the disaffected youth and all that.
And then you get into a Red Mind Hunter by Douglas, who was the FBI agent who wrote Silence of the Lamaffected youth and all that, and then you get into I Read Mindhunter by Douglas, who was the FBI genius
who wrote Silence of the Lambs originally.
And then from that, there's a great FBI paper,
and they talk about the first real attempt
to get a handle on him, and it was this guy,
Dr. Von Kraft Ebing, and he wrote a book in the 1880s.
He was a contemporary of Freud,
and he was a German psychiatrist, never been to America.
It's a whole section full of serial killers
that we've never heard of,
going back hundreds of years, European,
so it's not an American thing.
It's timeless.
Yeah, it's timeless.
It's something in the human community,
psyche, whatever it is, that there are those guys.
The only primate that we have that kills for pleasure,
other than us, is chimps.
And what do chimps have in common with us?
They're incredibly intelligent and they have a very stratified hierarchy. that kills for pleasure other than us is chimps. And what do chimps have in common with us?
They're incredibly intelligent
and they have a very stratified hierarchy.
So if they're low status and they feel low status,
the outcome of that is often homicidal or chimpicidal.
What is it, like 98.9% of our DNA is shared with chimps?
Did you see a chimp crazy?
No.
Oh, you must on HBO or Kax now.
Everybody's face gets ripped off.
Yes.
Again, look how chimps kill people.
Tigers, they get you around the neck, they kill you.
They want to eat you.
A chimp, Alicia's fury, it's a crime of passion.
They want to make you suffer.
They don't even really necessarily want you dead.
They want to maim you and maim you.
They just want to hurt you, yeah.
So disturbing. It is. It just want to hurt you, yeah. So disturbing.
It is.
It is, it's in us all.
It gives you that sense that's just so close at all times.
Circling all the way back,
what was it about the being and the sexual?
Do you think you could articulate specifically?
One is like you're seeing horrific graphic things.
That's disturbing and that will not make you,
that'll make you anti-horny.
Anti-horny, yeah.
But I think deeper and more interesting
is coming in terms with where you're at
in this weird thing.
You possess this same weird drive,
and we all have levels of perversion.
Is it almost like seeing a glimpse?
Your own sexuality gets scary to you.
That is a real effect of that.
Your job is taking down the guys
that are hurting people with their sexuality.
Right away, you become so paranoid
of your own sexuality as a man.
You have to govern this drive,
and you maybe get a sense of like,
wow, ungoverned, I'm afraid of who I would be,
or who anyone would be.
That's a huge part of it, and also for me,
as a guy, we all have to learn.
You have to control those urges,
and that's something that I think men,
in a sort of traditionally masculine way,
we learned that very early on.
And among other men, a lot of people don't talk about this,
the dude who can't control his urges becomes an outcast
if he doesn't get his ass kicked very quickly
by the other man in whatever little crew he's in.
If he's surrounded by any sort of decent group of guys.
So you learn to control it, and then in that unit,
what happens is you overcompensate.
And I think that I became
I mean, this is probably way more information than anybody
So what's great about your book is it's your personal story interwoven with your professional one. I became passive
Sexually probably to the point of being a lousy
Partner my girlfriend at the time was gorgeous got her masters in architecture and graduated from UCLA
She was a catch in every way.
And then here I am.
You're retired from sex.
It's scary.
Yeah, I retired at age 28.
Probably didn't do much for our relationship actually.
You're in that unit for a while
and then you get called up to the big leagues,
which is homicide and everyone's aiming towards that.
And you have this kind of well-worn stereotype or trope,
which is you're nervous the first time
you go to a crime scene,
because you know of these people who've come before you
who show up and throw up.
And we see it in movies.
Right.
We just rewatched Seven.
Ah.
It's a great movie.
Such a good movie.
Masterful.
It's so good.
It's so good.
I mean, Kevin Spacey,
who I think is getting uncancelled now, I think.
Is he?
He just hit a Broadway thing.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Oh my God.
I don't pretend to know how any of that stuff works, but amazing actor if nothing else.
Yeah, well that is true.
I won't take that from him.
But Brad Pitt and that was amazing.
Morgan Freeman was amazing.
They're incredible.
Oh, yeah.
It'd probably be the equivalent of you're an actor and you have just wound up doing
your first scene
with somebody like a Morgan Freeman.
I had the biggest imposter syndrome ever.
You were normally young for the position as well.
I was on a rocket and I looked like I was 12
and I go to the crime scene and come on,
everything you see on TV, the new guy always pukes, right?
I'm literally walking into that going,
don't puke, Murphy, don't puke.
Because if anybody's capable of throwing up on a dead body
or doing something that dumb, it's me.
I'm 33, I was surfing that morning,
trying to get over a broken heart from the UCLA grad
because she moved on.
Yeah, she moved on to a guy who was my buddy.
She wasn't retired sexually quite yet.
She was not, she was not.
And my buddy Greg, as he put it,
the guy she wanted marrying,
he's just like you dude,
just a little better in every way.
I walked into that crime scene.
We had a dead guy on his back in a kitchen
and the majority of the crime scenes are inside
and a lot of them are domestics,
which is what this wound up being.
But I walk in and it's like, don't puke,
don't puke, don't puke.
And I looked down and he had a folding knife
in his left hand and a wallet chain
into his right back pocket and immediately jumped out at me.
Like, why would a right-handed guy have a knife
in his left hand or a left-handed guy have his wallet in his right back pocket? And here's at me. Like, why would a right-handed guy have a knife in his left hand or a left-handed guy have his wallet
in his right back pocket?
And here's another thing that isn't in the book.
First thing, the detective, Buyington,
who went up being one of my best friends,
and he went up being the lead in so many of the stories
I talk about in so many of the cases,
but he lifts up the shoulder because what happened was
the killer, who was his mistress, I guess we could call her.
He was married, having an affair with her.
She had just gotten broken up with by her boyfriend
who she still lived with.
Right, and so she starts seeing our guy,
and I don't know if he was still living with his wife
or if they were separated,
and this is super weird and this is also not in the book.
His brother had a dream.
His brother is a really deeply religious guy
to the point of being kind of out there a little bit.
Has a dream where his brother is killed.
Again, my whole thing with the family is something
he told me this.
He has a dream that he sees his brother's death.
And so he talked to him and said,
God came to me in a dream and showed me your death
and he's gonna strike you down
if you don't end this sinful relationship
and go back to your wife and kids.
That's true story.
And if that isn't the weirdest frigging thing,
and I'm not religious,
but we always kind of thought
he had this talk with his brother
and he went over to end it.
And she couldn't handle two breakups.
So she shot him, he was hauling ass for the stairs.
And there was one graze went into his arm
and we see all these bullet holes on the wall upstairs,
broken glass.
As he's going down the stairs, she got him once in the back.
Then he goes down and he's on his back
and she shot him twice in the heart,
once in the temple, once in the mouth.
So the detective, I'm 30, this is my first murder scene,
I'm just thinking don't throw up, don't throw up.
He lifts up his shoulder to show me the two bullet holes
in the wood underneath, which is significant
because it indicates degree between the first and second.
Also, it was a six shot revolver and there were eight holes,
so she had to reload, which legally is all very significant.
He lifts up the shoulder and I'm in the don't puke mode,
and the guy groans.
Because, yeah, a lot of people want to.
The air came out of his mouth.
The air came out of his mouth, and it's like, ugh.
I mean, it's like haunted house.
You're just trying to act like you've been
in this situation a thousand times.
Yeah, I've seen this a million times.
It's like, are we sure this guy's dead?
Dead men don't talk.
Sometimes they do.
Sometimes they do.
Oh.
Yeah, so that was my first one,
and then what happened, she bailed out. Yeah, so that was my first one.
And then what happened?
She bails out.
This is my first week in the unit.
I want to add, she is financial manager.
Financial planner, 41 years old.
Never been in trouble a day in her life.
Ties to the community, grew up in Newport Beach area.
So she's got a right to bail.
And back then it was $250,000 and she can make it.
And I've got no arguments to keep her in.
And this is statutory bail.
She gets out and tracks down the ex-boyfriend,
who had just broken up with her
and they were still living together.
He's in a hotel, and he falls asleep,
unbeknownst to him, she brought in a tire iron from the car,
bludgens him to death in his sleep.
Next night?
Yeah, right after bailing out,
and then goes to the place called the Firing Line
in Huntington Beach, rents a gun and...
Kills herself. Suicides, yeah.
In a firing range.
This is my first week,
and I think I've got the shortest career
in the homicide unit because I must have screwed something up.
My boss, who is wonderful, he's like,
how is this your fault?
You know, he's like, she had a right to bail.
I hate to tell you this, I'm so relieved
that was the first story.
Because I'm so sick of us men killing everyone and hurting everyone. Anytime a woman's a piece of shit, I'm so relieved that was the first story. Because I'm so sick of us men killing everyone and hurting everyone.
Anytime a woman's a piece of shit, I'm like,
well thank God there's a couple of them.
Somebody on their team is doing something wrong.
It is weird because normally women kill themselves.
Normally she would have killed herself first before killing everyone else.
It's the tire iron where I go, oh, bitches can get down too.
We can all be nasty.
You can go in and bludgeon someone to death
with a tire iron, I mean, that is a dude move.
And not only like, she didn't hit once or twice
until he was shaking, she bashed his face into the point
that we needed fingerprints to identify him.
We had a pretty good idea who it was
because he ran out of the room.
She went Tonka.
Full Tonka, that's one of the chimps from the doc.
You'll learn.
Oh, okay, okay.
Full Tonka.
That's one of the chimps from the doc. Yeah.
You'll learn.
Oh, yeah.
We'll talk.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert.
If you dare.
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["Wonderful Music"]
What is the experience working with detectives?
And maybe delineate that you guys have different roles.
What the detective has to do
versus you have to build a case.
These are kind of separate things.
So what are the pros and cons of those relationships?
First of all, beginning with the FBI,
I got to work in some of those task forces over the years
and the FBI agents, in my experience,
are some of the best people I've ever met.
Yeah, they're so cool.
They are so cool.
A lot of people don't know this.
A lot of them are lawyers.
They tried to get me out of law school.
The FBI as an administration,
like when they want to tell you no
and there's no logical reason for it, you hear the word protocol and you deal with some of the most
ridiculous shit dealing with the FBI. Yeah. And the agents were wonderful. So they
made up for some of the negative experiences you deal with with the admin.
With the bureaucracy. So the philosophy of the vertical unit, there's a guy named
Francisco Berseno who just passed away, he was a Procure Judge, but he used to be head of the
Homicide Unit. Vietnam war hero came back with a guy named Ed Freeman,
who back in the early 80s was a World War II war hero.
So you get these two guys and they built the Homicide Unit
and they came up with this vertical concept.
And what they wanted was for their young women and men in the Homicide Unit
to be able to bond with their detectives to eliminate a lot of those problems.
So especially Southern California's a patchwork
of small cities.
My cities of Newport, Costa Mesa, Laguna and Irvine
are all small police departments.
And when you go in, it's like that day,
I think in a way, Byington was trying to freak me out
a little bit.
It was a little bit of a hazing the new guy
and can this guy hang sort of thing.
Right of passage.
It's a right of passage.
And right when I walked in the door
and I left this out of the book, they were literally,
it's like seeing straight out of TV,
they'd forensically processed the living
and part of this townhump and they were eating a pizza.
The guy said to Matt, he goes,
she killed the shit out of him.
Yeah, basically stapled him to the floor.
This guy is, a lot of detectives are funny as shit.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you got to.
You have no choice.
The gallows humor.
Another interesting thing about the best detectives
and the best prosecutors too, I think,
it's the guys that are one bad decision away
from being the same people they're investigating.
A thousand percent.
Those are the ones.
Well, cause you can understand, I have this too.
I'm a scumbag.
I'm a recovering addict.
I can drop into a mindset pretty easily
of feeling like I'm owed something.
I'm justified for this.
As far as detectives go,
there are detectives
who literally are boy scouts
that live this very Joe Friday life,
just the facts, ma'am, and you encounter those
and they're great at the documents,
the police reports, there's no spelling errors in them,
and they have their advantages.
When it comes to the really bad,
the serial killers you gotta catch,
the cases that are impossible,
that nobody else wants to take a run on,
give me the mutant that almost got fired a couple times,
and that's the person.
Yeah, you gotta get in their head.
Well, that's the person that's gonna win it for you.
And that's the one that you can also,
when they're sitting next to you during jury selection,
that's the person you can lean over to.
I keep saying, guys, a lot of these are women.
Some of the best investigators I worked with were women.
But I'm sure increasingly so over the course of your career,
in 92 or 93. Increasingly so.
Even then, they're the women that have been divorced
a couple times.
