Betrayal - Donielle | Featured on ABC's Betrayal: Secrets and Lies
Episode Date: April 13, 2026You can now watch Donielle’s story on TV! Check out Betrayal: Secrets and Lies. Episodes air every Sunday at 10pm EST/9pm CST on ABC. Donielle’s life descends into chaos when t...he FBI raid her house, searching for her husband and two of their family friends. She learns the extent of her husband’s horrific crimes and grapples with a life built on his lies. If you would like to share your story, you can reach out to the Betrayal Team by emailing them at betrayalpod@gmail.com and follow us on Instagram at @betrayalpod and @glasspodcasts. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an I-Heart podcast, guaranteed human.
It's Financial Literacy Month,
and the podcast, Eating While Broke,
is bringing real conversations about money, growth, and building your future.
This month, hear from top streamer, Zoe Spencer,
and venture capitalist Lakeisha Landrum-Pierre,
as they share their journeys from starting out to leveling up.
There's an economic component to communities thriving.
If there's not enough money and entrepreneurship happening in communities,
they failed. Listen to Eating While Broke from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the Iheart
Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Earners, what's up? Look, money is something we all deal with, but financial literacy is what
helps turn income into real wealth. On each episode of the podcast, Earn Your Leisure, we break down
the conversations you need to understand money, investing, and entrepreneurship. From stocks
and real estate to credit, business, and generational wealth, our goal is simple. Make financial
literacy accessible for everyone.
Because when you understand the system, you can start to build within it.
Open your free IHeart Radio app.
Search Earn Your Leisure and Listen Now.
Will Ferrell's Big Money Players and IHeart Podcast presents soccer moms.
So I'm Leanne.
This is my best friend, Janet.
Hey.
And we have been joined at the hips since high school.
Absolutely.
A redacted amount of years later, we're still joined at the hip.
Just a little bit bigger hips.
This is a podcast.
We're recording it as we tailgate our youth soccer games in the back of my Honda
Odyssey. With all the snacks and drinks. Why did you get hard seltzer instead of beer?
Oh, they hit a bogo. Well, then you got them. Listen to soccer moms on the Iheart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Miles Turner. And I'm Brianna Stewart. And our podcast, Game Recognized Game has never been done before.
Two active players giving you a real look at our lives and what we actually think, on and off the court.
Nothing's off limits. We talk tanking.
I might get in trouble for this.
but I think it's like definitely happening in the WBA.
We talk about our mistakes too.
They pulled me to the side and was like, hey, man, we got a call last night, man.
You can't be rolling around the city like this tonight before games.
Check out Game Recognized game with Stoian Miles on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, it's Andrea.
And we are re-releasing some of our past weekly episodes.
And there's a good reason why.
For the last year, I have been working with ABC on turning some of your favorite.
episodes of Betrayal Weekly into a TV show. The show is called Betrayal Secrets and Lies,
and it airs every Sunday at 10 p.m. on ABC. This week, we are re-releasing Danielle's story.
You may have heard Danielle's story before, or you may be new to her story. A little bit about
Danielle. I absolutely adore her. People always ask me when I tell them what I do, how do these people
not know. And I'm always protective of my storytellers when I hear that. Donnell's story is such a
clear example of what we call betrayal blindness. You don't assume the worst about the person you love.
You assume they're going to work every day. You assume your life is what it appears to be. You don't
assume they have a dungeon. And while all of that was happening, Danielle was raising six
kids, homeschooling them, running a household, showing up every single day trying to be the best
mom and partner she could be. When I was catching up with her recently, her new husband kept
popping in and checking in on her as she was talking to me. Just these small tender moments
making sure she was okay, it struck me how different that kind of love feels. It was steady,
it was present, it was safe.
And that's what makes her story so powerful
because it's not about what she missed.
It's about how much she was holding,
how much she was giving,
and how deeply she trusted.
Danielle, if you're listening,
I hope you loved New York City.
If you have not heard this story,
I won't give any more away.
Hearing Danielle's story is fascinating,
but seeing it unfold is a whole new experience.
So, please check out Betrayal Secrets and Lies on ABC and Hulu to see Danielle and see where the story took place.
Enjoy the episode.
One of my children saw his dad dressed all in black, and he said that it seemed like his dad was mad at him because he yelled at him to go back to bed.
And the night before that, he had actually told my oldest child to wrap a sledgehammer that we had that had a really,
bright yellow handle in black electric tape and find a black raincoat for him to wear.
And she was like, okay, dad.
I'm Andrea Gunning, and this is betrayal, a show about the people we trust the most,
and the deceptions that change everything.
One night in 2017, Danielle Oliver Chauvey was awoken by the FBI and state police.
They were pointing guns at her, demanding to know where her husband was.
That night she learned the man she had spent 20 years with
was hiding some very big secrets.
This is Danielle's first time telling her story.
She's been reluctant to share what she went through
because, as you'll hear in part two,
her husband has other victims.
She wants to be respectful of their experience and suffering.
But this episode isn't about her husband's crimes.
It's about the 20-year marriage Danielle built with him,
the ways he deceived and violated her.
and the shocking betrayal that ended it all.
It's also the story of being totally in the dark
about your partner's double life.
I used to watch lifetime shows,
and I used to be that person saying,
oh, she had to know something.
So I totally understand why people say things like that.
But until you are actually walking in those shoes
and living with a person who can be completely double-faced,
living a completely separate life.
All I know is the life that he had with me and our kids.
That's all I saw.
He was able to do everything else completely separate.
Danielle grew up in a happy, tight-knit family in California.
Family is very important to me.
We were just over at my parents, all of my siblings,
and we all just get along really well.
There's hardly ever any arguments within our family.
And when there is, it's resolved within the day.
Growing up, Danielle's parents were her role models.
They had a respectful and happy marriage.
It was an environment that nurtured her easygoing and trusting nature.
I had a really good childhood, and so I didn't grow up with a lot of strife or bad things happening in my childhood where that trust was broken down.
She was raised with a strong sense of faith.
That's still one of her core values.
I know some religions can be like really strict.
You can do this.
You can't do this.
I wouldn't even say that mine is a religion.
It's a relationship with Christ.
Danielle's one of those rare people who loved high school.
She was popular and she had a long time high school boyfriend named Billy.
When we were teenagers, everybody thought for sure that we were just going to be together forever.
You know, we were the thing.
Right before their senior year of high school, Billy proposed to her.
And she said yes.
But then...
I actually had to move to Hawaii because my dad was working for the military and we moved there.
She ended up spending her senior year in Hawaii.
Then she got accepted to college in Illinois.
She was ready to start a new life there without her high school boyfriend.
Giving up her first love was hard, but she wanted to prioritize her independence.
Danielle thrived in college.
She loved her major, which was art, and she also loved going to Bible study on campus.
That's where she met Chad.
He was raising his hand and answering the questions right away, and he was answering the way I would have answered those questions, right in line with the way I believed.
So I was attracted to that.
Immediately, she knew Chad was special.
The first time I met him, I said to my parents when I got back that I was going to marry him.
So it was pretty much love at first sight.
She felt comfortable around Chad.
It was easy, like they'd known each other for years.
We actually met at my parents' house and watched a couple movies,
and I made a mizania, and he changed my oil in my car.
That was her first date.
From the start, Danielle was serious about Chad.
When I'm dating someone, I'm deciding whether or not this person is the person I want to marry.
So I was looking for specific things that I wanted in a husband when I was dating him.
And Chad checked all the boxes.
There was lots of things.
He grew up in a Christian home.
He had a good relationship with his parents.
He was business-minded, like he was able to support me.
Everything about him felt right.
He was pursuing a degree in finance.
He had dreams of starting his own business.
And like her, he also wanted to be a job.
a big family.
But most of all, she just loved being around him.
I had fun with him.
You know, we would laugh about lots of things.
I was just attracted to the way I felt around him.
While they were dating, he went above and beyond to woo her.
Something about Chad, you have to know, he likes to do everything big.
It always has to be the best and the grandest and the most showy.
It's not who she is, but Chad said she deserved the best.
and it was flattering.
After about two years of dating,
he made a particularly grand gesture.
He bought her an expensive dress,
rented a limousine,
and took them to a dinner theater.
And during that intermission,
he excused himself.
I thought he was going to use the restroom.
But he actually, it turns out,
had set up beforehand with the theater
that he would go on stage
and ask me to marry him from the stage.
And then he got down on his knee and, yeah.
It was quite the show.
She said yes.
