Betrayal - Introducing: Betrayal Weekly
Episode Date: July 18, 2024The Betrayal community is growing. From the producers that brought you the critically acclaimed Betrayal limited run series, a new always-on docuseries will hit the feed every week. Our lives are ...all built on an invisible force: trust. But sometimes, the people we trust the most can turn out to be complete strangers. Every week, Betrayal Weekly will share first-hand accounts of broken trust, shocking deceptions, and the trail of destruction they leave behind. Hosted by Andrea Gunning, this weekly ongoing series digs into real-life stories of betrayal and the aftermath. From stories of double lives to dark discoveries, these are cautionary tales and accounts of resilience against all odds. If you would like to reach out to the Betrayal Team, email us at betrayalpod@gmail.com.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Owen Wilson stars in Tom Slick Mystery Hunter, an action packed thrill ride based on the
mostly true tale of explorer, scientific legend and alleged spy Tom Slick.
No one has been able to find the Yeti.
It's a mystery that does not want to be solved.
That's why I'm here.
Listen to my show, Tom Slick Mystery Hunter on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your most thrilling adventure stories.
How do you solve a crime in reverse
when you believe that someone was murdered
but have no clue who the victim was?
We have to do our job, and we have to find out
who did they kill?
If it's possible, how are we gonna do that?
I'm Jay Calpern, and this is Deep Cover, The Nameless Man.
Listen on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
In 2009, Matrice Richardson was released
from the Malibu Lost Hills Sheriff's Station,
and she never made it home.
Nearly a year later, Matrice's remains were found in a canyon, six miles from the station.
Her death is Malibu's greatest unsolved mystery.
I'm Dana Goodyear.
In Lost Hills, Dark Canyon, what happened to Matrice Richardson? Hi, it's Andrea Gunning.
Thanks for tuning into our first three seasons of Betrayal.
These stories have inspired so many of you to share your own experiences with us.
We knew we had to find a way to bring more of your stories
to the podcast feed, and now we are.
Every Thursday, we'll be releasing
new extraordinary episodes.
These are firsthand accounts of shocking deception,
broken trust, and the trail of destruction left behind.
And these are stories you've never heard before.
And I'm like, what?
No, this isn't real. What's going on? Who are you really?
I said, I can't believe what I'm listening to.
I was like, where is the baby? What's happening?
From unbelievable romantic betrayals...
The love that was so real for me was always just a game for him. romantic betrayals, to betrayals in your own family, financial betrayals, even life or death deceptions. She's practicing how she's going to cry when the police calls her after they kill me.
The people we trust the most.
He was caring and loving and genuine with his wife and his child and his patients.
The people we least expect.
And he was a psychopath.
These are cautionary tales,
stories of romance, family and business gone horribly wrong.
But they're also survival stories,
stories of resilience after losing the thing
we all depend on.
Trust.
My story was true.
Even if his wasn't, mine was.
Now here's a sneak peek of our first episode.
This is Stephanie's story.
Her marriage came crashing down in an instant
when she discovered the sinister truth about her husband,
a dark secret he had hidden for 22 years.
We got married in 1998.
It was a second marriage for both of us.
I came with four boys.
He had a boy and a girl.
Our kids were already friends and were thrilled about us being together.
Stephanie and her husband, I'm going to call him Greg, lived together in a tiny
Midwestern town. It's the kind of town where everybody knows everybody. It's
like a small town that you would see on a movie or a sitcom. I didn't want my
husband to go to the grocery store with me. It just would take so long if he went with because we knew every person at the store
and everyone would have to stop and visit with him. Their big blended family was well known in town.
Picture a modern day Brady Bunch. At least that's the feeling I got from a photo she shared with me.
It's Stephanie, her sons, and Greg's kids, all six of them,
standing side by side on the beach smiling. Their family takes up the whole 3x5 photo
across. Their arm in arm having the best beach vacation. It's really sweet.
He was the absolute ideal husband. He was my best friend. He did housework. He cooked. He played with
the kids. And when the kids were little, we would go in and volunteer at their
elementary school and help with their reading groups, which was super fun. And
like what their dad does that? I mean back in those days, he was the only dad who volunteered.
And the kids all loved him.
There's another photo of Stephanie and her husband
in front of a waterfall in a forest
with his arms wrapped around her.
The sun lights her face and she looks relaxed and blissful.
He was very kind, very generous, very interested in hearing what I had to say.
He very much lifted me up.
He made me feel seen and he made me feel like I was smart and competent.
They had great chemistry.
They made great partners, not just in marriage, but in business.
I just ended up working at my husband's optometry practice because, you know, it was a small
practice, just him.
He always had three employees and one quit.
And I was kind of in between jobs, so it's like, oh, could you just fill in?
Stephanie did a lot more than just fill in.
She started managing her husband's optometry practice, pushing insurance claims through and making the business more profitable than ever.
They had a clear vision for their future.
We certainly were not rich, but we were very comfortable.