It's the same thing.
They're paying the same price
everyone else pays for that job.
100%.
And they're the ones that,
the more twisted they are,
that's the one you can lean over to and go,
juror number 10, what do you think?
And you need that kind of guidance,
especially when you've been doing it for a while.
I needed as much help as I could get.
But you know what's interesting?
We would do these juror questionnaires
on the really heavy stuff,
like the serial killers and the death penalty cases.
This sounds crazy, but I do think we should just mention
for people who are 25 years out of jurisprudence,
when the case begins,
you're starting with an ample amount of juries
and you're gonna get to kick some off
as the prosecutor and the defense
is gonna get to kick some off.
So you're trying to figure out who's gonna be helpful, right?
You get 20 challenges on a life case.
For no reason, they're called peremptories.
So I can boot a jury for any reason other than risk.
But if they come in and they're wearing a shirt you don't like,
you're allowed to kick them if you get a bad feeling in your gut.
And so when you come up through the ranks,
I could have 37 misdemeanor jury trials before I touched my first felony.
And you don't get to do questionnaires in any of those.
And questionnaires, you get to ask them all kinds of things.
And I learned over the years that you gotta trust the gut,
not the paper version,
because they can look really good on paper.
It's kind of like dating in a way.
Also, people answer questions in a way
they think they're supposed to answer
versus there's a catrillion bits of information coming at you
that are nonverbal.
Which is the most important thing,
from chimpanzees on up.
But back to, oh, so the police, they're very helpful.
Right, so those detectives, yes, sorry,
I took us on a tangent.
The thing about a vertical unit
is you get a relationship with them.
You win a couple tough ones,
and pretty soon those cops are listening
to everything you have to say because they want to win.
I would meet with the families,
but these cops would do the death notifications.
And imagine that.
I think the most extreme emotion I've ever experienced
is, of course, for the dads to,
but for the moms who have had a child that's been murdered.
And imagine you're a cop who has to break the news to them.
No thanks.
And that cop, when they go through that,
you talk about tolls on relationships
and alcoholism and all that.
When they got the right guy
and they know they got the right guy,
they want to win that case.
And when you bring it home for them
and then you win a tough one.
Well, it's this beautifully symbiotic relationship,
which is you got to gather everything perfectly and then I'm going tough one. It was this beautifully symbiotic relationship, which is you gotta gather everything perfectly
and then I'm gonna slam dunk this.
And when you're in the foxhole like that with somebody
and you go through a really hard trial,
that detective sitting next to you,
you come to love them and they love you back
and they wind up being some of your closest friends.
I would imagine that y'all's integrity gets tried
probably more than almost any other job.
I'd imagine it's quite tempting, I bet it's presented all the time, that you could massage
something and you would know I'm kind of violating this person's right, but I know they're guilty
and it's worth it.
I bet that comes up a lot.
It definitely happens and as a defense lawyer I've seen more of that.
I defend a lot of police officers and I'm dealing with a case right now where they pulled
some stuff that I've been shocked
as a former prosecutor, I can't believe anybody did it.
That the prosecution's doing it.
However, when you do it long enough
and they let you actually be a pro as a prosecutor,
you learn pretty early in your career
that the only thing worse than a family losing a loved one
is losing a loved one, getting a conviction,
and then having to do it all over again
because somebody doesn't turn something over.
Because here's a hypothetical I could imagine happening.
I could imagine finding a bit of evidence.
And now if I take that on,
I'm legally obligated to turn that over to the defense,
right?
And I might go, I'm just gonna skip that altogether.
I didn't see that.
I don't have to incorporate that
because I don't really want to turn that over.
Those little question marks probably arise.
So when you came through,
there's a guy named Chris Evans
who's now a Superior Court Judge, real world guy.
He was a fireman who went to law school at night.
And so he was a citizen of the actual world,
uniquely gifted as a actual trial lawyer.
And I used to go watch him when I was a law clerk.
What he told us was, make sure the defense has everything
and then beat him with it.
That was what we got taught.
And so for anybody that's holding evidence back,
number one, it's totally illegal.
In the state of California, it's actually a felony.
But the people that do the dirty tricks as defense lawyers or prosecutors,
they're trying to compensate for a lack of game.
And if you've really learned the craft and you've studied it,
as a prosecutor, if you can't convince a jury, you shouldn't win the case.
Even if you're convinced the guy did it, you can't cheat to win.
You have to have a level of respect for the system.
You really do, and your reputation's all you have in that business.
The best prosecutors really are kind of like,
my buddy Jim Mendelson was an actual fighter pilot
before he went to law school.
And they're gunslingers.
They want to fight.
They don't want to cheat and win.
No, there's a spectrum of talent in anything.
But like the guys I was in the unit with,
and you know, guys including women,
they were some of the most twisted,
diabolically genius people.
They were superheroes in my eyes,
and they would turn everything over,
the ones I worked with,
because they would never admit they sweated.
Any defense lawyer they were kind of up against,
they wanted to beat them,
and the tougher the case, the better,
as weird as that sounds.
Now, if they were prone to be problematic,
where was it generally gonna surface?
Unicourt, and doing misdemeanors.
The ones who suck are never gonna get to homicide
in the first place. Gotcha.
And so you wind up with kind of the exact opposite.
You wind up with a bunch of people who were kind of brazen,
sharp elbowed, who relished the challenge.
As a prosecutor though, one of the tough parts is
there are three things alleged on every appeal.
The appellate defense counsel will always accuse
the trial lawyer, defense attorney, of being incompetent.
So they get accused of incompetence.
The judge gets accused of some sort of malfeasance and forgetting to instruct on something, some sort being incompetent. So they get accused of incompetence, the judge gets accused of some sort of malfeasance
and forgetting to instruct on something,
some sort of incompetence,
and the prosecutor always gets accused of misconduct.
Right now, the police have had a hard time
and some of that goes over into prosecutors
and there's people that are open to that idea.
And also what gets made, what do I watch?
I'm very heartbroken and interested
when I see on front line the confessions
and they got seven confessions from seven guys
who are all below a third grade reading level
that were scared.
That sting of injustice on that level in innocence
is so strong that obviously you could probably
mis-evaluate how prevalent, who knows?
I sit on a board with Purdue University,
it's a post exoneration board where our whole task
is trying to find people in Indiana that have been falsely convicted.
And I work with a guy named Timmy McDonald on that,
who's an exoneree.
I freaking love this guy.
Of all the people on the board, and there's a bunch of rich,
fancy, famous people, Timmy's the guy.
So he did 21 years for a murder that he actually did not
commit, and that's coming from a career prosecutor actually
innocent.
There's a bunch of mistakes that were made,
and they kept offering him deals and refused to take it
because he really didn't do it.
What a proposition to present to somebody.
Oh yeah, talk about it, Devil's Morgan.
And he's like, no, I'll stay in prison
before I'll admit something I didn't do.
And talk about the name of integrity.
Absolutely it happens.
And if you got a heart, which you clearly do,
it's the worst injustice imaginable.
That's why our system set up the way it is.
To let many guilty people go
is preferred to a single innocent. That's right. system set up the way it is. To let many guilty people go is preferred to a single innocent.
That's right.
And that's the way it should work.
It gets problematic when we get into the serial killers that are going to victimize other
people.
I think it gets into a problem there.
And I think where jurisprudence is most problematic is in sexual assault.
It's still almost impossible to prosecute.
100%.
In my opinion, let me hit you with this.
I was reading Missoula, the John Krakauer book
on the kind of rape epidemic at Missoula.
The problem prosecuting these kids
and then the problems with the jury
is even if they get the stuff they need.
It needs degrees like murder.
I think that's one of the problems
is you have these jurors looking at these young people
and there's no degree so it's all in or all out,
and they have a hard time finishing a young person.
Not that they shouldn't be finished,
that's not what I'm saying,
but I think if there were degrees within it,
it could move the needle.
That's a really interesting idea,
because you're absolutely right,
like a 288, that's sexual abuse of a minor,
there's one charge.
I mean, there's different subsections of a rape,
but that word is a heavy thing.
And a lot of jurors, you're right.
I prosecuted my niche was date rapes.
And you don't want to tag a kid as a rapist for life
for a misunderstanding or a drunken miscommunication.
You have two people in a blackout.
We're reconstructing two people's blackouts.
And it's a really tough thing.
Words are important.
Maybe if there were degrees.
But who's going to come up with the degrees?
That's very tricky too.
To me there's some things that are worse.
I'm gonna get in trouble for just saying that.
Worse than others.
But there are.
Look, I was molested.
There's worse versions of the way I was molested.
I can tell you if someone was molested.
If that was my parent, that's fucking worse.
If it were reoccurring for years.
Yes, if there was violence.
For me there's degrees of what I experienced for sure.
But you know what's interesting about that?
A lot of people, you encounter that,
not to spin off on a tangent,
a lot of people think that that's like a zombie bite.
So many people have been molested.
I still don't think the public understands that.
I admit it, I say it out loud.
I didn't know of an actor when I was a kid
that said he had been molested.
I thought I was the only person.
Now people are talking about him.
I will bet a majority of men in Hollywood
were the victims of sexual abuse at one point or another.
Because I'm ready to come to terms with the idea
that a majority of men in general in America
at one point or another were sexual abuse as a kid.
Yeah, the conservative estimates are like 25% of us
that grew up in the 80s were.
And our parents, they were smoking and drinking
and we were wildings in our generation, for sure.
Completely unprotected.
But one of the things about it is there's a weird stigma that needs to be relaxed,
especially when it comes to men.
A lot of people think it's like a zombie bite.
We know it happens when you get bit by a zombie, right?
Or bitten by a vampire.
Like you will then become a predator.
Yeah, I grew up with that paradigm.
Right. So a lot of people keep quiet.
And that is not the case at all.
In fact, it's the exact opposite. A lot of people that have been sexually abused know how fucking awful it is
So they would never do it and I understand that there's some
Psychology behind it and some people that are horrifically abused affects them
But the vast majority of time and this is four years in sex and 17 and homicide which half are sex cases
Anyway, the majority of the offenders were never victims themselves and And I'm here to tell you, that is a pervasive myth.
I think that's another part of the stigma.
That people are gonna be like,
oh, I don't wanna leave them around with my kids.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, I wanna hear about a few,
you do a dozen or so cases
throughout your long career in the book.
I guess since it was prompted by Anna's movie,
let's talk about him for a minute.
The notion that this motherfucker was on the dating game blows my mind.
So tell us about him a little bit.
So he grew up loving home,
never abused or bullied by anybody.
And this is the best investigators.
He went through three different capital trials,
which means you have A through K factors
is what is known in a bifurcated jury system in California.
So those are the factors the jury gets to consider
in weighing whether there's any mitigation.
So A factors like circumstance of the offense,
how brutal it was, B factors, other crimes of violence.
You go down the list and essentially a serial killer
is motivated in a life or death sort of way
to come up with any sort of abuse possible
as a mitigating factor sent to their jury.
So he had three great defense teams.
They were unable to uncover a single instance.
So he grows up in a loving home, successful siblings, mother who loved him,
aunt very much in the picture, father died when he was young, but went to prep school,
varsity lettermen on the yearbook committee,
graduated from UCLA film school, genius level IQ and handsome for the day and charming.
For the day, I mean, currently he would.
He needs a haircut in 2024.
But yeah, he's a good looking dude back then.
Is the part in the movie where he worked
at the LA Times as a photographer?
He was a typesetter and he worked for the LA Times,
gainfully employed.
So this guy, actually not far from where we are,
1968, he kidnaps, rapes and almost murders
an eight year old girl named Tally Shapiro.
So anybody that wants the background,
Anna's movie was wonderful.
The detectives were involved in it, I give it an A+.
And the final scene, the only way it could have been
more true to real life is if she'd made it longer.
Phenomenal job.
So anyway, so he kidnaps this eight-year-old,
Good Samaritan sees it,
follows him to this little Hollywood bungalow,
and all of this is in the book.
I think people would be interested in it, I hope, but this cop, little Hollywood bungalow, and all of this is in the book.
I think people would be interested in it, I hope, but this cop, his name is Camacho,
LAPD officer, hero cop, shot in Vietnam, comes back from the war, shot in the Watts riots.
It's his first day back at work.
Oh my God.
And he gets a welfare call, and nothing about it seemed any more right in 1968 than it would
today.
So he knocks on the door, and he hears one second, kicks the door in and Alcala's going out the back naked
and he finds this little girl, eight years old,
she's been raped, she's in a coma for 32 days.
She's got a barbell across her throat,
seconds away from death.
So this cop saves her life.
Whoa.
Alcala gets away, gets to the East Coast,
enrolls in NYU film school.
He'd already graduated from UCLA.
After that event, he decided to get out of town.
He fled.
