Crime Junkie - MURDERED: Girly Chew Hossencofft
Episode Date: December 7, 2020When a young mother fails to show up at her scheduled shift at the bank, her friends and colleagues are immediately suspicious. The investigation into her disappearance uncovers a truth so twisted, it...’s almost impossible to believe -- and shows us all how tangled people can become in the web of a con-man’s lies. For current Fan Club membership options and policies, please visit https://crimejunkieapp.com/library/. Sources for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of resources, please visit https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/murdered-girly-chew-hossencofft/Â
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Hi, Crime Junkies.
I'm Ashley Flowers.
And I'm Britt.
And Britt, before we jump in today,
we got one of the sweetest messages sent to us
that I wanted to share,
because it's really important to me.
And so it comes from a listener.
I'm barely gonna make it there.
It comes from a listener.
Yeah, you're gonna struggle with this one.
Yeah, name Luna.
And she wrote to us and said,
hi, I just had this urge to send you guys something.
My, oh man, my mom recently passed away
on October 29th this year.
She was 46.
Her birthday was November 2nd.
She almost made it to 47.
She was battling cancer for 10 years.
It went downhill so fast and so harshly.
She was an amazing woman, mother and friend.
I miss her every day, every moment.
I'm turning 18 in January.
And she will never see my wedding
or her grandchildren or my future.
Oh man, I'm sorry, you guys.
And the one thing that we really bonded over
was your podcast.
We would listen to it together on car rides
or mom and daughter days.
Anywhere we, anywhere.
And we would gossip over episodes all the time.
And whenever I listened to your episodes,
I just imagined her and the passengers deep in thought.
Luna says, I know you guys will never see this.
But I had the feeling to say that you guys
may tell gruesome stories,
but you have touched many hearts
and created a lot of good memories.
So thank you.
And thank you, Luna.
Yeah, thank you, Luna.
Thank you so much.
Our, you know, our fan base has gotten really big
and we can't thank you guys enough,
but we still see all your messages.
We still see all your comments and reviews
and it's stuff like this that means so much to us that,
you know, there's so much we wanna do in the crime space
and we wanna do education and advocacy
and we partner with nonprofits
and all of that is so important to me,
but I will never stop being so amazed
and so touched by the way that we're able
to impact people's lives in a small way,
being that thing that they can bond over or.
Connect with, it's amazing.
It's just such an honor to be able to do something
that we love and also, you know,
bring people together at the same time.
Yeah, and so I just wanted to say, you know,
thank you to Luna for letting us be that thing
between her and her mom
and thank you to everyone who listens every week
and who has made us such an important part
of their daily lives.
I know we can't talk back and forth,
but people say all the time they feel like we're friends
and I feel like we have such a special connection
with the people who listen to our show
and so I just wanted to say thank you guys
and we do never think we don't read your messages.
We're reading all of them
and they really do mean so much to us.
That's what keeps us going.
So with that, I have kind of a wild story today.
It has a little bit of everything
and when I say everything, I mean everything,
mystery, murder, conspiracy theories
and reptilian alien overlords that control the human race.
Oh, so basically write up your alley.
Basically, and it all starts
when a 36 year old woman fails to turn up
for her schedule shipped at a bank.
The investigation into her disappearance
uncovers a truth so twisted
it is almost impossible to believe
and it shows everyone just how tangled people can become
in the web of a con man's lies.
So hold on to your hat folks
because this is the story of girly Chew Hossenkoff
and this one is for Luna and her mom.
I'll see you later.
It's around 8 in the morning on September 10th, 1999, and the tellers at Bank of America
in Albuquerque, New Mexico are worried about their colleague, Girlie Chu Hossenkoff.
Girlie is late for her shift and she was never late, like never, not once, never, ever, ever.
Not only that, but Girlie's closest friend, Ernie, had been calling the bank all morning
asking if Girlie had made it to work yet.
Ernie said that she'd been trying to reach her at her home since the night before, but
Girlie wasn't answering and they talked every single night, so by this point, she's worried sick.
Girlie's boss at the bank, Kathy, speaks to Ernie on the phone and says,
listen, don't worry, we're going to help track her down.
So, Kathy calls Girlie's home number and it rings and rings, she calls her cell phone, same thing, no answer.
And so, one of the tellers, this guy named Jesse, volunteers to go check Girlie's apartment,
but in the meantime, Kathy calls police to report Girlie missing.
Um, how late is Girlie at this point?
Well, Kathy makes the call to police somewhere around like 8, 10 or 8, 15 and Girlie was due at like 8 a.m.