We had our own
resort in our backyard. We had a large in-ground pool, hot tub, basketball
court. I have this great photo of Greg on his giant pool lounger watching the
Masters Golf Tournament on our outdoor big screen TV.
We had just begun a plan of getting the house absolutely perfect and maintenance free for
when we retired.
Of course, there were hard moments, bumps along the way, and a 22-year marriage, that's
par for the course. At one point, he admitted that he hadn't been paying
the taxes at his business, and there was a possibility
we could lose the business, our house, he could go to jail.
That's a pretty big bump.
It's like, I've invested everything.
I've put my life and my kids' lives in this man's hands.
So that was tough, but we worked through it.
They agreed to a payment plan with the IRS
and moved forward as a team, back on track
for a happy retirement.
As the kids got older, Stephanie and her husband
adjusted well to the empty nest.
When the kids were grown, things were almost even better. We would leave the office
and walk hand in hand down the street to the local cafe and go to lunch together and sit and talk and
laugh through the whole lunch, not sit and scroll on our phones like other couples. And then we would go back and work for the afternoon,
and then we would go home together and make dinner,
watch our favorite game shows, and play a board game.
Even during the 2020 pandemic,
Stephanie and her husband got along.
So, you know, during COVID,
I'd hop on a Zoom call with like six or seven girlfriends,
and we're pretty much all empty nesters.
So we're all just stuck in the house alone with our husbands.
And my friends have good marriages and still there was a lot of like, I don't know how
much longer I can take this.
I'm really bored.
And I'm going, oh gosh, you guys, I feel bad.
Because you know what?
We're having a blast over here.
We're trying new recipes.
We've got this whole game thing going on.
We're doing all these puzzles.
We're having so much fun.
When COVID restrictions lifted, the couple
took the opportunity to spend even more time together and enjoy a warmer climate.
Kind of on a whim, we were like, hey, things are opening up.
We didn't get to go on our winter vacation to our timeshare in Cancun.
Let's go down there.
So we had gone down the first week of April and had a fabulous time as we always do.
But on this little COVID getaway,
she could tell that something was off with Greg.
She first noticed it when they were lounging by the pool.
One of the things that really struck me as weird
on that trip was that we had kind of sat
in this same spot a couple days
and there was someone else sitting a couple chairs down from us,
another husband and wife. And the guy made me really uncomfortable. You know
how some guys just look at you weird, you know, when you're hanging out in your
bathing suit, whatever. And that guy just kind of made me uncomfortable. And I told
Greg that. I said, you know, that guy is just kind of creeping me out.
Can we sit somewhere else? And he said, no. That was totally out of character for him.
He was always so accommodating to me and never wanted me to feel uncomfortable.
I mean, does it matter if we sit over on the other side of the gorgeous infinity pool looking
out at the ocean?
So yeah, it just struck me as a little weird.
It was weird.
But Stephanie didn't think much of it.
That night, the couple indulged in a long romantic dinner.
This was always part of their vacation.
A few dinners where they could really treat themselves.
Many, many courses and lots of different drinks
and wine and all of that.
The next morning, Stephanie was in a fog.
I was very out of it.
Like it was really hard to wake up.
I had this feeling, it was almost like I was up. I've had this feeling.
It was almost like I was at the bottom of the lake.
And I could just see light way up ahead.
But it was so hard to try to get there.
And then I would just feel so awful, like very cotton mouth,
very dehydrated, headache, miserable. Waking up shouldn't feel like that. But Greg was there to help take care of her. Last night you had a lot to
drink and we were out in the sun a lot. I'm sure you're dehydrated. Let's get you
some water, let's get you some coffee, let's try to stay out of the sun a little bit today. You know, very comforting, very kind.
But Greg wasn't the man he was pretending to be. I had that feeling. I was like, I gotta check all
his stuff while he's gone. I saw his laptop was sitting there by his recliner. They picked it up and they took it over to the kitchen counter
and that was where I was sitting and I literally just lifted it up and it was there. The pages were
open. He readily confessed to all of it. No tears, no remorse, no regret, no care whatsoever.
He talked to me like he was telling me I went to the store
and got a gallon of milk.
He said, I have those pictures of those other women
because I trade.
Like kids trade Pokemon cards.
I would trade your image.
Be sure to listen in on July 25th to hear all of Stephanie's story.
And subscribe to the Betrayal Feed where you'll hear news stories every Thursday.
subscribe to the Betrayal Feed where you'll hear news stories every Thursday. In 2009, Matrice Richardson was released from the Malibu Lost Hills Sheriff's Station, and she never made it home.
Nearly a year later, Matrice's remains were found in a canyon,
six miles from the station.
Her death is Malibu's greatest unsolved mystery.
I'm Dana Goodyear in Lost Hills, Dark Canyon.
What happened to Mytres Richardson?
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
How do you solve a crime in reverse? When you believe that someone was murdered, Apple podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts. If it's possible, how are we going to do that? I'm Jake Halpern, and this is Deep Cover, The Nameless Man.
Listen on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.