Clues with Morgan Absher and Kaelyn Moore - Maury Travis: A Serial Killer Unmasked
Episode Date: January 21, 2026From 2000 to 2002, women were disappearing across St. Louis and East St. Louis. Their murders barely made headlines. Then, in 2002, an anonymous letter, a printed map, and a set of disturbing clues le...d investigators to Maury Travis, a serial killer hiding in plain sight. Morgan and Kaelyn break down the timeline, the victims he targeted, the communities failed by law enforcement, and the investigation that finally exposed the truth. Head over to our Clues YouTube channel to WATCH this episode: https://www.youtube.com/@CluesPod If you’re new here, don’t forget to follow Clues to never miss a case! For Ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Clues is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios. 🎧 Need More to Binge? Listen to other Crime House Originals including Crime House 24/7, Crimes Of…, Serial Killers & Murderous Minds, Murder True Crime Stories and more wherever you get your podcasts! Follow us on Social YouTube: @CluesPod | @crimehousestudios Instagram: @cluespodcast | @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios X: @crimehousemedia Clues is hosted by Morgan Absher & Kaelyn Moore Instagram: @morgsyabsher | @itskaelynmoore TikTok: @twohottakes | @heartstartspounding Episode Sponsor:Go to https://www.Cymbiotika.com/CLUES to get 20% off plus free shipping. A year from today isn’t that far away. Get started now at https://www.HelloAlma.com/clues. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I'm Dr. Hrini-Bot, host of Hidden History.
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This is Crime House.
In 2013, police were searching a home in St. Louis
when they discovered what could only be described as a torture chamber.
Inside this room were videotapes that were apparently so disturbing.
officers that watched them were ordered to go to psychological counseling.
This is a story about a marginalized community, missed warning signs, and a killer whose ego
finally led to some answers.
Let's get into what was on those tapes, what really happened to these victims, and try to
determine if there are more out there that still need to be uncovered.
Hi, guys, welcome back to Clues, where we sneak past the crime scene tape to explore the key
evidence behind some of the most gripping true crime cases.
I'm Kaelin Moore, and I'm going to be the first.
the one digging deeper into the timelines, the backstories, and the court files released on these cases.
And I'm your internet sleuth, Morgan Absher. I'm the one who's diving into Reddit forums and
anything else I can find online to talk about those lesser known details and pulling out threads
that just don't add up. Also, don't forget to share your thoughts on social. We're always going
through comments. We love hearing from you guys. And if you want ad-free listening or early access,
you can subscribe to Crimehouse Plus on Apple Podcasts. Let's get into this case and the clues that defined it.
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Okay. This is one of the worst cases. I think I've ever had to research. I didn't sleep. It's heavy. It's heavy. Yeah. It is heavy. And it really does highlight, I think, some progress at least in the way we treat the marginalized community that is sex workers. I mean, this case, this killer is often referred to as the streetwalker strangler, the videotape killer, just kind of like you even can tell based on what.
they were called in the headlines and how these victims were talked about in the papers.
Times have changed a little bit.
But I think it's going to be highlighted today quite a bit why this got so bad.
But we also covered Gilgo.
I know.
Which is another one where most of the victims primarily were sex workers.
Yeah.
And you see a lot of heads just turning away from it.
I know.
So.
I know.
We might have a few marks today.
If we miss any, please let us know in the comments and what you think should have been botched.
Yeah, we're keeping our tally, but I love hearing the audience's tally. It's always so much more than what we cover.
It's so much more. And people are like, you could have given that one for. And I'm like, usually I agree. You're right. You're right. You're right. But okay, without further ado, let's get into this one.
Yeah. And if you're watching on YouTube, you're going to see some assets, some images, videos, sometimes maps that will help you kind of visualize the case. And if you're listening, you can find those same.
pictures, videos on our social media that's at Clues podcast on Instagram.
And just a quick warning, this episode does contain some pretty graphic discussions of
kidnapping, torture, essay, suicide, and murder.
So please, please listen with care.
We mean it when we say this is a bit of a heavy case this week.
All right.
So this case starts on the morning of May 15, 2001.
When a maintenance worker was out mowing grass near Highway 67, close to West Elton,
Mississippi. It's an area north of St. Louis that sits kind of along the Mississippi River.
When all of a sudden, as he's mowing this grass, he sees something in the distance, just
laying down in the grass. The closer he gets, he can start making the outline of a body,
and it's the decomposed remains of a woman. Now, immediately he calls the police, and while
the remains are too decomposed when the police arrive to identify this victim just by looking at
her. The woman does have something on her that helps police make a positive ID. Now, one source that I
read said that it was this dental plate that she had in her mouth. Another source coming from the St. Louis
dispatch said that she still had her fingerprints intact. We don't know exactly how the positive
ID was made, but regardless, she's able to be identified as 36-year-old Teresa Wilson. And aside
from her identification, just by looking at her body, the police can tell a few things about the scene.
One, foul play was definitely involved. Two, Teresa was killed somewhere else and then her body was dumped in this location.
And three, this type of crime was not unusual for this area. And actually, it was starting to become much, much more common.
Now, after learning the identity of the body, investigators learned a couple more things about Teresa's life.
leading up to her death. In the spring of 2001, 36-year-old Teresa Wilson was living in Baden,
a predominantly black neighborhood in St. Louis, Missouri, about 12 miles from where her body was
ultimately found. It's a place where about a quarter of the population is living well below the
poverty line. And Teresa was described as being somewhat of a latchkey kid growing up. Her parents
left her to her own devices a lot, and typically, you know, latchkey kids can get into trouble,
but Teresa really didn't in her childhood.
She always had really good grades.
She didn't really mess around with drugs or alcohol.
However, she did get pregnant when she was 17 years old.
And she was faced with this really tough choice that a lot of teenagers in that position have to make.
Does she stay in school or does she drop out and work to support her baby?
And ultimately, she decided that she was going to drop out.
Over the years, Teresa continued living in Baden.
She gets a job in downtown St. Louis.
But at some point in her 20s, it seems like she really started to struggle.
And it's, I mean, doing the research on this,
It's kind of hard to read about.
But at some point, Teresa began using cocaine, and she developed this really devastating addiction to it.
And this was happening at the height of what was known as the crack epidemic, and cities like St. Louis were hit especially hard during this time.
You're going to hear about that actually a lot in this story, the amount of crack that was, like, unfortunately spreading around these communities.
Then around 1993, 28-year-old Teresa had some issues with law enforcement.
She was arrested a few times, once for shoplifting, then for theft, and then for some offenses
related to sex work.
Teresa was engaged in the sex work industry, and she typically found her clients on a
famous stretch of Baden's Main Street Broadway, and it was nicknamed the stroll.
This continued for a couple of years, and then in the winter of 2000, 36-year-old Teresa went to
rehab. Afterwards, though, it seems like she still continued to struggle. Just a few weeks after she
graduated from rehab in 2001, Teresa relapsed, and she returned back to sex work. And in early May of
that year, she got into a strange man's car, and she never made it home after that. It was just a few
weeks later that her body was discovered in that tall grass. Teresa's body was found at a time
when the police were dealing with a lot of murder cases, both in and around St. Louis,
but especially in East St. Louis. East St. Louis and St. Louis, for those that aren't familiar
with the area, are different cities. They're right next to each other. East St. Louis is just over the
border from Missouri. It's in Illinois. And for many years, it had the highest murder rate in the
country, almost 20 times the national average. That's insane. It's insane. And we have here that
75% of those murders went unsolved. And I was reading something recently, too, that said that one of the
the reasons for high crime rates can be unsolved murder rates.
Like if you live in an area where the murder rate, where the unsolved murder rate is really high,
I mean, think about it.
People just feel like they can get away with murder.
So it's going to happen a lot more.
And so, yeah, unfortunately, that was just the reality of the time.
Now, between February and May in 2000, the year before Teresa died,
four sex workers that were all black women in their 30s were found dead in East St. Louis.
and they were dumped in a weed-covered field near a railroad bridge.
Police felt confident back then when they found those bodies
that those four East St. Louis murders were all committed by the same person.
But when they found Teresa's body, they did not think it was done by the same person.