So, I mean, this is not super long by any means and it almost goes to show you just how out of
character this is for her, that everyone who knows her is pretty freaked out within 15 minutes of her
being late.
Well, and especially knowing that, you know, it's maybe not just these 15 minutes,
but a lot longer because the friend was trying to reach out since the night before.
Right, but here's the thing.
There's another reason that they're so concerned.
It's not just because Girlie is a model employee, which she is, by the way.
Kathy and everyone who worked at the bank with Girlie knew that her ex-husband,
this guy named Diazen, was bad news.
According to an article from Amarillo.com, he'd been harassing her, threatening her,
and at one point, he even told her he would kill her and that no one would ever find her body.
I mean, it was so bad that Girlie actually told her bank colleagues straight up.
If I am ever late for work, call the police right away.
Oh my God.
And so on that morning when Girlie is late, that's exactly what Kathy does.
But because Girlie isn't even 15 minutes late at this point, police aren't really taking it seriously.
And you know, we give police a lot of flak when they won't take the report, but I even kind of get this.
Like someone's 15 minutes late for work, that's not that abnormal.
They're sleeping in, yeah.
Yeah, and the operator on the other end tells her, listen, it hasn't even been 24 hours yet.
We can't file a missing persons report.
And even though Kathy keeps insisting, because again, it is more than just the late, right?
Like she knows the stuff going on, she keeps pushing, keeps pushing.
But the operator on the other end is like, listen, there isn't much more we can do right now.
Now, not long after this conversation with police, the phone at the bank rings and it's Jesse calling from Girlie's apartment.
He says that her car is in the lot, but her door is locked and she's not answering.
So he tells Kathy that he's going to try and track down the super for the building to see if he can get into the apartment,
which he does.
And the first thing Jesse notices is that the deadbolt wasn't locked.
Like, you know how most doors had like a deadbolt and then some kind of smaller twist or push lock on the actual knob?
Yeah.
Well, the lock on the knob is all that was engaged and it's the only one that the super had to unlock.
And now remember, Girlie was legitimately afraid for her life and Jesse knew that.
So there's no way if she was inside that she's going to be inside with just that one tiny lock engaged.
Right. She would definitely put the dead lock in.
Right. So when they get in, they call out for Girlie, but there's no answer.
And they step inside and the only thing that they could really see that even looked out of place were like a few wet stains on the living room carpet.
But it just looks like someone maybe like spilled something and tried to clean it up like nothing super alarming to them.
In his book, September Sacrifice, author Mark Horner writes that the smallest of these stains was about the size of a grapefruit and the largest was the size of a basketball.
So Jesse and the super are like looking around.
They check her bedroom, they check her closet.
They're checking all throughout the apartment, but there is no sign of Girlie and nothing really out of place either.
Now, back at the bank, Kathy is now making her fourth call to Albuquerque PD, trying to get someone to take Girlie's disappearance seriously.
She tells them, listen, there is this history of domestic violence.
She says Girlie has made numerous reports over the years and she's even got several restraining orders against Diazin.
Finally, police agree to at least look into it.
They say, listen, we'll send a squad car to Girlie's place for a welfare check.
And we'll check in on Diazin too.
Now, when the officer arrives at Girlie's apartment building, he meets up with the super who tells him that he and Jesse had already been inside the apartment and Girlie wasn't there.
But otherwise, the super says, listen, like nothing's out of place and nothing is out of the ordinary at all.
Okay, but what about the stains on the carpet?
Well, just to show you like how much they didn't think it was out of place.
Like he doesn't even mention the wet stains on the carpet at all.
And I wish I could tell you why, but I don't think it even registered for him that that's something that he should mention.
What he does mention, though, is that he knows Girlie is a victim of domestic violence and that she moved to the building and this unit specifically to pretty much hide from her ex-husband.
So the officer decides that's where he needs to go right away, to Diazin's place.
Wait, he doesn't like look around the apartment at all first?
He doesn't, not yet anyway.
His next stop is to the Hossenkopf house.
And when he gets there, unlike how Jesse found Girlie's place, the police find the front door wide open and the place is totally empty.
Oh, you mean like no one's home?
No, I mean like no one is home and it is completely empty.
No furniture, no dishes.
Oh, it's been like completely cleared out.
Oh, yeah, nothing is there.
A neighbor tells them that a moving truck came a couple of nights before and that Diazin said he was moving to El Paso so he could be closer to Mexico where he was getting cancer treatments.
