Crime Fix with Angenette Levy - Husband Tried Bizarre Cover Story After Wife’s Murder: Sheriff

Episode Date: March 6, 2026

Kyle Long was arrested and charged with the murder of his wife, Rachel Long. Rachel died on October 23, 2025. But Kyle wasn't arrested until March 4, 2026. Kyle called 911 that day in 2025 an...d told the dispatcher that Rachel had repeatedly stabbed herself in the neck. But, investigators in Madison County, Ohio said Kyle's story didn't match the evidence. Law&Crime's Angenette Levy goes through the 911 call and the evidence in this episode of Crime Fix — a daily show covering the biggest stories in crime.Host:Angenette Levy  https://twitter.com/Angenette5Guest: Tom Smith https://www.youtube.com/@GOLDSHIELDSCRIME FIX PRODUCTION:Head of Social Media, YouTube - Bobby SzokeSocial Media Management - Vanessa BeinVideo Editing - Daniel CamachoGuest Booking - Alyssa Fisher & Diane KayeSTAY UP-TO-DATE WITH THE LAW&CRIME NETWORK:Watch Law&Crime Network on YouTubeTV: https://bit.ly/3td2e3yWhere To Watch Law&Crime Network: https://bit.ly/3akxLK5Sign Up For Law&Crime's Daily Newsletter: https://bit.ly/LawandCrimeNewsletterRead Fascinating Articles From Law&Crime Network: https://bit.ly/3td2IqoLAW&CRIME NETWORK SOCIAL MEDIA:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lawandcrime/Twitter: https://twitter.com/LawCrimeNetworkFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/lawandcrimeTwitch: https://www.twitch.tv/lawandcrimenetworkTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@lawandcrimeSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 My wife just stabbed herself. I, I, there's no pulse. I don't, there's blood all over place. A strange 911 call from Kyle Long led to a month's long investigation into the death of his wife, Rachel. Okay, where did she stab herself? In the closet and then out into the back. Now Kyle Long is charged with murder. I'll tell you why detectives believe he came up with a cover story.
Starting point is 00:00:28 Welcome to Crime Fix. and Jeanette Levy. Rachel Long and Kyle Long, they were married back in 2015. They had two children together. Rachel groomed dogs for a living and even owned her own dog grooming business. From the outside looking in, she had a picture perfect life. But sadly, Rachel's life ended on October 23rd, 2025. Rachel and her husband lived in London, Ohio, a small city outside of the state's capital, Columbus. That day in October 2025, Kyle Long called 911 from his and Rachel's home and made a strange claim. Madison County 911, where's your emergency?
Starting point is 00:01:18 My wife just stabbed herself. There's no pulse. There's blood all over a place. Now, this is not the type of call dispatchers usually get that someone has stabbed themselves. The call continues. What's your name? Kyle Fong. Okay, Kyle.
Starting point is 00:01:38 I'm trying to see. Kyle, take a deep breath for me, okay? We're going to get help started. How old is your wife? She's 32. She's numerous times where she kept going and doing it. Okay. Where did she stab herself?
Starting point is 00:01:55 In the closet and then out into the back. Where on her body? In her neck. she took a big knife with it do you know where the knife is it's still in her neck okay don't touch it okay take a deep breath for me okay
Starting point is 00:02:20 I don't want you to have to have I got a call somebody my daughter's ahead be coming on a bus and I need somebody to pick them up okay is there anyone else there with you no it's just I was working and I heard her and I went in there to grab her and everything and everything just Okay, when are your children going to be home? Around 4.30 or a little bit after.
Starting point is 00:02:45 Okay. Where is your wife in the home, sir? She's right by the toilet on the floor, puddle blood. Okay. Okay, she's in the bathroom. Yeah. Okay. Does she have a pulse, and is she breathing?
Starting point is 00:03:03 I don't. Can you check for a pulse? I don't. Now, this 911 call is absolutely horrific. Kyle Long, as you can hear, is telling the 911 dispatcher that Rachel has stabbed herself repeatedly in the neck and their children. In about 20 minutes, the children will be getting off the school bus. Are you willing and able to attempt CPR? I can give you instructions. Yeah, hold on. I'm going to. I'm going to. Speakerphone, sir, and I'll give you instructions. Okay. Okay. I don't know. Okay.
Starting point is 00:04:05 Do you have anything to put on the wound that's in her neck? Okay. It's okay. Okay. I'm not listening to him from her. Okay. Can you put me on speaker phone? It might be a little easier to hear each other. Yeah, you're on speaker right now. I can't get any sex from her. Can I call my dad or someone to come to the girls before they come in? Okay. Do you have anything that you? you can put on the wound in her neck?
