Cold Case Files - Taken In Tacoma
Episode Date: March 28, 2023When 13-year-old Jennifer Bastian is abducted and murdered in August of 1986, residents of Tacoma panic. This is the second young girl killed in five months. Convinced a predator is loose, Police emba...rk on a 32-year inquiry to catch the killer. Check out our great sponsors! ZocDoc: Go to Zocdoc.com/ccf and download the Zocdoc app for FREE! SimpliSafe: Go to simplisafe.com/coldcase to claim a free indoor security camera plus 20% off your order with Interactive Monitoring! Quote your car insurance at Progressive.com to join the over 29 million drivers who trust Progressive!
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An A&E original podcast.
This episode contains descriptions of violence and sexual assault.
Listener discretion is advised.
It was alternately scary, frightening, and questioning.
I was terrified.
I was thinking some wacko is going to jump out of the bushes and grab me.
Who would have done this?
It had to be some completely bizarre pervert.
This was a case that I grew up with.
This was in the background of my childhood.
I was questioning whether we would have her back alive.
And I wanted to know what happened.
This is crazy.
We have two different killers.
There are 120,000 unsolved murders in America.
Each one is a cold case. Only 1% are ever solved. This is one of those rare stories. It's August 4th, 1986.
The weather is warmer than usual, and the sun is shining in Tacoma, Washington.
Tacoma is described as a blue-collar town, just over 30 miles from Seattle.
Although it's the third largest city in the state, Tacoma sits on the banks of the Puget Sound in the shadow of Mount Rainier.
One of the most popular places to visit in the area is Point Defiance Park,
a waterfront park filled with almost 700 acres of forests and hiking trails.
In 1986, it isn't unusual for children to go off around the park on their own or with friends until the disappearances of two young girls becomes a cautionary tale that
strikes fear into the residents of Tacoma. 13-year-old Jennifer Bastian is spending the
quiet summer morning with her mother, Patty. Jennifer was up. I got up. I think she got cereal.
I got coffee. And we just talked about the day. She was going to go on a YMCA bike riding trip.
It was a trip that was a little bit timid for her.
She was a petite gal riding a 15-speed bike
and trying to master that before the trip.
And so she was practicing every day.
Jennifer asks her mom for permission to ride her bike
to Point Defiance Park.
She's made the journey before with friends, but her friends aren't around,
so she heads off alone and leaves a note for her parents to say when she'd be back.
She wrote a note saying she'd be home by 6.30, but she wasn't there for dinner.
She wasn't there after she had said she would be.
It gets very scary.
We called a few friends, neighbors,
to see if maybe Jennifer had stopped off after her ride
to play with their sons or daughters.
And then we called the police.
It's worrying, not only for Jennifer's parents, Patty and Ralph,
but for her older sister, Teresa, too.
We were very close as a family.
My dad, you know, he had kids late in life, so I think he maybe appreciated being a dad even more than if he had had them as a younger man.
We had a great relationship. We had great fun.
I'm two years older.
I was definitely big sister material.
I was the more serious one. I was the more serious one.
I was the one who followed more rules.
Jennifer was a bundle of energy.
She was ready to go at a moment's notice.
She was always active, always in motion.
Our dining room was kind of open to the living room.
Jennifer would literally get down from the table
and go into the living room and start doing cartwheels and walkovers and gymnastics moves. She was having nothing to do
with the sitting still part. It's getting late and there are still no signs of Jennifer. My dad
picked me up from the movies and right when I got in the car, he said, Jennifer hasn't come home
from her bike ride yet.
And his voice cracked, and I could see he had been crying,
and I knew that something was very wrong.
I can't tell you what I was thinking. I can tell you I was feeling extremely anxious.
The police had come.
I didn't know what to expect the next would be.
The police pulled me aside.
They wanted to ask me some questions.
Were there things that maybe Jenny kept as a secret
that she wouldn't want her mom and dad to know?
You know, really, the answer to all of that was no.
We didn't have any secrets.
The police asked for a piece of her clothing
or something from her room.
Ralph and I both went into the bedroom.
We got a T-shirt or school peg or I don't know what it was,
gave it to them.
She could have fallen down, had a flat tire,
go through a whole litany of things that could have been.
Bloodhounds are brought in to track from Jennifer's house down to the park.
They follow her scent around the looping road known as Five Mile Drive,
but they can't find Jennifer or her bike.
As dawn approaches, the search intensifies.