And inside his apartment,
they find hundreds and hundreds of photographs
of young women and boys in positions of vulnerability.
Out in the woods, in rooms with him.
Some of them are sexual, some of them are pornographic,
some of them are remodeling.
Hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of these things.
What age is he at that point?
That they lost.
So this is 1968, mid-20s, I think at this point.
So he's like prolific.
This guy is the real deal.
Okay, so goes to New York, they catch him,
he's working at an all-girls sleepaway camp in Vermont.
And there's a rainstorm and two little campers
go running into the post office to get out of the rain.
FBI 10 most wanted list.
They look up and they're like,
that's weird, that's Mr. Burger,
because he's a counselor at the camp.
They catch him, they extradite him back to California,
winds up kidnapping and near death of an eight year old
and he raped her.
There's a photo in that,
and this is one of the scenes that sticks with me,
even though I wasn't physically there
because I was 12 when it happened.
Little white Mary Jan's in more blood
than should ever be able to come out of an eight year old
at the scene.
So she survives miraculously.
They extradite him.
The prosecutor decides to give him
a straight child molest case.
And he goes in, he gets a life sentence.
They paroled that guy after 34 months.
And that is a cautionary tale.
So he gets out and they violate his parole.
They catch him with a 13-year-old girl
that he was certainly on his way to killing.
But they had marijuana.
They went to prosecuting her for possession of marijuana.
Oh my God.
13 years old.
Fucking God.
So he gets about a year and a half.
They release him again.
It's like Forrest Gump, again.
Gets out and then he kidnaps Monique Hoyt.
She's 15-year-old runaway, rapes her, sodomizes her.
She wakes up, he probably thought she was dead.
She comes to and says,
we can't let anybody know what we did.
He then had a moment of emotion, broke down crying
and then transported her wherever they were going.
And she jumped out and called the police.
And then the court has an obligation legally
to presume the rape and kidnap is true
and assess danger to the community.
And on all the background, the judge lowered his bail.
He got out and he kidnapped and murdered a 12-year-old girl
at a Huntington Beach named Robin Sampso.
So he gets convicted, goes up,
case gets reversed once by the California Supreme Court.
Convicted again in 1986, goes back up, now it's the Ninth Circuit that reverses it.
So the case has been twice gutted, then it winds up on my desk.
So we don't know anything at this point.
Since late 2002, 2003, I get assigned to me because I'm one of the cold case deputies,
and this poor family has had to go through this twice now.
Every time a case gets reversed, they... A re-interview everybody.
Well, we got to figure out what kind of evidence we have. The police in 1979 got into his
storage locker and again different batch found hundreds and hundreds of photos of
more young women and girls.
How can he be...what? I don't understand...
He killed a hundred people after his release from California State Prison. So he killed a 21 year old
computer programmer in Burbank very close to where we are right now,
named Jill Parenteau.
We didn't know that, so it winds up on my desk
and I talk to my old mentor and I'm like,
what do we do with these?
Because the case got gutted twice
and there was a photo found, this is kind of cool,
of a girl named Lori Wirtz.
She's on roller skates in a place called Sunset Beach.
It's right next to Huntington Beach.
That was in a storage locker and it turns out
that was from the same day that Rob and Samso went missing.
So we can put him in the area,
and then we're kicking it around like,
how do we freaking prove this thing?
And there were signs in the background
that were still in the cement,
and we found some guy in the Navy of all places
that was able to give us an exact time
that that photo was taken based on the shadows.
So I'm locked and loaded, I'm ready to go again.
No sooner do we make the decision
that we're gonna retry this fucker
that we start getting DNA hits out of LA County
for unsolved murders because California
just entered the COTA system.
So we get three DNA hits in LA County plus a fourth.
He was a suspect in one.
Jill Parenteau, the computer programmer.
So now we got five, so we constructed a whole thing
and then like a lot of good serial killers,
because he's a psychopath, they can't resist the control,
so he went up representing himself.
Oh, this is a big move, isn't it?
Oh yeah.
They over indexed him representing themselves,
100%.
100%, which is awesome, because they all suck at traveling.
Whatever disconnects them, that makes them want to do it in the first place.
Talk about an admission of their arrogance.
Oh my god, and it's the greatest...
If I were you, I'd just go like,
so this guy's representing himself, I think that tells you everything you need to know, we rest our case. Oh, there's a great adage, and it's the greatest. If I were you, I'd just go like, so this guy's representing himself.
I think that tells you everything you need to know
we restaurant gays.
Oh, there's a great adage,
and I threw this in the book
that you learn in law school.
Anybody who represents himself as a fool for a lawyer
and a jackass for a client.
It was surreal, but I had to deal with him every day.
I had to go in and talk to him.
Oh my God.
Because you gotta move things around.
You gotta talk to the council, right?
Yeah, and for me, being kind of twisted,
it was fascinating.
Oh, I would have enjoyed. Tell us, what was he like? Well, and for me, being kind of twisted, it was fascinating. Oh, I would have enjoyed.
Tell us, what was he like?
Well, first of all, so there's this moment,
like they don't give us any training
on how death row actually works in California.
And I just thought it was one big prison yard,
like a prison within a prison, it's all in San Quentin.
And I didn't know yet that they sub classify them.
They have a yard they call themselves,
and they divide it up into yards,
called the weenie yard,
which are the guys that aren't dangerous
to staff or other inmates.
And so we just sentenced this guy,
big white supremacist gang leader, super gnarly dude,
he'd just gotten the death sentence out of Orange County.
So he goes up, I'm sitting there,
we're waiting for the judge one day,
and I literally had to talk to this guy several hours
every day for six months, you know,
because he's representing himself.
So you develop a rapport.
Can I ask you one hard question?
Because we interviewed the defense attorney
that was representing the victims for Epstein,
and he had several lunches with Epstein
while he was representing those people.
And he said, he's so fucking charming.
I'm there experiencing what they experience,
and leaving going, boy, that was fucked up.
Did you have any of that?
A hundred percent. That's why the actor who played Rod and Alcala in Anna's movie was friggin brilliant.
Oh, he yeah, he's so good.
He won the dating game.
Of the three bachelors.
By being charming and funny and the actor nails it because it's like who would get in a car with that guy?
The answer is almost everybody because they're so frickin charming, but that's the thing with Alcala.
So I'm like, hey Rod, just out of curiosity.
What do you do when a guy like Billy Joe
talk about a cartoon character
and this guy had frickin' swastika tats
everywhere, the whole deal.
Aren't you worried that a guy like that
is gonna get to you?
He goes, Matt, buddy, you know me.
I'm on the Weenie Yard, I'm not violent.
I'm never gonna see that guy.
He was offended that I would think
that he was a violent guy.
This guy murdered 100 women
and smashed their faces in with rocks.
And that other guy's a Philistine.
Right, right, right.
Are you kidding me?
Totally.
That guy's a racist.
Croglodyte, what are you talking about?
He's got swastika tattoos, what do you mean?
Do you think that he believes that in the moment, right?
Oh yeah, totally in the moment, and that's the charm.
Watch the Bundy tips where he's getting interviewed.
It is fascinating.
Bundy has a moment where the reporter says,
hey, what's it like to know
you're gonna get executed tomorrow?
And Bundy's response, I'll never forget this,
he's like, my odds of getting executed tomorrow
are about the same as yours getting killed
in a car accident on the way home.
He goes, God forbid that should happen.
So much concern for him.
So much concern, God forbid.
What a horrible analogy to use.
Like, I'm concerned with you, and they did.
They frickin' choose Bundy the next day
to the better men of all mankind.
The really smart psychopaths, they understand intuitively
where that good heart opening is,
and they take advantage of it.
Well, no one likes this, but sociopaths
overindex in empathy.
They're very, very good at knowing exactly how you feel
and what you want to hear.
That's exactly right.
That hypersensitivity to it is connected to
their love of inflicting pain.
Even for the sociopaths that haven't killed anybody,
like the ones that are running businesses,
there's that little element of cruelty
that so many of them have, they get off on it.
I want to go through a couple more,
because the book is just full of so many
riveting cases that you covered.
I didn't realize Orange County was such a
a bed of activity.
Seriously.
Yeah.
But Skyler DeLeon?
Skyler DeLeon, yeah. So he was a Power Ranger.
He had a speaking role.
He was a child actor.
No.
Yeah.
You know, he was, of all of the guys I dealt with,
all the fraudsters, Ed Sheen was one of mine
that I talked about in the book.
Skyler was the best liar of anybody I'd ever seen.
Really?
Yes.
Because his name rhymed with it or?
Skyler's a liar.
Good job, Mom.
Couldn't help myself.
I like it.
I like that.
She's got a new Missoni sweater on.
She's feeling pretty good today.
It's a nice little first-year.
It works, it works.
This guy was in the Marine Corps for about a second
and went AWOL.
A lot of them also joined the military and go AWOL.
Alcala did, my Nyeri guy did, my last one.
That's another common thing that you see on the cycle pass.
So he wants to put together this scheme
to basically murder people to get their money.
And there's this beautiful couple, retirees, Tom and Jackie Hawks.
Jackie was in a motorcycle accident, she was in her 20s, couldn't have kids of her own.
Mary's Tom, he had two young kids at the time, so she got to be mom,
and then one of them had a baby. So they'd retired onto the ocean
and sailed around on a yacht, so now they got a grandchild, and Jackie just wants to experience
that. So they decide to sell the boat, and they go out for a sea trial,
which is basically a test drive for a yacht,
never seen or heard from again.
And so Skyler is there with all the bill of sale
paperwork, fingerprints that we sent to the FBI.
It was Tom and Jackie's fingerprints.
They actually signed all the stuff,
and there was one problem.
The S on her signature didn't match,
but everything else did. That became important. They show up with these
documents indicating they bought the boat there was a notary that notarized
the documents they'd filed it with Prescott Arizona everything legally they
could do indicating they purchased the boat they had done and so we had to
untangle that. I do an annual surf trip with a bunch of buddies to Indonesia and
you sit on a chartered surf boat for 12 days or whatever. I do an annual surf trip with a bunch of buddies to Indonesia and you sit on a charter surf boat
for 12 days or whatever.
I was gonna skip that year and anyway,
I catch my girlfriend making out with the groomsmen
at a wedding.
So that's bad.
So I decided at the last second,
I'm gonna take this surf trip and I wind up on this boat,
this guy, Gary Burns, who was a part of the boating world
and he's a totally legit guy,
but he had seen sort of the underbelly of it
and met some smugglers and actual pirates along the way.
There's Tom and Jackie, like three months later,
they're missing, it's a Newport case.
I'm working with Barrington again,
that same detective who moved the body
and made the guy drown.
And we were at a dead end
and we suspected something bad had happened,
but we did two forensic workups of the boat.
So the boat was found.
Boat was found.
They're not on it. Tom and Jackie are missing and you got Skylar and Jennifer saying, hey, we bought the boat. So the boat was found. Boat was found. They're not on it. Tom and Jack, you're missing,
and you got Skylar and Jennifer saying,
hey, we bought the boat,
and here's all the documents indicating we bought it.
By the way, when you find these people,
they promised to teach us how to operate it properly.
We would hate to have to sue them.
Oh, this is a pretty good, that's a cool angle.
So I watched his interview,
credit to the detectives,
I believed everything he was saying.
He was on probation for burglary at the time
and he goes, look, this is cartel money.
My dad was involved in the cartels.
You can look it up.
I can't tell you where I got it or they'll kill my family.
It was so convincing.
And it's like, I was buying this in a money laundering scheme.
That's why I was buying the boat.
It's all cash.
It came up, this could almost work.
Like this almost makes sense. And the thing is, there's a difference was buying the boat. It's all cash, it came up. This could almost work, like this almost makes sense.
And the thing is, there's a difference between
what you suspect and what you can prove.
And we had friggin' nothing.
And we had a weird story, but it was convincing as hell.
So I called Gary in Australia, the charter boat captain,
and I'm like, dude, what are we missing?
And without skipping a beat,
it's almost scary how fast he said it.
I don't even think I finished the sentence.
He's like, missing anchors, look for missing anchors.
If there's murder on a boat, there's gonna be a missing anchor.
Everybody thinks they invented the wheel, everybody gets tied to an anchor.
That's how they do it.
And we go back to the boat for like the 20th time.
Sure enough, been staring us in the face the whole time.
There should have been two anchors on the bow.
There was one.
And so we hook them the next day and the whole house of cards fell down.
So what have they done?
How have they?
So what they did is they lured him out to sea.
They brought in this guy, it was a Long Beach insane crip.
But yeah, they got muscle.
They went out, they lured him out to sea.
They tasered them both.
They threatened to beat her if he didn't sign.
They threatened to taser him again if she didn't sign.
