Crime Junkie - MURDERED: Dana Ireland
Episode Date: March 13, 2025On Christmas Eve in 1991, Dana Ireland is found tucked away in a secluded, hard to get to area of the Hawaiian subdivision Vacationland, barely clinging to life. When she finally arrives at a Hilo hos...pital, the damage is too severe and they declare Dana dead at 12:25am on Christmas morning. In 2023, the audiochuck team set out to tell you the story of what happened to Dana Ireland and how three men were convicted of her murder. Then in 2024, everything changed. In Chapter 1, Amanda Knox takes you through everything that happened on December 24th, 1991 and why this story is very different from the one we were originally going to tell you.  Follow and listen to Season 2 of THREE wherever you get your podcasts! ---Please consider donating to Ian’s GoFundMe at https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-ian-schweitzer-after-wrongful-conviction.  You can visit www.hawaiiinnocenceproject.org and click the donate button to support them, their work and their clients. To buy Amanda Knox’s new memoir, Free: My Search for Meaning, click HERE. If you have any information about the abduction and murder of Dana Ireland, we encourage you to contact the Hawai’i Innocence Project at contacthip@hawaiiinnocenceproject.org. You can also contact Crime Stoppers at (808) 961-8300 and the Hawai’i Police Department at (808) 961-2380 or visit their website Hawaiipolice.gov to submit a tip.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, Crime Junkies. It is Ashley Flowers here, and I am popping in to share something new
with you that actually stemmed from something that is a bit of a throwback. I think all
of you know by now that Britt and I are on the road for Crime Junkie Life Rule Number
10 Tour. It has been a complete blast, a wonderful seeing all of you who've come out to the
stops we've made so far. I can't wait to see more of you soon. But this thing today,
what I'm about to tell you, this actually stemmed from our very first tour in 2019.
The case we told then was wild,
filled with twists and turns.
But you guys know me, and when I get in,
I get into all the craziest rabbit holes,
even over the smallest details.
Well, in the case from our first tour,
there was a suspect who had Googled this term
that had nothing to do with the case we talked about.
This suspect had Googled Dana Ireland autopsy photos.
Now, I had never heard of Dana Ireland.
And like I said, it had nothing to do
with the case we were talking about.
Why is he Googling this?
So I kept digging and digging.
I just had to know more.
And thus, the years-long journey of exploring Dana Ireland
and her case began.
This case is one that has so many layers,
and you can dive into all of the details
on our latest season of the podcast, Three.
This season is hosted by someone
I'm sure you crime junkies already know, Amanda Knox.
She's gonna walk you through the case,
through how three men were convicted of Dana's murder,
and through the many costs that she knows firsthand
come when the justice system gets it wrong.
And as our team was on the ground reporting in Hawaii
where this case took place,
an update came that changed everything.
And because you all are my crime junkies, and
I know you want to be the first in the know, I am sharing the first episode of
this season of Three with you right here, right now.
So take a listen and then head over to the podcast Three.
You can find it wherever you get your podcast and you can listen to the second episode that
also dropped today.
Again, just search for three wherever you listen to podcasts. It's 921 a.m. on Tuesday, January 24, 2023, and a man named Ian Schweitzer is standing
in a courtroom in Hilo, Hawaii.
He's not a total stranger to this feeling or to the criminal justice system in general.
He's been here before.
But this time, it's for very different reasons.
Over 23 years ago, Ian was convicted of a crime
he firmly asserts he did not commit.
And for almost two decades,
the Innocence Project has been trying to help him prove it.
Ian's team, including the legendary Barry Sheck,
who co-founded the original Innocence Project in 1992,
well, they would spend the next seven hours
stating their case in front of Judge Kubota.
Your Honor, this is a critical day
in Ian Schweitzer's journey towards justice.
It started on October 4th, 1997, when he was arrested and jailed
for the sexual assault and murder of Dana Ireland.
He has insisted on his innocence for all who would listen for 26 years.
9,243 days marked by fear, confusion, isolation,
sorrow, anger, despair, terror, and now hope.
Ian never stopped hoping that this injustice
would be corrected.
The family has been ridiculed,
shunned, treated like
pariahs in their community.
But none of the Schweitzer's ever
gave up hope that there would
be a day
of justice that would arrive.
