Crime Junkie - MURDERED: Heather Bogle
Episode Date: March 22, 2021When a woman is murdered in a small Rust Belt town, the quest to find her killer gets turned upside down. For current Fan Club membership options and policies, please visit https://crimejunkieapp.co...m/library/. Source materials for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/murdered-heather-bogle/Â
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Hi, Crime Junkies. I'm your host, Ashley Flowers.
And I'm Britt.
And today, I want to tell you all about a woman whose life in a small rust belt town was brutally stolen from her,
just as she was working to make positive changes and build a better future for her and her daughter.
But what at first seemed like a straightforward murder investigation turned into so much more,
with allegations swirling while a killer remained on the loose.
This is the story of Heather Bogle.
On April 9, 2015, in Clyde, Ohio, which is this itty-bitty town about an hour to like an hour and a half west of Cleveland,
this woman named Renee McLaughlin gets some odd news.
Her granddaughter Mackenzie hasn't been picked up from school.
Now, usually Mackenzie's mom, Heather, who is Renee's daughter, is the one to pick her up,
but today, for whatever reason, Heather never showed up.
Right away, this strikes Renee as odd.
She'd already texted Heather a couple of times really super early in the morning,
like once at 2.24 a.m., asking if she was at home, and then again at 3.13 a.m. after she didn't get an answer.
At the time, Renee didn't think it was too weird for Heather not to respond,
but now, with no one going to pick up Mackenzie from school, it just doesn't sit right.
So why was Renee texting Heather so early?
Yeah, it's an odd time. It kind of stood out to me, too.
But according to Craig Shoup's article for the News Messenger,
Heather actually works the night shift doing material handling at the Whirlpool plant there in Clyde.
So she was pretty likely to be awake at that hour.
It's not like she was just texting her in the middle of the night when most of us would be sleeping.
Oh, right. And even if Heather wasn't at work, she would probably still be sticking with that schedule just to keep her body in that mode.
Right, right. So now, Renee's trying to get ahold of Heather again, really hoping for an answer.
She sends Heather a message at 2.33 p.m., basically asking,
hey, who is supposed to get Mackenzie from school today?
But again, Heather never answers.
And all of this is super out of character for her,
because everyone who knows her knows that she is a super dedicated parent
who just finished nursing school in addition to working at the factory and raising her daughter.
So she's working really hard to make a better life for her and Mackenzie.
She wouldn't just not show up.
Even though Heather's plans had hit a little bit of a stumbling block,
she had actually recently failed her nursing board exams,
even though she graduated school.
She's still determined. Like, that's not sitting her back.
It's not like she's kind of like run off.
And this one thing wouldn't stop her from picking up her daughter and wouldn't stop her from this path that she's on, right?
Yeah, yeah.
So at some point on that same day, this is April 9th,
Renee calls the Sandusky County Sheriff's Department to report Heather missing.
The Sheriff's Department, thank goodness, doesn't waste any time starting their search
for any sign of where Heather or her car might have wound up.
Heather drives this dark green 2003 Oldsmobile Allero and police don't find it in the parking lot
at the Whirlpool Plant, where we expect it to be if she were still at work
or if something had happened to her at work.
And they don't find it at any of the local bars or even at her ex-boyfriend's house.
Now, nothing in the earliest reports that I could find mentioned police checking over at Heather's house,
but I have to assume her mom probably did and police did too.
If they're checking her ex-boyfriend's house, they have to check her house first.
Yeah, like that's the first place you check.
By the next day, law enforcement takes to local media in nearby Toledo to ask for the public's help.
Nick Bade reported for Toledo News Now that Heather was last seen at 6.17 a.m. on the morning of April 9th,
when she was clocking out of work at the plant,
and that she was wearing jeans, a neon yellow shirt, and black and pink sneakers.
Law enforcement knows what she's wearing. They also know that her cell phone last pinged in the town of Greensprings,
which is about a 10-minute drive from Clyde.
But by 9.20 a.m., Heather's phone is dead that day.
And then, on the evening of Friday, April 10th, this is a little over 24 hours after Heather was first reported missing,
police get a tip from an anonymous 911 caller about a car parked at the Somerton Apartments on Hickory Street,
only about a 5-minute drive away from where Heather worked.
The caller is convinced that the car belongs to Heather,
and when the caller asks the dispatcher to run the car's plate number, it comes back with a match.
So, law enforcement go out to check this out, and sure enough, it is Heather's car.
When police open the trunk, that's when they make a horrifying discovery,
because there, curled up in the fetal position with her hands together, is Heather Bogle.
According to 48 Hours, she looks like she's been posed this way,
and she's wearing this big red t-shirt from Walt Disney World with a picture of Mickey Mouse on it,
so not the stuff that she was last seen in at work.
And the reports don't mention if she has any shorts or pants on underneath the shirt.
Yeah, I mean, you said she was wearing a neon yellow shirt when she was last seen.
Right, so obviously we don't know what happened to her or where her clothes are,
but she's in different clothes than when she's last seen alive.
Even though police won't know how Heather died until they get the autopsy results back,
it's obvious just from looking at her that she has been viciously beaten,
and they're no longer looking at a missing person's case.
This is clearly a homicide.
They're not able to get any forensic evidence from the trunk of Heather's car.
There's no blood in there. There's no bullet casings. There's no DNA.
I mean, the scene is pretty well tidied up.
I actually have a picture of the trunk just to take a look,
because I don't know that it's what I would expect.
I mean, it's definitely tidy. There's no blood stains.