Starting point is 00:04:55 I tried to put... Can you fold up some towels and put on it and be able to hold pressure? Yeah, it's right there. I don't know. She just started running. Like, she did it, and then she just kept doing it and running it through the bathroom and just nonstop, like repetitive. That's okay.
Starting point is 00:05:26 That's okay. Where is the knife now? It's on the floor. Okay. Is it within reach of her? Uh, yeah. Okay, can you take your foot and kick it to the side? So it's with, it's outside of her reach.
Starting point is 00:05:44 Yeah, it's outside of a reach. Okay. Okay. Do you, are you going to attempt CPR or no? Uh, hold on, hold on, hold on. Okay, it's okay. Because my kids are going to be here in 20 minutes and I don't want them to see anything. That's okay.
Starting point is 00:06:01 Who can we call for you? Uh, my, my father. Now, one thing that seems notable here is that Kyle Long still hasn't attempted CPR. He could be in shock, and maybe he just doesn't know what to do. Take a deep breath, Kyle. Okay. I don't know. Do you feel like you're able to attempt CPR?
Starting point is 00:06:23 Let me try. Hold on. Okay. Okay. Okay. Take a deep breath, okay. We're getting help to you. Okay.
Starting point is 00:06:50 In the bathroom with her? Yeah, I'm still right here. Okay. Okay. Okay. Is she moving at all? We're open. Okay. No pole. Is someone at your door? EMTs were not able to save Rachel Long. She had already passed away by the time they arrived. And the scene that they found, it was gruesome, incredibly gruesome. And again, the claim by Kyle Long was incredibly strange. It's not impossible that a person would stab themselves, but it's certainly not something that EMTs would see very often.
Starting point is 00:07:54 probable cause affidavit states, according to Kyle, his wife Rachel came home from work, and after a short time being home, she went into the master bathroom while he was in the master bedroom working at his desk. Kyle stated that he heard what he thought was laughing, followed by screaming, and when he looked into the bathroom area, he saw Rachel Long, stabbing herself several times in the face and neck area. It was determined that Kyle Long and Rachel along were home alone at the time of the incident. The affidavit goes on to describe what the EMTs and detectives found when they arrived. Rachel was located in the master bathroom near the toilet with several injuries consistent with being stabbed with a knife on her face and neck. There were also
Starting point is 00:08:38 visible injuries consistent with knife cuts on her hands. Rachel's clothes were saturated with blood along with a large amount of blood pooling around her. A knife was located on the right side of the toilet along with several pieces of paper towels or toilet paper found in the pooling blood next to the knife. The body was photographed and placed into a bag and sealed for transport to the Montgomery County morgue. Kyle Long was taken to the sheriff's office. Of course, detectives wanted to speak with him about what happened and they say that it was at this time that Kyle told them that Rachel wanted a separation and then the autopsy was conducted. During the autopsy, the pathologist stated to Detective Henry
Starting point is 00:09:22 that the wounds on her hands appear to be defensive type wounds. This was later documented in the final autopsy report indicating defensive type wounds on her left and right hands. There were also wounds located on Rachel's right arm, which conflicted with Kyle's statement saying she had the knife only in her right hand.
Starting point is 00:09:41 Per the autopsy findings, the cause of death was determined to be multiple sharp force injuries. The autopsy identifies a minimum of 17 sharp force injuries. And there was more evidence that detectives said they gathered, including interviewing Rachel's friends. One said she'd texted with Rachel just a short time before she died,
Starting point is 00:10:02 and she didn't mention being angry or suicidal. In fact, the two discussed what Rachel was going to wear to a concert the next evening and how she would have to get that outfit ready. That text conversation is going to be very important to the detectives, and I'll talk about that with retired, homicide detective Tom Smith in just a short bit. There was also evidence inside the home that investigators didn't feel matched Kyle Long's story. The sheriff's office enlisted the help of Ohio's Bureau of Criminal Investigation and analysts did a 360-degree scan of the home. Detectives wrote that the
Starting point is 00:10:37 analyst noted evidence at the scene that would be indicative of a struggle between individuals. And the detective wrote, they reviewed the layout of the residence and it was evidence that Kyle could not have seen within the bathroom or the closet from his vantage point as he described to detectives. So there are red flags popping up all over the place as far as the investigators are concerned. Kyle Long was taken into custody this week and charged with murder. All right. So let's bring in retired NYPD detective, Tom Smith, also the host of the Gold Shield show on YouTube, Tom. Thanks so much for coming on. I really got to get your thoughts on this one. because this reminds me of another case I covered back in Ohio a long, long time ago where a husband calls 911 and claims his wife, you know, died, died in the home or is dying in the home.