As Dr. King famously
said after the five-day march from Selma of justice that would arrive. As Dr. King famously said,
after the five day march from Selma to Montgomery,
truth crushed to earth will rise again.
No lie can live forever.
The arc of the moral universe is long,
but it bends towards justice.
We want to thank the court in particular for the wisdom, guidance, and
patience that you've had with all of us over this entire proceeding. We rest.
His family, yeah, filled up the courtroom. And what was odd is, a lot of times, you
know, when you have someone charged with a serious crime, you know, some
departments of public safety
overflow the courtroom with deputies, right?
Like this is a scary person, right?
So when we first get there, I mean, they are extremely mean to the attorneys, very mean
to one of our volunteer attorneys, very mean to the family members.
These are the deputies, right?
Who believe, at least from my perception,
believed that Ian was guilty.
And the hearing, as you said, lasted all day,
and they had to stay there.
They, being the deputies, had to stay there all day.
And you could see the more that they heard that evidence,
the nicer they started becoming with the family members,
the more they heard that evidence, right,
the more human they seemed to become.
That's Ken Lawson, the co-director of the Hawaii Innocence Project.
They have been looking into Ian's case since around 2006, but when Ken started in 2010,
he took it over and ever since, he's been damn near determined to prove his client's
innocence. But no one had predicted that today would be the day.
Especially not Ian.
I think he knew that he was supposed to be coming back for a hand.
He didn't know that he was coming back so soon because he was in quarantine.
The Department of Public Services has to fly out to get him and bring him back.
And they were saying because of the COVID rules,
that he would have to stay in quarantine there.
And then when he came back here,
he would have to be quarantined in the jail
before he could even come to court.
The next question was,
are we gonna get a judge that's gonna listen?
To everyone's surprise,
the judge announces his verdict later that same day.
My amazing team broke down everything and just step by step just knocked everything
out.
My belief was the hand of God wasn't going to be able to kick me.
I had God's team.
There's a judgment of this court that the new DNA evidence, the tire tread evidence, the bite mark evidence,
and Sean Schweitzer's recantation conclusively proves
that in a new trial, a jury would likely reach
a different verdict of acquittal.
So therefore the conviction of Albert Ian Schweitzer
for murder in the second degree, kidnaping,
and sexual assault in the first degree is hereby vacated.
And Mr. Schweitzer said we need to release immediately from custody in this court.
So Mr. Schweitzer, I'm going to ask you directly.
You've spent roughly half of your life so far as a free man, and another half of your
life in prison.
How old are you now?
One.
You want? Okay. The question is, how do you make up for that
lost time? And I'll give you a bit of advice. You live roughly
one third of your life, you got one third of your life ahead of
you. You can live it being angry and resentful at the process
or the people that put you there,
or you can live it with a new freedom.
All right, I suggest that since you have
your whole family here, you hug and love your family
and live a fulfilled life and make the best
of the next one third of your life.
So after we conclude this proceeding, the family of Mr. Schweitzer are allowed to come
across the bar.
No one else is allowed to come forward to greet Mr. Schweitzer.
Mr. Schweitzer shall be released from his shackles immediately.
In a matter of hours, Ian Schweitzer is free.
Well, sort of.
It's a feeling very few people understand.
Being charged and convicted of a crime you didn't commit.
While his story played out a little differently, Ian's brother Sean is also one of those people.
I took my deal, I got out, and I was supporting my family.
It's a shitty that I had to do that, but...
You better have taken it.
You better have taken it.
I would have been sitting in the cell right by him if I didn't do that.
That's the way I felt.
And so am I.
A 22-year-old American student, Amanda Knox, was found guilty in Italy of murdering her British roommate.
She was immediately sentenced to 26 years in an Italian prison.
As the verdict was read, a crowd outside the courtroom burst into cheers.
Inside the courtroom, Amanda Knox and her family
began to sob.
I'm Amanda Knox.
And while studying abroad in 2007,
what was supposed to be a once-in-a-lifetime college
experience turned into a life-altering nightmare, one
I would spend the following eight years trapped inside of
and will carry with me for the rest of my life.
Amanda Knox walks free.
This was an extraordinary day in Italy and all over the United States.