And they tied him to the anchor,
begging for their lives and threw him overboard.
Was the intention just the capital gain?
Did they just want the boat?
Yeah, they wanted the boat,
and they also had a power of attorney
indicating that they should have had access
to their bank accounts too.
All money motivated.
All money motivated,
and then when we got the search warrant,
we found an LAPD Interpol liaison card
to a totally separate murder the year before in Mexico.
A guy from Southern California named John Jarvie
who got into drugs, he was a pilot, had back issues.
A lot of people have experienced that
where he's sober, goes back on painkillers,
fucks him up and he gives him $50,000 in cash,
Skyler cut his throat.
Oh wow, did you watch this newest Zodiac doc?
I haven't and you know, here's my problem with Zodiac.
Please.
They never catch him, It is madding to me
Well, the zodiac doc is really really well done
And I think it's exploring a different aspect which really hit home is the guy the zodiac
Was a school teacher in a task at arrow. Wait, did they finally figure out who did it? Oh, they know
Oh, I didn't know a thousand percent who it is. He just got away with it died before he got he died
He was on dialysis. He died at like 58.
Ah, okay.
And why was he called that again?
He named himself that.
Very smart guy.
He was a champion diver.
He was a scuba guy.
He was an enormous man.
He's a teacher in Atascadero.
He meets these kids.
There's seven kids.
The mom of the seven kids' husband is in
Atascadero State Mental Prison because the dad
had molested the kids, or one daughter in particular.
She's in silver head, she's got seven kids.
This teacher shows up and he starts taking them
to the movies some nights.
He's their teacher, she trusts him.
He develops this relationship with the whole family.
What's neat about this doc is it's not focusing
as much on him like the other ones have.
It's this crazy thing where you can know somebody
who's been so generous and benevolent.
This duality that can exist between what you think
is a serial killer and then the absolute torture
of getting presented evidence after evidence
but you know this man and he was kind to you.
And it's riveting.
People want everyone to be a cartoon character
of a serial killer.
They don't want to be the teacher that was kind to you.
And you know.
That's the thing.
And to see what they had to deal with.
There's the victims, but then there's this whole family
that it tore them apart and one brother finally admitted,
no, no, it's him.
It's incredible.
Okay, I'll watch it.
It's incredible.
It's heartbreaking for this family.
Yeah, Rex Huberman, that's the latest, that's the Gilgo Beach one.
Another huge guy. That's more East Coast news, but he's kind of the modern,
I think he represents the next wave because he figured out a way to defeat modern forensic science.
Oh, really?
They made a DNA hit on a hare, and it's mitochondrial DNA,
so the numbers are like 1 in 50 as opposed to 1 in 18 octillion.
He killed probably 19, they think,
and he was an architect in Midtown, Manhattan.
Wife, kids, the full deal.
Yeah, and he would wrap him in burlap,
which probably had something to do with fingerprints.
And yeah, he got away with it for years and years.
But so did my Golden State Killer kids.
That guy got away with it for years.
Yeah.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
In Zodiac, so he would teach the kids ciphers, right?
He'd teach them how to do ciphers.
Like you draw a grid, A, B, C, D, E, F.
You drew a symbol and taught them how to write code letters.
And he was submitting these to the San Francisco Chronicle
and they were running them on the front page
and there was these ciphers.
One of the ciphers got broke last year.
50 years long his cipher didn't get cracked.
He was like at the cure.
He was writing nonstop, I'm the zodiac.
What?
Figure out this cipher,
it'll tell you what I'm gonna do next.
I mean it was so twisted.
Oh my God.
And he's a very smart dude and very competent and a pedophile, as we come to find out.
Did he kill all his kids?
He killed teenagers who would be making out at make-out points.
Yeah, they're equal opportunity, these guys.
Oh my God.
Boys, girls, women.
He was into self- aggrandizement.
He killed a cab driver for no reason
because he wanted to kill the guy
in front of a movie poster of a movie he loved
and he used to teach the kids.
I mean, it is so dense with craziness.
You gotta watch it.
And my heart to this family.
I can't help but try to think of it in terms of addiction.
And I think about like, are they like me buying coke?
Like, okay, we're buying coke this time,
but we're not gonna buy coke anymore after tomorrow.
Are those deals being made in their head?
Are they trying to quit?
Here's the difference in my mind.
And I mean, everybody in my family's an addict.
For the addict, we can have sympathy.
It's like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, you know,
it's the innocent, right?
The duality of man, the vehicle he had to use
was spontaneous transformation.
Like Dr. Jekyll was a noble man working for science.
Mr. Hyde was the monster they would kill.
And when you know it turns you into something
and you know that you're hurting other people,
addicts only hurt themselves, typically.
There's collateral damage, but in general, yeah.
Sure, there's collateral damage, but it's not predatory.
It's secondary.
I just wonder, are they trying to quit?
Yeah, is it like a compulsion and then they feel guilt?
Or they're like, I'm doing this till the day I get caught.
I'm just so curious.
There's an arrogance that goes along with it.
I don't think you see in addicts.
And also sadism is an inherent part.
It's a thing called the hair psychopathy checklist.
It's like the most common traits of actual psychopaths.
And grandiosity is on that list.
But the very first serial killer case I did
was a serial rapist in downtown Huntington Beach
who finally killed one of his victims
named Victor Miranda Guerrero. And he was living in a tiny little place and
he had a notebook he wrote Victor King. Self-portraits with a crown on his head
and it's like textbook type stuff. Addicts it's a little different right? Yeah
yeah yeah. I only meant the element of trying to quit. For a lot of those guys
they get off on it so much it's more the opposite They can't wait to go out and do it again.
I don't think they feel guilty about it at all.
Okay, I had some questions that have just kind of always
been on my mind about someone with your job.
How do you deal with the frustration of knowing
you have someone and you don't have the evidence
and you're not gonna have it?
What does that do to you?
How do you compartmentalize that
or how do you process that?
Yeah, the answer is not very well.
I lost a lot of sleep over those.
I'm almost shocked there's not more vigilante justice.
I bet back in the day there was.
It's funny you raise that.
People forget there's a social compact.
And one of it is somebody murders your family member
or somebody you love.
The deal is we don't exact revenge
because the state is supposed to do it for us.
And that's what a lot of people forget
as we tack back to like early release.
And I'm as pro reform as anybody,
but for the sexual predators and the really bad guys
are the ones that unnecessarily hurt a family or a victim.
Is the biggest predictor,
I have to imagine rapists are just in route to that.
And all rapists don't want it being serial killers,
but virtually all serial killers were rapists.
They start out with like peeping or flashing,
and they work their way up, they'll steal some underwear.
The beef I have with the FBI definition on serial killer
is it's too broad.
It's two or more victims by the same perpetrator
at different events.
That encompasses gang members and mafia hitmen
and drug dealers they get in beefs.
The real predatory guys are the sexual offenders.
There was this great documentary about chess masters
and there's this very common pattern for chess masters.
This happened to Bobby Fischer,
it's happened to a lot of them.
They spend their whole life anticipating doom
and they exercise their brain in that way
and when they are not concentrating on just
a huge percentage of these chess masters, become paranoid.
It's a liability if all your focus, so,
are you aware that you have had a unique view of life,
and do you attempt to correct for that?
A lot of bad guys.
Yeah.
You have a little bit of a misleading worldview,
I might argue.
In the same way, let me add one other one.
So my wife's mom was a nurse,
and she came to me on the first time we met,
and she said, oh great, I'm glad I'm meeting you.
You have to help me get Kristen off of birth control.
And I said, well, I don't think that's my position.
Do you know how many strokes I see
at the hospital from birth control?
And I said, I bet you see more than anybody.
That's who they come to.
But if we look up right now, car accident deaths
per 100,000 in strokes from birth control,
I would be more apt to get her to quit driving a car.
It's not a realistic, but I understand why to you it is.
No, I think you're exactly right, of course.
There's this nice old man that we were on the same schedule
and he would ride his bike past this elementary school
Manhattan Beach, as I'd be on my way to work.
And for years I'd pass by this guy a couple times a week.
And after about a couple months of sexual assault,
it was like, there's that fricking pervert,
I know what he's up to.
You know, like, you definitely get jaded, for sure.
And you're right, I would have a very skewed worldview.
And I don't think anyone could.
So I have zero judgment saying this.
It'd be weird if you didn't.
I'm skewed by my weird experience in life, right?
I travel around and meet a bunch of artists all the time.
I think the world's full of creative, wonderful people.
I'm delusional.
I mean, I've stepped over a hundred dead bodies
over the course of my job.
And that definitely gives you a viewpoint there.
Now here's a great question.
So I have a tolerance and an appetite
and a capacity to understand gnarly stuff still needs to go on in life.
People gotta do gnarly jobs.
Some cop answers a call to domestic disturbance
and they walk through a door to a house they've never been
and they know violence is happening.
That is a very intense gnarly situation
and we need people to go do that.
I think some people have lost their appetite for the reality of what has to go on.
They have. And so do those people I'd argue like hey,
you have to have some understanding that gnarly shit's got to get done and guess what?
Gnarly shit getting done goes wrong often. You have to have some tolerance for how ugly and gnarly all this is. And split-second
decisions too that police are put in all the time. And that is not to excuse any of the clearly racially motivated,
horrific things that have happened.
Just everything's happening.
And you have to have some tolerance for this.
And you also have to have some self-correcting if you're you.
And I'm wondering how one even does that.
You know, I scuba dive a ton.
I still surf every morning I can,
even though I'm getting rickety in my old age.
But this is gonna sound weird to say.
I started shark diving a few years ago.
Nothing quiets your mind more than cageless shark diving.
And it's a lot safer than anybody would think,
and sharks get a bad rap.
I'll take your word for it.
I go to Cuba in two weeks to go shark diving there,
and it is a friggin' blast.
That's been really zen for me.
And like you, I gotta be very careful
about using anything chemical to balance that out because that's a very
Slippery slope in that job. Yes. Well, okay great. That was one of my questions funny enough
The rate of domestic violence is really rough. It's over indexed the rate of alcoholism is really fucking high among police officers
Do all those same things plague DA's?
Yes, I don't think to the same degree though as cops and I think that we still have a lot better than they do and
It's rough to be a police officer right now
You're putting your life on the line for $80,000 a year in a community where you're hated where the community is being taught to hate you
That's I think what really gets them as you even pointed out in the book. Most of your colleagues aren't in thriving long-term relationships
No, not in homicide
They're not.
And my mentors, and I don't really mention this
because I kept them out, the rule is,
you're either a genius, and there are a few
that came through the unit that are able to balance out
and be great husbands, wives, and fathers, and mothers.
But generally, you go into that unit,
if you're single when you go in,
you're single when you come out,
and if you're married, you're probably getting divorced.
Yeah.
Because you can't do the job, at least me, I wasn't smart enough,
to have good bandwidth on both,
and I decided that I had to go all in.
Well, how can you be at dinner,
not thinking about this thing that has to get done
in order to get this person off the street?
Like, to be able to leave that at the valet
is a tall order.
Yeah, when you have the responsibility to the moms,
that's what it always came back to me,
is when you meet the mom and they want you
to bring it home for them.
And for me, I'd wake up in the middle of the night.
What's hard about the dinners is when you get the call-outs.
You know, I talk about this in the book,
I had a notorious case at a Costa Mesa
and I got the call in the middle of the woman
I was dating at the time was her birthday.
And for me, being awesome boyfriend that I was,
it was just like, all right, we're out.
That's tough on relationships, but in retrospect,
I was a lousy romantic partner for a lot of that time.
Obviously, it's hard to watch people you know are guilty
and you don't have the evidence.
But what about the opposite?
Is there ever a time where you're like,
God, I hope it's the right one?
So that's a great question, and thank you for asking me that.
The answer's no, because your ethical obligation,
your sacrosanct duty is to do justice.
It's not to get convictions.
And when you entertain a doubt,
especially if you're working for a good office
like I was back then,
it is understood as soon as you say, I have a doubt.
But a lot of times it's not just
whether the person did it or not.
A lot of times it's on an enhancement.
Like I had a case where we go
and it was a very wealthy couple, Newport Beach,
about to get divorced and I filed a murder for financial gain
because you only need any part of the motive
being financial that satisfies the element.
The guy was so rich, we were afraid he was gonna run anyway.
And UK citizenship and all that,
and then we get into the computers,
and as soon as the forensic analysis comes back,
like six weeks later, FBI,
so maybe eight weeks if we were asking for it, and four.
The real problem is he was going out,
visiting the services of sex workers,
I believe is the politically correct,
and he was bringing home STDs.
That's what they were fighting about.
So now I knew what they were fighting about,
and it wasn't money.
And we also learned in the course investigation,
each side of the family had tons of cash.