The Five Mile Drive is closed down
while searchers on horseback, ATVs, and on foot
search through the vast expanse of Point Defiance Park.
There are areas of the park that are coastal,
and there's a chance that Jennifer could have fallen off a cliff
and been washed out to sea, but there's nothing to indicate that.
Flyers are printed and posted through North Tacoma,
and teams of 300-plus volunteers continue to look for Jennifer.
By day three of the search, the investigators start to
wonder if she is in the park at all. The Bastions are beside themselves with worry, but they find
comfort in knowing they aren't alone. I think it was on day two or three that the doorbell rang
and I answered it. There's a lady there and she said, are you Patty? And I said, yes.
And she said, I'd like to talk with you.
And introduced herself as Barbara Welsh,
Michelle's mom.
12-year-old Michelle Welsh
disappeared five months before Jennifer.
She was last seen riding her bike near Puget Park,
just miles from where Jennifer vanished.
Ten hours after Michelle was reported missing,
search dogs found her body.
She had been sexually assaulted and murdered.
The little girl's killing shocks the community,
and her mother Barbara reaches out to Jennifer's mom
as the search continues.
I know I felt sorry for her having just lost her daughter.
I felt just terrible.
It's a very, very brave move on her part to have come by.
It's been four long days since Jennifer vanished
and her family is desperate to bring her home.
I don't know if it was just what the default was,
but it really seemed the police felt that someone had kidnapped Jennifer
and was going to contact us for ransom in exchange to get her back.
On my dad's birthday, August 8th,
the press conference we did in the Point Defiance Park
was actually aimed to the kidnapper.
We were told that whoever took her would surely be watching the news
and would hear us talking.
It was like our plea to this phantom kidnapper.
As a result of the media coverage,
the investigators receive an influx of calls and reports
from people who saw Jennifer in the park on the day she went missing.
So they are certain she was there.
Detectives chase down every tip, but none of them lead to Jennifer. It's been just over three weeks
since Jennifer was last seen, and a member of the local YMCA running club is jogging through the
trails at Point Defiance Park. He notices a foul odor off one of the trails, so he calls the police.
They investigate, but they can't locate the source of the odor. Canine units with the Tacoma police
are brought in, but it takes two more days for a search and rescue team to make the grim discovery. On August 28th, 24 days after Jennifer vanished, her family's worst
fears became a horrifying reality. Detective Lindsay Wade was just 11 years old at the time,
but she recalls the details and public reaction when she was a child once Jennifer's body was found.
It was apparent to the investigators at the time that she had been sexually assaulted
just based on the positioning of her body and the positioning of her clothing when she was found.
The two cases of Michelle and Jennifer were so similar
that a lot of people thought there must be some deranged serial killer on the loose.
People were on edge. People were questioning, do we have a serial killer in Tacoma?
Is there going to be another victim?
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ZocDoc.com slash CCF. Every single day, a police officer named Pat O'Malley had been assigned to come in the morning
to inform the family of what the police were going to do to look for Jennifer today,
and in the evening, come and tell the family what the results of that were.
I never gave up. Never gave up hope.
It's the afternoon of August 28, 1986,
and Jennifer Bastian's mother, Patty,
has tried her best to remain optimistic
since her daughter's disappearance three weeks earlier.
Unfortunately, when the officers arrive at her home,
they deliver the news no parent wants to hear.
I distinctly remember around noon-ish being on the ladder painting.
I just heard the latch on the screen door go, and it was Pat walking in.
And he walked up to the ladder, and he reached up, and he took the paintbrush out of my hand,
and he helped me down the ladder and sat me on a chair, and he said,
We found her.
And truthfully, I can't remember who said
what or what was said or how it was said, but the two detectives that worked on the case were there
and explained as much as they could, as gently as they could. Tacoma police detective Jean Miller recalls the scene in Defiance Point.
Her body itself was positioned on its back, arms above her head, knees somewhat bent and out to the side.
Her bathing suit was pulled down to her right ankle.
Her bicycle was located maybe 60 feet away. Because
of the level of decomposition, it was very difficult to tell for certain, but there was a
ligature that was around her neck. And based on everything that we saw and everything that we knew,
we believe that was most likely going to be the cause of death. That was subsequently confirmed at autopsy.
The murder of a second young girl sparks a wave of fear through Tacoma, and the events of 1986 are cemented into the minds of people who know the area, like journalist Linda Byron,
Detective Wade, and Jennifer's sister, Teresa. I went to college in Washington State in Seattle,
and I remember hearing about both of the murders
and just being horrified.