Immediate liberation. She didn't commit the crime.
The words of the judge. Tonight she's free.
In February 2023, after Ian was released from prison, I traveled to Hawaii and met him in
person.
Little did I know that almost two years later, I would be sitting down now with you all to
tell you what has happened since that very conversation.
Behind every wrongful conviction is a devastating and complicated web that is almost impossible to untangle.
But during this series, we're going to try to do just that.
Because justice doesn't have to be complicated.
And the victims in this case deserve clarity.
Justice too long delayed is justice denied. Over the past 18 months
we've had a team of people who've been out on the Hawaiian Islands investigating
this story, talking to the people that were there firsthand. Some who have never
spoken out before. Recording in-depth interviews that you will hear nowhere else.
We've pored through nearly 40,000 pages of documents about this case.
We've listened to countless hours of audio, from witness stories and confessions to secret
grand jury testimony and never-before-heard interviews with jailhouse informants, all
so we could discover the truth
behind the murder of Dana Ireland
and the three families who will never be the same
because of it.
But what we didn't expect was that the story
would change drastically over the last year and a half
as we investigated.
Actually, no one did.
In July, 2024, the world found out
who really killed Dana Ireland.
A name that never popped up on investigators' radar
matched the DNA left at the scene
and on the body of Dana Ireland.
If you had told me a month ago
that this is where this path would have turned,
I would have called you a liar and said there's no possible way.
But to understand how we got here, you have to understand what has transpired
in the 33 years since Dana Ireland was murdered.
I'm Amanda Knox, and this is 3, Season 2, Murder in Vacationland.
We're asking you to come with us to the Big Island,
to hear the untold story of what really happened
to Dana Ireland and how her death impacted the lives
of three families, the Irlands, the Schweitzers, and the Paulines.
We all said DNA on our side.
It didn't matter.
We didn't even have the car.
Yeah.
We didn't even have the car.
Guilty to proven innocent, huh?
No, it ain't Schweitzers.
Like I said, I just said that
because that's what the detectives wanted. Chapter 1 Christmas in Hawaii
It's December 1991, in a small town Kapoho, located on the eastern end of what's known
as the Big Island of Hawaii. It's not the place most mainlanders think of
when they imagine the Hawaii islands.
It's quieter, slower, serene,
the ultimate tropical paradise,
and often called one of Hawaii's best-kept secrets.
And within Kapoho, there is this little subdivision
called, almost too perfectly, vacation land.
At around 5.30 p.m. on Christmas Eve, a local woman named Ida Smith had just gotten home from running some afternoon errands
and is settling back when she hears something strange.
The call of a hawk?
No.
She realizes what she's hearing is not bird calls.
It's sounding more like a girl who is calling for help.
Ida quickly follows the direction of the faint screams,
which take her towards a vacant house near her property.
And then she sees her.
About 80 to 90 feet down the narrow gravel roadway
towards the waterfront, surrounded by bushes,
is a young woman in desperate need of medical attention.
She is barely clothed, and it's clear she is suffering
from numerous injuries by the amount of blood
on her.
And based on her appearance, Ida also believes the woman has been sexually assaulted.
She had nothing on.
Her jeans were, she had cut off jeans and they were down on her ankle.
And her shirt looked like it, so I had grabbed it and tore it off her like that.
So I got a hold of her arm, you know, and I said,
let me help you up, and she started to scream.
It pained.
And I thought I'd stop because I didn't want to hurt her.
Ida books it to the main road on the other side of her home
to flag down the first car she sees.
Thankfully, it doesn't take long, and in a matter of minutes, a group of individuals,
including a nurse who lives nearby, are down there comforting the victim as they anxiously
wait for an ambulance to arrive.
And they're praying it won't be long, because the woman's condition is only getting worse.
It's obvious she is in severe pain, and through it, she's trying to make words.
Some are coherent, some not.
But they can make out her name, Dana.
By 6 20 PM, an officer makes his way to the scene, but unfortunately, the ambulance
doesn't arrive for another hour.
Once arrived, Ida and the group watch as Dana is whisked away towards Hilo Hospital, two
hours after Ida found her.
It might have been sooner if she wasn't in such a remote area, but it was the type of path you wouldn't even know was there,
unless you knew.