Now, it's also important to note here that Diazin isn't a complete stranger to the Albuquerque PD.
He's been on their radar since February, which is about six or seven months at this point.
And he got on their radar because when Girlie initially left him, she had filed a domestic violence report.
According to an article by Benjamin Smith for Oxygen, she'd gone to Albuquerque PD at least twice to report domestic violence.
And in fact, Diazin was just a couple of weeks away from standing trial for violating a restraining order Girlie had against him.
When the officers hear all of this, they decide that, you know what, maybe we should go take a peek around Girlie's apartment after all, just in case.
And when they walk in, unlike the super with his untrained eye, investigators know right away what they're looking at.
Those stains on the carpet, they look like blood stains and not only are they still wet, the entire place smells like bleach.
So whatever took place here, someone tried their best to clean it up.
When crime scene texts get there for a more thorough sweep and do a luminal test, the place lights up like a Christmas tree.
Someone lost a lot of blood in this apartment.
And it isn't just those larger spots, the one that still look wet when police first visited the apartment.
But there are a bunch of smaller ones too, all over.
But before they can even really start the work of running tests and comparing DNA,
someone driving along a remote highway 120 miles away makes a really disturbing discovery.
A few hours after Girlie was reported missing by her colleagues at the bank,
a state highway employee is driving along a remote stretch of road about an hour and a half from Albuquerque.
When he sees something out of the corner of his eye, about 20 feet up the side of an embankment,
he sees what looks like a blanket, which he realizes could be dangerous if the wind picks it up and drags it into the road.
I mean, this guy was already in the area to empty trash cans from the public rest stops along the road anyways.
So he's like, you know what, I'm just going to pull over, I'm going to grab this thing,
toss it in the back of the truck along with the rest of the stuff I have.
So he gets out, he walks towards this thing.
But what he realizes as he gets closer is that it's not a blanket at all, it's a tarp.
And as he approaches it, he notices what looks like blood.
Now, he's not going into like a full crime junkie panic like you or I would,
because he knows that it's hunting season and he's thinking like, listen,
this is some kind of tarp that a hunter would wrap a deer in.
But the panic does start to set in as he gets closer to this tarp and sees something else.
He sees a piece of duct tape with long, dark hairs caught in it.
And then another piece shaped like a figure eight.
And then a few feet farther away, he sees what looks like kids clothes,
a shirt, a pair of shorts and a pair of underwear.
And there's blood on all of those too.
Oh my God, kids clothes.
Yes, that's what it looks like at first glance.
They are these small clothes, the kind, you know, maybe a kid would wear,
but also the kind say a woman just five feet tall and less than a hundred pounds,
just like girly might wear.
Now, either way, he knows something is for sure not right here.
So he gathers everything up, the clothes, the tarp, everything,
and tosses it all into the back of his truck to deliver it to police.
Wait, he just picks it up and moves it?
Like this is a crime scene, isn't it?
Yeah, I mean, it's definitely some kind of scene, right?
Which like I think probably should have been preserved.
And I mean, I can't tell you why he moved everything,
except maybe he just didn't know any better.
I mean, like I said, several of the sources we consulted for this episode
mentioned that he was worried about safety.
Remember like the wind like catching the tarp and blowing it.
So maybe that's part of it.
Like he wanted to get it out of the way.
But I'm guessing he also just didn't fully know what he was dealing with
or how evidence should be handled.
Which I mean, fair enough, this is kind of pre-CSI on every single channel.
Yeah.
So maybe back then the only people who really knew about preserving scenes
or forensic evidence were police officers.
For sure.
So while the tarp and the clothes make their way to the state crime lab for testing,
police in Albuquerque are still trying to reach Diozin.
But at this point, dude's in the wind.
Until on September 13th, four days into the investigation,
police hear from not one, not two, but three different people all reporting
threatening phone calls coming from Diozin.
What?
This is where things start to get really strange.
Yeah, one of these threatening calls was received from Diozin's divorce lawyer
who says that he had called pretty much like ranting and raving.
The second one is from a former neighbor who, when she initially spoke to police,
like we're talking the very beginning of their investigation,
this neighbor told them that she saw Diozin get out of his car wearing full camouflage
clothing with like black grease paint all over his body.
And this was the night before Gurley was reported missing.
Well, now she tells them that Diozin must have found out about her statement.
Because now he's calling and threatening her.
And then the third threatening call is going to this woman named Vanda,
who is the director of the adoption agency Diozin used just a few weeks before when he
placed his son Dimitri up for adoption.
Wait, did I miss something?
Diozin has a son?