He brought her out of her comfort zone,
and it felt like a fairy tale.
I was 100%.
This was the one I'm going to spend the rest of my life with.
Chad was involved in every step of the wedding planning,
which Danielle loved.
And he also wanted to go to pre-marriage counseling
to discuss their expectations.
We discussed who would be the breadwinner in the home,
you know, what would be the different roles of both,
husband and wife, as far as who did what in the household.
It was thoroughly discussed how our marriage would go before we got married.
I mean, as far as you can, right?
We did know that I wanted to be a stay-at-home mom, so that was talked about.
Danielle had been managing her own money in her early 20s,
and although she was good at it, it was a relief to be marrying someone who had expertise
in finance. It made her feel safe.
And so they agreed that while she would manage the house,
household, Chad would manage the money.
And I had full trust in Chad to be able to do that too because of his business degree.
He was really good at money.
Since he went to school for it, I didn't have any, you know, worries about him taking over the
finances for the family.
She was happy with this arrangement.
She's a do-it-yourself kind of person.
It's an attitude that's well suited to raising kids and running the household.
My dishwasher broke down several years ago.
And I wasn't about to pay somebody because I'm going to figure out how to fix it.
I laid all the flooring in the house that I'm in right now.
I didn't know how to do that, but I looked it up.
Just went on YouTube and figured it out.
So I'm that type of person.
After they got married, the couple decided to move to Chad's hometown in Illinois.
To call it a small town is an understatement.
The entire population could fit in one high school football stadium.
Well, the town we live in,
Erie is only 1900.
It's small.
Small but perfectly suited
to the life that they were building,
a life that centered around family and community.
Plus, Chad had grown up there,
so he knew nearly everyone in town.
And everyone seemed to adore him.
In fact, he'd been the high school valedictorian.
Once they moved back to Erie,
the couple also joined Chad's church,
the church he grew up in.
We were really involved with that.
church and his parents went to that church too and we led a Sunday school together as a couple.
Their life was falling into place, a happy marriage, a strong foundation based on shared values,
a community that supported them and a church they felt welcomed by. And Chad was making progress
in his career. He began the certification process to become a financial advisor. He wanted to
start his own firm. He did it all online. Like went through classes.
online and got his certificate online and all that.
She was proud of him.
And for the time being, she kept working too.
I also worked for the post office for a little bit.
But that was not part of our marriage plan.
I didn't want to be a working mom.
I wanted to be a stay-at-home mom.
Pretty much as soon as we got married, we started trying.
But conceiving their first baby didn't happen as quickly as Danielle hoped.
The months turned into a year.
And during that year, Chad made a shocking confession.
He came home from work and sat me down and said,
I need to tell you something really important.
And it just said I had an encounter with a guy in the bathroom.
And I think we need to go see somebody and talk to like a counselor about it.
And so I was just like, what is going on?
It just blindsided me, like, what just happened?
She asked him point blank if he was,
gay. He said no, he wasn't. She wanted more details about what actually happened, who it was with,
and what they did. But he never really gave a straight answer. It was just, we need to go talk to somebody
like a counselor about it. Will Ferrell's Big Money Players and IHeart Podcast presents soccer moms.
So I'm Leanne. Yeah. This is my best friend, Janet. Hey. And we have been joined at the Hipsons High School.
Absolutely. Now a redacted amount of years later, we're still joined at the
hip, just a little bit bigger hips, wider.
This is a podcast we're recording it as we tailgate our youth soccer games in the back of my
Honda Odyssey with all the snacks and drink.
Sidebar.
Why did you get hard seltzer instead of beer?
Oh, they had a bogo.
Well, then you got it.
Do you want a white collar or something here?
Just take it.
What are y'all doing?
Microphones?
Are you making a rap album?
Oh, I would.
How did you put?
I would buy it.
Cut through the defense like a hot knife through sponge cake.
That sounds delicious.
Oh, you're lucky I'm not a drug addict.
You're lucky I'm not an alcoholic.
You're lucky I'm not a killer.
I love this team and I'm really trying to be a figure in their lives that they can rely on.
Oh.
Listen to soccer moms on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up? I'm Miles Turner.
And I'm Brianna Stewart.
And our podcast, Game Recognized Game has never been done before.
Two active players giving you a real look at our lives and what we actually think on and off.
for. Nothing's off-liaments. We talk trade requests.
What's the vibe of that when it's like your star player is like, well, I want to leave,
and then actually now I'm going to stick. We talk tanking.
I mean, honestly, like, I might get in trouble for this answer, but I think it's like
definitely happening in the WMA. And yeah, we talk about our mistakes too.
They pulled me to the side and was like, hey, man, we got a call last night, man, you can't be
rolling around the city like this tonight before games, you know, you know, doing this, doing whatever.
And of course, family stories.
They'll be like, Mommy, why did you miss that?
Mommy, do you play basketball?
Check out Game Recognized game with Stuy and Miles
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, everyone.
I'm Cheryl Stray, author of Wild and Tiny Beautiful Things.
I'm excited to share that I have a new podcast called Mind Over Mountain.
In each episode, I interview athletes,
adventures and adrenaline seekers to discuss the inner landscapes and life experiences
that informed and inspired their extraordinary feats.
I also bring a bit of advice into the mix so we too can better understand how to face our own
seemingly insurmountable challenges.
Do you know what I'm going to do?
I'm going to pull out what you already have inside.
We're coming into this world fighting for our lives.
All I'm going to do is pull out what you already got inside.
We're there to support and celebrate each other.
And that's not like a your story.
story versus my story.
You're going to walk up and over that dang
mountain. You're not just going to put your mind over it.
Yep, yep, exactly. And if I can't walk up and over it, I'm going to go through it.
Listen to Mind Over Mountain every Thursday on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
You know the famous author Roald Doll.
He thought up Willie Wonka and the BFG.
But did you know he was a spy?
Neither did I.
You can hear all about his wildlife story in the podcast,
The Secret World of Roald Dahl.
All episodes are out now.
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
What?
Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you.
I was a spy.
Binge all 10 episodes of The Secret World of Roll Dahl.
Now on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Danielle was shaken and confused about her husband's confession to a one-time fling.
But at the same time, Chad was doing everything he could to make it right.
He confessed to it immediately.
He wanted to get help.
And most importantly, he was coming to her with sincere remorse.
He was crying.
I was crying.
He was saying, sorry.
Chad wanted to get help quickly.
And so the next day, they did.
We actually went to the pastor and asked for advice about who we should see as a marriage counselor for us.
We were given a name of a Christian counselor.
They had multiple sessions with the counselor, some sessions together as a couple and some separately.
During a one-on-one meeting, the counselor gave Danielle some advice.
He advised me, you should really think carefully about this marriage.
You know, you actually have a right to end this marriage if he's being unfaithful to you.
The counselor said he'd seen a situation like this before, and he wanted Danielle to know that
divorce was an option.
I understood that.
I knew that that's something that is
perfectly fine for me to file for a divorce,
but I didn't want to.
I wanted to make this marriage work.
I didn't even want the word divorce to come up
in our marriage. Like,
when I made a commitment in our marriage
at the wedding ceremony,
my promise was a promise.
I didn't take my vows lightly.
In sickness and in health,
or richer for poorer.
I was going to walk through it with him.
I wanted to help him resolve whatever it was that he was going through
because I loved him and I wanted our marriage to work.
This one infidelity, it felt small and manageable,
especially compared to the years they'd spent together,
getting to know each other, studying the Bible together, and building a life.
She really trusted Chad.
I felt like I could 100% trust him,
even though he had done whatever he had done.
I believed him 100%.
They got a workbook on overcoming infidelity
and even did the homework together.
And they decided to lean on their faith
to help them rebuild their relationship.
Church became an even bigger part of their lives.
He was an elder in the church.
We jointly were leaders for kids' Christian camps.
We were very involved in our faith.
Their marriage began looking up, especially when a year later, they welcome their first baby, a baby girl.
She was an amazing first child, super easy baby.
Smiling all the time, happy, alert.
It was a great, great first mom experience.
Danielle was on top of the world, so filled with love for her first daughter and her young family.
It confirmed to her that she really did.
want to be a stay-at-home mom. She just felt whole. People that we would meet walking through a mall
always stop and say, oh, you have the cutest baby. She's the cutest thing I've ever seen. And your
family is so cute. The difficulties she and Chad faced in the first year of marriage started to feel
like they were in the rearview mirror. At that point, I felt totally in love with him and close to him.
I felt like I had the perfect life.