There's nothing more all-American
than kids out riding their bikes in our parks,
in our beautiful state,
and to have two of them within a few months of each other
snatched off their bicycles, raped and murdered,
with no sense of who's out there doing this.
This was in the background of my childhood.
I was thinking some wacko
was gonna jump out of the bushes and grab me.
After that summer, I never rode a bike again.
It's September 5th, and the people of Tacoma
come together to support the Bastion family and say goodbye to Jennifer.
As we were leaving, I glanced up and saw that that foyer was filled with law enforcement.
Not in uniform. These were moms and dads.
These were family people who cared and felt and had journeyed with us.
That was a pretty powerful statement.
Tacoma police detectives enlist the help of the Green River Task Force
to investigate the number of incoming tips relating to Jennifer and Michelle's murders.
Based on the similarities between the two cases,
it was believed that the same person
must be responsible for both cases. So detectives were following up on the hundreds of leads that
were coming in. Fairly early on, there was a potential suspect identified. He, to some extent,
at least lived out of his van. The thing that was very compelling about him was that he spent a
great deal of time at Point Defiance Park
in the parking lot and somebody that there had been a number of issues with over the years. Once
he was identified as a potential suspect, it was a matter of locating him. And it was my partner and
I that located him down on the waterfront of Tacoma. The van was detained, as was he, and a search of the van then took place.
During the course of that search,
there's a number of things that were interesting to us.
One of the items was a wooden mallet-type thing
that was roughly three inches around,
and it was actually relatively close in size
to the injury that Michelle had sustained on her head.
Additionally, there was a number of drawings
within the vehicle that had juvenile females
in rather explicit positions, but nothing
that was specifically able to be associated
with either one of the victims.
And he provided a DNA sample voluntarily
and was able to be excluded because of the DNA that
had been found in Michelle's case.
A year passes by and the leads run out.
So the case goes cold and the task force scales back.
This case originally had multiple detectives assigned to it as part of this task force,
but eventually the leads had pretty much dried up.
It's a very difficult thing to be intimately involved in these investigations
and to not be making progress.
It was very clear that they had done everything that was possible.
They were extremely, extremely professional,
and that's got to be hard
when the person you're going to see wants an answer,
and you don't have it.
In 1986, the Green River Killer was terrorizing the state.
King County police have been finding bodies of young women
on the banks of the Green River and in the water.
Although the serial killer was operating in a neighboring county,
the investigators had to consider the possibility that Jennifer and Michelle had fallen victim to the notorious multiple murderer.
The victimology was totally different.
The location of occurrence, Pierce County rather than King County, there was really nothing that suggested that these were
or could even potentially be linked to the Green River Killer.
Really, the department took ownership of these cases
and made me want to be a homicide detective one day
and then subsequently made me want to start the cold case unit.
And just that, we've got to find a way to solve them.
In the fall of 2008, 22 years after Jennifer's murder,
Detective Gene Miller followed through on his ambition to find a way to solve cold cases in Tacoma.
When I began to develop the cold case unit for the Tacoma Police Department,
I collected information on all the unsolved homicides
that took place in the city of Tacoma.
It was during the course of putting all of that information together
that I identified two other juvenile females
that had been the victims of sexual assault homicides in 1986.
The thing that was very interesting about it
was one of the victims, Denise Sally, went missing in January 1986.
Her body was subsequently located just a few days after Michelle had passed.
So you have four juvenile females, all within Pierce County.
So I began looking at the overall case files of both Jenny Bash and Michelle Welch,
and then Denise Sally and Kimberly Payne on the county side.
Detective Miller notices one name that continues to show up throughout the case files.
Timothy Burkhart.
I start looking and I'm able to identify a Timothy Ray Burkhart. And it was when I dug into that name that it piqued my curiosity.
Timothy Burkhart at the time that the cases
occurred was a 20-year-old male. In looking at his criminal history, it's rather limited,
but there is one case where he's a suspect in an attempt abduction about a year and a half prior to
the Denise Sally case. As I looked further into him, I actually found that he was listed as a suspect
in two homicides that occurred in 2001. I looked further and found that he had actually committed
suicide. And as a result, those cases were never able to be fully adjudicated.
It's the spring of 2009, and using evidence found at the 2001 crime scenes,
the State Crime Lab develops a DNA profile of Timothy Burkhart.
What we ended up learning was that Timothy Ray Burkhart's DNA matched the evidence from the Kimberly Payne homicide,
so that links him to Kimberly Payne and Denise Sally,
but is not consistent with the profile developed
in the Michelle Welch case.