So I had to dismiss that right away, ethically,
even though concerned that he might run,
and what did he do? He frickin' ran. But yeah, so ethically, even though concerned that he might run, and what did he do?
He frickin' ran.
But yeah, so ethically, whenever you entertain a doubt,
you gotta dump it.
And I had another one, a guy I actually charged with murder.
He was a choker.
He had a whole history of domestic violence
where he would choke his ex-girlfriends and ex-wives.
So it was his third fiance,
and they get in a big argument, and she's found dead.
He calls 911.
The rigor's already set in.
She's been dead for hours.
She had bruising to her strap muscles,
which happens in strangulation,
petechial hemorrhaging in the eyes,
which is when the blood vessels burst.
There's always telltale signs
for when somebody's been strangled.
So he fought with her, choked her,
caused death with asphyxia.
Easy, charged him with murder.
We get the tox back,
the toxological results for blood turns out
she took about 500 sleeping pills,
and you die of asphyxia from sleeping pills.
Right, right, right, yeah, stumbly. So that so that's one had to dump it you don't pass go you
immediately call the court you go in and you dismiss it we prosecute her for the
domestic violence he went to prison for that but yeah so that's part of the job
yeah okay is murder reflective of the time in culture the way everything is
is there a trend in murder is there there a style in murder? Has it changed since the 80s?
That's a really interesting question. So murder itself, I think, the motives have been the same
for 100,000 years. Jealousy, greed, anger, lust. It's like the four horsemen that you keep seeing
over and over. Throw a little booze in there, Fourth of July barbecue, dispute with the neighbor,
next thing you know, the gun comes out and somebody gets killed. So it's the same thing over and over again.
What we're seeing now, and I think that this is kind of
a weird byproduct of the fascination with true crime,
is you're getting guys like Rex Heuerman
who are figuring out they don't want to get caught,
so they're getting smarter about it,
almost like a Dexter type thing, and that's the new thing.
Most of them aren't smart enough.
The vast majority of murders are one-offs.
It's situational, never to be repeated again.
But for the real predators, they are getting smarter.
So that part is a yes.
There's also a social media impact
on the way some of the psychopaths
are able to manipulate the public.
And we've just seen a big example of that.
I don't want to necessarily go down this rabbit hole,
but the Menendez brothers, you know?
That's a fascinating thing.
We got Netflix, and we've got this outpouring
of people that feel very, very strongly
because they think they were sexually abused.
Therefore, we gotta let them go and it's a dicey area.
In keeping with my normal trying to always
find the middle ground, what's interesting is
there's two options on the table in this debate.
They either were not molested and they belong there
or they were molested and they don't belong there.
Here's my position.
They're molested and they still belong there.
I know where you're going, right?
Yes.
I watched the trial and what is undeniable
is their testimony would be seen so much differently today
than it was then, and I'm grateful it would be seen
the way it should be today.
For sure.
I think that was a fucked up family,
and I think really bad shit happened to them.
I don't think either of them are that good of actors,
and I know that world, and I believe them.
Does that mean you can cut down Mom with a shotgun?
And therein lies the rub.
Remember, and this is one of those things that forensically,
it's Mossberg 12 gauge, that is a six cartridge weapon,
and there were 13 shots.
And it takes a while to load a shotgun.
It sure does.
It takes a while to load a shotgun.
It's a pain in the ass, you cut your thumb, stick him in there. That a shotgun. It's a pain in the ass. You cut your thumb sticking them in there.
It's a pain in the ass and they'd practice with them. They bought them with fake ideas.
But Lyle Menendez went out to that car, got ammo, reloaded the shotgun, and literally put the gun to his mom's face and blew her face off.
We can say everything we want about whatever Jose did or didn't do.
Great. Unless you're after the money, why do you kill mom?
In that debate, nobody will come up with a good answer
How about this? I can't even make that argument you were supposed to protect me right you turned your eye
You could have saved both of us from all exactly right still fine
But then we're talking about a revenge killing not self-defense. Yeah. Yeah, right
So it's just interesting again to me
What's frustrating is it lines up the way every fucking thing lines up?
Which is it's binary you're on this side or in this exactly right?
No, cuz your middle ground also has a flip, right?
Your middle is they're abused, they should serve time,
and maybe it's time to let them out.
That's not in a legitimate position.
Yeah, that's how I feel.
They've been in there for 30 years.
I think they've done enough.
They're not strangers, they killed their parents,
they raised them, I've got no issue with that.
My problem is the zeal that everybody's gone into it with.
They've all forgotten the first trial
and they've all forgotten how Lyle was bragging
about how he lied on the stand in the first one.
There's so many nuanced pieces like reloading
and shooting mom in the face.
Buying two Porsches Rolexes.
Spending Spree that started four days after Merge,
all that, right?
It's all rough.
Not good.
I guess some people maybe are saying it's good.
Some people love them.
Bill Maher has a great thing.
I'm gonna butcher the quote, but it's brilliant.
It's basically, America never reacts, it just overreacts.
Right, we don't have act, we have overreact.
Which is exactly what you were just saying.
There's a middle ground that everybody ignores.
It's because everything has to line up politically.
So it's like, all of a sudden,
once you find out what your identity is,
what's our team doing?
Well, I don't want to lose my team.
It's not a coincidence you're presented with two options
because there's two fucking parties
and there's two identities in this country.
Which is madness.
It is madness.
COVID, you got to act like there's not a disease
to be a member of your group?
That's nuts.
You got to act like we got to be separated forever
to be a member of your group?
You can't let it go?
What happened to the great rational middle
that I still think exists?
It does.
It does.
And see, with juries, that's a job as a DA,
you have to get a disparate group of people
who are across the spectrum
and get them to agree on something basic,
especially for murder.
This stuff predates Democrats and Republicans,
it predates empires and kings.
This goes back to Hammurabi Cuneiform,
like what happens when you kill somebody?
Well, there's degrees of badness in it.
One of the first laws they wrote down,
literally the first laws dealt with killing people.
And the Ten Commandments, that's a sequel to a lot of the first writings.
How do we deal with each other as human beings?
And I can tell you, from my experience, the grief of a mom or a dad
losing a kid to murder is the same now as it has ever been.
And together as a society, like if we can't all agree on that, we're lost.
I think that that might have something to do
with the fascination in true crime
because it's kind of a refuge where people
can get away from the screaming heads.
It's one of the last areas where people,
regardless of their political affiliation, can agree.
Yeah, yeah.
Have you been involved in any penis chopping Zofs?
I've been involved in penis chopping Zofs?
You have.
No, you haven't, oh yeah. I thought you were being funny.'s offs. You have? No, you haven't.
I thought you were being funny.
I was kind of being funny, but also I wondered.
Oh no, I've had a couple.
What?
A couple?
Yeah, I've been involved in a couple,
but my last trial was my Hussein Nyeri case.
This is actually a great story.
It's a good one to go on.
It was a marijuana dispensary owner gets kidnapped
and the marijuana world in California
is still like the Wild West.
So the way it works is you can't bank from marijuana proceeds. So it's all cash.
Really quick so people understand the federal government hasn't legalized it.
So any proceeds that were in a federally FDIC insured bank, you could go in and get all the money.
That F in the FDIC stands for federal, which is a federal crime. So they can't use Visa MasterCard.
So we've legalized marijuana in the state of California
without a plan in effect to deal with that.
So the result is it's all cash.
You immediately open up the door
to an actual narco trafficker saying,
I own a dispensary.
Here's how I explain this million dollars of cash.
I put it in the bank.
The cartels are involved in so many dispensaries
in California.
It's a problem.
It's just sitting there as a great laundering situation.
Yeah, but you got legitimate business guys that are coming in and they're squeezing out
and they're lowering the margins for the criminal element that's been responsible for that business.
It's like the old bootleggers for years and years.
Like those guys weren't Seagram's whiskey makers.
They were criminals that were willing to fill the need of bootlegging back in the 30s.
As a result, the bad guys in the marijuana world know who's selling a lot of product
and they know who's got a big pile of cash at the end of every day.
So this guy, he owns a dispensary in Santa Ana, totally legit, super licensed.
And in fact, the guy didn't even use weed himself.
So he's like a legit business guy.
They put trackers on his car and they surveilled him and they took him.
He was out in the desert on a meaningless trip with a friend
and they got it in their little brains
that that must be where he's burying Oliva's treasure.
So they kidnap him out of Newport, they drive him out,
they torture him the whole way out,
they get him to the GPS coordinates where they'd stopped.
They're like, give us the money.
And he's like, I told you for the last time,
the money's in the safe because why wouldn't it be in the freaking safe?
I don't need to use the desert.
But again, psychopath in love with his own brilliance.
They've tortured him and he's like,
for the last time, it's in the office, it's not out here.
So he's like, fuck you, and he cut off his penis.
And he took it with him.
So they also kidnapped his roommate's girlfriend.
So imagine this, she's along for the ride basically,
they didn't torture her.
So in the middle of the Mojave Desert,
they dump her out, they're still bound.
They throw a knife down and they're like,
if you can cut your way out, you might be able to get out.
If you can't, you can just fucking die.
So the van drives off.
So she manages to get this blindfold off
and sees lights off in the distance
and she's in her pajamas
and goes running through the California desert.
First car she sees is an off-duty sheriff's deputy going to work.
And so they're able to get to him before he dies.
And now the search is on.
And so, long story short, our mastermind fled back to Iran,
where he was originally from.
And he grew up in California, a California kid,
but he still had citizenship and he still had family back there.
We don't have a great extradition policy with Iran. Not as good.
They're not real big on that, which is a huge problem.
So we've got the mastermind of this thing.
We wound up, and this is kind of cool,
they do a canvas of the scene.
So a canvas is just when the cops go and knock on doors,
right, so they knock on a door.
You're old enough to remember Bewitched,
you're too young to remember Bewitched.
Do you remember?
Mrs. Travis, always looking out,
knows her switches in hell.
Monica's 59 years old, do you believe?
Look how good she looks. They've got a neighbor, knows there's witches in the house. Monica's 59 years old. Do you believe, look how good she looks.
They've got a neighbor,
and you never get anything on a canvas.
When you're out of Leeds, it's a due diligence thing,
but she's like, as a matter of fact, I did see something.
I saw these boys, it looked like two went up on a ladder
into the house where the kidnapping happened,
but I didn't see them come out.
They were wearing hard hats
and looked too clean to be real.
And the cops are like,
please tell us you can describe the truck.
And she's like, well, with the license plate due?
She wrote down the plate number.
And of all the brilliance
and all the planning that went into this,
we had a really smart psychopath guy
and he had helpers.
And one of the helpers was a stone moron.
That's why you gotta do everything yourself.
Right.
That's why you need to kidnap somebody doing something.
Yeah, someone's penis up. You better be doing the whole thing. Yeah, so anyway why you get to kidnap somebody doing this. Because someone's peeing his self,
you better be doing the whole thing.
So anyway, he used his own truck for that event.
So we catch one of them, the other guy flees to Iran,
and we get pretty much everybody else,
including the wife of the mastermind.
So we've got her, she was in law school at the time.
Oh my God.
And now the game became, can we lure this guy out of Iran?
It was one of the coolest things I ever got to do as a DA.
So we flipped her to help us lure him
into the Czech Republic.
And I still can't believe it worked,
but we threw a net on him, the Czech border police.
And that was a case where the FBI were heroes.
So the former Soviet countries absolutely will extradite
to the U.S. because they actually trust our legal system.
The UK is terrible, France is even worse,
Spain not so good.
Oh really?
Surprisingly so, but yep.
Pain in the ass to get him beat out of those countries.
So we could pick any country in the world, the Czechs.
We get him here, extradition is successful,
we put handcuffs on him in New York,
transport him back, we're preparing for trial,
and he friggin' escapes from the Orange County jail
with two guys that were in there for murder,
and they were on the loose.
You read headlines about this back in the day,
you don't remember, but for a week they're out.
You got this guy out of Iran now, you lost him.
I don't know how present you were
at whatever girlfriend's birthday it was happening that week,
but I'm sure you were not fucking thinking about.
I was not popular either.
He's out and he left my photo on his bunk
along with my trial partner, Heather Brown,
who had loved to death.
And it was escape from Alcatraz.
They tunneled out through these plumbing tunnels behind,
repelled off the roof.
Literally something out of a movie.
Leaves my photo on his bunk and Iran,
a lot of people don't know this,
have pretty warm diplomatic relations with Mexico
because they're both OPEC countries.
And they have a full blown embassy in T Tijuana like about 15 minutes from the border
Oh, so all he has to do is head south
So I'm convinced the guy we spent a year out smarting my god that we got out smarted by and instead for whatever reason
He went north and so we got him in San Francisco a week later. They recaptured him
That was my last trial as a prosecutor and he took took the stand, and that was my final question to him,
was, dude, tell us, why couldn't you just leave it there
and give the poor guy a chance that it would be reattached?