That baby would be the first of six.
I knew that you could get pregnant even when you were still nursing
and before you had your first cycle after pregnancy.
I didn't think it was going to happen to me, but it did.
Soon, Danielle's life became consumed by full-time child care.
As their kids got older, she started homeschooling them,
and she loved every minute of it.
I wouldn't have it any other way.
I know a lot of people are like, wow, six kids, that's a lot.
But, you know, each one of them is unique.
It has their own personality.
Each of them is just amazing.
I love it.
I absolutely love it.
With their growing family came more financial demands.
But luckily, Chad's business was taking off.
They even had the ability to upgrade their house.
He had been starting to look at this property that he really wanted.
It was a huge house, way big.
bigger than we needed.
Enormous, huge living room, huge family room, huge dining room, huge, huge, huge master
bedroom, you know, basement that looked like a bowling alley.
And so he started looking at it and dreaming about it and eventually decided that he was going
to try to purchase it.
Danielle didn't think it was the most practical choice, but the house made him happy.
After they moved in, he tried to tell her how to run the house.
But she stood her ground.
She trusted him to handle the finances.
So when it came to the housework, he needed to trust her.
He wanted me to do things a certain way, like do laundry on a certain day, do the dishes on a certain day, or, you know, do dusting on a certain day.
And I was like, no, I will do it when it needs to be done.
When I see that it needs doing, I'll do it, you know.
And there were a lot of things that needed dusting.
Chad was a collector.
It was a quirk that Danielle accepted.
Precious moments figurines,
and he was very much a Hallmark fan,
so he had millions of Hallmark ornaments.
Tons of DVDs.
I mean, we had two huge walls full of DVDs.
They loved watching movies as a family,
and after the kids went to bed,
the couple would watch their favorite TV shows.
Dexter, and Breaking
bad. Every summer, Danielle, Chad, and their six kids would take family road trips.
Yellowstone, the Grand Canyon, Mount Rushmore. We had all the tourist places in the United States.
We had a lot of really fun times as family. On these trips, they'd stay in huge rental homes.
Chad always wanted the best of the best for the family. And they were very nice, very
nice rented houses. Some of them I was like, okay guys, don't touch anything. You know, like
expensive paintings on the walls and glass decorations. One summer, about 15 years into their
marriage, the family was on one of their regular road trips. And on this trip, their rental
home was in a remote area. I woke up around between the morning. I know it was the middle
the night. All the kids were asleep. And I got up to go to the bathroom or something and turned over and
he was not in bed with me. I looked around the house to see if he was just up somewhere. He was not
there. I went out into the garage area. The car was gone. So I started being like, where did he go?
There was no note as far as he left somewhere. He didn't leave a message on my phone.
He was just gone.
It was the early 2000s, so she didn't have a smartphone to look at his location.
She started to worry that something terrible happened.
So I started calling around to the hospital around the area.
Is there any Chad Skipper admitted into this hospital?
No, ma'am.
Call the next hospital.
Around 3 a.m., the phone rang.
It was Chad.
And he said he was at Walmart.
I was like, okay, why are you at Walmart?
I just thought I would pick up some stuff.
But, you know, you can kind of tell when somebody's calling from the middle of a store,
you can hear the hum of everything.
There was no shopping cart sounds, no, like cashier beeping and stuff.
There was none of that.
It did not sound like he was in a shopping area.
I hung up the phone and just was like, what is happening?
I don't understand.
says he's on Walmart, but it's hours away.
That doesn't make any sense.
And I just sat in confusion, shaking until he got home.
When Chad got back, he tried to explain it away.
He apologized.
He said, I'm sorry. I didn't tell you where I was going.
Everything's fine.
You're good.
The kids are good.
I'm back.
We're safe.
You blew it over.
Whenever they got in a disagreement, this is what he'd tell her.
His favorite phrase was, don't make a mountain out of a molehill.
You know, you just get really emotional about things.
It's okay, you know, calm down.
Always made me feel like I was crazy.
Abandoning the family in a rental house in the middle of the night with no good explanation,
it just didn't sit right with her.
So Danielle called her mom.
She was like, oh, wow, yeah, that is really weird.
I'm glad you're okay.
You know, I'm glad it all worked.
but that is really weird.
Danielle was the full-time caretaker for six children under 15.
She didn't have the energy to fight with her husband.
I didn't confront him.
That's one of my personality quirks is I don't like confrontation.
I would rather just not talk about it than have a huge argument about something,
which is not healthy.
I think it's much healthier to communicate and work it out.
but at that point, I just didn't want to deal of it.
Plus, whenever she did question him, it always ended up coming back on her.
The rare occasions, when I would ask questions, I would be shut down and told I was crazy, or that is totally not how it went.
You have, you know, blown this out of proportion and you don't remember the actual facts that actually happened.
This is how it actually happened.
What's up? I'm Miles Turner.
And I'm Brianna Stewart.
And our podcast, Game Recognized Game, has never been done before.
Two active players giving you a real look at our lives and what we actually think, on and off the court.
Nothing's off limits. We talk trade requests.
What's the vibe of that when it's like your star player is like, well, I want to leave?
And then actually now I'm going to stay.
We talk tanking.
I mean, honestly, like, I might get in trouble for this answer, but I think it's like definitely happening in the WBA.
And yeah, we talk about our mistakes, too.
They pulled me to the side and was like, hey, man, we got a call last night, man.
You can't be rolling around the city like this tonight before games, no, you know, doing this, doing whatever.
And of course, family stories.
And we're like, Mommy, why did you miss that?
Mommy, do you play basketball?
Check out Game Recognized game with Stoian Miles on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi everyone, I'm Cheryl Strayed, author of Wild and Tiny Beautiful Things.
I'm excited to share that I have a new podcast called Mind Over Mountain.
In each episode, I interview athletes, adventurers, and adrenaline seekers
to discuss the inner landscapes and life experiences that informed and inspired their extraordinary feats.
I also bring a bit of advice into the mix so we too can better understand how to face our own seemingly insurmountable.
challenges. Do you know what I'm going to do? I'm going to pull out what you already have inside.
We're coming into this world fighting for our lives. All I'm going to do is pull out what you already
got inside. We're there to support and celebrate each other. And that's not like a your story versus
my story. You're going to walk up and over that dang mountain. You're not just going to put your
mind over it. Yep. Yep. Exactly. And if I can't walk up and over it, I'm going to go through it.
Listen to Mind Over Mountain every Thursday on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
at your podcast.
Will Ferrell's Big Money Players and I Heart Podcasts presents soccer moms.
So I'm Leanne.
Yeah.
This is my best friend Janet.
Hey.
And we have been joined at the hips since high school.
Absolutely.
Now a redacted amount of years later, we're still joined at the hip.
Just a little bit bigger hips, wider.
This is a podcast.
We're recording it as we tailgate our youth soccer games in the back of my Honda Odyssey.
With all the snacks and drink.
Sidebar.
Why did you get hard seltzer instead of beer?
Oh, they had a bogo.
Well, then you got them.
Do you want a white collar something here?
Just hit you.
Oh, what are y'all doing?
Microphones?
Are you making a rap album?
Oh, I would.
Come on.
I would buy it.
Cuts through the defense like a hot knife through sponge cake.
That sounds delicious.
Oh, you're lucky.
I'm not a drug addict.
You're lucky I'm not an alcoholic.
You are.
I'm not a killer.
I love this team, and I'm really trying to be a figure in their lives that they can rely on.
Oh.
Listen to soccer moms on the IHeart Radio,
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You know the famous author, Roald Doll.
He thought up Willie Wonka and the BFG.
But did you know he was a spy?
Neither did I.
You can hear all about his wildlife story in the podcast,
The Secret World of Roald Doll.
All episodes are out now.
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
What?
Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you.
I was a spy.
Binge all 10 episodes of The Secret World of Roll Doll.
Now on the Eyeheartedly.
Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
When Danielle woke up on a family vacation to find her husband missing, he said he was
picking up something for work at a Walmart in the middle of the night.
She didn't quite buy the story.
But she knew Chad was busier than ever, growing his financial advising firm.
Around the same time, he decided to start making passive income by buying rental properties
in town.
It started with one small house, then two.
Then, an apartment building in their hometown.
He was so busy that he often worked from home at nights.
He renovated their basement to become his home office.
He even put in a king-sized bed.
I didn't understand why you would need a bed in your office,
but he insisted on having it.
And his reasons were that if he needed a nap,
he could just hop into bed and take a quick nap and then get back to work.