Her murder, at least to them, felt like it was this isolated case.
But after they spoke to the Illinois State Police,
they learned about another victim who had died about six weeks before Teresa's body was found.
and her case and that case had a lot of similarities.
In March of 2001, 33-year-old Elisa Greenwayd was a sex worker who, like Teresa, also struggled with a cocaine addiction.
And also, like Teresa, she worked on the stroll in Baden, and she had recently lost custody of her two children.
But unlike Teresa, she did have a safe place to stay.
So after some time in jail, Elisa met a reverend named Inuka Munguzzi, who took in women who were struggling with substance use disorders.
And Elisa loved this reverend.
She even referred to her as mom.
And the reverend really worked with Elisa.
She kept counseling her.
She was hoping that she would find her way with some time.
But Elisa would continue to kind of backslide.
She kept using cocaine.
She kept doing sex work.
One quote that we have from Reverend Mungozy about this is she felt trapped, you know.
And she knew that what was happening with her was wrong.
It was not good for her.
She knew all of this.
What she didn't know.
was how to get out of it. And on the night of March 31st, 2001, things took a turn.
That evening, Elisa called the Reverend from a customer's house, saying that she was going
to spend the night there. And to the Reverend's surprise, Elisa actually put the man on the phone.
And then she calmly explained that they had just met and she was going to spend the night at his
place. After some small talk, Reverend Mungozy let the man know, quote, you got my girl over there.
She even said that people would look for Elisa if she didn't.
come home. And this man told her, quote, you don't have to worry about her tonight because she's
with me and she's safe. And those last words, she's safe, would go on to haunt the reverend for the
rest of her life. Because nine hours later, on April 1st, 2001, Elisa's partially clothed body was found
in Washington Park, Illinois, just north of East St. Louis. And she also had been moved there after
her death. They determined that the cause of death was strangulation, and
And the medical examiner also found ligature marks on her wrists and ankles, along with evidence of cocaine and alcohol in her system.
Plus, there was something else at the scene.
And this was a detail that seemed like a pretty big deal to investigators.
One that if examined closely, they thought could unlock what kind of car the killer drove, which brings us to our first clue, a tire track.
It was right near Elisa's body.
experts actually determined it was from a Bridgestone Potenza.
These were performance tires oftentimes used for sports cars or amateur racing.
So it told them that this killer might be a car enthusiast.
It's a very specific tire.
I know.
I was going to say, I imagine it's not super common.
Not your typical all-season tire you get at your Costco.
Yeah, I've mentioned this in the Moro-Murie episode.
I know nothing about cars, though.
So maybe in the area everyone had these tires.
Yeah, no, these were pretty specific tires.
And at the time, Elisa's death seemed like a random one-off murder and not related to any other murders in the area.
Okay, I think that's a mark.
But then, six weeks later, Teresa's body was found across the border in Missouri.
That's when the neighboring states started comparing notes and realized our second clue, the killer's pattern, which...
Okay, yeah, you know, we do know how difficult it is for these different agencies to talk,
and especially when it, you know, crosses state lines.
But still, come on, you guys.
Yeah, different departments.
It does, yeah.
But you also, you had four other women killed and dumped in a field.
Like, there's clearly a big issue going on here.
Something's happening.
Something's happening.
And when these multiple murders happen around the same time and place,
obviously police want to know if they're connected.
As you all know, the best way to figure this out is through the forensic evidence,
the hard evidence, like fingerprints,
DNA, ballistics pointing to the same murder weapon.
But when there's none of that, police turn to case linkage analysis,
essentially looking at the offender's behaviors, their MO, as we've learned about in past episodes.
Case linkage analysis, though, isn't perfect.
According to a study published in the Journal of Investigative Psychology and Offender profiling,
killers behavior can change over time for many reasons.
so it's always difficult to say for certain if two murders are connected without that forensic evidence.
But in this case, it was extra complicated.
For one, the bodies appeared in two different states, Teresa in Missouri and Elisa in Illinois,
which again meant that those two departments were going to have to really coordinate and share all of that info that they had
to make solving these cases easier or even possible.
And at this point, police were still pretty confident
that the first four murders in 2000 were not connected to Teresa or Elisa.
All of the women did have similar profiles in both sets of murders,
black sex workers in their mid-30s who suffered with substance abuse disorders.
But Elisa and Teresa both worked in Bata, Missouri, not East St. Louis, Illinois, like the others.
And they were found one at a time while the other four victims were found in pairs,
two and two.
Three of the other four women were found in garbage bay.
Teresa and Elisa were not.
The four bodies found in 2000 were also discovered near a railroad overpass in East St. Louis
called Black Bridge.
Also, Teresa and Elisa were both found in roadside ditches, appeared to have been strangled.
Like, they had a very similar ammo.
So police were confident that they were not connected.
They actually thought they're dealing with something even scarier, which is a new second serial killer in the area.
and soon they would get even more evidence for that theory.
Yes, because eight days after Teresa was found, on May 23rd, 2001, police got a call about another homicide.
The body of 46-year-old Betty James was found in an alley less than five miles from Baden.
And sadly, I mean, we looked into this.
There's not a lot of information out there on Betty's life.
The few things we do know about her was that she was black.
She was believed to be a sex worker.
and she did have cocaine in her system at the time of her death.
And I wish we had more information than just that on her.
But that is at least enough for the police to believe that this is connected in some way to the crimes that had been happening.
We also know about her that she was tied up with duct tape and that she was beaten, which was similar, at least in the cops' mind when they see this, they think it's similar to the ligature marks that they saw on Elisa's wrists.
Something else noted on Betty's body, though, was a tire track.
And you guys are like a tire track on her body?
Yeah, you guys.
Her leg had been run over from her ankle to the middle of her calf,
which brings us to our third clue, another tire track.
Investigators thought that maybe the killer after dumping Betty's body
had accidentally ran her over.
And police immediately wondered,
is this the same vehicle from Elisa's crime scene?
We have the Potenza tire track.
However, when they compared the tire print from Betty's leg, they determined that it came from a good rich advantage tire, not a Bridgestone Potenza, which doesn't immediately rule out that it is the same person. It could mean that they drove a different vehicle or changed tires. But it was going to take a lot more to identify a suspect. But at this point, police do believe that the person who killed Elisa Greenway also killed Teresa Wilson and Betty James.
I know. In my mind, too, I'm like, it's really sad to think about, but could just someone else have hit her and not realized?
I know.
Could it just have been a tire from a totally different car?
I know. It's hard, but like that's like literally all they really knew at this point.
Right.
Kind of grasping at straws.
And this meant that the killer was still out there, potentially about to strike again before they could find them.
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Hey, before we jump back into the show, let's take a quick break. But not just any break. This is a
refreshing break with Snapple. We all know about Snapple's iconic real facts, so let's take a minute to go over
some of my favorites. Snapple Real Fact, 964, it is illegal in the United Kingdom to handle salmon
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Snapple Real Fact 2033. Americans consume
150 million hot dogs on July 4th. Snapple Real Fact 705. Every ton of recycled paper saves about 17 trees.
So grab a Snapple, take a second, and enjoy the moment. Because let's be honest, this might be
the most refreshing part of your day. Snapple. Make your break more interesting. All right, now let's get back to
clues. Well, just a month later, a fourth victim was unfortunately added to this list. On June 29th,
2001, 36-year-old Verona Roney Thompson was found dead near West Alton, Missouri.
Rony was last seen six days before leaving a party in Washington Park, Illinois, near where
Elisa's body was found.
She was also believed to be a sex worker.
She did have hard drugs in her system when she died.
Roney's body was too badly decomposed when she was found to determine a cause of death, but
it was the location that made police pretty certain that these murders were all concerned.
connected because she was found just 16 feet away from where Teresa was discovered.
Literally full-blown chills.
Which meant now the police realized they were clearly dealing with a serial killer.
Clearly.
And it was time to bring in more resources.
So sometime that summer in 2001, police in Illinois and Missouri quietly formed a task force to
help find the serial killer.
We love a task force in this house.
Yeah.
And to do this, they called the FBI for help because they have a,
all of the profilers for serial killers,
but they wanted to keep it out of the news
because they figured if it was too publicized
that the killer might catch on to what they were doing
and maybe go quiet or run away, basically.