It's closure for two families,
but disappointing for two others
as Jennifer Bastian and Michelle Welch's murders
remain unsolved and the cases are cold.
It's January 2013, 26 years after the murders,
and Detective Miller consults with his old partner
from the sex crimes unit, Detective Lindsay Wade.
Detectives Miller and Wade speak with a forensic expert
who advised them to submit Jennifer's swimsuit
to the crime lab.
The hope is to obtain a reference DNA sample for Jennifer
in case it's needed in the future.
So Gene submits Jennifer's swimsuit to the crime lab,
and a few months later, he gets a call from the crime lab,
and the forensic scientist says to Gene,
hey, are you interested in the male DNA that we found on Jennifer's swimsuit?
It was like, what do you mean, male DNA?
The scientist tells Jean that there is male DNA in the form of spermatozoa
in the crotch of Jennifer's swimsuit.
This is a bombshell because not only are we learning for the first time
that we do have DNA evidence from an unknown perpetrator,
but we also learn at that same time that this DNA profile was entered into the state and the national DNA database, and it did not match the DNA in the Michelle Welch case. This is crazy.
We have two different killers. Like, what is going on? So the first thing that Jean did was to go back through and look at who had been identified and eliminated previously,
either by alibi or in some cases by DNA, and then pull those people back up again and resubmit their samples
so that they could be compared against the DNA profile in Jennifer's case. After more than 26 years of investigating the murders as linked incidents,
the detectives have to start from scratch. They submit the DNA found on Jennifer's swimsuit
into CODIS, the National Database of DNA Samples Criminals Must Submit. But there's no match.
At the end of 2014, Detective Gene Miller makes the difficult
decision to retire, leaving the case with Detective Wade. Detective Wade is one of those people that
if you're a bad guy, you do not want her in your rearview mirror because she will not quit.
When Jennifer Bastian was murdered, Detective Lindsay Wade was an 11-year-old girl
growing up in Tacoma. She never forgot the impact it had on her, even after almost three decades
had passed. This was a case that I grew up with, and I wanted to know what happened. When I took
over the case, I recognized that the cases were so massive
that I took on the daunting task of creating a database
so that I could take every single male name
that appeared in either one of the cases
and I entered that name into this database,
along with whether or not they had DNA in CODIS,
whether or not we had collected their DNA
as a part of the investigation,
were they dead, were they incarcerated.
There were like 2,300 plus names in the database.
As Detective Wade searches for Jennifer's killer,
the Bashan family mourns another loss.
In 2015, Jennifer's father dies.
He goes to his grave without seeing justice done.
Our faith has seen us through a lot,
and sure, he wanted to know.
You carry the burden you carry.
That's just life and its natural progression.
When you've got a burden, you carry it.
We all do.
I met Patty and Ralph in 2013,
working on the case, and I can't explain it,
but for whatever reason, Patty and I just clicked,
and she was really inspirational to me.
We got to really know each other on a deeper level
and, you know, really gained a mutual respect for each other.
It's the beginning of 2015,
and FBI agent Terry Posma helps Detective Wade with the case
by obtaining DNA samples from a wider pool of possible suspects.
One name leads them outside of Tacoma to Aberdeen, Washington.
When they arrive at the suspect's location,
they discover he's living in the back of a van by the river.
The suspect voluntarily provides a DNA sample,
and analysts compare it against evidence in the case. But it's another crushing
disappointment. The DNA from the man in Aberdeen doesn't match the DNA found in Jennifer's swimsuit.
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Despite years of frustration and dead ends, Detective Wade refuses to give up.
This case was so important to me for many reasons.
I never dreamed as a youngster that I would be in a position one day to work on the case.
Lindsay worked so hard on these two cases.
She was 11 years old when this happened to Jenny.
There's just something about Lindsay
and her total dedication, her total involvement,
her intelligence.
She gave so much for us as a community.
As the leads begin to thin again,
Detective Wade learns of a murder case in Arizona that catches her attention.
I had heard about a woman named Colleen Fitzpatrick
who had helped the Phoenix Police Department solve these cold cases from,
I think it was 1990 or 91.
And I talked to the detectives on that case,
and when they told me what she had done using genealogy, I was intrigued,
to say the least. So with the help of the FBI, we were able to pay for Colleen's assistance in
working on the case. Our crime lab basically created a profile from the DNA from the swimsuit,
and YSTR DNA is DNA that's passed down from father to son.