And...
Oh, you asked that?
No, I was questioning.
His corpse stenographer had a type-ed question.
He was enraged by that question.
I mean, he was so pissed, which is the goal.
You want the violent guys to flash in front of the jury,
which allowed me to argue in the end.
Ladies and gentlemen, I asked him something he didn't like
and his answer was, you're done.
Personally, you're done.
You're done.
You got a movie moment out of it?
I had a movie moment out of it.
You can't handle the truth.
You got it.
And then the beauty is you connect that to closing words.
Like ladies and gentlemen, think about this.
In between you, a group of people who are deciding his fate,
a superior court judge, and in a courtroom
full of armed guards and bailiffs,
he threatens to kill me.
Whatever your done means, imagine what he's like
in the back of a van when he's not getting
the million bucks that he thought was buried out there.
Nuts.
Yeah, so Hussein Nayyari.
Did he ever say what he did with the penis?
Did he Lorraine Bobbitt it
and chuck it out the window of the van?
One of the three guys in the van
and he said they threw it out the window down the road.
Now I know it called him to testify
but it was one of the co-conspirators.
Weird.
Yeah.
What does one do if they're walking down the side
of the road and they see a penis there?
I mean, immediately you should call the authorities, right?
No one misplaces them intentionally.
Yeah.
Well, Matt Murphy, this was awesome.
The book of murder, a prosecutor's journey
through love and death.
There are a dozen of those stories in there,
as well as your own.
And what else I want to add about it
is it's a great education on a district attorney's job.
You learn a lot about jurisprudence
while you're hearing about all these crazy cases.
Hopefully an interesting way for the reader.
The audible's doing really well.
I narrated it myself, learned to write in tongue twisters,
but thank you for saying that.
Yeah, so everyone check out the book of murder
and I look forward to your next book.
This has been incredible.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
All right, good.
I sure hope there weren't any mistakes in that episode,
but we'll find out when my mom, Mrs. Monica,
comes in and tells us what was wrong.
Just real quick, what if I was, people do this.
Some people wear sunglasses inside.
Anna Wintour.
Yeah, so you might like it.
What if I wore sunglasses?
I don't like not being able to see your eyes.
Yeah, it's a bad look for me, but just what if?
Try to wrap your head around the fact
that I'm the type of guy that like,
I'm always wearing my shades, you know?
I'll be the dude in my shades, I'm always in my shades.
I should've worn my leather.
This is tricky, okay?
This is a deep one.
This can change exactly how you feel about somebody, right?
This little accoutrement.
You putting that on is gonna change
your whole personality, right? This little accoutrement. You putting that on is gonna change your whole personality, right?
Right, right.
So what do I do if I hate your new personality,
but I love you, what happens?
What happens?
What happens?
Yeah.
I mean, really, like people do change over time.
Well, also remember my uncle,
he had had that procedure for his epilepsy
where they told, they warned he and his wife,
like he may have a radical shift in his personality.
That was on the table.
Yeah, it's an interesting question.
Do you have a friend though that had a,
do you think a radical shift in their personality?
Because I could be that friend to some degree
from where I grew up.
Uh-huh, to those people?
Yeah. That's interesting.
Like wow, this guy's like, people? Yeah. That's interesting.
Like wow, this guy's like, he's sober and he's liberal.
Do you think your personality's changed?
Cause those are just, those aren't to me personality things.
They are, we might confuse them as personality things,
but those are like some beliefs
and some just ways of walking through the world.
Yeah, and I imagine you have a, I have a bias
where it's like, I think I'm aware of the things
I've gotten better at and I'm not necessarily sure
which ones I've gotten worse at.
So I think a lot of people that were friends with me
in my early 20s, like they got me,
but I would alienate certain people
or I was too provocative or I'd get drunk.
And then I think a lot of my friends
were often having to apologize for my,
who I was to their friends that didn't know me.
I think it was a little too much for some people.
So of course I would chalk that up as like,
well now I'm better.
But maybe some people would be like, he's boring.
Now I like the guy that was a little crazy. Right. This guy's a fuckin' yawn fest now.
I just thought of an idea for a furniture line called,
what word did I just say?
Yawn fest.
You want to do yawn fest?
I want to do yawn furniture.
Like lawn furniture.
Oh!
But it's comfy furniture for taking a nap in.
I like that.
Yawn furniture.
Is it still for outside?
I think it should be.
Sure.
I feel like you must be in a really good mood today
because you have your hair up and you have a bow in
and that to me is usually a cue.
Like you got up this morning and you're like,
I feel pretty good, I'm going to do a thing
and now here it is.
That's a great guess.
That's not what happened.
Okay.
I put my hair, I just grabbed the first clip I saw
and put my hair up to do my makeup.
Yes.
And then when I was done with my makeup,
I was about to take it down and I thought,
oh, I'll just leave my clip in.
It landed right.
It landed right, it's hard to.
Sometimes you just get lucky, right?
It's hit or miss.
Throw it up and then you pull off an orna.
Exactly. Yeah.
I should have taken one right out.
Accidental perfection.
That's right.
Okay, so I guess you don't really want to talk
too much about personalities.
No, I love talking about personalities.
Do you think you've changed a lot?
Yeah.
Yeah?
I did an awesome podcast yesterday called She Pivots.
Okay, great.
It was really fun, awesome host, Emily Sussman.
And she asked me what my personality was like as a kid.
Like was I, I must have been very wanting
a lot of attention.
Center of attention.
Yes, because I went into entertainment.
Yeah.
And could not be further from that.
I was so shy.
You were shy.
So shy.
But you always made a lot of friends,
so that's a little.
I did make friends.
I did it in the.
But quietly and slowly. Right, I did it in the. But quietly and slowly.
Right, I did it in the way I still make friends.
Like I'm not at a party out.
Taking huge swings like me.
Taking big swings, making, yeah, loud noises and like.
Drawing attention.
I'm not drawing attention, you know I hate that.
I hate audience participation.
And like Jess is very like you, right?
Yeah, here I am. Yeah, here I am.
Yeah.
And I love that.
Like I do joke with him though,
that the first time I ever met him ever
was at one of the Hanson Christmas parties.
And he was like, had his like shirt off or something.
It was doing a dance.
I think those heightened events
could bring out an even heightened version of himself.
So.
And I was like. This guy's dangerous. I heightened version of themselves. And I was like.
This guy's dangerous.
I'm scared of that person.
I'm not, but I want distance from that person.
Yeah, and I think that's what a lot of people's reaction
to me was in my 20s.
Yeah, well, and that's so funny
because I obviously have a pattern of thinking like,
ah, I'm scared of that, I don't want that near me.
And then I always find my way towards those people.
I'm off to the flame, Germany.
Opposites attract.
Yeah, laws of attraction. Germany.
I read that fascinating article about how they're like,
they're so buttoned up and responsible,
and yet they keep, they get drawn to the chaos.
Mixed messes.
Inexplicable.
One of our old school go-tos.
Our tropes.
Anyway, so I used to be very shy.
Yeah.
And I'm not shy anymore.
Oh, congratulations.
But no one would,
I can't imagine anyone would miss your shyness.
Ooh, that's a great question.
My mom probably misses it because I was probably nicer.
I know what you're about to say.
And I don't think you've ever been shy to your mom.
Well, no, I wasn't, but I was stuck to her hip.
Okay, oh, that would have been nice.
Yeah, like a little monkey.
Yeah, but actually this was probably a lesson for her.
She probably didn't like that.
She was probably like, can you like go away?
No, she never said that to me,
but she was probably like, I need some space.
I've been working all day and there's this kid here.
Yeah, stuck, glued to me. Glu was probably like, I need some space, I've been working all day and there's this kid here. Yes, stuck, glued to me.
Glued.
Oh, that's sweet.
You were glued to Nermeen?
Yeah.
Oh.
Well, mainly in public.
Okay.
You kind of hide behind her body, the way kids do?
I guess.
She would describe it as, yeah,
it was like always kind of glued to her.
My cousins Mandy and Kelly,
who are the funnest people on planet Earth.
You'll remember they visited not too long ago
and we had the blast.
Mandy is the younger sister and she has same personality
I do, right?
Look at me.
And then Kelly, who's my exact age, was very, very shy.
And she would just move through the world
hiding behind Mandy at all times,
which she was much bigger.
But I have such a clear image in my head
of anytime we would leave our little bubble
and be at a Kmart or a thing,
Kelly would be behind Mandy.
Like, go ahead, you do.
Do all this stuff I don't want to do for us.
Interesting.
It's again, maybe a birth order thing.
Oh my God, you would have loved this.
So the update no one's asking for is I went to the dentist.
Oh, right.
And my hygienist was five X's into astrology as you are.
Wow.
And she was really mad that you hadn't told me
what my rising was.
I've asked you.
I said, I think she has.
I think she made me take a test to find out my rising,
but I forgot it.
I only remember Capricorn.
But she was a Capricorn, but she had like five,
and this is the thing about you guys that are really into it,
all of a sudden you have like all the signs,
cause she's like, I'm such and such rising
and I'm this waning and I'm like,
well you've got now a fourth of the signs.
Yeah, no it's-
I loved her by the way, very fun hygienist.
She was swearing and stuff, which I love.
That's fun.
And of course I asked her,
because it had been almost to the day seven years
since I had been there last time.
Sure.
And she was like, whoa, seven years.
I going, no, and I'm going to ask you to do something
that's really maybe even impossible to do
because you already know the seven years.
But I'm going to ask you to pretend you don't know that
and objectively assess my mouth
to see how long you think it's been.
Because this is what I asked last time I was here.
And this is when she started swearing.
She was like, oh my God, shit, yeah.
You're just genetically lucky.
You don't have any tartar.
She's like, you have no tartar.
And you know what she told me,
which I find really fascinating,
is remember my calcium heart score,
which I brag about all the time.
Yeah, you do a lot of bragging.
I do a lot of bragging.
It's unbecoming of a gentleman.
Do you think that's a personality change
or has that always been there?
Well, no, in fact, what I was going to say,
the grody part of myself that I think is diminished
is I used to, if not directly brag,
I was really trying to brag all the time.
Okay, so that's gone down.
It's gone down.
That's good.
And even now there's a zone of things I'll brag about
and there are things that I should be in trouble for,
but I'm not, so that's the brag.
So my calcium score, I was terrified to get it
because of my diet.
Sure.
It's just me. And so I was so relieved and it because of my diet. It's just meat.
And so I was so relieved and delighted that it was zero.
Similarly, I haven't been to the dentist in seven years.
I've been one time in 17 years.
That's disgusting.
Because it was 10 years before the last trip.
I know, it's foul.
Everyone is throwing up their tuna sandwich
in their car right now.
I am bragging about it.
And then here's my other justification. This is what I told her.
She's like, yeah, some people genetically are lucky.
They don't build up a lot of tartar and that's you.
And I said, I'm going to take it
because I have some other genetic stuff
that's like, sorry, arthritis and stuff.
So these things that I have that are just blessings
from above, my teeth.
We all have a grab bag.
Yes.
What a great genetic lottery I hit with my teeth.
Yeah, that's nice.
I'm really lucky.
Cause I hate going.
Speaking of bragging.
Yeah.
Something that you've bragged about recently
that I've been excited to bring up.
So the cognitive test.
Oh yes, yes, yes.
Now it's your turn in the catbird seat.
But there was a huge revelation that happened.
I got my test results back, hour and a half long
with Dr. Richard Isaacson.
Fascinating, fascinating.
All the cholesterol stuff, you know, I started my STAT
and I told you that.
All the cholesterol stuff, all the other stuff.
Turns out, minus the cholesterol, which is the other stuff, turns out minus the cholesterol,
which is really, really, really bad,
but we're working on it, everything's tip top.
Wonderful.
Yeah, everything's great.
My liver's great, which I was worried about.
I would be too.
Yeah, but it's fine.
So I can keep powering through.
You're built for it.
Then the cognitive test results.
And of course I was very anxious about this part of it.
Yeah, you thought you'd convinced yourself you did bad. Yeah, even during it, I think I said on here,
I said this is very, very humbling,
and she said I had had people walk out,
and we got it, you know, and I was like,
yeah, this is really bad, I'm doing horribly,
I'm doing horribly, and then when he,
and what I didn't even realize, we were taking an IQ test. I didn't realize that.
Were we?
Yes. The number is an IQ score.
It is? Because there was none of the fun riddles that I love from IQ tests.
Maybe the kid ones, maybe different.
No, no. A standard like to get into men's IQ test has a ton of computation and long form pattern recognition
and prediction.
Well, this is pattern.
There was a lot of pattern, or maybe not pattern recognition.