It bothered her,
him staying up late like this and sleeping in his office.
It also bothered her that he locked the door.
He said it was a security measure because he had important financial documents in there.
And in the back of my mind, I'm thinking, well, how do you work at night if you are a financial advisor?
You can't meet with clients at night.
So it was just very confusing to me.
And I do remember one time just crying my eyes out to him saying, I really want you to sleep with me.
You know, at night, I just feel closer to you when we're sleeping together.
I feel like we're more like roommates.
He started coming to bed with her until she fell asleep.
Then he would slip out and go back to work.
She would only realize it when she woke up and found him gone.
One night, I actually got up out of bed and was knocking on his basement door and I heard no answer.
And so I actually got in the car and was driving around thinking maybe I would see his car somewhere.
I never did.
but I got to that point where I was starting to look
to see if I could find anything.
She never found any proof that her husband was cheating
or having an affair.
She didn't have the energy to start a fight with him.
He insisted on sleeping in the basement.
Eventually, she became resigned to the fact
she couldn't change his mind.
At that point in our marriage,
I felt very distant from him.
I felt like there was a wall up
and we never would discuss anything
if I ever wanted to talk about anything, it was always, I'm too tired,
or can we talk about this tomorrow, or let's talk about this weekend,
but nothing ever got talked about.
In this period where Chad was sleeping in the basement office,
and they were bickering, Danielle knew that their marriage needed to improve.
So, she sought help for herself.
I actually went and saw a counselor a couple times on my own
because I felt like me having these issues with our marriage was kind of my fault.
I felt like there was something wrong with me, not feeling close to him.
But I wanted our marriage to be a really good marriage, and I didn't feel like it was a good marriage.
She even suggested they try counseling again as a couple.
But this time, Chad resisted.
He refused to go to more than one or two sessions with me.
He felt like it was useless or he didn't want to tell somebody else our problems.
With each passing month, Chad spent more and more time out of the house, renovating the rental properties.
In some nights, tenants would call with emergencies.
There would be nights where he would say, oh, I got to go.
There's a sewage leak.
I have to go really quick and fix the sewage leak.
Despite their rocky few years, she still trusted him.
She had to.
You can't have a marriage without trust.
It doesn't work.
You know, if one of the partners say, I'm going to go do this outside the home,
you have to trust that they're actually doing what they're saying they're doing.
Like if I say I'm going to go shopping, he has to trust that I'm actually shopping.
If he says I'm going to go to fix the sewage system in his apartments,
I have to trust that he's actually doing that.
Otherwise, there's no relationship.
Plus, the rental properties added financial security to their lives.
She believed that at the end of the day,
he was working so hard in order to provide for the family.
She often overheard him practicing conversations he needed to have for work.
He had this weird quirk where if he was going to have a conversation with somebody,
he would write down the conversation that he was going to have and then memorize it.
And then I would often see him like pacing.
and doing weird things with his hands and with his mouth.
I think he was like rehearsing in his mind
how the conversation would go
and what he would say in response to their responses.
There was one big meeting in particular
Chad was preparing for.
It was with an older couple that went to their church,
a couple that taught Sunday school.
They had known Chad for nearly his whole life.
And they were wealthy.
Chad set up a meeting with them
to pitch his financial advising services.
He was trying to really hard to get
them to be one of his clients.
In the end, they decided not to use him.
He was dejected.
He'd been counting on their business.
After that meeting, didn't go as planned.
He started talking about selling his financial advising business.
And instead, getting into the storage industry.
There's a little plot of land that would be perfect for storage units.
So he had said that, you know, we're going to buy this land over here.
and I'm going to start building storage units,
and so we need to set up this LLC.
He wanted Danielle to sign paperwork
to help set up the business.
If we have you as a president,
then it's better for taxes because you're a woman.
He asked her to go to the bank with him that day
to get it set up,
and there, out in public,
she noticed that her husband looked dishevelled.
He was not bathed.
He didn't shave.
I was surprised that he went to the bank
in the state that he was in.
I just thought, well, he must be so tired.
He's trying to sell his financial business,
and he's trying to get these storage units ready,
and he's not getting much sleep,
so he just must be really stressed out.
Later that day, one of Danielle's kids came to her.
He said that last night he'd seen something strange
in the driveway of their house.
One of my children said that he got up and saw his dad
dressed all in black
and he said that it seemed like
Chad was mad at him because he yelled at him
to go back to bed. This was alarming
because another one of her kids
had confessed something bizarre.
The night before that he had actually told my
oldest child to wrap
a sledgehammer that we had
that had a really bright yellow handle
in black electric tape
and find a black raincoat for him.
And she was like, okay, dad.
Immediately, she tried to get in touch with Chad, but he wasn't answering his phone.
After they went to the bank, he'd left the house to work on a rental property.
There were several rental places that he owned, that he was either renovating or was currently renting.
I texted him asking if he could call me as soon as possible.
I was starting to feel like, okay, what's going on?
I hope he's okay. I hope he's not in an accident.
He called shortly after and explained that he had accidentally fallen asleep at the rental
and that he was still feeling a little disoriented, but reassured me that he was fine.
If it sounds like Danielle is reading off of a piece of paper, it's because she is.
She's reading from a written statement documenting this day.
Nothing is as it seems. Absolutely nothing.
This is my living nightmare and what I'm.
I can remember that has happened in the last few days.
At 4.22 p.m., I texted him asking if he was okay. No response.
I texted again at 506 p.m. and his response was, yep, you?
I told him I was just wondering what happened.
And he texted, what do you mean?
And then around 5.30, he called and said he was sorry he didn't see my text and that he must
have been in the basement and hadn't gone it right away.
That night, Chad didn't come home for dinner.
At the time, she assumed he'd fallen asleep at the rental property again,
but she couldn't leave her six small children to go check on him.
So around 11 p.m., after putting the kids to bed, she went to sleep herself.
Next thing I heard was banging and breaking glass and then yelling,
State police, state police, hands in the air.
I came out in my bedroom with no glasses on, hands in the air,
wondering if they were actually police, because I can't see very far.
I can only see about a foot in front of me without it being blurry.
In my mind, I was thinking, well, either I'm being robbed and they're posing as state police
or something's happening, and I have no idea why there's state police in my house with
a gun pointing at me.
It was becoming very clear, very quickly.
This was actually the state police and the FBI.
there wasn't a mistake.
They were looking for Chad, and they were incredibly serious.
They asked if anyone else was in the house, and I said, yes, just me and the kids, assuming
Chad was at the rental.
My whole mouth got super dry.
I could not hardly even talk.
I asked them if I could go back into the bedroom to get some water.
I kept water by my bed, and they're like, no, you can't go anywhere.
You have to stay right here.
I wasn't even allowed to wake up my chair.
kids. They actually went and woke up all of my kids. They were asking if there was hiding places in the
house. And it threw me for a loop because I'm like, I mean, my kids hide in little places when they
play hide and see. Then the police asked her about the elderly couple that went to their church.
The ones Chad wanted as clients. Why are you asking me questions about them? And where is my husband?
Will Ferrell's Big Money Players and IHeart Podcast Presents
soccer moms. So I'm Leanne.
This is my best friend Janet.
And we have been joined at the hips since high school.
Absolutely. Now a redacted
amount of years later. We're still
joined at the hip. Just a little bit bigger hips.
Wider. This is a podcast. We're recording it
as we tailgate our youth soccer games
in the back of my Honda Odyssey.
With all the snacks and drink.
Sidebar. Why did you get hard
seltzer instead of beer? Well, they had a bogo.
Well, then you got it. Do you want a white collar
or something here? Just hit it. What are y'all doing?
Microphones? Are you making a wrap?
Alba.
Oh, I would.
Come on.
Could you pull?
I would buy it.
Cuts through the defense like a hot knife through sponge cake.
That sounds delicious.
Oh, you're lucky.
I'm not a drug addict.
You're lucky I'm not an alcoholic.
You are.
I love this team.
And I'm really trying to be a figure in their lives that they can rely on.
Oh.
Listen to soccer moms on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, everyone.
Strayed, author of Wild and Tiny Beautiful Things, I'm excited to share that I have a new podcast called Mind Over Mountain.
In each episode, I interview athletes, adventurers, and adrenaline seekers to discuss the inner landscapes and life experiences that informed and inspired their extraordinary feats.
I also bring a bit of advice into the mix, so we too can better understand how to face our own seemingly insurmountable challenges.
Do you know what I'm going to do?