Because the victims had so many similarities,
detectives combed the streets
because they wanted to talk to people
who might have known the victims.
For obvious reasons,
a lot of the sex workers that they talked to
did not want to talk to the cops,
even when detectives offered to pay them for information,
which when I read that too,
I was like...
I've never even heard of that.
Oh, yeah.
Really?
Yeah, but the problem with that is sometimes people will like remember things for money.
So it gets really dicey when you start paying people for information.
Yeah, I mean, we saw that in our Natalie Holloway case where a reward was offered and it went up and people started making up these stories and bringing the police on these goose chases to get the reward.
And it's like, yeah, it could incentivize in the wrong way.
And it didn't even do that though.
These sex workers were like, we don't care.
We're not talking to you.
We don't trust you.
And no matter what they did, it didn't turn up anything useful.
But the clock was ticking.
There was this killer out there.
And from what we know now, they were already plotting their next move.
So on August 25, 2001, less than two months after Roney's murder, another body was found in a patch of weeds in East St. Louis, Illinois.
This time, it was a 50-year-old woman named Yvonne Cruz.
She was also believed by officers to be a sex worker.
she also had cocaine in her system at the time of her death,
and Yvonne lived with her mother who last saw her leaving their house in St. Louis, Missouri, the day before she was found.
Now, Yvonne also had ligature marks on her wrists, suggesting that she had been bound before she was killed,
similar to that of the other victims.
She also had scrapes on her knees, and she had either been smothered or strangled.
Yvonne's crime scene revealed a pretty critical clue for investigators, though.
and kind of a huge mistake that the killer left behind, but hey, I like it.
And this would really get the ball rolling in this case.
Police technicians used an essay evidence kit to look for DNA on Yvonne's body,
and they were able to recover semen enough to complete a DNA profile for analysis,
which brings us to our fourth clue.
But the other shoe is dropping.
There were some minor issues that investigators had to acknowledge.
This wasn't guaranteed to be the killer's DNA since Yvonne could have had sex with someone else before she was killed.
Another thing, back in 2001, DNA databases weren't as big as they are now.
Neither Illinois nor Missouri had even begun collecting DNA from convicted felons yet.
I think in Illinois, that one happened for another year.
In Missouri, it was like three years away.
And so they don't have this big database.
I mean, we talk about KOTUS quite a bit.
It wasn't vast as it is now.
Right.
But we do see in a lot of the cases we cover that they hold on to some of that DNA for later.
And then that's how a lot of these matches are made.
So at least there was a little bit of foresight.
But yeah, they were still really hopeful because at least now they had a sample.
They had something ready for comparison that when they did find a suspect, their suspect, they had something.
Right.
It's just so unfortunate to see that they weren't able to really track anyone down at this point because it does not take very long for the killer.
strike again after these crimes. On October 8th, 2001, six weeks after Yvonne was murdered,
33-year-old Brenda Beasley was found dead in East St. Louis, just two miles away from where
Yvonne's body was found. Her eyes and her arms were bound with tape. She had been struck in the
head and she had been suffocated. She was found wearing just her jeans, which were pulled down
around her ankles. Brenda also had some similarities to the other victims. She was a sex worker.
She also struggled with a cocaine addiction.
But two days after her murder on October 10th, her family actually came forward and shared a more intimate version of Brenda with the St. Louis Post Dispatch.
So luckily, we do have more information on Brenda other than just the circumstances that surrounded the way that she died.
Her family said that she was a mother of four.
Her children lived with her mother in Ferguson, Missouri, which was six miles from Baden, where Brenda lived with her boyfriend.
And while police claimed that she was a sex worker, because remember, the police are the ones seeing these women being like sex worker, sex worker, like that must have been a sex worker.
Her family actually came forward and said she was not a sex worker.
She worked a full-time job at Hardee's, which was a fast food restaurant near the stroll, which again, the stroll is where everyone is walking up and down doing sex work.
But Brenda herself worked up the Hardys that was located on this strip.
Now Brenda had to walk a lot of places because she didn't.
have a car, which is what she was doing out around midnight on Sunday, October 7th.
She was walking home along that long strip of road where men would cruise around looking for
sex workers. Now, Brenda had been drinking for several hours. She was planning just to head home
and call it a night. She couldn't really afford to miss any work. She really needed the money
for her daughter's 10th birthday that week. But instead, sometime between Sunday night and
Monday morning, she got picked up by someone, and that person was the killer because her family
never saw her alive again. Like Yvonne, Brenda's body was examined with an essay evidence kit,
and again, investigators were able to recover enough semen for a DNA profile, which is clue
number five for us. When investigators compare the samples from Yvonne and Brenda, they learned that
the two unknown DNA samples were indeed a match, which made it official. They now. They now,
had forensic evidence to prove a link between at least two of the murders.
By mid-October 2001, the bodies were adding up and no one could ignore the fact that something
horrible was happening. Elisa Greenway, Teresa Wilson, Betty James, Roney Thompson, Yvonne Cruz,
and now Brenda Beasley. Six. Plus, there was another victim, 61-year-old Mary Shields,
but police, it seems like they were on the fence as to whether or not she was a
another potential victim.
I mean, her body was found 10 months before Elisa's on July 31st, 2000.
Now, police believed that she was most likely part of the murders that we've been talking
about, the Teresa and Elisa group of murders, rather than those four others from East
St. Louis, just based on the details of those other women being found in pairs and in trash bags.
See, that doesn't, like, do it for me, though.
I'm like, when we look at other cases, we've had, like, Gilgo was kind of inconsistent.
consistent, some had burlap sacs, some didn't.
Right.
You guys don't really know anything right now.
You don't have a lot to go on.
So why be so conclusive that no, these are not connected?
Yeah.
And I'm curious, too, if they were, like, looking for another serial killer at the same time.
Like, they knew that those four were probably connected, but there's not a lot of information as to what they were doing about those four.
Just interesting to me.
Yeah.
Well, some of them were even questioning whether Mary was a victim of this serial killer at all.
because she didn't fit the profile of the others as far as age.
She was 30 years older than them.
She was also not a sex worker, even though now we know that one of them,
at least one of them, wasn't a sex worker as well.
But as the murders continue to go unsolved, the public grew more concerned.
At the time, no one even really knew that this task force had been created to look into these crimes.
But on October 28, 2001, about three weeks after Brenda Beasley's murder,
an article mentioned that different jurisdictions had actually...
begun working together. And for a little while, it seemed like this announcement did truly
make a difference because throughout the winter of 2001 into 2002, the murders came to a stop.
The police actually figured that the killer had died or he simply left the area or he went to
prison or maybe he was just laying low in the wake of all of this publicity. And so maybe because
of this, the community of sex workers in St. Louis were able to breathe this collective
sigh of relief because whoever was doing this was gone, at least for now. But that did not
last long at all. In early 2002, workers with the Illinois Department of Transportation found
three more bodies alongside highways in southwestern Illinois. One body was found on January 30th,
one was found on March 11th, and one was found on March 28th. In each case, the bodies had been
dumped months earlier. By the time they were discovered, they were just skeletons. And they had a few
items of clothing and jewelry on them, but the medical examiner could not determine a cause of
death for any of them. So the police called in this forensic anthropologist who determined that the
victims were all black women. The first two were thought to be in their 20s, while the third was
anywhere from her 20s to her 40s. They gave kind of a bigger range. The victims fit the same physical
profile as the identified victims, they all had been dumped out in the open, and plus,
the timelines all matched. They had all been killed during 2001 when the killer was active.
If these were additional victims of the same killer, his body count was now potentially up to
10. And none of this helped answer the bigger question, though. Was the killer actually gone,
or was this just a cool-off period?
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On May 19th, 2002, almost a year after Teresa Wilson's body was discovered, a reporter named Bill Smith shared her story in the local paper.
Now, I really want to give some credit to Bill Smith and others at this paper because according to Bill, this is why he wrote that article.
And we're going to play a clip so you guys hear it in his words.
These women, I felt, had stories and had lives.
And there was a need I felt, and some of the people at our paper felt also.
So to put faces in a humanity to these women.