You didn't miss it.
But yes, he has a three-year-old son named Dimitri.
According to court records, Gurley had signed the papers giving up her rights to Dimitri
on August 26, so just a couple of weeks before she disappeared.
Okay, so this is Gurley and Diozin's child together.
Well, this is where things start to take a sharp left turn.
So stay with me.
Gurley was Dimitri's mother.
Yes, but he didn't come into Gurley's life in any kind of normal, straightforward way.
Diozin just showed up one day from a business trip with this month-old newborn baby boy
in his arms.
What, like, totally out of left field or, like, had they been planning to adopt?
A hundred percent out of left field.
So it was a complete surprise.
I mean, not like an unwelcome one.
Her friends say that Gurley wanted to have kids and she and Diozin had been, like,
trying to conceive for a while at this point, but, like, weren't just having any luck.
So before, adoption wasn't really, like, on the table.
They'd apparently discussed it and Gurley wasn't super keen on the idea,
but then Diozin just, like, rolls up with an infant and is, like, surprised.
And I mean, like, what is she gonna do?
I mean, to be fair, I actually know exactly what that's like.
I'm just gonna say, I was like, I feel like this is a little bit how you guys got ma'am.
You were super down for adoption, but...
It feels a little bit close to home for me, yeah.
Yeah.
But it was also something that just night, you know,
I had always planned for, had conversations about, met with family members and lawyers
about beforehand.
And it was very by the book and not, like, he just walked in from work one day with May.
For sure.
Okay, so now I, my mind has to know, where did Dimitri come from?
Well, Paul Hardin reported for the L Defensor Chieftain that Diozin told Gurley
that the little boy had been orphaned in Mexico by a friend, and he'd stepped up to help.
Which, like, I mean, to me, all the red flags go up, because to your point, to adopt a child,
like, lots of red tape, lots of paperwork.
Yeah, and that's, like, we adopted May from, like, our county in our state.
Like, when you're dealing with adopting from other countries, there's a ton more paperwork and...
Yes!
You know, assessments and, like, he's had red tape that goes along with it.
Yeah, but he just, like, shows up with a baby.
Okay, but why is he putting him up for adoption now?
Well, when Diozin first reaches out to Vonda, the lady at the agency, about putting Dimitri
up for adoption, he told her that Diozin himself was dying of leukemia and he only had,
like, a month or maybe even less to live.
And Vonda said that at the time, she totally believed it, because as he's telling her this,
he's, like, in her office, like, literally coughing up blood.
But everything starts to kind of unravel, because as part of the adoption process,
when you do it the appropriate way, they had to do a bunch of background checks and physical exams,
and when the results of Diozin's bloodwork come back, Vonda was surprised to learn,
first of all, that Diozin was not, in fact, dying of leukemia or of anything else.
Like, his bloodwork was totally clear.
But second, he's not Dimitri's adoptive father, he's Dimitri's biological father.
What? Yeah. So that's when she starts asking questions, like, okay, if you're his father,
who is this kid's biological mother? And Diozin then tells her that Dimitri doesn't
have a biological mother. Well, not really, he says, because he says that Dimitri was created
and grown in a lab using harvested eggs. Okay. Yeah, and I'm not, I'm not talking about the
kind of thing that happens with, like, in vitro or, like, surrogates or any of that,
like, what Diozin's talking about is, like, nine months growing this baby in a lab.
So, obviously, Vonda's like, that's not a thing, that's impossible, this guy is bad news,
and she's starting to wonder, like, what the heck is she actually, like, getting herself into?
What is going on with all of the lies? Right, this is like a time when you start,
like, slowly backing away and being like, I want nothing to do with this.
Exactly. So if Diozin isn't sick and dying in the first place, or after all, I guess,
why are they moving ahead with the adoption? I mean, it's a good question, and I wish I had
a straight answer. So, looking into this, like, it turns out, girly actually didn't want anything
to do with this plant. Like, she had grown really fond of Dimitri. She was Dimitri's mom, but Diozin
had been basically making her life a living hell when it came to sharing custody. So, for girly,
signing those papers to give him up for adoption was about self-preservation. I mean, the domestic
violence was bad. She was afraid for her life at that point. She was afraid of Diozin, and rightly
so. So she knew that anything that tied the two of them together, even the son that she
loved so much, was putting her life at risk. It was more or less just about completely severing
that tie. Yeah. I mean, and it's why she left Diozin in January. It's why she hid the details of
where she lived from pretty much everyone, and it's why she agreed to give Dimitri up for adoption,
because she knew what could happen if she didn't go along with what Diozin wanted.