By 8 p.m., a flurry of people, including paramedics,
rushed Dana into the hospital on a gurney.
And there, in the waiting room, is her family.
They've been there for about two hours,
ever since they figured out something was wrong,
and now they are watching their Dana,
23-year-old Dana Ireland, fighting for her life.
When detectives speak with Dana's older sister Sandy in the waiting room,
they discover Sandy moved to the Big Island a few years earlier, and Dana came to visit often. Then, only two months
prior, Dana decided to stay in Hawaii for good. So for the holidays, Dana and
Sandy's parents, John and Louise Ireland, decided to fly in from Virginia and
join them on the Big Island for a few weeks.
The family says earlier that day,
before they were planning on celebrating Christmas Eve,
Dana decided to go on a bike ride.
So she borrowed her sister Sandy's bike and headed out to her friend Mark's house,
which is about a seven-mile ride.
But when Sandy and her boyfriend Jim were driving over to their
parents' rental house around 5 p.m., they saw something on the side of the road
that caught their attention. A crowd of people all gathered around what looked
like the scene of an accident. Sandy went from curious to terrified when she
recognized the crushed bike lying in the road. It was her
bike, the one she had just let Dana borrow a couple hours earlier. Next to it was Dana's
wristwatch, the band completely broken, a foot-long chunk of blonde hair, and a single white athletic shoe still tied.
Sandy and Jim rushed to her parents' rental,
which was just minutes away, to tell them what they saw,
and they all headed back to the scene.
But when they arrived, Dana's mom Louise
saw what was going on, assumed Dana had been involved
in some kind of accident, and so
the family headed over to the local hospital in case she showed up. But they never imagined
she would show up like this.
They watch in shock as the doctors do their best to save Dana, but she is just too far
gone. A little after midnight on Christmas morning, Dana dies after hours of attempted life-saving
measures.
Her cause of death, exsanguination or blood loss due to multiple traumatic injuries of
the head, neck, chest, abdomen, and pelvis. In Dana's autopsy report,
Dr. Charles Reinhold notes a disturbing amount of injuries.
Dana's chest, back, arms, legs, and face
were covered with abrasions, cuts, and bruises.
Her collarbone and pelvis were fractured.
She had extensive hemorrhaging in her heart, lungs,
stomach, and bladder.
But the doctors find something even more disturbing
and which can't be explained by a car accident,
a bite mark on her left breast, and the presence of semen.
So while Dana's family is reeling from her sudden death,
police scour not just the one,
but the two scenes related to Dana,
which are about five miles apart.
The first scene is on Kapoho Kai Drive,
where Dana's bike was discovered.
They find tire impressions in the dirt.
They make plaster casts of the tracks and take several pictures of tire marks, including
a single deep gouge mark on Kapoho Kai Drive, which larger double-tire tracks lead into.
Detectives identify the gouge mark as the point at which the bicycle tire was driven into the road from the collision.
They find Dana's black bicycle seat on the side of the road near the tracks.
Once finished at the collision scene, detectives head five miles away to the Wa'a Wa'a Fishing Trail, where Dana had been found.
She was about 80 to 90 feet off the main road in the bushes, just off the right side of
the trail.
Leaves surrounding her were bloody, too, as if she'd been placed or possibly thrown there
in an effort to conceal her.
Her jean shorts and her missing white Avia tennis shoe are found nearby.
But there's more.
There's a child's black McGregor shoe,
the left one only,
and two white socks stuffed inside.
There's also a blue-colored T-shirt, size large,
with a print of a station wagon and the Jimmy Z logo,
which was a popular brand at the time,
especially on the Big Island.
Then, up the trail, about halfway between the road and where Dana was found,
a black knit adult sock and a red panty, size large.
Police also find cigarette butts and two Corona beer bottles.
Everything gets collected and tagged.
But what is at the scene is only part of the story.
The question still stands
as to how Dana could have ended up there.
After speaking with her family and witnesses at both crime scenes, authorities tried to
build a rough timeline of events based on everything they know so far, which begins
at the home of Mark Evans in a pohika'o at 4.10 p.m.
Mark was the friend Dana went to visit on her bike the night of the murder, and he told
police that while their relationship in the beginning leaned a little towards the romantic
side, they were totally platonic.