Like, again, we talked about at the beginning, like, times have kind of changed
and how we maybe prioritize cases involving sex workers.
But, again, like, people were not treating these women, these victims, even with an ounce of humanity, it seems.
So I really applaud Bill in this moment.
And just caring about them as human beings.
Yes.
Yeah, they had stories, as he said.
They had these lives.
They were, a lot of them were mothers.
A lot were mothers.
For their children, just figure out what's going on.
A lot.
So, thanks to Bill, just five days later, he received a letter that was postmarked from May 21st, 2002, just two days after his profile of Teresa was published.
And at first, he kind of thought this was a prank.
I mean, it was, like, addressed really weird and the stamp that was an American flag was upside down.
Like, it just, he thought it was a prank.
but he quickly realized that in fact this letter was directly from the killer.
And this is our sixth clue.
The envelope obviously had a fake return address on it.
But the fake return address was I Throl Dom.
325-331, Lafayette Street, New York, New York, 10012, which I had to know what Throl Dom meant.
So you guys do too, unfortunately.
Apparently, Thraldom is the state of being a slave in bondage or under the complete control of another person.
It's a synonym for servitude and subjugation and can refer to physical, moral, or mental enslavement.
Thrall Dom is also the name of a bondage website.
And while the return address said New York, this letter was postmarked from St. Louis.
So it wasn't sent from anywhere else.
Which is so strange to me, I guess whoever sent this, like, didn't understand how the mail worked.
Yeah. I mean, clearly an idiot. But this letter, I mean, it looked really weird. I have a picture of it that you guys will see. But it had this, like, homemade-looking stamp on it. It was green ink and it had, like, fruit and, like, grapes hanging.
If you didn't read the contents of it, it looks like a letter from your grandmother. It's like a nice holiday-looking letter. Yes, it does.
We need a font expert to chime in. I'm sure someone could determine what.
it is, but it's like almost like a fake cursify-type font. And so this red ink on tan
stationary said this. Quote, Dear Bill, nice sob story about Teresa Wilson. Write one about Greenwayed.
Write a good one. And I'll tell you where many others are. To prove I'm real, here's directions
to number 17. Search in a 50-yard radius from the X. Put the story in the Sunday paper like the last,
End quote. Inside this letter was also a map of West Alton, Missouri, printed from a website.
They couldn't tell what website, though, because whoever sent this had cropped the borders
that would have displayed the URL and the website logo. An X was drawn over a spot on the map,
just off Highway 67, close to where Teresa and Roney's bodies were actually found. And Bill,
he showed this to his editors pretty quickly after he realized, hey, this is not a prank. This is
from the killer, and they turned the letter and envelope over to the police.
Unfortunately, police weren't able to recover any DNA or fingerprints from this letter.
They did quickly learn, though, what Ithral Dom was.
Again, we all know now.
And this made a lot of sense to police, as nearly all of the victims did show signs of being
bound before their death.
Investigators also followed up on that map, and on May 25, 2002, it became
clear that whoever had sent this letter and MAP was in fact the real killer.
When searching the area near the X, they found another body.
She was a black woman who had been killed months earlier and was unidentifiable due to decomposition.
Her cause of death, again, couldn't be determined.
But now that police knew that this was indeed their killer, they keep going back to the fact
that this letter referred to this victim as number 17.
Yeah, when I read it, that was the first thing that jumped out.
to me. He said 17. And we've been keeping track this whole time and police at this point only think
there's 10. Maybe 10 if we're counting Mary. And so we're at like nine potentially. So the fact that
there's that many women, that many victims potentially missing, I mean, they're in a tailspin.
Yeah. Like either he's bragging about more murders than he'd actually committed or again,
like there's more people out there to be found. In the meantime, the Illinois State Police have an idea
about how they could catch this person, though.
So as we just talked about, like, the killer did crop that URL after printing the map
from the website.
Police kind of figured that if they could find out what site that map came from.
Like, there were multiple providers.
I was a MapQuest person.
There was a bunch of other different providers.
They figured that if they could find out what provider that was, they could go to that provider
and say, hey, these are the coordinates.
Can you track or provide us what IP?
address requested.
Those specific coordinates.
Who made that search for that specific area?
Can you tell us that?
Boom, they'd just have them.
Yeah.
They assumed this would likely lead right to their killer, which is clue number seven
for us tracking the map.
Back in 2002, it wasn't super easy to get maps online.
Like, I remember traveling across the U.S. with my dad and, like, having the big
book that you'd like trace the Atlas.
I always remind my dad of that every time he,
at me for looking at my phone to go somewhere. I'm like, you used to have like 17 pages out on the
dashboard. Yeah. Screaming at all of them. Yeah. I remember printing off MapQuest directions to go
from Duluth, Minnesota to Minneapolis. And it was like two freaking turns. But still, I had my
MapQuest printout ready to go. But that's interesting because back in the day, there weren't a lot of
places you could get maps online. So even the police, if they don't know the website because they don't
see the URL, I would think there's only like a handful places that it could be. Yeah.
And it wasn't before long that analysts with the Illinois State Police eventually narrowed down the list to just one website.
Expedia.com, which was actually owned by Microsoft.
And for those of you that don't know, because I feel like it's just common lingo now, it's just like we don't really know what it means, but we know what it is.
An IP address is a unique numerical label assigned to every device connected to a computer network that uses the Internet protocol for communication.
So internet protocol equals IP.
And so essentially this IP address is like a direct mailing address for that device.
It basically can reveal the approximate location, but it doesn't actually provide a precise home address, which I found to be pretty interesting.
Which also you take for granted how little people knew about technology back then.
Like the person who was doing this probably didn't know that it would have been so easy for them to just find him.
Yeah.
Because I just, we talked about this with BTK.
as well. This was around the same time that BTK was asking the cops if floppy disks could be tracked.
Like they just, this stuff was relatively new. It was. People didn't know that, hey, when I use it,
I'm basically leading authorities right back to me. Yeah. And I mean, we've talked about MapQuest and
Expedia, but like there weren't apps. Like Google Maps was not a thing. Like, you don't have Apple Maps on
your iPhone. The technology, even though it's not that long ago, was vastly different. But they knew
that like, okay, this is coming from Expedia.com. So next, investigators sent Microsoft and Expedia
a subpoena. They wanted every IP address who had searched for a map of West Alton between the day
of Bill's article, May 19th, and the day that the letter was mailed, May 21st. So, I mean,
they had a pretty tight window at least. You have the website, you have the dates, and you have the
coordinates. Mm-hmm. And Expedia responded with only one IP address.
IP 65.227.106.78. The user assigned to that number had clicked to zoom in on this specific area in West Alton 10 times until the map on his screen looked exactly like the version that was sent to investigators.
Wow.
After submitting another subpoena to the internet service provider who supplied that IP address, they were able to.
to trace it to a home in Ferguson, Missouri on June 3rd.
Like a week later.
Just a week later.
And I will, I'll give them credit here.
I feel like this is a bit of a Sherlock moment.
Even like back then, limited technology, internet's pretty new.
All of this stuff is kind of new for investigators.
Like, they were moving pretty quick on this IP address and stuff.
I think it also is kind of kismet that it was sent to Bill who really seemed to care about
the women involved and really wanted to see this solved.
So when, of course, it's like he gets the biggest clue that is what could lead them to the killer.
I mean, he cracked it.
Yeah.
He cracked it.
Because what investigators find when they get this IP address back, it was from a home that was owned by an older woman named Sandra Travis.
Based on, you know, the DNA evidence that police found at the crime scenes, though, they did suspect that they were looking for a man.
I mean, some of it was semen.
They were definitely looking for a man.
man.
Seaman, you guys.
It was jizz.
So it turns out
Sandra wasn't living
at the house,
but her 36-year-old
son,
Mori, was.
And to really hammer home
that they had the right guy,
when Microsoft
handed over the IP address
to investigators,
they also were able
to provide this
like Microsoft
screen name
that like this account
was going by.