Now, as for why Diozin approached the adoption agency in the first place,
that's a little harder to pin down. I mean, to be honest, maybe he didn't want to take care of a child
on his own, or maybe he started the process because he knew girly was going to disappear soon,
and he might end up in prison for the rest of his life, and he didn't want to leave Dimitri
unaccounted for. I mean, I really don't know what goes on in this guy's head. Anyway, at the time
all of this was going on, Vonda had been pretty shaken up by all of the lies and just this entire
situation. I mean, it's strange. And she didn't know who or what to believe. And she was frankly
starting to worry not just about Dimitri, but even about herself too. And she was worried enough
that she ended up sharing some of the details and her concerns about Diozin with her husband.
But according to a post on Mark Horner's blog, this is the same author who wrote the book on
this case. Diozin randomly overheard this conversation. Like they just happened to be at the same
restaurant, which is like bananas to me. What are the odds? Yeah, what a bizarre coincidence.
Yeah, but he hears her talking about him. And obviously he's like not happy. And so it's
it's this anger that he had for Vonda after hearing her like gossiping about him.
That's what led to him making the threatening calls to her. So all of the people that he'd
been calling and threatening his neighbor, his lawyer, Vonda, they were all people he
felt wronged him in some way. And because all three of them reported the threats, police are able
to trace the calls to a residence in South Carolina. And that's where they finally track
Diozin down. Only now he's got a brand new fiance.
When police finally catch up with Diozin in Charleston, South Carolina, they're able to arrest
him on three counts of making threats across state lines. I'm sorry. And you said he has this new
fiance already too? Oh yeah, he's got a new fiance already and not even just one over the
course of the investigation, police learn that he's engaged to three different women at this
point, none of whom know about the other. And only one of these three knows anything about the fact
that he has a missing wife or even that he had a wife at all. Oh my God. So with Diozin under arrest
and heading back to New Mexico, police move in to do a physical search of the home that he's been
staying in in South Carolina. And during that search, they find a gun, two vials of blood,
a bunch of different medications like prescriptions and stuff that's over the counter,
needles and glass vials. And they also find Gurley's address book and her Malaysian photo ID.
In addition to that, they also find a steam cleaner like the kind used to clean carpet
it and two sticks of the type of charcoal that a person might use to say paint their whole body
black. Okay, you're gonna have to rewind just for a second. Two vials of blood? Yeah, like his blood?
Harder to answer, maybe, but probably not. So again, this case keeps getting weirder.
Diozin was known to take blood from people for what he called scientific research.
Yeah, totally normal. Yeah, hard air quotes on the scientific research.
So if I had to take a guess, the blood probably belonged to either one of the
women that he was seeing or someone he was scamming. At this point, police have a decent
case building against Diozin. So they convene a grand jury in Albuquerque with the goal of
having him indicted for Gurley's murder. Wait, they like put all that together this quickly?
Yeah, this is September 27, just a little over two weeks after Gurley went missing.
Yeah. Now the key witness during that grand jury trial is a woman named Linda Henning. Linda is
a name that came up pretty early in the investigation as a person close to Diozin.
But when police went to speak with her the first time, just like a day or two after
Gurley went missing, she said that she and Diozin hardly knew each other and that
she'd never heard of Gurley, let alone even met her, which is what she tells the grand jury too.
But the more they press her with questions, the less coherent her answers become.
And before long, her testimony has devolved into a bunch of bizarre claims about government
officials and pedophile sex rings. And what investigators are finding out along with the
grand jury is that this woman is hard into conspiracy theories. And it's actually how
she met Diozin in the first place. They were at a lecture at a local college where this guy named
Dave Ike was speaking. And Dave Ike believes that shape shifting reptile aliens control
everything and that the only way they can maintain their human form is to drink human blood.
Okay. Yeah, and not only that, but they say that the most powerful blood is full of hormonal
secretions that you can only get from a woman who has been tortured and terrorized.
That's very disturbing. Were Diozin and Linda like hardcore followers of this guy?
Well, Linda was definitely hardcore. Diozin, I mean, it's hard to say, like he certainly
played like he was. But how much of that is for real? How much of that is like part of his whole
act? Honestly, who knows? But Diozin and Linda were both part of this UFO fan club kind of deal
as well. And Linda had been a member for a while, and she started bringing Diozin with her to meetings.
And everyone else in the group was kind of like, like, who the heck is this guy? And I mean,
how bananas do you have to be to raise eyebrows in like-
At a UFO fan club?