I'm going to pull out what you already have inside.
We're coming into this world, fighting for our lives.
All I'm going to do is pull out what you already got inside.
We're there to support and celebrate each other.
And that's not like your story versus my story.
You're going to walk up and over that dang mountain.
You're not just going to put your mind over it.
Yep, yep, exactly.
And if I can't walk up and over it, I'm going to go through it.
Listen to Mind Over Mountain every Thursday on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up?
I'm Miles Turner.
And I'm Brianna Stewart.
And our podcast, Game Recognized Game, has never been done before.
Two active players giving you a real look at our lives and what we actually think on and off the court.
Nothing's off limits.
We talk trade requests.
What's the vibe of that when it's like your star player is like, well, I want to leave?
And then actually now I'm going to stay.
We talk tanking.
I mean, honestly, like, I might get in trouble for this answer, but I think it's like definitely happening in the WBA.
And yeah, we talk about our mistakes too.
They pulled me to the side and was like, hey, man, we got a call last night,
man, you can't be rolling around the city like this tonight before games, no, you know, doing this, doing whatever.
And of course, family stories.
They'll be like, mommy, why did you miss that?
Mommy, do you play basketball?
Check out Game Recognized game with Stuy and Miles on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
know the famous author Roald Doll. He thought up Willie Wonka and the BFG. But did you know he was a spy?
Neither did I. You can hear all about his wildlife story in the podcast, The Secret World of Roll
Doll. All episodes are out now. Was this before he wrote his stories? I must have been. What?
Okay, I don't think that's true. I'm telling you, because I was a spy. Binge all 10 episodes of
The Secret World of Roll Doll. Now on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcast. Danielle Oliver Chauvey woke up in the middle of the night on February 8th, 2017,
to find her house swarmed with police and FBI agents.
Something's happening, and I have no idea why there's state police in my house with a gunpoint
at me. So I think at that point, they were suspecting me. I thought I was involved.
But a suspect in what? Danielle would soon find out.
Chan Skipper, her husband of nearly 20 years and the father of
of their six children hadn't come home that night.
He said he'd been renovating one of their rental properties.
The police were screaming questions at her about where Chad was,
asking if she had any hiding places in the house.
And most confusing of all, the police were asking about an elderly couple
who taught Sunday school at their church.
Why are you asking me questions about them?
And where is my husband?
The police wouldn't give her any information about what was happening
or why they were at her house.
but it was clear that whatever it was, it was urgent.
The police took her in and began a long interrogation.
I went into the interrogation room and they started asking me questions.
They asked me about this couple and I was thinking,
that's a weird question out of the blue.
Why would you ask me specifically about these people?
Yeah, we know them for sure.
We've known them for a long time.
They were also asking questions about the family's finances.
Questions, Danielle just didn't have the...
answers to.
I was shaking.
I was just so confused.
Like, why are you asking you this?
All I was worried about was his safety, like if he was still alive.
It didn't even dawn on me that it could be what it was.
After hours of interrogation, the police let Danielle go.
She went to a friend's house where her kids were waiting for her.
She repeatedly tried to get in touch with Chad without any reply.
Then, first thing the next morning, her phone rang.
It was Chad's father.
He asked me, do you know where Chad is?
And I said, no, do you?
I said, I don't know anything.
If you know anything, just tell me what's going on
because I need to know what's wrong with my husband
on where he is.
And his dad just said, there was a rumor going around
that this couple has been kidnapped.
And the rumor is also that Chad
did it. My brain was not registering. It was like, wait, what? No, that's impossible. This is Chad
we're talking about. That rumor's wrong. And I was thinking, there's just no way that it's actually
my husband. I know my husband would never do anything like this. That's not who he is.
Unbeknownst to anyone, that couple from their church had been missing for three days. We're not
saying their names because Danielle wants to respect their privacy. Before this, they were friends,
and Danielle believes that their story is their families to tell, just like her story is hers to tell.
So for this episode, she's going to call them... His victims, I had known them since I had met Chad.
He had known them since the time he was born because they were part of his church. They were our
Sunday school teachers. We would often go over to their house.
And sometimes we would have like a pool party.
Sometimes it would be a Bible study.
So we knew them really well.
They were amazing people.
The day before police raided Danielle's house, a woman had walked into a bank and asked for a cashier's check for $350,000 from her own savings account.
Before the teller cut the check, the woman slipped her a note.
She was being held for ransom.
Her captor was waiting down the block with her husband in the trunk.
If she didn't return to the car with the check, her kidnapper said he would kill her husband.
She needed to walk out of that bank, check in hand.
So they gave it to her and let her go.
And as soon as she walked out of the door, the teller called the police.
That call initiated a statewide search for the kidnapped couple and their captor.
Immediately, it became the top story on the local news.
It all started just before 5 p.m. on Wednesday when the sheriff's office received a call from First Trust and Savings Bank in Albany.
Investigators are working with the FBI, state police, and local agencies. It's a case they say that will shock this community.
The morning after the raid, Danielle was still in the dark about what was happening.
She was reeling and desperately trying to get in touch with her husband.
She didn't want to believe the wild theory that Chad could have taken.
kidnapped this elderly couple.
That was until she saw his picture on the news.
My whole world got flipped upside down.
At that moment when I saw his picture
and the police update and what he had done.
Developing story in Whiteside County.
Investigators say they've never seen anything quite like it.
A man accused of kidnapping a couple at gunpoint from Erie, Illinois,
is facing four felony charges in connection
to the kidnapping. Chad Skipper handcuffed the couple to their bed and threatened to shoot them
with his gun if they didn't pay him $350,000. At that point, all I knew was that he abducted
somebody. And that's where I just broke down and started crying my eyes out and fell to the
floor and was just didn't know what to do. In that moment, she understood why the police woke her up
in the middle of the night. When the police knocked down my door asking if I had any hiding area,
in the house. I'm sure they were looking for the people that he abducted. They were wanting to know
if there was a place in that house where they could be hidden. As far as they know, I know where the
kidnapped victims are because I'm his wife. I mean, most people would assume that the wife would know,
but I had no clue. Over the following days and weeks, Danielle discovered the full extent of her
husband's horrifying crimes.
This is what she learned.
A couple days before the police knocked down my door,
he must have gone to their home.
I think that's what the sledgehammer was for to break into their home.
He had my daughter duct tape it with black duct tape
so that the yellow handle wouldn't be seen in the dark.
I heard that he had a voice changer and that he was all dressed in black.
And I also heard that he broke into it.
their home and sat in their kitchen for several hours before going upstairs to wake them.
He just sat in their kitchen for hours, in the middle of the night, before he finally entered the
bedroom where the elderly couple was sleeping. He tased the guy and threatened his wife
and then said, where is your God now and took them from their home forcibly.
they didn't even have a chance to get their clothes on.
And I know that he had told them that it wasn't just him.
Like he threatened them that it was like a group of people who were doing this.
After the police showed up at the bank, they called in the FBI,
who traced the cashier's check and found the couple's names and address.
When they searched their home, they discovered signs of forced entry,
evidence of a deployed taser, and small drops of blood in the beach.
bedroom. But the house was eerily quiet. No one was home. In fact, by the time the police were
alerted, no one had heard from the couple in three days. He had her call around and tell a false
story about them deciding to go on vacation. I think he even took their car to the airport.
While Chad was committing this elaborate crime, Danielle was at home, taking care of their kids,
going about her business just as usual,
completely unaware that her husband
had violently kidnapped their family friends
and was holding them for ransom.
But where was Chad?
And where was he holding the couple?
Danielle had no idea.
When the police were finally alerted,
they knew time was of the essence.
They relied on the FBI and state police
to use all resources possible to find the missing couple.
Ransom kidnapping cases like this often end in tragedy,
especially considering the money was already exchanged.
They were running out of time.
With each passing hour, the search grew increasingly urgent.
Then the FBI got a tip about a car matching the description
of the one scene leaving the bank with the kidnapped victims,
a silver 1990 Chevy Caprice.
But Danielle didn't know anything about a Chevy Caprice.
so maybe they had the wrong guy.
The police tracked the car down,
but when they went to pull it over,
the driver sped up.
It was all over the local news.
Around 4.30 a.m., the car crashed here outside Port Byron.
We tried to affect a stop on that vehicle,
and they took up at a high rate of speed.
The police approached the crash vehicle
and found that the driver was indeed Chad Skipper.
He was injured but alive and arrested on the spot in connection with the kidnapping.