And that username
was literally
Mori Travis. First name, last name. First name, last name, just smushed together there. The home was
placed under around the clock surveillance at that point, and it wasn't long before they had enough
evidence to make an arrest. While surveilling the house in June of 2002, members of the task
force saw Mori taking out the trash. So they caught a ride with the garbage collectors and intercepted
Mori's trash without his knowledge. That's how we actually get our eighth clue, a used plastic
spoon. Within a day, the crime lab retrieved DNA from it. It was a match to the unknown DNA retrieved
from the bodies of Yvonne and Brenda, but without being able to say who exactly used that spoon,
they couldn't prove it was Mori's DNA, not yet at least. Well, on June 7th, police and the FBI not
on Mori's door with a search warrant. And Mori reportedly complained, quote, it's seven in the
morning. Why are you here so early? That's what he said to them when he answered the door.
And the detective said, quote, you're right. It's seven o'clock in the morning. And we're serving a
federal search warrant. And Mori said, okay, why are you here? And they said, you know why we're here.
And Mori just dropped his head and agreed. He said, yes, I know why you're here. And he proceeded to let
investigators into his home where he talked to them for over two hours. Just sitting there on the
couch in the living room, just chatting away for a couple hours. And you read something about his cat?
You guys, this is the like weirdest tidbit rabbit hole piece of information I went down. So I read an
article where they interviewed one of the main like investigators, Sacks. And Sacks like described this.
Like they're just casually chilling on the sofa asking questions. And Mory had like a calico cat that
kept wandering about, you know, in between the investigators and brushing past their legs.
And, like, when the cat would do this, investigators would reach down and pet the cat.
Mori was pissed about this.
Like, he was visibly getting, like, irritated by the fact that investigators were touching
his cat.
And so finally, he, like, picked the cat up from the floor and, like, put it on the couch
next to him.
And investigators kind of noticed that, like, he just had to be in control of the situation.
Like, he was constantly redirecting all of it.
of their questions and just like needed to be in control. Yeah, like they would ask him something and he
would just not answer and he'd try to move the question to a different topic. Yeah, a little bit of
deflecting. Yeah, exactly. And eventually, investigators just straight up told Mori that they found him
through the map that he printed and sent to them. And Mori response, quote, expletive computer,
damn internet, which I mean, come on. It's probably, yeah. But who was Mori Travis? Let's rewind just a little bit and talk
more about who this guy was.
So at the time that police showed up to his house,
he was 36 years old and he worked as a waiter
in Manchester, Missouri. He was born
on October 25th, 1965.
He moved to Ferguson with his parents
when he was about 10 years old. His parents
divorced when he was 13.
Other than that, he had no childhood traumas.
And this is like trigger warning animal abuse.
We do know that he was killing animals
in the neighborhood. There was like reports of a
neighbor's dog that he may be killed.
This came out much later in his life.
though.
Yeah.
A lot of the people that were close to Mori when he was growing up didn't really think he was
that off as a person.
No, I saw one neighbor that was like, he wouldn't hurt a fly.
Teachers and neighbors remembered him as being quiet, shy, and withdrawn.
But it seems like he came out of his shell long enough to make a lifelong friend named
Kadeza, who described Mori as being a big brother figure and that he taught her how to drive.
Mori graduated high school late.
He was 19 years old in 1985 when he graduated.
And afterwards, he spent two years in the Army Reserves working as a medical and dental assistant.
After that, he went to Morris Brown College in Atlanta.
And according to Mori, while he was there, he developed an addiction to crack.
And that cost him nearly $300 a day.
In 1988, 22-year-old Mori used a plastic toy gun to rob five stores so that he could have money for more drugs.
And that earned him a 15-year prison sentence, but he was released after just five years.
and that was June of 1994.
After his release, he was 28 years old and he moved to Ferguson,
where he made an impression amongst his neighbors as being quiet and polite.
People described him as being this really polite neighbor,
but he was still living with this addiction that he had.
And in February of 1998, when he was 32 years old,
he went back to jail, this time for possession and for violating his parole.
And that December, he was released into a rehab program
where he stayed until May of 1999.
Afterwards, Mori worked various restaurant jobs.
He started being very vocal as well about hating drug use.
A coworker remembered him saying, quote,
crack and heroin were the worst thing that God put on this earth.
In the absence of drugs, he spent his time and his money on these new hobbies that he had developed.
He bought himself a 2000 black Mitsubishi eclipse,
and he spent his days off working on it.
And it's around this time, too, that people started noticing a little bit
bit more red flags about Mori. He mentioned to a co-worker that East St. Louis was, quote, a good
place to dump things because police weren't very attentive in that area. The conversation was about
a friend's car that had been stolen, but still, when Moray's co-worker heard this, they thought it was
just a weird thing to say. Yeah, who's dumping things? Dumping things. Like talking about a car or two,
it's like easy to dump things there because the police don't pay attention. How would you know that?
Well, that feeling grew in July of 2001.
At that point, these murders had already been taking place,
when Mori met that same co-worker's girlfriend.
At the time, she was interning for a TV news program,
and Mori suggested that she cover a story about a serial killer targeting sex workers.
He claimed that he had friends who knew about bodies being dumped,
that he had some sort of insider information into this.
And that was three months before the police said they were.
we're looking for a serial killer targeting sex workers.
It was not on anyone's radar.
And he brings up that he thinks it's a serial killer.
And it was also almost a year before he became a suspect.
Which, I'm sorry, like, coworker, you're getting a little bit of a botched mark there
because I got your civilian.
But when you hear crazy, crazy like that, you should maybe tell someone.
Maybe you should tell the police.
I know.
And she worked for a TV news program, too.
She didn't say anything to anyone.
Well, and it's like if the police aren't connecting this and they're not talking about it in the news and you have your coworker making claims that like, oh, I know someone who knows the serial killer and where they're dumping bodies.
How do you know about this?
What do you mean?
The news isn't talking about this.
I'm a news reporter.
Yeah.
Come on.
Yeah.
Tell someone something.
I know it's interesting.
No flags were raised.
They could have reported it.
And then maybe he would have gotten a tail put on him.
And you would have caught him how many months sooner and how many people could have been spared?
No, I know.
I know.
That botched.
Well, also, four months later, Mori gets picked up on drug charges and he goes to jail between
November of 2001 and March of 2002.
And at that point, whoever was doing the killings had gone quiet.
So it definitely matched up with the timeline of the killings as well.
That was when the killings had mysteriously stopped.
And that brings us to the police.
being in Mori's living room having this conversation with him.
And I mean, just on the map alone, you think that they have enough to really make an arrest.
But there was a lot more evidence collected in Mori's home during that visit.
When they searched Mori's basement, it was obvious that this was a crime scene.
And this basement is our ninth clue.
The basement had one main room with a hallway and a couple of other bedrooms off the hallway.
investigators immediately, just like even upon going down the stairs, they were met with just a horrible, rancid smell.
And one of the investigators said that, like, he could tell that someone had tried to use like a frieze or something to cover the smell.
But it didn't work.
It just reeked down there.
That always makes it so much worse too when you have something that smells bad and you just try to spray something on it.
Yeah, because then it's the horrible smell plus the deodorizer.
Yeah, it's just disgusting.
And when investigators really opened their eyes and just took a look about, they noticed that there was blood pretty much everywhere.
The walls, the furniture, the floor.
I mean, I saw a couple pictures where they peeled back the carpet and the blood spots that pooled.
I mean, there was a lot of blood in this basement.
There was one room that was like off the hallway and kind of towards the end of the hallway, and this was where his computer was, where there was like a mattress.
And one investigator describes the color the room was as like this disturbing blue.
It had gray carpet.
And when they opened the closet door, that wasn't painted the blue color.
It was left unpainted, just like a white.
And there was blood spatter.
They could see everywhere in it.
Did they think that he had painted the blue over all of the blood?
then maybe.
They didn't really say, but that was a question I had or like was the blue, like, did they go with like an eggshell finish or something that was easy to wipe?
Like, I had a lot of questions about this basement.
When they started looking through things, they discovered various women's items like shoes, underwear, wigs.
They also discovered a stun gun.
When they went and started looking at the computer and the area around it, they noticed that there was a filing cabinet next to the computer.
Inside, officers found a backpack with a duct tape, straps, ligatures for strangulation,
and a stocking material that they assumed he used to cover his hands to avoid leaving fingerprints.