Yeah. I mean, listen, I would join a UFO fan club, no lie. But like, Diozin stood out even among
that crowd. And, you know, in this group, he was telling everyone that he was a doctor,
that he was a geneticist, which he wasn't, but fine. But then he also told them, this is my
favorite part, that he was a 4,000 year old alien and that he was immortal.
Ashley, this is going off the rails quick.
Listen, stay with me. I promise you are listening to an episode of Crime Junkie. This is not
supernatural. We're gonna, I'm gonna rope it back in. So police find out that there is one guy who's
been like chumming around with Linda and Diozin a lot. His name is Bill Miller. And the more
closely police look at Bill, the more suspicious they get. First of all, the people in the UFO
group say that they heard him saying things like he knew more than he could talk about when it came
to Gurley's disappearance. And also, he just randomly happened to go elk hunting for two days
right around the time that Gurley disappeared. So, of course, police go talk to Bill and when
they do, he tells them, yeah, I know Linda and I know Diozin too. And by the way, Diozin tried
to recruit me to kill his wife. Okay, then. Bill tells them that he didn't do it. Of course,
he had nothing to do with it. But when they get a warrant to search his house, they find a few
things that don't sit super well. Like they find a bunch of articles about Gurley's disappearance
that he had cut out of the paper and saved. Not only that, but they also found a notebook in
his truck that says, and I quote, the pituitary gland and the pineal gland has strong drug in it,
like heroin endorphins need terrorization for it to be put in blood. End quote. Sound familiar?
So police learn that Bill had a hunting cabin in this town called Magdalena, which is the exact
town that's an hour and a half from Albuquerque where the tarp and the duct tape and the bloody
clothes were found on the day that Gurley was reported missing. And if that wasn't all suspicious
enough, Bill also opened a brand new safe deposit box at a brand new bank on the day
that Gurley disappeared using someone else's name and an address in Colorado. And what do
police find when they look in the safe deposit box? They find $10,000 in cash split between
four packages and then wrapped in tinfoil, which I only assume is like an alien thing.
I would say that seems pretty pointed. Yeah, and then they find $12,000 worth of coins.
So they have to be thinking that this guy is a hitman. I mean, absolutely. But the only problem
is, we know this, it is really hard to prosecute someone for murder without a body. Right. And
even though everyone working the case is sure by this point that Gurley is likely dead,
Bill and Linda are probably both involved. And diazin is the mastermind behind all of it.
Not having a body is a big problem when it comes to prosecuting someone for murder.
Right. It just throws a ton of reasonable doubt into the mix. Exactly. But what police do have
is a mountain of circumstantial evidence. And then on October 21st, this is six weeks
after Gurley disappeared. Police finally get the break that they've been looking for.
On October 21st, investigators get the call that they've been waiting weeks for. The results of
the forensic testing on the carpet from Gurley's apartment and the Magdalena tarp are finally in.
And they are kind of surprising. The blood on the tarp and on the clothing and the strands of
tangled hair in the duct tape all come back as a positive match to Gurley. The blood evidence from
the carpet in Gurley's apartment, that's what was more surprising. So remember how I said there
were a few big spots of blood and then some smaller ones too? Yeah. Well, the larger spots,
even though they were pretty degraded from the bleach, were found to be consistent with Gurley's
DNA. But the tiny droplets of blood, those were a match to Linda. You mean like she was injured
during a struggle or something? Well, probably. Like so the way it worked is a droplets of Linda's
blood were kind of all mixed up with droplets of Gurley's blood. So investigators are thinking
that that's probably what happened, that there was some kind of struggle and Linda got injured.