Starting point is 00:11:36 The thing that gets me about this one, you don't hear a lot about people stabbing themselves. I'm not saying it doesn't happen. It can happen. But stabbing yourself in the face of, and neck. Your thoughts? Yeah, that's a tough one to swallow because if you look at just patterns of tapping because the pain that you're in and they want it done quick. So to inflict numerous painful shots on yourself is something that isn't the norm. And in the way that, you know, he claimed she did it is definitely not typical of a attempt. And, you know, there's a lot to this that I would like to. to unpack. There's a lot of questions and a lot of things I would have loved to have done and seen
Starting point is 00:12:24 with running this investigation or even being on the scene and in a room with the husband for sure. So Tom, what would you have liked to have done? Because it sounds like they took Kyle down to the police station, the sheriff's office. And of course they want to talk to him because he's the witness. he is he's laying out this story uh on nine one one he's saying she stabbed herself and so you know what would you have done had this case landed in your lap yeah well you initially you have to talk to him obviously because of just the circumstances and you know you're going to take your time doing it you're going to be sympathetic at first because you want him to come down to a certain level even if you have a thought that he was responsible for this, you're going to talk to him as a surviving spouse
Starting point is 00:13:20 and be sympathetic to him, but lay out all the facts that you know at that time. You know, a case like this, there's going to be numerous factors that come out later on because of autopsies, because of crime scene analysis, because of all that. But it's important to get the initial story from him. And here's why. Because a lot of criminals, when they're setting up a crime, will have a plan with the taking care of the crime, committing the crime, but don't anticipate what happens later.
Starting point is 00:13:57 And that's when you get them jammed up. And that's when you want to really go at them. Because they're not thinking of the questions you're going to bring up or the evidence you're going to have. And that's when you really get them tied up. So it's really important to talk to them. quick with the information you have right away. How important is this 911 call here to you in this investigation? There are things that really stand out to me in this 911 call, but I want to know
Starting point is 00:14:26 what stands out to you in this 911 call. Yeah, there's two things that popped up immediately, is one, his breathing. There's tired breathing, and then there's panic breathing. Those are two different things. If you notice, his voice wasn't shaky at all. His breathing was enhanced and breathing very heavy, which tends to lead me in the direction of being tired, not being stressed out. The other thing is you have your wife, who is now bleeding profusely and maybe still alive. No thought of CPR, no thought of rendering aid to her. You know, he mentions the fact of the knife is still in her neck.
Starting point is 00:15:10 but makes no attempt to help her in that matter. So all those are bullet points I'm going to have written down when I go and talk to him because those are the main things that stood out right away when I listened to the tapes. And that stood out to me. The dispatcher, I mean, you could be freaking out, of course, freaking out because you're like, you just witnessed this horrific thing that you're claiming your wife did. stabbing herself in the neck and face. But then this call taker is like, okay, are you going to try CPR? I mean, like, they're like, can you do this? Like, and it doesn't sound like he made any
Starting point is 00:15:57 effort to do that. And so you need to be listening to what the call taker or the dispatcher is doing. and your first instinct should be, in my opinion, to do whatever this person is telling you to do to save your wife. There's another thing that stood out to me. He's like, my kids are going to be home in like 20 minutes. So that to me, you know, if he is indeed guilty of this crime and it unfolded the way the police are saying, that's a red flag too because that's showing to me that maybe this wasn't, planned out. I mean, maybe this is something where she says, I want a separation. I don't,
Starting point is 00:16:42 I don't want to be married to you anymore. And then he gets mad and stabs her. And then he's not thinking that, oh my God, the kids are getting off the bus in 20 minutes. I think you're 100% right on that and nail that really well. And I think that's what happened. The conversation took place. And when you stab someone that many times, that is a rage crime, without a doubt. In the face, in the neck, that is pure rage and hatred about what was going on. And then, like you said, I think reality kind of time stepped in and reality came back into the picture. And he thought about the kids. And not wanting the kids to see that obviously, but initially having the kids maybe question it,
Starting point is 00:17:32 What did you do to mom? What happened? Anything like that is a possibility of coming out. You know, so I think you definitely nailed that with the timing of it, with it being not planned out. I don't think it was planned at all because most crimes that take place like this and the circumstances of it aren't planned. Mm-hmm. And that raises another question to me. you know, they always say the most dangerous time for a woman, or spouse in general, I guess, is when they're trying to leave.
Starting point is 00:18:08 And so we don't know what the nature of that conversation is. I'm assuming there's more detail in the actual interview of this guy, Kyle Long, more than what they detailed in the affidavit. They just said, oh, he disclosed that she wanted a separation. So I'm sure there was more information about that in the actual interview with detectives. and when that happened and everything like that. But, you know, it's like what else was going on in the background of this relationship? You know, she didn't just like up and say one day like maybe she did, but I don't think she just up and said, I want out. I mean, there had to have been something precipitating that.