The computer had clearly been used to write the letter to Bill, the journalist,
because there were many drafts saved on the hard drive.
There was also a locked door, and when officers ended up breaking it down,
they immediately smelled decay.
Inside was a mattress with another bag containing duct tape, restraints, the stun gun.
In the closet, there were chains, more ligatures, boards with blood on them.
There was just like so much evidence that they gathered from this basement.
They actually had to set up an entirely new evidence room at the station just to store all of it.
Girl, winter is so last season.
And now Springs got you looking at pictures of tank tops with hungry eyes.
Your algorithm is feeding you cutoffs.
You're thirsty for the sun on your shoulders.
That perfect hang on the patio sundress.
Those sandals you can wear all day and all night.
And you've had enough of shopping from your couch.
Done hoping it looks anything like the picture when you tear up on that envelope?
It's time for a little in-person spring treat.
It's time for a trip to Ross.
Work your magic.
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Watch only on Prime. I read somewhere that they collected over a thousand samples of
blood in that basement and blood samples ended up matching six different victims.
Investigators also found this diagram that Travis had made showing plans for this new basement
extension.
Investigators also found this diagram that Travis had created showing plans for a basement extension.
And they concluded that he was going to build two cells in there.
where he would chain women up.
He was planning for these like little air vents
that went out into the basement
and there was no bathroom facilities in the plan
and he had like made a list of things that he needed.
One thing on the list was adult diapers
so that he could keep these women captive
for long periods of time.
Like again, just like,
we knew this person was just depraved
but like, yeah, clearly,
like this is one of the worst,
I think we've encountered on this show.
He was making plans so that he could keep people in the basement for even longer periods of time.
Even longer.
And you guys, it gets so much worse when we get into clue number 10.
Mori had a whole bookshelf of VHS tapes in the basement.
And you guys, this next section is going to get pretty graphic.
So please skip a hat if you can't handle it.
Most of them looked like they were just home videos or kid movies.
but when investigators started looking at some of these tapes,
on one tape, they saw a 46-year-old Betty James being tortured.
Another tape labeled Your Wedding Day showed Maury torturing some of his other victims,
though the tape wasn't labeled which victims they were.
Another tape showed Maury strangling a young woman while she was chained to a wooden beam
in that very basement.
After her body goes limp, he turns to the camera and says,
quote, this is first kill. Number one. First kill was 19 years old. Name? I don't know. I don't give a
blank. I don't give a expletive. First kill was nice. End quote. Now, these tapes are beyond
disturbing. I don't want to play any clips for you guys because like they are genuinely.
Are they even out there for people to watch? There are some of these recordings out.
there that have been released and they're horrible. Like this man was truly one of the most sick,
psychologically torturous out there. And I mean, he would like degrade these, you know,
these women in these clips, but he would go so far as to like shame them. Like don't you feel stupid
for getting in the car? Like your kids, who's taking care of your kids? Do you want to say sorry to your
kids. Like, it was horrendous. And so you have these women who are horrified and like they're
literally apologizing to their kids, their children. I mentioned it at the beginning too that the police
who watched these videos because they had to go through all the tapes were ordered to get mandatory
counseling afterwards because it was that horrible for them to watch. They were that bad. Just absolutely
horrendous. So the victim in the video that you mentioned, Morgan, that first kill, was not
not even someone that was on the police's radar at the time.
They would later identify her as 19-year-old Cassandra Walker.
She was described by her uncle as, quote,
a good kid who got off on the wrong track for a minute.
Cassandra's body was found back on March 24, 2001,
near Nashville, Illinois, 50 miles southeast of East St. Louis.
And if Mori was telling the truth in the footage,
and she was his first victim,
then the plan was always that he was going to,
kill again. I mean, if he's calling her number one, then this is obviously like a pattern he wants
to repeat. So in the letter that he sent to Bill, Mori said that he killed 17 women. So police
wanted to know who all of the victims were. Because counting Cassandra, if we count Mary
Shields, and all four of those still unidentified victims that were found before, that still only
gets the police to 12 victims. So they continued searching the house and the grounds.
And in the driveway, they found that there was two vehicles,
Mori's beloved Mitsubishi eclipse, and also a Chevrolet Cavalier.
The Cavalier's tires ended up matching the marks on Betty James's leg.
And the Mitsubishi's tires matched the tracks near Elisa Greenway's body.
And one thing, you know, as the police are starting to kind of like run around the grounds of Mori's house,
figuring out if they can, you know, find any other clues,
they also see that Mori has a girlfriend
who is in the house the entire time that this is happening
and somehow
police figure that she doesn't know anything about these murders
she tells the detectives I need to hear from the community on this one
because I don't know how
you are with someone who has a torture room in the basement
we literally covered a case like this on Hartzards Pounding
about this guy in Germany in the 80s
who had a torture room in his basement and a wife
And when they talked to the wife and they were like, how did you not know he had a torture room in your basement?
She goes, I never thought to ask. He always kept it locked. I figured it was none of my business.
Psychopath. And you too. You're roped in there, lady. That's your house and you don't, you're not curious what's in the basement at all.
You're not curious. You're married. Come on. Well, this one too, like you never go in the basement and see all of the blood everywhere. Like once you go into his basement, there's blood everywhere. Yeah, it's a parent. She said that she never even entered the basement one single.
time. The woman was identified as being a childhood friend of Mori's and a former neighbor. Her name
has never been released. The police did mention that they had only been together for two months when
Mori was arrested. So I guess maybe most of their interactions had happened outside of his home,
though I can't believe his house smelled normal. I mean, they did say immediately upon walking
downstairs, they could smell it. And so, I don't know. Maybe she,
had decreased smell, but like, I don't know, it's a very convenient story, I guess. Like, I just,
I find it very hard to believe that you knew nothing. Nothing. I remember I went on a date with a guy
once and I went to his house and he had bugs in his bathroom and I never ever called him back
ever again after that. Because even that, like, I just don't understand how you, like, your house
smells that weird and I don't know. No, my friend Lauren, literally, we just talked about this on an episode,
but she went into someone's house, like, after they had helped her move into her apartment.
And the guy was like, do you want to come back to my place for a drink?
Like, blah, blah, blah.
And she goes into his place and there were like axes everywhere.
What?
Yeah.
Axis.
Did he have an explanation as to what they were for?
She quickly left.
She didn't even wait to find out.
She made up some excuse and was like, bye.
You cannot hang out.
No.
No, no, no, no, no.
Oh, my God.
That's horrible.
I'm curious if you're listening, what is the most appalling thing that you've seen
someone's home. People were like kind of defending it in my comments on that episode. They were like,
that's not that weird. People have collections of stuff all the time. And I'm like, I feel like
then you warn someone like, hey, just, you know, I have axes on my wall. I like medieval
weapons. I don't know. It's still, hey, it's weird to me. I was going to say, it's weird to me.
I totally agree. Bugs. I didn't call someone back over bugs. So I feel like there's even like,
the bar is even lower than that. So Mori gets arrested on the same day that that search happens, June 7th,
2002. He was interrogated for eight hours, but he never revealed anything that the police didn't
already know. So investigators felt like Travis didn't even think that these women could be
considered victims. He definitely saw them as less than. And during the interrogation, he would say
things like, huh, victims when the police were showing him images of the women being like,
are these like the victims? He even went so far as to say that he didn't know any of them when he was
asked to identify these women. However, a few minutes after they asked him,
Travis asked if he could look at the photos of the dead women again.
And at that point, Detective Sacks told Travis that he never told him that those women were dead or that they had been murdered.
It was Mori who came forward with that information.
Gotcha.
And at one point, Travis can be heard saying, I'm toast. I'm toast.
He then goes off the rails and he offers to lead investigators to a body in St. Louis.
But when they started driving towards the location, he changed his mind and he demanded that they take him back to jail.
They did get another DNA sample out of that interrogation, though, after Mori drank out of a soda can.
And that matched DNA on the plastic spoon and the DNA from Yvonne and Brenda's bodies.
Because remember, they had only gotten a sample that they couldn't specifically say was his.
It had come from the trash.
From the house, but who in the house?