In John Springer's reporting for Court TV, he quotes prosecutors saying the blood droplets
suggest a quote, pitched battle, end quote, occurred between Linda and Gurley inside the
apartment. Okay. So we have Gurley's DNA and Linda's DNA. Was there any DNA evidence from
diazin? No blood DNA evidence, but they did find hair and saliva on the carpet that matched diazin
as well as on Gurley's clothing, which I think is important because again, people are like, oh,
you know, they did used to be married. But remember, she got this apartment to like hide from him. He
wasn't supposed to know where she was living. So I do think it's significant that that was found
in her apartment. Right. The other thing that they found though, that's interesting is like
all this other stuff in the carpet. So they found glitter, they found this sand that's used for
like arts and crafts, both of which police think connect back to Linda. And not only that, according
to Mark Horner's book, investigators also learn that the carpet Gurley's clothing and the steam
cleaner found in South Carolina in that house all contain a bunch of animal fur, lots of cat hair,
but also like deer and rabbit fur and feathers. Okay, I have to ask this question, but I know
you would have brought it up if she had, but did Gurley have any pets? I mean, obviously she wasn't
like keeping a deer in her apartment, but a cat or dog. No, no, she didn't have any animals and
neither did the person who lived in the apartment right before her. But you want to know who had
six cats? Linda Henning. Okay, so that explains some of the evidence, but not really the rest of
it. Like where do they think the fur and feathers came from? Well, I mean, I think they think that
those belong to the third person in this complicated little murder trio, Bill Miller. I mean, remember,
Miller was the guy who went elk hunting right after Gurley disappeared and who was known to
hunt pretty regularly, including in the woods near his fixer upper cottage in Magdalena. And
sure enough, when police go back to search Bill's house again, they do find traces of the same
fur and feathers, like same colors and everything. So at this point, investigators might not have
a body, but they have enough to finally bring charges. So on November 17th, a grand jury indicts
both Linda and Diozin on a slew of charges, including murder and kidnapping. But what about Bill
Miller? Well, the grand jury says that they don't feel like there's enough to proceed with murder
charges against him at this point, but they do charge him with conspiracy. And I'll actually
come back to him. Now, by the time the trial date is approaching, the prosecution's case is strong,
even without a body. They have that pile of physical evidence leaking Diozin and Linda
to both the primary crime scene, which is Gurley's apartment and that second one in Magdalena.
They know that Linda bought a tarp from Home Depot just before Gurley went missing, the same
kind found with Gurley's hair and blood on it. According to court records, they also found two
guns and a ninja sword hidden at her home. And this is a sword Diozin had bought just before
Gurley's disappearance. Now, there was blood evidence on the sword kind of like all over it.
And the blood on the handle that they found was confirmed to belong to Diozin, but all of the
blood that was actually on the blade was too compromised to test. So I mean, for a largely
circumstantial case and for a nobody homicide, I mean, that's that's a pretty solid case. And
Diozin must have recognized it because in January 2000, before he could even go to trial,
he surprises everyone by changing his plea to guilty to avoid a trial or to avoid the death
penalty. Oh, but that doesn't stop the state from pursuing the death penalty in Linda's case.
As Jolene Gutierrez Kruger put it in her story for the Albuquerque Tribune, quote, three years,
four attorneys, and five judges later, end quote, Linda's trial finally begins. And I've already
told you about the state's case like the forensic, all the circumstantial evidence, right? But the
defense's case, well, that relies pretty heavily on one key witness, Diozin himself. He is the key
witness for Linda's case. Diozin tells the jury that he was the person ultimately responsible
for Gurley's murder, and that he hired Bill Miller to do the job. And he says that his role,
besides like hiring a hitman, was to clean up the crime scene. And he says Linda was absolutely
not involved. But her DNA was at the crime scene. Well, Diozin says there's a reason for that.
According to an article from CNN, his plan was to take a vial of another woman's blood. And remember,
he's like prone to just like storing random vials of blood around. But he was going to take this
vial of blood and use it to confuse police. Because according to his thinking, is that like,
if there was two different types of blood and none of it was really usable or identifiable,
because of like the bleach cleanup that it would throw off the whole investigation,
basically is like what he was aiming for. So he says he did grab a vial of blood initially,
but like it broke in his pocket. And the only other one he had was Linda. So he just like
grabs that. And before he cleaned up the crime scene, he just like sprinkled it around.
Seriously? I mean, if you believe Diozin, which I mean, the jury didn't. And I mean,
why would they he is a full time liar? Everything about this guy was a lie. I mean,
like just even put it in perspective, like this dude made a living conning people out of their
money. I mean, he told them B vitamins were this special serum that would stop the aging process
or cure cancer. He claimed to be a doctor geneticist, which he was neither. And in fact, I mean,
he lied so well that he got people to give them their blood. Yeah. And he was like straight
up booted from med school for faking his resume. And this is the kicker. Even his name is made
up. What? His real name was Armand Chavez, and he's from Houston, Texas. And listen,
Diozin's testimony on the witness stand is some of the most chilling, disturbing
testimonies I've ever heard. I could tell you about it, but you really need to hear it for yourself.
I debuts murder is the most heinous crime known to mankind.
But when you decide you're going to commit murder, you decide that you're going to trade your life
for theirs. I did that. She knew that you were looking for her. She knew she was going to be
hunted like the dog she was. And yes, she knew like a scared rabbit in an open field. She knew.