Law enforcement was hoping to find the victims with Chad, alive in the trunk of his car, but no one else was with him.
Instead, the police found clear plastic painters tarps, a saw, duct tape, and a shovel.
Now that Chad was arrested, the only priority was finding the missing couple.
There were still a few places the police had inserted.
Chad's rental properties.
After he was arrested,
Chad gave police the address
where he said the couple was being held.
When he was arrested,
I thought that house was still rented.
Like, I thought people were in the house
renting it from us.
When police showed up,
it looked like a construction zone.
The surfaces were covered in sawdust
and power tools.
The doors were taken off their hinges.
And there was a ladder in the middle of the living room.
but it also looked like someone had been squatting there.
There was trash everywhere, plates of half-beaten food,
electronic wires and cables dangled from the outlets.
Police searched every room, but no one seemed to be in the house.
Then they double-checked the bedroom,
or they took a closer look at a computer monitor laying on the floor.
It appeared to show a surveillance feed,
six live feed images of a windowless room,
where two figures relying on a mattress covered by blankets.
On the wall next to them were hooks and shackles.
There was a secret room somewhere in this house.
And Chad's victims were in there.
Will Farrell's Big Money Players and IHeart Podcast presents soccer moms.
So I'm Leanne.
This is my best friend, Janet.
And we have been joined at the hip since high school.
Absolutely.
Now a redacted amount of years later, we're still joined at the hip.
a little bit bigger hips, wider.
This is a podcast. We're recording it as we tailgate
our youth soccer games in the back of my
Honda Odyssey with all the snacks
and drink. Sidebar.
Why did you get hard seltzer instead of beer?
Oh, they had a bogo. Well, then you got it.
Do you want a white collar something here? Just hit it.
What are y'all doing? Microphones? Are you making a
rap album?
Come on.
Can you imagine? I would buy it.
Cut through the defense like a hot knife
through sponge cake.
That sounds delicious.
Oh, you're lucky I'm not a drug addict.
You're lucky I'm not an alcoholic.
You are.
I'm lucky I'm not a killer.
I love this team and I'm really trying to be a figure in their lives that they can rely on.
Oh.
Listen to soccer moms on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, everyone.
I'm Cheryl Stray, author of Wild and Tiny Beautiful Things.
I'm excited to share that I have a new podcast called Mind Over Mountain.
In each episode, I interview athletes, adventurers, and adrenaline seekers to discuss the inner landscapes and life experiences that informed and inspired their extraordinary feats.
I also bring a bit of advice into the mix so we too can better understand how to face our own seemingly insurmountable challenges.
Do you know what I'm going to do? I'm going to pull out what you already have inside.
We're coming into this world fighting for our lives. All I'm going to do is pull out what you already got inside.
we're there to support and celebrate each other.
And that's not like your story versus my story.
You're going to walk up and over that dang mountain.
You're not just going to put your mind over it.
Yep, yep, exactly.
And if I can't walk up and over it, I'm going to go through it.
Listen to Mind Over Mountain every Thursday on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up?
I'm Miles Turner.
And I'm Brianna Stewart.
And our podcast, Game Recognized Game, has never been done before.
Two active players giving you a real.
real look at our lives and what we actually think on and off the court.
Nothing's off limits.
We talk trade requests.
What's the vibe of that when it's like your star player is like, well, I want to leave?
And then actually now I'm going to stick.
We talk tanking.
I mean, honestly, like, I might get in trouble for this answer,
but I think it's like definitely happening in the WBA.
And yeah, we talk about our mistakes too.
They pulled me to the side and was like, hey, man, we got a call last night,
You can't be rolling around the city like this tonight before games, no, you know, doing this, doing whatever.
And of course, family stories.
They'll be like, Mommy, why did you miss that?
Mommy, do you play basketball?
Check out Game Recognized game with Stoian Miles on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You know the famous author, Roldahl.
He thought up Willie Wonka and the BFG.
But did you know he was a spy?
Neither did I.
You can hear all about his wildlife story in the podcast, The Secret World of Roll Doll.
All episodes are out now.
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
What?
Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you.
I was a spy.
Binge all 10 episodes of The Secret World of Rolled Doll.
Now on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The night of Chad's arrest, police began searching one of his rental properties for a secret room, a dungeon, where he was.
was holding two people captive.
From what they could see on the surveillance feed, it was a windowless room somewhere in the
house.
The couple was lying motionless on a mattress.
It wasn't clear if they were alive.
But then, one of the FBI agents moved a dresser in the closet and lifted up a piece
of carpeting to reveal a locked steel hatch.
And the only entry in exit to that dungeon.
room was through a steel trap door with a walk on the outside in a closet hidden under
a dresser or something. He walled it off with cement blocks and soundproofing. You would only know it was
there if you knew it was there. Police used bulk cutters to open the door. They found an eight-foot
drop into a dark windowless room. And they went in. That's where they discovered the couple,
miraculously, still alive. They had been twice.
tortured and chained.
Chad said he had people watching their kids and grandkids.
So if they tried to escape or get help, he would kill them.
They were in that dungeon for a couple of days.
I can't even imagine thinking that you're going to die,
thinking that your children are going to die,
hooked up on this thing,
your hands up in the air for so many hours
that you're basically shaking and can't even stand.
and having their kids and grandkids threatened.
Once he got the money, he was planning to kill them.
I mean, what's he going to do? Go, oh, I'm going to let you go now.
Forgive me. Everything is fine.
How else could it end?
And judging by the contents of his car, it seemed like he meant it.
This what if still haunts Danielle.
Chad was charged with felony home invasion, aggravated kidnapping,
an unlawful restraint.
His bail was set at a million dollars.
Overnight, Danielle had to reckon with the fact that her husband of nearly two decades
and the father of her children was capable of a violent crime.
In addition to processing that shock, she didn't understand why.
Was it all for the money?
I didn't know that we were having financial trouble.
I'm a penny pincher.
So I don't know where all the money was going,
and I don't know why he needed that.
To answer that question, Danielle started looking through Chad's basement office.
There, she made a series of shocking discoveries.
First, why he targeted the people he did.
He had gotten a hold of their finances and knew how much they had in the bank.
Because he had asked them to be clients of his or his fake financial business.
his fake financial business.
She also found out that he was never actually a certified financial advisor or planner.
So what did he do for a living?
From what she gathered in his office, he charmed elderly people into letting him be their financial advisor,
where he would skim from their accounts for years.
In fact, after he was arrested, his own parents sued him for stealing over $400,000,
while he claimed to serve as their financial advisor.
But not only did he steal from his own parents,
he also stole from his grandmother.
It was around that same amount, something like $300,000.
Maybe he felt like he needed to steal that from his victims
in order to repay the money that he had stolen from his grandma.
He never confessed to this, but it added up for Danielle.
What never made sense, though, was the construction of the dungeon.
I found the plans and bills from it in his office.
Chad had been hiring a contractor to build the dungeon piece by piece over the past two years.
I can't even imagine how much that cost.
It had been thousands upon thousands.
And I don't think the person who did it ever got paid, honestly.
The shocking fact that he'd built a dungeon to hold the kidnapping victims,
kept the story in the headlines for months.
In a News Aid exclusive tonight, investigative reporter Chris Minor
shows us a photo of that actual room
where it's believed the couple was held against their will.
Danielle never slept another night in the big house
that she and Chad had shared with their kids.
I did not want the kids to be back in the house
knowing that he had done that,
knowing that he was capable of kidnapping,
people that he'd known for his whole whole house.
life. I didn't want them back into that house, and I didn't want to live in that house anymore.
She and her kids moved into her parents' home while she got her bearings.
For the first few months after Chad's arrest, Danielle's dad would accompany her to the old house
to continue excavating Chad's office. The police had already collected the evidence they needed,
and she was left to clean up the rest. Every day that we went into his office, there was another thing.
Oh, he lied about this next day.
He lied about that too.
I remember at one point we were both looking at each other on our way to the house thinking,
I wonder what else we're going to find in his office today.
What else could there be?
There was insurance fraud.
One of the things we found in his office was that he actually claimed that my wedding ring was lost
and took insurance out for it.
So even our wedding ring, he lied about.
There was credit card fraud.
He had fraudently signed credit cards in his dad's name.
You've gotten credit cards in my name.
He had forged my name.
She also found lies about herself, stories she'd never heard before.
We found several papers that had conversations written down on them that had lies about me as far as like I had to go have a brain surgery.
in Minnesota or somewhere.