And so theoretically, if you follow the paternal line, the last name should stay the same.
We gave Colleen the YSTR profile.
She did her research and looked through her genealogy databases and came up with three
potential last names for the suspect based on that DNA.
The three names were Smith, Holbrook, and Washburn.
No one in the case file named Holbrook. So I went back and I looked at Washburn and I saw that a guy
named Robert Washburn had called in a tip back in like May of 1986 in Michelle's case.
Months before Jennifer was killed,
Washburn had called to report a suspicious person who he believed
the police should look at in the Michelle
Welsh case. The detectives,
they didn't find anything unusual about
him, and so they just
wrote the report up and
moved on to continue investigating.
He made it into my high-priority offender pile of people that I wanted to get DNA from,
but he certainly wasn't the only one.
In March 2017, 30 years and seven months after Jennifer's murder,
the investigation moves to Eureka, Illinois,
after the detectives take a closer look
at Robert Washburn.
Agent Postma contacts the local FBI agency
and asks them to make contact with Washburn,
who consents to providing a DNA sample.
The FBI agents feel as though
their interaction with Washburn was unremarkable.
And the investigators aren't convinced he's their man.
I mean, what is going on here?
I don't know if we're ever going to get to the bottom of the case.
There were days when I would go into my office and I would look at the stacks of case files and think, this case is unsolvable.
It's January 2018. 31 years have passed since Jennifer's murder,
and the investigators have been submitting DNA samples to the crime lab without any success.
After sending off the second batch of samples, Detective Wade is faced with a difficult choice.
I had been approached to apply for a job with the Attorney General's office to work on the sexual assault kit initiative.
And I did a lot of soul searching, trying to decide, like, do I really want to leave now?
But that's ultimately what I decided to do.
The hardest part about leaving is not having solved Jennifer and Michelle's cases.
Like, it was just terrible.
But there was something in the back of my mind that thought,
maybe working on the sexual assault kit testing will provide an answer.
Maybe one of these untested sexual assault kits will provide a match. My last day was April 13, 2018.. I was gone 25 days and I get a phone call.
It's May 8th, 2018, 31 years and nine months after Jennifer Bashan's murder,
and Detective Wade receives a phone call. It was from the detective who took over for me,
and he said, are you sitting down?
And he tells me, we have a match on Jennifer Bastian.
I'm speechless at this point, and I'm also, like, tearing up.
So I'm like, well, who is it? What's the name?
And he says, it's Robert Washburn.
I got dressed really quick and then went back to the station
so that I could help dig through the case to
pull out the information about Robert Washburn. Washburn had graduated from high school in the
Tacoma area before working as an engineer for a time. He then moved to Illinois where he lived
a quiet life caring for his disabled daughter. At the time of Jennifer's murder,
Robert Washburn was living just nine blocks from the Bashan family.
A warrant is issued for Washburn's arrest.
They got eyes on Robert Washburn pretty quickly,
and the SWAT team in Eureka arrest him.
Washburn is arrested,
and preparations to extradite him to Washington get underway.
Detective Wade has waited for this moment for a long time,
and she has dreamed of giving Patty and Teresa Bastian closure for years.
I think the arrest took place around 7 a.m., and so immediately one of the assistant chiefs and
myself drove from the police department to Patty's home and
Knocked on her door. I had rehearsed in my head something to say to her
Of course it all went out the window and I couldn't remember what I was gonna say
Doorbell rings open the door and she just says we got him
Lindsay and I are hugging one another and alternately crying and laughing
and crying and laughing.
Just the raw emotion.
Just an awesome,
awesome reality
that took over.
And my first thought,
I gotta call Teresa.
She does the whole, I've got someone here
who wants to say something to you.
And then I hear Teresa,
it's Lindsay. We got him. And I dropped to my knees. I just said, tell me everything.
When I heard the name Robert Washburn, it didn't mean anything to me.
I couldn't come up with anything. I don't know any connection.
Washburn is behind bars and he pleads not guilty to Jennifer's murder.
But worries remain about whether the case is strong enough.
Will they trust that that DNA was preserved?
It's decades old.
Was it tested properly?
So there is still a very real fear that he could get away with murder. It's May 2018, and 60-year-old Robert Washburn pleads not guilty
to the murder of Jennifer Bastian 31 years and nine months earlier.
My overwhelming fear was that this case would go to trial because my mom is in Tacoma alone,
and I really was quite anxious and fearful
about what that would look like.