So I don't know about you, but everything about that makes my skin crawl 1000% percent.
But is his story legit? You know, I don't know what to believe anymore. I mean,
the evidence at the scene makes sense with his story. And I think he for sure did the cleanup.
That whole thing about him like sprinkling the vial of Linda's blood around to throw police
off. I mean, that could be true. It's just at some point, it gets hard for me to believe
that he wasn't actually there. Like when Gurley was kidnapped or even killed.
Yeah. I mean, even by the way he talks in the clip from his testimony, like,
it sounds like he wouldn't want to miss being there, you know?
Yeah. But I guess the thing I can't get past though is I don't know what the jury
did or didn't see that they didn't feel like they could get Bill Miller on this.
Because it also in my mind, like I don't see a way that Bill Miller wasn't involved.
Like totally. Did he end up facing any murder charges in the end? Like what's his deal?
No. So actually Bill didn't face trial until the summer of 2003. And in the end,
he was only ever charged with evidence tampering and sentenced to time served plus a year of probation.
Even with all that evidence, like the fur and the stuff that was on Gurley's clothes that they
matched back to his cottage. Yeah. Dye isn't testified at that trial too, telling the same story,
but this time as a witness for the prosecution. But here's the thing. He was like total sleaze
bag on the stand. He was like really difficult. He was really combative and hateful. So I don't
think that the grand jury found him credible. So they wouldn't indict Bill for murder,
just like the evidence tampering and stuff. Okay. We didn't really get into this,
but was there ever any closure or was ever addressed as to why Dye isn't did this? Like
what was his motive? Well, Dye isn't said that it was because Gurley threatened to try and get
full custody of Dimitri. And he was just mad about it. But I mean, really, I think if he was mad
about anything, it was that she dared leave him in the first place. Not to mention Gurley had
uncovered his like youth serum B vitamin scam and his fake cancer. So I mean, who knows what
other lies that she uncovered. And like, she was probably starting to learn who he really
was. And that might have been a motivating factor for what he did. Right. Right. I mean,
I think the unfortunate truth is that, yes, this story is one of the twistiest, most absurd we've
ever told on this show. But it's also just like so many other stories because the truth is,
Gurley Chew Hossenkoff was a victim of domestic violence, just like so many women in this country
and around the world are every day. And I think it's easy to lose sight of that when you're talking
about alien overlords. But that is what this story is about. And the worst part is Gurley
knew that she was in danger. She went into hiding. She filed restraining orders. She started
divorce proceedings. I mean, she actually called the FBI the night before she was kidnapped and
killed asking for protection from diazin. And she didn't get it. Whatever happened to Dimitri?
According to Mark Horner's book, he was adopted into a new family, but there's really no solid
information out there about where he is now. And probably for the best, I mean, this kid deserves
to live a peaceful life. And, you know, actually a little bit of an aside here, but during their
investigation, police actually tracked down Dimitri's actual birth mother. She's a Japanese
woman who was living in Canada and carrying on a bit of a long distance relationship with diazin,
one of, you know, the many while he was married to Gurley. And shortly after the baby was born,
he had asked her to meet him in Mexico and to bring their son, which she did. And while they
were there, diazin told her that Dimitri had a rare genetic condition that only he, diazin,
would be capable of handling. And so this is how he got Dimitri. He actually convinced her.
Obviously they conned him away from his mom. Yeah, when he was just a few weeks old. And
she never did see him after that. And she never learned the truth that Dimitri was 100% fine,
that diazin was neither a geneticist or a doctor until the police called her.
So I would assume that she isn't the person who adopted him then?
No, by the time she found out about all of this, he was with his new family.
And she did say that she missed Dimitri every single day, but she had a family of her own two
and an elderly husband. And she said it was just really complicated. In the end, Linda Henning
avoided the death penalty, but was sentenced to 73 and a half years for her role in Gurley's death.
And she's serving that time in New Mexico. Diazin is serving a life sentence and then
some in Wyoming, where he requested to go as part of his plea deal. And in return,
he said that he'd point investigators to Gurley's body. But that hasn't happened.
Police have done several extensive searches over the years. But as of this recording,
her remains have still never been found.
If you want to see pictures and source material for this episode, along with resources for victims
or those who have loved ones who are victims of domestic violence, you can find all of that on
our website, crimejunkiepodcast.com. And be sure to follow us on Instagram at crimejunkiepodcast.
We'll be back next week with a brand new episode.
Crimejunkie is an audio chuck production. So what do you think Chuck? Do you approve?