It just lies like that in order to gain control
or gain sympathy from the people that he was talking to.
There were just like conversations written down on a piece of paper.
Some of them were to credit card companies
because it was with credit card stuff.
Some of it was two different potential clients
that he was going to have.
And some things she discovered were just suspicious.
Hiking boots.
that he never wore.
A wetsuit that was still wet
and had a little bit of dirt on the cuff.
And, you know, it's like,
he did never go scuba diving.
So why does he have a wetsuit?
And where would he have used to the wetsuit?
In the Mississippi River?
You know?
Just strange things that we never found an answer to.
One of the most haunting things she found in his office
was a set of life insurance policies.
on everyone in their family.
Policies she never knew existed.
You had life insurance policies out on me and the kids.
I think mine was a million.
And I think my kids were a quarter of a million each.
It messes with your mind really hard.
I never felt like I was threatened or my kids were threatened for our lives.
It was only after his arrest and when we started going through the stuff in his office,
that I was like, whoa, if I had confronted him,
about any of this stuff if I had known about it,
I don't think I would be here.
Danielle didn't want his explanations.
She cooperated with the police and prosecutors
and gave them any evidence they needed.
One of the things that the police told me
is that in all of their cases,
they said they have never come across a case
that was so cut and dried
with the amount of evidence for this guy.
I was like, wow.
And he thought he was so smart.
She sent him one letter in jail, where she said she would be praying for him but needed to cut off communication.
After that, she filed for divorce.
But letters from Chad never stopped coming.
Every few weeks, there'd be that distinctive envelope in their mailbox.
Every time I got a letter from him, my whole body would just shake.
I would get sweaty, palms, hard to breathe.
But as soon as I saw that envelope, I'm like,
not another one.
She never replied, hoping his letters would finally stop coming.
But one day, she got a letter that was different from the others.
On the outside of the envelope, it was not addressed as him.
It was addressed as Eloisa May.
And that threw me because I'm like, well, this is definitely a letter from that jail.
But Eloisa May is kind of weird.
I don't know when Eloisa May.
And there was no, like, I'd return address.
It was just the name.
And so when I opened it and it wasn't in his writing either, I was thinking, okay, that's weird too.
There's something off.
The whole letter is written in this weird southern accent.
I felt like I was reading Huckleberry Finn.
This is how the letter began.
Howdy there, missy?
My name is Elisa May.
You don't know me, honey, child, but maybe we can remedy that with this here letter.
Will Ferrell's Big Money Players
And IHeart Podcast presents
Soccer moms
So I'm Leanne
This is my best friend Janet
And we have been joined
At the Hips since high school
Now a redacted
A amount of years later
We're still joined at the hip
Just a little bit bigger hips
Wider
This is a podcast
We're recording it as we tailgate
Our youth soccer games
In the back of my Honda Odyssey
With all the snacks and drink
Sidebar
Why did you get hard seltzer instead of beer
Oh they had a bogo
Well then you got it
Do you want a white color
There's some here. Just a second.
Oh, what are y'all doing?
Microphones? Are you making a rap album?
Oh, I would.
Come on.
I would buy it.
Cuts through the defense like a hot knife through sponge cake.
That sounds delicious.
Oh, you're lucky.
I'm not a drug addict.
You're lucky I'm not an alcoholic.
You are.
You're lucky I'm not a killer.
I love this team and I'm really trying to be a figure in their lives that they can rely on.
Oh.
Listen to soccer moms on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up? I'm Miles Turner.
And I'm Brianna Stewart.
And our podcast, Game Recognized Game, has never been done before.
Two active players giving you a real look at our lives and what we actually think,
on and off the court.
Nothing's off limits.
We talk trade requests.
What's the vibe of that when it's like your star player is like, well, I want to leave?
And then actually now I'm going to stay.
We talk tanking.
I mean, honestly, like, I might get in trouble for this answer,
but I think it's like definitely happening in the WBA.
And yeah, we talk about our mistakes too.
They pulled me to the side and was like, hey, man,
we got a call last night, man.
You can't be rolling around the city like this tonight before games,
no, you know, doing this, doing whatever.
And of course, family stories.
They'll be like, Mommy, why did you miss that?
Mommy, do you play basketball?
Check out Game Recognized game with Stuy and Miles
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, everyone.
I'm Cheryl Stray, author of Wild and Tiny Beautiful Things.
I'm excited to share that I have a new podcast called Mind Over Mountain.
In each episode, I interview athletes, adventurers, and adrenaline seekers
to discuss the inner landscapes and life experiences that informed and inspired their extraordinary feats.
I also bring a bit of advice into the mix so we too can better understand how to face our own
seemingly insurmountable challenges.
Do you know what I'm going to do?
I'm going to pull out what you already have inside.
We're coming into this world, fighting for our lives.
All I'm going to do is pull out what you already got inside.
We're there to support and celebrate each other.
And that's not like your story versus my story.
You're going to walk up and over that dang mountain.
You're not just going to put your mind over it.
Yep, yep, exactly.
And if I can't walk up and over it, I'm going to go through it.
Listen to Mind Over Mountain every Thursday on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
You know the famous author, Roald Dahl.
He thought up Willie Wonka and the BFG.
But did you know he was a spy?
Neither did I.
You can hear all about his wildlife story
in the podcast, The Secret World of Roald Dahl.
All episodes are out now.
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
What?
Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you, because I was a spy.
Binge all 10 episodes of The Secret World of Roald Dahl.
Now on the IHeart Radio app.
podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
While Chad sat in jail, Danielle was trying to rebuild her life.
That's when she began to get strange letters in the mail.
The return address just said the name Eloisa May.
This is what the letters were about.
It's this fake character who supposedly lives, I think, in Arkansas or something,
but she moved to Illinois because her daughter is in Illinois.
She had a stroke and so now she's in the hospital.
and she came across my story,
and she starts telling me how her husband was an alcoholic,
and at one point he physically abused her,
and so she left him and went to live with his parents.
Finally, Chad, or Eloisa May, got to the point.
She ended up deciding to get a divorce
because she didn't want to do with his abusive, addictive issues.
He ended up killing himself.
And because of her decision to get a divorce,
her daughter and son are having issues in their lives,
and they take the blame for him dying.
I felt like it was a threat.
If you divorce me, I'm going to kill myself
and your kids are going to feel like it was their fault.
That's the feeling I got from the letter.
The letters were four, five, six pages long,
written in a tiny, neat handwriting
that didn't look like Chad's at all.
She assumed that either he was disguising
his handwriting or got someone in the jail to write it for him while he dictated. Either way,
the character Chad was putting on was so transparently manipulative. He didn't directly say,
how can you divorce me, but through the character of Eloisa May was basically saying that.
She suspects that he made the character Southern to try to pull on Danielle's heartstrings
because her grandmother was from the South. A little bit later he goes, I feel the good Lord
telling me to do something and I got a little eager, Danielle, sugar. And may I declare
darling? That is one of the most beautiful and unique names I've ever heard, something we have
in common, sweetie. Chad also used his extensive knowledge of the Bible to try and make
Danielle question her decisions. He basically has a sermon in there and quotes Bible passages
about God hates divorce and gives me examples of different characters in the Bible who wanted
meant to get a divorce but didn't because it's not the right thing to do.
The Eloise Amay letters almost amused her, but they also felt like an insult.
Did he really think she would fall for this?
I think he had a very, very low opinion of me, or it still does.
I struggle with that, with my marriage too, because he treated me like a child.
She kept the Aloisa May letters to remind herself of just how
delusional and scheming, Chad really was. A year after his arrest, Chad pled guilty. But before he
faced a sentencing hearing for the kidnapping, they had their divorce trial. He actually
did not have a lawyer to do those proceedings. He was pro se. And so he questioned me on the stand,
which was really, really nerve-wracking. Danielle was awarded full custody. And shortly after,
she attended her ex-husband's sentencing hearing.
It started with the victim's statements.
There were no dry eyes in that courtroom.
They're amazing people.
The judge was stunned by Chad's crime,
especially the premeditation that had gone into building the dungeon
and the torture the victims endured.
From what the judge said when he sentenced him,
he wanted people to know this is not acceptable in society.
Like, it's heinous.
You can't just do that type of a crime and get away with it.
The judge gave Chad the maximum sentence possible.
Today, Chad Skipper, and a packed courtroom listened as he awaited his jail sentence.
Sixty years the rest of his life in prison.
I was thinking he was only going to get 20 years.
And so when it was 60, I was surprised.
Surprised, but grateful.