I think the idea of a trial
was the biggest black cloud since his arrest.
There's a bunch of things that he may have to say
that I don't want to know.
As a family, like, no one wants to sit through that.
No one wants to sit in the courtroom
and look at graphic photographs of their family member
who's been sexually assaulted and murdered.
I mean, that's horrifying.
The judge sets a trial date for 2019. And after three months, the Bastian family
receives a phone call that changes everything. It was the prosecutor saying they felt Washburn
was ready to change his plea. They were clear it wouldn't necessarily be the longest sentence they
would hope for. But under the situation, it would be no trial.
And given his age, it kind of made sense to not push the issue.
After 32 years, the Bastian family finally get a measure of justice at a sentencing hearing
in January 2019.
Walking into the courtroom that day was really intense because it's all kind of like overwhelming
to see so many old friends and family and colleagues of my dad, but made it really clear
how important this case was still for so many people.
I mean, Lindsay tried to prepare me, but I knew I was going to see him.
I wanted to see him.
And then when it was our time to walk into the courtroom and stand in the same room as him,
it was impactful, but it also left a lot to be desired because he didn't make eye contact.
He just kind of sat there.
There was no eye to eye. He never raised his head. He looked down the whole time.
I went to the sentencing, and it was really emotional.
I don't think there was a dry eye in the courtroom from the judge to one of the cameramen in the courtroom to people in the gallery.
I remember Patty saying, do you know how many birthdays we missed and how many Christmases we missed?
I mean, you pretty much have to be a psychopath to sit through that and not tear up.
The Bashan family and their supporters watch
as Washburn admits that he murdered Jennifer back in 1986.
He's strangely stoic in the courtroom.
A written statement is read saying, you know, he's sorry.
He admits that he grabbed Jennifer and strangled her.
He never admits to or talks about the sexual assault.
And there's very little revealed about his motives,
why he did it, how he did it,
other than that he strangled this little girl.
And he basically confessed in the most bare bones way
possible that he had murdered Jennifer, period.
Robert Washburn is sentenced to 26 and 1
half years in prison.
Seeing Jennifer's killer brought to justice is some closure,
but Patty Bashan is determined to help other families
through their heartache, too.
That is not the end for Patty, and it's not the end for Teresa.
This family is determined to make
sure that this isn't just about one girl's murder or two girls' murders. This is about
keeping young people safer everywhere.
They begin to work with Washington State Representative Tina Orwell.
So starting in 2015, we teamed up and we introduced a number of bills to really move forward on
the DNA collection.
We had people leaving the court that had never given their DNA and all kinds of problems.
And then in 2018, we passed House Bill 1326 is when we really brought it all together
to expand who we collected DNA from and closing the most loopholes. It was bipartisan support,
and it was really a huge team effort
with Patty and Detective Wade.
On May 21, 2019,
the governor of Washington,
with Patty Bastian by his side,
signs the new legislation
named Jennifer and Michelle's Law.
On March 22nd, 2019, a Pierce County man, Gary Hartman, is found guilty of
Michelle Welsh's murder after DNA evidence helps link him to the crime.
He is sentenced to more than 26 years in prison. This country needs a national law about what to do with DNA,
when to collect it, when to put it in the database,
and it's got to be before a felon is released from prison.
It's to help the guilty and the innocent.
It's to help parents and people who have lost someone, as well as help prevent, period.
Cold Case Files is hosted by Paula Barrows. It's produced by the Law and Crime Network
and written by Eileen McFarlane and Emily G. Thompson.
Our composer is Blake Maples.
For A&E, our senior producer is John Thrasher
and our supervising producer
is McKamey Lynn.
Our executive producers
are Jesse Katz,
Maite Cueva,
and Peter Tarshis.
This podcast is based on
A&E's Emmy-winning TV series
Cold Case Files.
For more Cold Case Files, visit aetv.com.
Copyright 2017.
A&E Television Networks, LLC.
All rights reserved. I'm Lola.
And I'm Megan.
And we're the hosts of Trust Me, cults, extreme belief, and manipulation.
We both have childhood cult experiences.
And we're here to debunk the myths about people who join them and show that anyone can be manipulated. Our past interviews include survivors and former members of the
Manson family, NXIVM, MS-13, Teal Swan, Heaven's Gate, Children of God, and the Branch Davidians.
Join us every week as we help you spot the red flags. Get new episodes of Trust Me every
Wednesday on Podcast One or wherever you get your podcasts.