There was identifying, but there was no pattern.
It's not like they would go A, D, H,
what's the next letter?
I love those.
That's true.
Okay, well, whatever.
Anyway, it is what it is.
Okay.
So it was it IQ test?
Yeah.
Why didn't he give us an actual number?
He did.
He gave you a number?
That's my whole thing.
Okay.
Okay, so he said, cognitive tests,
don't worry, your cholesterol hasn't affected your brain yet.
Or, what if you were even smarter?
It has.
Okay, well, we'll get to that.
So, he said, hasn't affected your brain yet.
You did fantastic.
The guy who evaluates it said words like superior, excellent,
wow.
So I was just so relieved at this.
Yes, of course.
And he said, you did a teeny bit better than your co-host.
And I said, yes, that's so exciting.
He's been bragging so much.
Yes, yes.
And he said, well, actually I don't have the numbers.
One of you did a little bit better.
I was like, ah.
Okay, okay, so one of us did a little better.
And I said, oh man, well, if it was him,
I think this is because of the seahorse and racism.
Uh-huh, sure.
And there was an Indian man also on the call
and I was asking him about seahorses.
He also was very hazy.
Really?
Yeah, he was like,
sea monkeys.
Wait, you had two people on your call?
I had like eight people on my call.
Why did I only have one?
I think I'm a very interesting case.
Oh wow.
They brought in the whole.
You did say I'm an interesting case.
Okay.
Okay, so anyway,
while I was commiserating with the Indian man
on seahorse Sea Monkeys,
Dr. Isaacson told Holly to pull up our actual numbers.
Okay.
And when he was doing it, he goes,
oh my God, are you serious?
It took his breath away?
Holly, are you serious?
Is this real?
We scored the exact same score.
Oh my God.
To the 10th of a point.
Oh my God. Nothing could be better.
Nothing. No one's hurt feelings.
I know. Yeah.
I think my dad did that for us.
And obviously we both definitely scored differently in parts,
but it all added up to the exact same number.
Because again, there's all these columns of intelligence,
and some of them I know I did terrible on.
So the fact that our terrible things
evened out to be the same.
So they give you an IQ score, we'd cut it out, but I won't.
I wrote it down, but now I forget it,
but hold on, I sent it to Eric.
I don't think it's an IQ test, but I'm going to,
unless it's great, then I'm gonna say
it's a really good IQ test.
Do you know what I'm saying though,
where you have to get those really good riddles?
This is an IQ test.
Okay, sorry.
I felt like a memory test.
Okay!
Oh my God.
Okay, our number is...
First, before you tell me,
have you taken a bunch of IQ tests?
I've taken a bunch.
So I told my mom the number and my dad.
I was like, good news is my brain is doing well.
This, you know what, whatever.
I explained the whole thing and I was like,
this is my score.
And my dad was like, yay, that's great.
And my mom was like, well, when you were five,
you got five points higher than that.
Or seven, when I was seven.
So I was like, okay, well, she's keeping me humble.
Wait, wait, hold on, hold on, hold on.
Yeah, I reject that.
I'm not trying to make you mad. This is my own self-preservation.
That was your score.
Okay.
I don't know what to tell you.
That's lower than I want.
Yeah, and actually this is, I wasn't going to say this, but now I'm going to say this
based on your reaction.
Okay. To me, it's so this based on your reaction. Okay.
To me, it's so telling about men and women.
Okay.
Because I'm taking this test and I'm like,
I'm fucking this up.
I'm doing so badly.
Oh, right.
I, oh my God, this is so embarrassing.
I'm stupid.
The self-doubt.
Yeah.
And then my score is.
Exemplary.
High, and I think men don't do that as much.
Or let's take you who ended up
with the exact same score as me.
Okay, this is a great comp.
Because after we, you know, we talked after your test
and you didn't think that.
I mean, you weren't like, I did amazing, but you weren't.
I wasn't, remember, there were quite a few
that I thought I did bad on. I don't think I was I mean, you weren't like, I did amazing, but you weren't. I wasn't, remember, there were quite a few that I thought I did bad on.
I don't think I was overly bullish about it.
I thought I definitely nailed a few things, that F thing.
I bragged about that.
Right.
You did some bragging before you got your score.
I didn't feel like you, for sure.
On the spectrum, I didn't feel like you.
Yeah.
So I just think it's an interesting takeaway
of how men and women walk through the world
and when they're put through tests, like what is happening in their brains.
I'm teeming with testosterone, which is the chemical that convinces you you can do things you can't.
Right. And it's just funny.
My brain was more what you were thinking, Monica,
after I took the test.
As a comp, we got the same score, which is why I can say that.
Because I didn't do poorly.
And I wish I could do these things with more confidence, like borrow some of that feeling.
I wonder, like if we dug into it, what's under that?
Is it for you that being smart
is a very defining characteristic,
and so here's this thing that has the potential
to destroy your identity, I'm just throwing something out,
this isn't what I think per se,
but I'm just like spit balling now.
Is it that the stakes were higher for you?
Whereas for me, it's like,
well, I know I'm going to tank a lot of this and I don't.
You don't.
In fact, that's what our just fight just now was.
You're like, I reject that number, I'm higher than that.
Well, because I've gotten better scores than that.
And so of course I'm going to believe the one
that made me seem the smartest.
That's like my self-interest.
Yeah, so you don't have what you're saying you have.
You think you're, you believe and think.
You're right, that's a paradox.
Yeah.
It's a paradox.
Yeah, I don't know.
I think also like women, a lot of girls are told like,
oh, like girls don't score as high on tests
or girls aren't good at math or girls aren't X, Y and Z.
Right, STEM.
Yeah, I don't, I am in there thinking like,
well, I mean, it's all subconscious,
but it's like, yeah, I can't be very good at this.
Yeah, and it'd be interesting to know what young girls now,
because yeah, when you grew up,
the admission rate for men in STEM
at universities was still in the 80s probably, right?
But now it's completely flipped.
So now like two thirds of girls are getting to college
and only one third of boys or whatever the number is.
It's pretty crazy now.
I watched the, I guess it was a holiday concert
last night at Lincoln School.
Oh, nice.
And as you would expect, lots of balling.
Yeah.
I'm watching all these little girls.
It's all girls' school.
So cute.
And they're singing and it's so beautiful.
Yeah.
And I'm crying.
Yep.
And then I look at Chris at one point and I go, you know
Daughters are really the best thing this planet has to offer
Best thing that this planet has to offer is little daughters. Yeah, fuck me
they're all this is all they're so cute and oh
Yeah, gotta protect them. Yeah. Oh man, it was so cute and, oh yeah. Got to protect him.
Yeah.
Oh man, it was so touching.
I was also tripping the fuck out
that I have a daughter in a Catholic school outfit.
Like in a bazillion years.
That is so funny.
That is not what my fantasy of having kids was.
Yeah, I know.
Yeah, it was great.
That's sweet.
Do you think a lot of men feel that way?
About daughters?
I think a lot of men want to have a son.
And I could spitball for an hour on why that is,
just historically what that has meant until recently.
But the second you have a daughter,
every man I know that has daughters,
the first thing we say to each other is like,
aren't we so fucking lucky?
Like we got so lucky that we have these girls.
And you know that study that just came out
that adds like 1.5 years to your life
per daughter you have and it's cumulative.
It does something very good for us. Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
["The Armchair Expert's Theme Song"]
Ah.
Tell me, makes you love your dad?
No, I mean, I love my dad, yeah.
But no, it's like, it makes me so happy to hear that.
And yet.
And then you have a disconnect.
I have a disconnect.
Why do we stop caring about women after a certain,
like really, I mean, not to be political,
but women, I'm gonna say for me, just took a big hit.
And from men and women, right?
Oh yeah, yeah.
So that is so curious to me,
how we can like look at these,
be so proud of our daughters
and want the best for them.
And I believe that, I believe that.
I believe that most people want the best for their children
and half of their children are girls.
To me, there's just like a hypocrisy, not you obviously, of their children and half of their children are girls. Yeah.
To me, there's just like a hypocrisy,
not you obviously, but there's a hypocrisy
where it's like, I got to protect my family
and I got to, and then you don't.
Yeah, and this is where you and I often disagree,
which is like, yes, if your conclusion
is that it was an opportunity to vote for women and that was the thing
that drove your voting, then it's very disheartening.
But I mean more just, well, that too,
but also just rights.
I personally think that it wasn't a vote on women,
as much as maybe it should have been,
and I voted that way, but if I just look at the exit polls,
that's not what people were saying was their concern.
That's my point.
That's actually my point, is it was not their concern.
But let's just be as generous as we can.
If you are somebody who is having an impossible time
feeding your family, and your conclusion, right or wrong,
is that it's because of the left,
well, feeding everyone and keeping everyone safe
would trump other things.
It's like first order of businesses
like food, shelter, and water.
Once we have that, then we move on to these other things.
So it could be that they very much want those,
well, we know 70% of the country wants those rights
for women, but they may have said to themselves,
but I am more scared about my income currently,
and that's gotta be what I'm gonna vote to.
And then we can disagree on what the best route to that is.
To those people who truly are like,
well again, yeah, I think there's some misinformation about what would help those people who truly are like, well again, yeah, I think there's some misinformation
about what would help those people.
But to those people who really,
they're in like, I can't put food on the table.
I'm not, I have no judgment of those people.
I don't.
That's a very specific situation.
I am not talking about that group.
And it's tens of millions of people.
It is, but there's a huge percentage of people
that did not vote for women's rights,
that do not have trouble putting food on the table,
and chose to still,
again, the most generous thing I can say
is chose to pick their tax dollars over women's rights.
And that is, there is just to me, there's a disconnect between the way we think
about young girls and then what happens overall.
I think people just triage their priorities, you know?
I think it's, and then, and for you,
which is totally understandable,
that's number one for you on all the issues
that were being voted on, that was the number one one.
And there's some other stuff you totally care about
that went to number two.
And if-
Well, everything I cared about,
not unfortunately, but belonged to one party.
So I didn't have to make big sacrifices.
But let's put it this way.
I do believe if you had virtually two centrist candidates
on the right and the left,
and on the right they were pro-reproductive rights,
and on the left they were anti and they wanted to extend, I think you would have flop pro-reproductive rights. And on the left, they were anti,
and they wanted to extend.
I think you would have flopped out.
100%, I would.
Right, so I do think it was in the same way
that for the people that are pro-life,
that that one always trumps all the other ones.
I think we often have certain issues that trump
a lot of other stuff we care about.
Yeah, just bums me out.
I can feel, I can really feel it.
I don't know if you can sense this too,
but I've been around a lot of women lately.
And like everyone's in a tough spot.
Yeah, I feel it.
Yeah, it's like.
Well, I talked to my ex-girlfriend, Carrie.
I sent you the text.
Then I FaceTimed her.
And we haven't had a FaceTime.
Like we just check in with each other once every few months
and, or she'll send me a song she likes
or I'll send her a song.
But we had a full like hour and a half FaceTime
to talk about this, all these issues.
Yeah, she doesn't need that from me normally. Like that's not something, she's not reaching out to me
to go like, how are you not freaking out kind of a situation?
Right.
And so yeah, I can see in, I can see, I see it.
Yeah, you know, you brought this up
and I think it's right that a lot of men,
young boy, young men feel not seen or not spoken to.
And I really, I guess I'm just to our male listeners
who are in a position of influence at all,
it's on you, not you, but you as a group
to help these men.
I don't think it's on women to do it.
Is that on women?
It's on the party.
The party has to have a plan for.
Yeah, but I'm saying the way to change the seed,
the culture, it happens from within.
And we had Sharon on and she was like, it's not that, it's not the government
that's going to come in on a white horse
and change people's opinions and change, exactly.
It comes from within.
And I was also thinking about this,
speaking of daughters and fathers,
Kerala, where my parents are from,
is a very matriarchal society,
because originally, the wealth was passed down
through the female.
Yeah, matri and local.
So there isn't this, like, cause I was like,
why is it, like, why doesn't my dad have this?
And even my grandfather, who was much, you know,
of a old generation, he didn't have that at all.
Right.
And I was like, what is it?
And I was like, oh, it's not that they're like special,
they didn't grow up in a patriarchal environment.
And it's for everyone to start moving more away from that.
Well, so much of it too is just,
you're kind of a product of your environment.
And as Keith Payne said, it's like,
yes, we all believe we've thought through all the issues
and come to the best conclusion, but it isn't suspicious.
I can predict 90% what your conclusion's gonna be.
I think that's relevant.
And so, I don't deserve applause,
because I'm a feminist.
I was raised by a force of nature woman,
and there was no dad around.
I was seeing no lowered status.
I just am the lucky beneficiary of having grown up
with a gangster mom.