Right. They needed to, like, be looking at him in the eyes as he gave.
them a DNA sample. So now they had enough. Eventually, Mori refused to say another word without a
lawyer, so the police had to end the interview. And I will say here, like, this is something I thought
was really interesting and also kind of speaks back to our interview with Denise Huskins about
different interview techniques. So Sacks questioned Travis for nearly eight hours. And eventually he was
just like, okay, like, I'm good. Like, you're not giving me anything, okay. But he kept talking. Like, for
those eight hours he kept like talking like didn't ask for a lawyer and when he handed the interview
over to other detectives they immediately started a more like in your face confrontational interview
and in just 19 minutes with those other investigators Travis asked for an attorney and the interview
was stopped so I think it just goes back to again like what we talked about with Denise about like
interview techniques and how much they matter yeah that's so true that you can get someone to
talk for eight hours.
Yeah.
Or you can get them to ask for a lawyer after 19 minutes.
Eight hours, 19 minutes.
And like, if those techniques would have been continued, maybe you would have gotten more.
That's what, maybe.
We talked about Chris Voss, the FBI negotiator.
One thing he says during his negotiations when he's trying to get more information out of people is he just takes the last thing they said and he refraises it as a question.
Genius.
So, oh, you think that's genius?
And then you're like, yeah, it's really smart.
The way he does this.
Like, oh, you think that would make you crack.
And then they'll start like, oh, yeah, because people kind of get nervous and they'll just start
talking.
Oh, I'm a nervous overshare.
Same.
Oh.
Same.
And so it's amazing just to see how much you can kind of lure out of someone just by, like,
asking them questions.
Yeah, because they also, they just gave that information up willingly.
Like, yeah.
And so it's like, it's kind of a Jedi mind trick.
Yeah, that's really interesting.
I mean, if you talk for eight hours, he clearly wants to talk about this.
Clearly.
Clearly.
But after that 19 minutes, when he asked for.
a lawyer, he gets placed under suicide watch. And that happens while he's in his prison cell.
And there's a guard that's required to check on him every 15 minutes. But on the evening of June 10th,
this is just three days after Mori's arrest. The guard skipped two checks in a row between
7.15 and 8 o'clock at night. And that is when, if you believe, the way that police reported this
one down. Mori used a noose made out of a bed sheet to take his own life. He even went so far as to put...
You kidding me? Are you kidding? You kidding me? Two missed checks? Coloring the entire botched board.
Sorry, everyone. Sorry for your ears. I'm just like, I literally my stomach just dropped.
Two checks. I'm fucking sick. Two checks. That's a really, that's a long time to leave someone by themselves when
they've been on suicide watches for a few days. Yeah. Mori went so far as to put a tissue in his nose, a gag in his
mouth and a pillowcase over his head, which is why some people don't believe the official
police report that he did take his own life. It seemed like a little bit more than someone.
Like there was maybe some foul play involved. He was also somehow able to restrain his hands
behind his back. Yeah. So it did look really suspicious. Like Clayton Police and St. Louis
County Medical Examiner even agreed it was super odd. But suicide.
nonetheless, which I would have been a big mark.
And he did leave behind a note.
It was addressed to his mother.
But other than that, his last remaining secrets all went with him to the grave.
And again, like, think about that interview.
Like, he's now gone.
And because of those interview techniques, you only got 19 more minutes.
Like, just imagine if that had gone differently.
Yeah.
So how many victims were still out there?
At least five?
At least five.
that they didn't know about. I mean, he claims 17.
So this is what the note read.
He wrote,
Dear Mom, I'm sorry for the pain this caused you and the family.
My death seems to be the only way out and a fast end to all the publicity.
You were the best mother a man can have,
but I've been sick for a long time, sick in the head, since I was about 14.
I don't know why.
I was just sick.
I've never felt normal or happy at any time in my life.
I think about the life I lead and what is ahead of me.
This seems like the best solution for all involved,
especially me because I won't spend the rest of my life locked up or worse, let them kill me with a needle.
Tell grandma, Marina, James, and everybody, I love them dearly. I love you the most, but you know that forever your son, Toby Travis.
And there's a little image here too of it scrawled out. He like underlined a couple points to really highlight that.
He like underlined normal and happy. I won't underlined spend the rest of my life locked up.
won't let them kill me.
Like, it's all about you.
No, of course.
It's just, yeah.
When you read it, it's just, he's just so focused on what's going to happen to him and the publicity surrounding it.
He's not concerned about anyone else or about writing out the coordinates of the other bodies or any clues that would help investigators.
He only cares about himself.
Now, to this day, the police and the FBI are interested in any tips from the community about those five additional victims.
And if you have something to share, you can.
call crime stoppers at 866-371 Tips or visit tips.fvii.gov. But I will say there have been a
couple recent updates in this case. So let's go through. I'm just going to read out the names of the
suspected victims that we have. So number one being Mary Shields, then Cassandra Walker,
Alisa Greenway, Teresa Wilson, Betty James, Rony Thompson, Yvonne Cruz, Brenda Beasley.
And then this year, 2025, three victims.
previously just known as Jane Does were identified thanks to this new partnership that just
happened between Southern Illinois University Edwardsville students.
Students, you guys.
And Illinois State Police using forensic genealogy.
So these students were actually able to go through these old cold cases and positively identify
bodies that were just Jane Does.
And they identified Crystal Alicia Lay, Kelly Johnson, and Carol Hempthow.
And they were basically comfortable.
confirmed to be victims of mores. There's also a Charles County Jane Doe that gets added to this
list as number 12. Very likely still five, if not six out there, because Mary Shields still has
not conclusively been linked to Travis yet. So if Mary Shields isn't included in that list,
then we're only at 11 and there's six potential more victims out there. And honestly,
I'd be curious what you guys think about this. But I really,
don't think he was lying about 17. No, I don't think so either. And I think those women have
probably been found and are just Jane Does. Yeah, I saw somewhere. And I don't remember the exact
years, but it was like something like 341 people were found and they were unidentified between
like 2000 and 2018 or something like that. So there's a lot that is now being brought to light because
of this amazing partnership and this forensic genealogy. I mean, this just happened this year.
So I think there's a lot that is going to continue to be discovered with this technology.
I mean, those other four could still be, but they haven't been identified.
So as for the first four East St. Louis murders in the early 2000s, police still believe that those have
nothing to do with Travis. There was a man named Donald Young, who was arrested in January 2002,
after DNA evidence tied him to a sexual assault of another sex worker,
he was eventually charged with three of those killings and suspected of the fourth.
But after he was already in prison,
a key witness that was expected to testify against him
was actually killed in an unrelated stabbing.
The prosecution's case pretty much fell apart after that.
And after spending more than six years in a Missouri prison without being tried
for the East St. Louis murders,
the charges were dropped.
But Donald didn't go free.
He was actually extradited to Utah to face trial in another murder and sexual assault case.
He remains alive and in prison.
And in 2024, was charged in connection with another Utah cold case murder.
Wow.
So clearly murdering people, but whoever committed those first war crimes,
whether young or someone else was obviously targeting the same victim demographic as Travis.
and using the same area.
So it's kind of hard to know at this point
who really those victims belong to.
Like, honestly, I could see them being a part of Travis's 17.
Like, it kind of fits with M.O. and timeline.
Yeah, definitely.
And they say that M.O. can change over time to...
Yeah, maybe trash bags he felt were necessary,
but by the fourth, he's like, eh, whatever.
I don't really need them. No one cares.
Don't need them.
Yeah.
And then you don't see trash bags again.
And, like, it could be very likely.
And, you know, investears also wonder, like, did they know about each other if, if, you know, those weren't Travis's victims?
Like, did he know about young?
Right.
It is interesting.
But something else interesting that's happened since all of this went down is the house.
Like, a lot of people online are fascinated with Travis's old house, which belonged to his mother, Sandra.
The house actually made news for being rented out in 2014.
and the person that rented the house from Travis's mother, Sandra,
had no idea that this house was used in such a horrific way
that this was essentially like a serial killer murder house.
Yeah.
And they actually found out about it from like seeing a segment on like the TV as a documentary
about this serial killer and like, oh, that's my house.
Yeah, wow.