Sometimes shortly thereafter, the police speak to a witness who says they saw a woman who
looked like Dana passing places called shacks and secrets, both local surfing hangout spots.
Based on this, authorities determined she was run over at approximately 4.40 p.m.,
less than half a mile from her parents' vacation land rental home,
which she was most likely headed back to for the family's Christmas Eve dinner.
Then, as she was riding her bike,
she was struck in the rear by a vehicle
heading in the Makai direction,
AKA east towards the sea, on Kapoho Kai Drive,
which would indicate that Dana was also traveling
in the Makai direction, on the right side of the road,
before someone grabbed her and drove away
to move her to that isolated area along the trail.
There, she would endure a nightmare,
before being left for dead.
As detectives continued to work to fill in the pieces,
a flurry of calls and leads about trucks, vans, and SUVs believed to be in the area
flows in from the community.
One comes from Eric Carlsmith.
He lives on the first house on the left on Ililani Road, and he says he was with his
girlfriend Karina on Christmas Eve.
He tells police he noticed a pickup truck facing southwest at the intersection of Ililani Road and Kapoho Kai Drive.
This was the spot where Dana was hit.
What color was the truck?
It was turquoise green.
It was, uh, it wasn't aqua color.
It was green.
It was like a pine and turquoise green mix, darker color.
I can tell you what kind of wood is over there
and I can tell you,
I can tell you any kind of wood that's in the forest
and I can tell you if it's straight
and I have an eye like a hawk.
And right now, you know,
I can read the stop right behind the tree over there.
You see the stop sign?
So police are focusing on a truck or van.
And this makes sense.
The road from vacation land to the Ocean Trail off Beach Road, where Dana was found, is barely
drivable by a car.
It's a tucked away, isolated, unpaved fishing trail of sorts, and really only known to the
locals in the area. it'd be hard to
find otherwise. But obviously, they still need more. And fortunately, or maybe unfortunately,
there's no shortage of witness accounts.
And this is the part where I would have walked you through detectives interviewing each one of them from the day Dana was found.
Like Ida Smith, the woman who first found Dana.
And it wouldn't stop.
Help me, help me.
And I said, well, the voice was very faint.
That's why I thought it was a little girl.
I heard the cop crying.
So I said, I'm coming.
You know, just where are you?
I just stopped looking.
Or Demian Fierro, who was 10 at the time
and was one of the first ones to discover
the broken bike in the road.
There was some stuff in the road.
Her shoe, there was a bike, of course.
Some hair, a watch.
And me and Rick were actually the first ones on the scene.
So we went further down and jumped out, took a look kind of because there was some tire,
there's some tire tracks further down the road, right, where they turned around. You could tell they turned around.
So we went home and called. We made the call.
We ended up walking back up to the scene.
At that time I was trying to give them as much information
that I had.
There was nothing more I could do, which I wish there was.
But I had people at school somehow caught wind of it,
and they would blame me.
You had something to do with it.
It wasn't cool.
But like I said before, the story we were planning on telling you when we first started
investigating in 2023 is a very different one today in 2025. Which means how we tell it to
you is also very different, because what holds weight now is not the same as then.
So instead, in this series, I'll be focusing on what you need to know
to understand how we ended up where we are today.
How so many lives got tangled up in one of the most devastating
and high-profile cases to ever hit the Big Island.
Coming up on this season of Three...
There were no winners.
There were no winners in this entire situation.
When all these first starts happened,
I thought, these guys gotta be fucking joking.
This isn't a joke.
You guys gotta come to your senses at some point
and figure out that it ain't us.
But no, I guess not.
It's, if you want it, you want it.
You're gonna push to have it. So somebody's lying, right? figure out that it ain't us. But no, I guess not. It's if you want it, you want it,
you're gonna push to have it.
So somebody's lying, right?
Go back and look.
I had the students that don't read the transcripts,
read the police reports.
The transcripts aren't gonna tell you
what's not in the evidence.
The transcripts gonna tell you what came in the evidence.
Not all the shit that didn't come in.
You have to read the police reports.
Go back to the police reports, read them carefully. And that's how you start re-investigating a case.
That's next in Chapter 2, which you can listen to right now. Music