She sees how dangerous Chad is.
and doesn't want him anywhere near her or their children ever again.
She says she forgives him, but forgiveness can include boundaries.
I have a big, big problem with some of the ways that Christian pastors portray forgiveness,
that every marriage, 100% of marriages can be resolved.
And I was like, that is very, very untrue.
and very, very dangerous to say.
If there's an abuse happening, that's not true.
Danielle decided to stay in that small town of Erie, Illinois.
Chad's victims still live there too,
and Danielle has seen them around town.
I have seen them.
Yeah, I've seen them, seeing their kids.
You know, I smile at them when they see me.
I don't know if they recognize me or not.
I don't know if they see me when I see them.
I really don't know.
She's even thought about reaching out to apologize for the pain her husband caused and to grieve with them.
I would love to talk to them directly.
I haven't because when I was speaking with my lawyer and also the police even said something about don't reach out.
And so I just kind of like took a step back.
I don't even know what their thoughts are towards me if they feel like I was part of it or if they know that I
had no idea what was going on.
One of the reasons why I haven't reached out is because I really don't want to cause them more pain.
Some people in their community just didn't believe that Danielle was in the dark about her husband's double life.
When you first was arrested, there were some posts on Facebook about it.
People were saying, oh, she knew and all that kind of stuff.
Around town, she's noticed that people don't smile and wave as much as they used to.
I haven't had anybody approach me and accuse me of anything.
It's just, you know, when you're walking around in a small town,
sometimes you get looks, just kind of a weird side look.
Like, I know who you are.
Don't look at me.
Don't interact with me.
She's had to reckon with blaming herself
for not knowing who her husband actually was.
And what he was really doing all those nights,
he claimed to be in the basement working.
I couldn't have known.
He didn't show that part of himself to me.
All I know is the life that he had with me and our kids.
That's all I saw.
He was able to do everything else completely separate.
I can't blame myself for something that he did without me knowing.
As part of her healing process, she's learned about people like Chad and the tactics they use,
tactics that felt very familiar.
When I was doing my studies of narcissistic behavior,
One of the things that really spoke to me was a thing called word salad.
And I totally was like, yep, that's exactly what it was.
Just words that twist anything that I said would twist it around and jumbled it up like a salad
and then shoot it back at me.
And my mind would just be like, I don't even know what's going on.
These kinds of things helped her understand how he had subtly manipulated her for so long.
But that didn't ease the self-blame or the sense that she couldn't trust
anyone around her or even herself.
If my husband can pull the wool over my eyes so easily and I thought that he was an amazing
person, does that mean that this amazing person can also pull the wool over my eyes?
Like what are they actually behind closed doors? Are they the person that they are presenting to
me as a loving brother, a loving friend? But then when we are not in each other's
presence? Are they somebody else? Like, okay, this pastor seems like he is everything that a pastor
should be. But now that I've been through what I've been through, is he who he says he is? Or is this
just his presentation of who he says he is? For Danielle, trusting the wrong person, building a life
with them, left her all alone and a single parent. All the weight of the responsibility is now mine.
because I know I had six kids and I had to support them now.
She found work as an online English tutor, and she built a business writing and selling knitting patterns.
My business is called knitting nicely, but then nicely spoke with a K-N.
I'm really proud that I have a business that I absolutely love and enjoy.
After her divorce, she decided that she was done with romantic relationships.
My whole view of the loving, caring relationship of marriage got trashed.
Even when I would see couples in church or shopping, holding hands,
or I would see a post about somebody celebrating an anniversary,
it would kind of turn my stomach.
It just felt ew to me because of what I went through.
You know, having trust in someone and then having that trust completely destroyed.
I didn't want to go through what I went through again.
I didn't want to put my kids through that again.
So for me, I was like, okay, I am going to do this single mom thing and we're going to make it.
But then...
But then, she saw a post on Facebook from her high school boyfriend, Billy, the one who proposed to her 30 years ago.
They'd since drifted apart and hadn't talked in nearly a decade.
But in his post, she saw that his fiancé had recently passed away.
So she reached out to lend support.
We were just like being there for each other.
You know, I kind of wanted to uplift him and make him come out of the hole that I felt like he was about to go into.
Just to have somebody to talk to, to be able to laugh with.
But then the conversations got longer, and then we ended up staying up all night talking over Messenger.
And my daughter was starting to say, who is this that you're talking to all this time?
and I think she knew before I knew that I was starting to fall in love again.
Danielle and Billy planned a FaceTime call where they would see each other for the first time in years.
And as soon as I saw his smiling face, I knew that was, that was it.
I was going to pursue that relationship, for sure.
The trust issue was not even an issue in the situation.
Because I had known him from when I was a teenager,
there wasn't that, is he really who he says he is?
Question.
So they started dating again.
Both of us were like,
this is weird.
How could this actually be happening again?
Donnie and Billy 2.0.
After a few months of dating again,
they got married, surrounded by their families at the Thanksgiving table.
So we had Thanksgiving dinner,
and then between Thanksgiving dinner and dessert is when the wedding happened.
Yeah, it was really cool. I loved it.
I wouldn't have it any other way.
We end all of our weekly episodes with the same question.
Why did you want to tell your story?
Knowing that you're not alone is so helpful.
That's huge for people who've gone through stuff like that.
That was one of the main things that helped me.
Knowing that people have actually survived it and are happy again, that was really huge.
My main reason for wanting to tell my story is to give people hope that even though you may feel like your world is upside down and it can never become upside up again.
There is a light at the tunnel.
Maybe really tiny and small.
It might be a little tiny speck.
But there is a light.
If you would like to reach out to the betrayal team or want to tell us your betrayal story, email us at BetrayalPod at Gmail.com.
That's Betrayal P-O-D at Gmail.com.
We're grateful for your support.
One way to show support is by subscribing to our show on Apple Podcasts.
And don't forget to rate and review Betrayal.
Five-star reviews go a long way.
A big thank you to all of our listeners.
Betrayal is a production of Glass Podcasts,
a division of Glass Entertainment Group and partnership with IHeart Podcasts.
The show is executive produced by Nancy Glass and Jennifer Fasin.
Hosted and produced by me, Andrea Gunning.
written and produced by Monique Laborde,
also produced by Ben Federman.
Associate producers are Kristen Mulcuri and Caitlin Golden.
Our I-Heart team is Ali Perry and Jessica Kreincheck.
Audio editing and mixing by Matt Dalvecchio.
Additional editing support from Nico Aruka.
Betrayals theme composed by Oliver Baines,
music library, provided by MIB music.
And for more podcasts from IHeart,
visit the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
wherever you get your podcasts.
It's Financial Literacy Month,
and the podcast, Eating While Broke,
is bringing real conversations
about money, growth, and building your future.
This month, hear from top streamer,
Zoe Spencer, and venture capitalist
Lakeisha Landrum-Pierre,
as they share their journeys
from starting out to leveling up.
There's an economic component
to communities thriving.
If there's not enough money
and entrepreneurship happening in communities,
they failed.
Listen to Eating While Broke
from the Black Effect Podcast Network,
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Miles Turner.
And I'm Brianna Stewart.
And our podcast, Game Recognized Game, has never been done before.
Two active players giving you a real look at our lives and what we actually think,
on and off the court.
Nothing's off limits.
We talk tanking.
I might get in trouble for this answer, but I think it's, like, definitely happening in the WBA.
We talk about our mistakes, too.
They pulled me to their side and was like, hey, man, we got a call.
last night. Now, you can't be rolling around the city like this tonight before games.
Check out Game Recognized Game with Stoian Miles on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Earners, what's up? Look, money is something we all deal with, but financial literacy is what
helps turn income into real wealth. On each episode of the podcast, Earned Elegia, we break
down the conversations you need to understand money, investing, and entrepreneurship.
From stocks and real estate to credit, business, and generational wealth, our goal is simple.
Make financial literacy accessible for everyone
Because when you understand the system
You can start to build within it
Open your free IHeart Radio app
Search Earn Your Leisure and listen now
Will Ferrell's Big Money Players
And IHart Podcasts
So I'm Leanne
This is my best friend Janet
And we have been joined at the hips since high school
A redacted amount of years later
We're still joined at the hip
Just a little bit bigger hips
This is a podcast we're recording it
As we tailgate our youth soccer games
in the back of my Honda Odyssey
with all the snacks and drinks.
Why did you get hard seltzer instead of beer?
Well, they hit a bogo.
Well, then you got them.
Listen to soccer moms on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