And I was just on a trip with a dude who's also only dated
and is now married to gangster women.
And I said to him, your mom must be a gangster, was she?
And he's like, oh yeah, she's like the ultimate gangster.
And it's just like, yeah, that boy is the beneficiary of that,
and I was the beneficiary of that.
And that's just, we got lucky.
He was born into a house with this.
You got lucky, but also there's societal things
that make it harder or easier.
Like when there's equal pay, it's
easier to grow up in a household where your parents are equal.
That's what these systemic things are about.
That's why we have to change some of these things,
because you're absolutely right,
it's what you literally are born into.
Also, some people dispute this data,
but let's just say for one second it's true
that men will date laterally and below them,
and that women date laterally and above them.
Or even like status-wise educational attainment,
these different metrics, right?
But on social dating platforms,
it's really pretty staggering.
And I was like, why is that, right?
Why is that?
And what occurred to me is like,
oh, yeah, for a guy who grew up in the 80s,
his dad worked,
and the mom didn't work or make money,
and probably didn't go to college and have a degree.
So like the primary love in a boy's life
was this woman who probably had less status
than the man on the scene.
So of course that makes sense,
whereas if you're a girl,
dad had more status and money and power than mom, and you're trying
to marry dad.
So like boys are trying to marry mom, and girls are trying to marry dad.
So of course this pattern exists.
That's exactly what you saw growing up.
Maybe for a large swath.
But for a woman who has a level of success, a certain level, has hit a certain level of success,
I don't think that's,
they're not looking for someone with more.
That's hard.
Like that's really rare and hard to find.
But like a lot of women would not want to,
I'm going to use these air quotes,
a deadbeat boyfriend.
But there's so many rich dudes that are happy to have
a wife who's never done anything
but look gorgeous.
That's weird to me.
Like, how could that be?
Why is that like not triggering for a guy
and that would be hugely triggering for a woman?
Most of the people in my life are with partners
that are 100% on par.
Comparable, right.
They're all working, they're all working
and make around the same amount of money.
I guess my conclusion's hopeful for me,
which is like, oh, well, as this primary structure
evolves, perhaps the baggage of both those things
will go away.
Like, I think there's very much product
of like 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s family structure,
but it more and more and more people have either a mom who makes the same as dad or
more or I know a ton of people here, which I didn't exist in Michigan in the 80s.
There was no stay at home dads that I never met a single kid whose dad stayed at home.
But here, I don't know what the percentage is, but all the time I'm meeting men at school
who that's what they do.
So conceivably their daughters aren't gonna think
that a guy who, you know,
that would never be an issue for them.
Because the other conclusion is that it's just so bleak.
Like there's the kind of, you know,
Scott Galloway who I love so much of what he says,
his is pretty bleak, right?
Where this is just going to get exacerbated
because less and less men are going to college,
so less and less men are even going to achieve
something laterally significant or above.
So it's just going to continue to self-perpetuate.
Which I can see, that's a very defendable position.
But I'm hopeful that as people's role models
and parents evolve, that they'll just,
it'll maybe take care of itself.
But why, what's his take on like,
why it would self-perpetuate?
Why can't men get themselves to college anymore?
Well, they're being outperformed by girls, very simply.
They're getting, you know,
now that the reins are off of girls
and the shackles are off of girls,
well, lo and behold, they perform better.
They test better.
You know, they're more mature.
There's all these things that would-
I don't think it's that like,
I don't think the stat is that boys
are getting rejected from college.
It's that they're not going.
No, well, in these elite schools with hard emissions,
way more boys are applying than are getting in.
Yeah.
And, but, metrically, girls are doing much better.
They're getting in at a much higher rate.
Yeah, but I mean, I guess that's an outlier, right?
Like trying to get into an Ivy League school.
I mean, just a regular public college institution, there's no reason
other than from within that group that they shouldn't be able to go.
Like that's what I, what is happening.
What if though they, what if they can't compete?
Well, I think there, there literally would be affirmative action for men. Like if, I think that if 90% of women,
if it was like every school is turning into 95%
based on five, because of merit.
Yeah, what Malcolm was saying.
Yeah.
Yeah, that Tulane is becoming a women's only college.
But, and then that gets into, but then why?
Because is it then draw more women and draw less men,
you know, that whole thing, whatever.
There's so many factors to it.
But there would definitely be fixes for that.
Currently, I just don't know why they can't go.
Well, how about just anecdotally,
your high school experience
and I'll say my high school experience.
So on average, girls were much better students than the boys.
Like the boys were highly distracting.
They were distracting in class.
I was one of them.
And I think the only reason they weren't before blasting boys
out of the water is that they didn't apply
or they weren't expected to do that
or they weren't encouraged to do it
or they were discouraged to do it.
But like once that, I think once that,
like when everyone's aims were the same,
I'm not shocked they've blasted by boys
just from sitting in classes my whole life.
Boys were kind of, you couldn't get them
to fucking settle down for 10 minutes.
I don't know what's happening there physiologically,
but I'm not shocked that now that the governor's off,
girls, that they're doing better.
That doesn't shock me at all.
Well, it's not shocking to me that they're doing better,
but it doesn't explain to me
why men are just dropping off the map.
I think what men are feeling
is we made a very specific decision about 30 years ago,
where we said, okay, our economy is transitioning from a manufacturing economy to a brain economy.
We're going to invent stuff, and we're going to administrate, and we're going to do all this stuff.
And then, so NAFTA is a very appealing policy because we're not going to be manufacturing
anymore. It'd be better to get cheap labor in Mexico. And a lot of decisions were made to pursue that goal
of a brain economy and we have the results.
So I think, at least when I was going to high school,
in fact, I can tell you, a month or two ago,
I said I reconnected with him, Joey Riccardi.
Joey Riccardi wasn't a good student.
His dad was a bricklayer.
He had a work ethic like no one's business.
He owns this incredible excavation company now
and he's done incredibly well.
He could never, he was not gonna go to college.
There used to be a lot more avenues like that.
The trades, the trades were bigger.
The, you know, manufacturing, I'm from Detroit.
Like most people went into manufacturing
and they had great lives and they had ski boats and you know. that is really falling out so that's a real issue. It is a real issue but in the same way
that when we talk about AI here and if I say like well I think we should put regulations and you're
like well we can't because we have to compete with these other countries they're not going to stop
and I say that not because I don't agree with you. I say that because I think I'm working backwards
from a reality.
I don't think we should do that.
Yes, so I'm making the same equivalency.
Like if we said we're not gonna be a brain economy,
how the fuck are we gonna compete with China and India
in these other countries that are full brain economy?
But luckily we have some models.
So it's like Germany's doing both things.
Germany is leading in tech and in engineering.
And yet they also have this huge manufacturing base.
You know, three of the best.
I don't think they're leading in tech.
Germany isn't leading in tech.
OK, they're a very high tech civilization.
Yeah.
And they have their own stock market.
They have all the things we have
they're kind of winning on both fronts and they have a they've made a lot of legislative decisions that
These skilled lay a when you're in school
They drive you if you're a boy to a vocational school
Yeah, I think that's very smart and you pick up an actual trade there that you will make
$45 an hour like you'll be a middle class,
whether they're unionized or not, they just culturally.
I think because we have at least a model of it
where it works, where you can have both things,
you can have a brain economy and a manufacturing economy,
I think we need to do a lot better.
I do too, but so that's sort of,
how do we get those people to hear,
because this is the truth,
the party that wants to do that,
the party that wants to do free community college,
to offer retraining and vocational skills,
is not the party they're voting for.
So I don't know how to get those people to understand
that what is in their best interest
and this country's best interest of that,
of actual training that group to be middle class or above.
And there is an avenue for that.
Now look, some of these things are dog whistles.
I'll totally agree with you.
But it's very simple messaging.
It's like 2016, Trump's the only person in America
that's like fighting for coal jobs.
We're going, we gotta get into green energy.
But what else did she say?
And so we have to retrain.
Hillary said retrain.
I heard it so many times.
Retraining, retraining.
And that's correct.
But listen, you can totally disagree with it
on an environmental stance.
But you had one side saying,
we're gonna get into green energy,
which is a very high tech energy.
It's all happening in Silicon Valley.
It's like the solar panel companies,
the wind turbine companies,
and then you have oil and gas drilling,
which is North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota.
All these places where dudes are roughnecks
and they can go make $60 an hour,
and that thing they can do.
Solar and wind sounds like they're never,
that's never gonna be for them.
But coal mining and gas and oil,
which the right is very in favor of gas and oil
and the left's very against gas and oil.
You just gotta acknowledge that that's a whole sector
of jobs that a lot of these guys were gonna have.
And they think that one side wants to get rid of all those jobs, the last of their high-paying
jobs.
If you can just table the environmental aspect for a second, I understand the appeal of that.
That's not like hard for me to get.
There's one side saying, I'm going to protect all these jobs that the left says are too
dirty for the world.
And the other side is saying, we're going to green, which is high tech in Silicon Valley.
That all makes sense to me.
And it's a lot simpler to understand than
something more complicated.
Yeah.
All right.
Here we go.
So this is for Matt Murphy.
Oh, this was a fun one.
Yeah.
The percentage of DNA that we share with chimps, 98.8%.
Almost our temperature. Mm-hmm.
That'll be my new way of remembering it.
Okay, great.
Blood alcohol levels, his mom was five,
and 0.08 is the legal limit, so that's really bad.
Oh, that's insane. Really, really bad.
That's insane. Very bad.
On the Wondry Plus episode,
we do a little fact check now for the Wondry Plus episode.
So for the Matt Murphy Wondry Plus episode, Yeah. We do a little fact check now for the Wondry Plus episode. So for the Matt Murphy Wondry Plus episode,
the facts are a little different than,
they're the same, but they're different
because I have, I found a different fact.
Oh wow, you keep going.
Yeah, because in that episode,
I said that he, Kevin Spacey is currently in a play
and he's not.
He's not.
No. Okay. He's not. No.
Okay.
He's unemployed currently?
Well, I guess he's set to appear in a movie,
Peter Five Eight.
Okay.
And where he got the standing ovation,
he was at a theater in Oxford,
which is why I guess I was confused.
It says his first stage appearance
since being cleared of sexual assault after performing a brief scene
by Shakespeare.
So he just did a scene.
A little one-off.
Exactly, he did a five minute scene.
And that received a standing ovation.
I guess so.
All right, so he's not currently in a play.
Okay, there was a standing o last night.
Oh, that's nice.
Do you call it a standing o?
I used to, yeah.
No, you know, you're off of it. Am I doing something dorky? I haven't said it in a O? I used to, yeah. No, you're off of it.
Am I doing something dorky?
I haven't said it in a while.
I love it.
Go ahead, it's a little dorky.
No, it's fine.
Okay, you said 25% of boys are molested-ish.
And the last time we talked about this,
I was like, yes, I found that stat.
Now that stat's gone.
They took it off the internet?
Yes, it's gone.
And what's left is one in six.
I guess that's this big number.
And then there's a site called oneinsix.org,
and all these other places are saying one in six.
I looked a lot for the other thing and I couldn't find it
and I kept finding one in six.
One could be data from today
and one could be data from the 80s.
Like I'm always referencing body keeps a score and that stuff was all about the generation from the 80s. Like I'm always referencing Body Keeps a Score,
and that stuff was all about the generation in the 80s.
But one is data from today,
and the other's data from last week.
Oh no, I don't have an explanation for that.
But I can see where from my generation to my kids
that it has dropped.
Also, that's nuts.
If you're at a football game,
and you're looking at those many thousands of people,
and you're seeing one of every six people you see
Awful, it's crazy. Okay, that's more than that. I've been in a traffic accident. Yeah, I don't know those stats
Okay. So are you more likely to be sexually?
Abusive if you were sexually abused
again
Some conflicting info there stop it stopitnow.org,
which we talked about.
Stopitnow.org says, no, you're not more likely to be.
There is a study by the NIH.
Among 747 males, the risk of being a perpetrator
was positively correlated with reported sexual abuse
victim experiences. The overall rate of having been perpetrator was positively correlated with reported sexual abuse victim experiences.
The overall rate of having been a victim was 35% for perpetrators and 11% for non-perpetrators.
Of the 96 females, 43% had been victims, but only one was a perpetrator.
A high percentage of male subjects abused in childhood by a female relative became perpetrators.
Having been a victim was a strong predictor of becoming a perpetrator,
as was an index of parental loss in childhood.
And that is all.
Well, I love you.
This was fun.
Yeah.
You rose to the occasion of your bar wrap.
Thank you.
I rose to the occasion?
Yes.
It's a rose.
Oh, it is.
Yeah. Oh my Lord. All's a rose. Oh it is. Yeah.
Oh my Lord.
All right, love you.
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