So they end up going to Sandra and being like, hey, you didn't disclose this to us.
we want to break our lease.
And she was like, hmm, no, no.
Some states have laws about that.
Some do.
It's state by state, but, uh, yeah.
Missouri at the time did not.
You only, I think at the time, I don't know if it's changed, but you only had to disclose
like damages.
Like, oh, the wall has a crack here, whatever.
Like, you had to disclose damages, but not killings.
And Justin, my husband actually lived here in L.A.
in a house that had a double homicide committed in it.
Was he told about it before you moved in?
He wasn't because he was renting.
So if you're selling the house, you have to disclose.
But even if it's like outside of the year limit, you don't have to disclose it.
So in L.A. I think it's like only three years or something like really short.
Yes.
And so.
There's the Ghostbusters ruling.
Have you heard about this?
No.
When is this?
Stambovsky versus Ackley.
What year?
It's from 1991.
Oh.
The court held that a house which the owner had previously advertised as being haunted by ghosts was legally haunted for the purpose of an action for recession brought by a subsequent purchaser of the house.
Basically, they were saying that because they had advertised as the house being haunted before the people had moved in, that they were legally required to tell the people that the house was haunted when they moved in.
Yeah, that makes sense.
But it became, so now it's like taught in U.S. law schools all over.
Okay.
And it's like the case that people point to to be like, well, how much do you have?
to disclose about a house as like dark past when you're talking about.
Yeah, it varies state by state. I don't think the laws are really good enough. I think it should
just stick with the house forever and you should know what you know. But this tenant was eventually
able to break their lease. So the house did end up selling in August of 2025. It was listed
at 84,500. However, when it sold on August 25th, 2025,
they kept the price redacted, but you can see some of the other history.
Like in February 4th of 2021, the rent was $1,000.
And it was removed a couple of days later, unclear if it was rented or if it was just removed because no one would rent it.
You can actually still find the Zillow listing.
We're going to put some house pictures in the YouTube video and on our Instagram.
But like, you can walk through this house in the Zillow listing.
I mean, you can see the whole basement.
The basement. The floor has been changed. Just no longer carpet. It's wood. But I mean, it's just insane. Like, it's insane. Like, I'm sorry. But this house should have been burned to the ground.
No, I know. Yeah. At a certain point, it's like, can you just get rid of the house?
It's so disrespectful. Like, burn it to the ground. The property, build a new house in the back. And I know, like, that is.
Yeah, but who's going to do it, right? I don't care who. Honestly.
No, it doesn't matter who, but no one's going to take on that financial burden.
All the little cluminati come together. If every clumonauty gives a dollar, we can buy the house and do a controlled burn with the fire department.
Because then it's giving back to the community because the fire department needs to learn new skills. And they do controlled burns on houses all the time.
Yeah, right. They have practice houses. Putting this out there for you guys, you know?
Just crazy. His mom went on to start a paternity testing company.
What? Wait, I did not see this.
Baby Maybe.
So, yeah, DNA testing caught her son and now she started a DNA company.
So it's like to make sure that the child is yours.
Like that's the company that she started.
A paternity testing company.
Wow.
Baby, maybe.
I didn't call Baby Maybe Maybe.
Baby.
Maybe.
I didn't not read about that.
That is wild.
Yeah.
So that's where we're at with this one.
I mean, there's a lot on Reddit.
You can go down the rabbit hole of like, did he actually commit suicide or was there some sort of cover up?
A lot of people on Reddit do not believe it was suicide, especially given the pillowcase over his head.
And the hands being tied behind his back.
I've seen a lot of comments on there questioning that.
I also found one comment that obviously cannot be verified.
This is all alleged information.
But someone did comment that two or more of the victims were the mothers of correctional officers.
and so a lot of people believe
like some sort of inside job
I mean you have someone who's been in police custody
for three days on suicide watch
and two checks get missed
two checks get missed
it looks like someone was in the jail cell maybe
kind of did that to him
I also wondered about cameras
like this was again 2002
but like were there no cameras
did we not have any comings and goings
I know in a lot of modern cases
camera footage disappears
No, I know, exactly. That's what I'm saying.
Like sometimes even having the cameras there doesn't really give us any answers.
I know.
A lot of speculation on that piece of this.
Yeah, it's interesting, like all the little rabbit holes that you can go down.
I went down on them.
Well, in East St. Louis, where Mori Travis left at least four of his victims, it's a place that's had a lot of violent crime for a long time.
But since 2017, the East St. Louis murder rate has dropped by almost half.
That's positive.
By 20, 23, their homicide clearance rate.
was up to 67%. That's from, what, like 25%. They had a 75% unsolved rate and now it's up to 67%
clearance. That's pretty good. And that's partly due to these public safety enforcement groups that
they started. They launched it in 2020. It's a partnership between the Illinois State Police and the East
St. Louis City Police and also some community-based groups. They're also working to make sure that
surviving victims and witnesses of violent crime get immediate trauma support and they're trying to
build more bridges within the community.
I do appreciate that because one thing we haven't talked about is there are survivors from
Laurie Travis.
And there's a YouTube interview I watched with one of them and she shares about her life
and just her circumstances.
And it's really sad, but she's lucky to be alive.
And one potential victim had so much brain damage.
Like, they're not.
So it's just good that the support's there.
It's great that the police that had to be.
to see the footage, were like forced to go to, or had to get counseling for that. But also,
if that's your loved one and you hear about that happening to them, like, you are also,
you need that. You should be entitled to some sort of support as well. Absolutely.
So you can learn more about community lifeline and their support work at community lifeline,
E-T-L-N-P.org. And with that, let's get to our missing person of the week.
This week we are highlighting the case of Kesheya Sylvester.
Kesheya has been missing since 922, 2017.
She went missing from Brobridge, Louisiana,
described as a female, black, 29 years old, 5 to 145 pounds.
Now, I will say there are very suspicious circumstances
surrounding Keshea's disappearance.
Her purse and cell phone were left behind at her home.
the food that she had made for dinner was left on the stove.
She didn't pick up her last paycheck from her job at a casino, and she also missed her daughter's prom.
This was all super uncharacteristic of her behavior.
She had really been looking forward to her daughter's prom, had already picked the hairstyle she
wanted her daughter to have for the event.
According to her family, prior to her disappearance, Kechia had seemed confident and happy,
and she kept in daily touch with her family and often visited her father,
only days after her disappearance, her landlord moved her belongings and the trailer in which she lived,
something that her family believes led to possible evidence being lost or destroyed.
Fow play is possible in her case, which still remains unsolved.
Keshe has not been found.
I saw in a recent update, computers and items were seized from the landlord, but nothing has been released at this time.
So if you have any information in regards to Kesheya and her disappearance, please contact the St. Martin's Parish Sheriff's Office at 337-394-3071.
Obviously a very suspicious case.
The landlord moving the trailer right afterwards within just a few days?
All of her belongings.
Everything gone.
Oh my gosh.
And like she went and visited her daughter before, like as she was getting ready for prom, like gave her some money or something.
Like for prom.
Like it's, she was supposed to go back and meet, you know, and see her daughter after.
So very, very suspicious.
So if you guys have any information, like, make sure it gets, it gets known.
Sounds like one of those ones where someone knows something.
Someone definitely knows something.
That is all we have for this episode of Clues.
As always, now you can share anything you want with us, your theories, your thoughts, feedback, anything on social media.
We love hearing from you guys.
We get a lot of our missing persons from the world.
week from you guys. Yeah, that's been a really, really impactful thing over the past year.
Seeing you guys show up in the comments again and again and subscribing. You know, we just
recently hit 50,000 subscribers. Yeah, thank you so much for that. It means the world.
Like, you know, we have such a great team here and we all put so much work into this show. So
seeing your comments, I literally read everyone. So thank you guys so much for your support and
adding your theories and continuing conversations about these cases.
and highlighting those that aren't very known.
Like, we really, really appreciate your support,
especially here at Crime House.
So again, share all those thoughts.
And remember to rate, review, and follow.
Subscribe to Clues, help others discover our show.
And we'll see you next time, guys.
Bye.
Bye.
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When someone goes missing, the headlines focus on what happened,
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I'm Sarah Turney.
After my sister disappeared,
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