Starting point is 00:18:51 Yeah, definitely. And that's where the investigation comes into play. You know, there's going to be social media dumps into both of their social. media accounts. There's going to be many interviews of their friends, their family, anyone who knew them very well about what was going on behind the scenes. You can even go to the next step and interview the children about what was going on in the house, where their fights, were their arguments going on, anything like that. So all that's going to culminate into the possible motive behind this. And that's what I meant before that this investigation is going to go through
Starting point is 00:19:28 different levels and different steps and be, you know, to come up with the big picture of what happened, including the motive. You talked about these dumps that they would do, the electronic data, you know, so often these days, the digital data, the electronic data tells the story. And that seems to be the case in this case. And so we have basically, you know, search warrant returns from Amazon, Apple, ICloud. email accounts belonging to Kyle and Rachel. And an analyst went through everything. And it shows this is very important.
Starting point is 00:20:08 A 911 call, this is what they're saying, was placed from Kyle Long's phone prior to a second 911 call that actually connected to dispatch. This fact was inconsistent with the information provided by Kyle during the interview. At no time did Kyle disclose that he called 911 and hung up before. for a subsequent 911 call connected to dispatch four minutes later.
Starting point is 00:20:31 So they're saying he dialed 911. He it didn't connect. He hung up. Waited four minutes and then called 911 again. So he, something happened. Did he stop? Are they going to say he stopped and like paused for four minutes is a long time, Tom? I mean, a lot of people might say, oh, that's not that long.
Starting point is 00:20:54 It's a long time when somebody's laying on the floor dying. Right. And I think, you know, if I want to speculate on something, she wasn't dead yet. You know, maybe she was still moving around. Maybe he heard a breath. Maybe he heard something that startled him and said, oh, I can't do this yet, you know, until I know she's dead. And like you said, four minutes is a long time in a situation like that. You know, so I think something like that occurred.
Starting point is 00:21:18 She moved. Something prompted him that he didn't have his story ready yet. He wasn't, you know, ready to make that call yet. something like you said happen, I'm going to lean towards the victim, you know, either still breathing or moving around or something like that. Or did Rachel try to call 911 from his phone and he got to her because there's a second part of this. And that's speculation on my part. This is purely speculation. The affidavit goes on to say, furthermore, the text message observed from her friend's phone indicates the last message between Rachel and Madison occurred four minutes prior to the 911 call from Kyle's phone that did not connect.
Starting point is 00:22:04 So we've got like this window of time. She's texting her friend talking about the concert and getting this outfit ready. And then there's a time period. And then he called, there's a 911 call from his phone. Was there an argument? You know, did something happen, obviously? And then there's this stabbing. and then there's another 911 call four minutes later.
Starting point is 00:22:29 Something, I mean, we're missing some key information. Yeah, and that's going to be part of the interview with him. You know, right off the bat, you know, he's going to claim, I was stressed out, you know, whatever, you know, excuse he comes up with. But that is definitely something to pin him on. And the calls ahead of time, you know, the text messages with her friend talking about a concert, that doesn't line up with someone, you know, who may do something to themselves.
Starting point is 00:22:57 You know, so all of that, like I said, is going to create a timeline, which is going to be important in this. You know, timelines are very important in crimes from the beginning of the day and conversations that they're going to extract from their social medias, from their phones leading up to this. That's going to be really important. And one last thing that interests me, the return from Amazon, was that for an Alexa device?
Starting point is 00:23:25 echo, one of those devices where you say Alexa or what have you. You know, I know we have one of those. And I think that those can sometimes kind of collect data. And I'm just interested to know if Alexa was listening in on any of this. Oh, no doubt. And they do do that. We all have experienced that, I think. But that's when I get to the arguments and the relationship
Starting point is 00:23:54 and what's taking place in that house. And that's why I said, you know, the kids may play a part in this. The neighbors are going to play a part in this. You know, if they heard anything going on over the days leading up to this. But that is very interesting with the return of that because any, you know, any mention towards that device is going to enact it. And it's going to start recording. And then you could get the data from that. Most definitely.
Starting point is 00:24:22 Well, it is a case to watch. very sad. You know, a woman is gone and her children now are without their mother and without their father. Very sad case. Tom Smith, thank you so much for your time. Appreciate it. It's always a pleasure. Thanks for having me. Kyle Long appeared in court on Friday morning. A judge ordered him held on a $1.5 million bond. An attorney representing him told a reporter working for a local news outlet that his client says he did not murder his wife. And that's it for this episode of Crime Fix. I'm Janette Levy.
Starting point is 00:24:55 Thanks so much for being with me. I'll see you back here next time.

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