There's a handful of odds and things in the back, like jumper cables, an extra set of shoes,
a Walmart bag, an ice scraper. Nothing super out of the usual.
Yeah. I mean, it's definitely not like immaculate.
To me, it doesn't look like it had been professionally cleaned or anything,
but I think it goes to show that I don't think she was putting that trunk alive.
Right, right. Otherwise, you would see a struggle and stuff moved around,
but it looks like everything was just sitting there, and she was maybe in there with it.
Yeah. Now, I know I mentioned that police looked for Heather's car
at her ex-boyfriend's house before they found her,
but it's not her ex-boyfriend who they start looking at right after they find Heather's body
and start hunting for her killer.
It's actually her ex-girlfriend.
This woman named Carmela Bedea.
In the time since Heather had been missing, police learned that they dated for about a year,
but according to Courtney Oztolfi's reporting in the Sandusky Register,
they broke up less than a week before Heather vanished,
and it was rough on both of them.
What do you mean by rough?
Like, knock down, drag out, messy breakup.
And I mean, the very night before Heather went missing,
she and Carmela had a big fight.
Their calls and texts from that Wednesday night are pretty nasty.
I mean, to the point that threats are being made.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, you can see why.
I mean, when you have a missing person,
and this is the thing that they're seeing right before she goes missing,
you understand why they're looking at her right away.
For sure.
But after reviewing her phone records
and interviewing her several times over the next few days,
Detective Sean O'Connell feels confident that he can cross Carmela off his list,
and she is no longer considered a suspect at that point.
Okay, but what about the ex-boyfriend then?
I didn't see him named anywhere in my research,
so I don't know that he's even really looked into the same way Carmela is,
but ultimately, because he's not mentioned, I assume they ruled him out,
however deeply they looked into him.
Now, around the same time that Carmela is being eliminated, though,
police get Heather's autopsy results back,
and the findings are truly horrific.
According to Kred Shoup's piece in the news messenger,
the autopsy reveals that Heather was shot twice in the back
and died from the bullets piercing her lungs.
She also suffered from blunt trauma with bruises to her face,
forehead, eyes, her jaw, and on her arms and her legs.
Heather even had defensive wounds on the back of both of her hands,
and she also had lacerations on her tongue.
I do not even want to speculate on how those got there.
I know.
That sounds so awful.
And there's more.
I mean, that's not even the end of it.
She had ligature marks on her wrists and ankles
that suggest she was handcuffed before she died,
and she's got what the autopsy report calls
curvilinear marks on the left side of her neck.
Okay, but what does that mean?
I'm not totally sure.
This is the first time actually this word has ever come up
in a crime junkie episode,
and there aren't pictures for me to show you, thank goodness,
but I'm thinking that maybe it's like a half moon shape.
I mean, that's the only thing I even think of.
Right, right.
The report goes on to say that there's no evidence
that Heather was sexually assaulted,
but what's really odd is that whoever killed Heather
also cut her hair in a really uneven, jagged way.
Like, think being nine or 10 years old,
getting ahold of some scissors,
and deciding to just like go to town on your hair, right?
Okay.
Right at the scalp, not even like at the bottom.
It's bizarre.
And whoever killed her also cut Heather's nails
all the way down to the cuticle.
We're not talking a manicure.
Wait, if they cut her nails down to the cuticles,
the nails would be gone, right?
Like, do they mean maybe the nail beds?
I don't think so.
I mean, 48 hours says cuticles.
Again, without photos, I can't say.
So I don't know how they did it,
but I mean, I think they're like really, really deep
and something that, again,
I don't know if it was done pre-mortem, post-mortem.
Something I think would be really painful
if she wasn't already deceased.
And the reason for this, I'm thinking,
is that whoever cut her nails did it to try
and get rid of any DNA evidence underneath them.
Like, her killer knew the body would be found
and actively took steps to cover up this crime,
which goes hand-in-hand with how police didn't really
get any forensic evidence from her trunk either.
So with this person obviously being incredibly careful
and even having a vague idea of where police would look
for DNA, is it possible that she was sexually assaulted
but the killer knew how to cover up
or even not leave behind physical evidence of that?
Well, I mean, usually it's more than semen
that they're looking for when they're checking
if someone has been assaulted.
You can be assaulted without there being semen.
So I'm wondering if maybe the person who did Heather's autopsy
didn't find things.
What they normally look for is vaginal tearing
or other physical signs that someone's assaulted.
Yeah, like trauma.
Yeah, so I would imagine that there was no additional trauma
for them to completely rule it out.
So based on Heather's car and body being found
in the Summerton apartments,
that's really where investigators turn their focus.
Detective Sean, who I mentioned before,
is in charge of Heather's case,
and he takes to the media with police's theory
that Heather may have come to this complex before she died,
but he doesn't know why.
According to Christina Smith's piece in the News Messenger,
within six days of Heather's body being found,
police put out a $5,000 reward for information
and announced that they've got several people of interest.
Between the reward money, the shocking nature of Heather's death,
and Clyde's close-knit small-town gossip mill,
the investigation is all over the local news throughout the area,
and as a result, police are getting tips coming in.
One tip leads them out to an abandoned building
on County Road 175 and County Road 113
that falls within the range of Heather's last cell phone ping,
which again was out near Greensprings.
Police bring a cadaver dog in the hopes
that maybe they'll be able to pick up the scent of blood
or help them locate some kind of forensic clue.
I mean, again, I think they're looking for the place that she died, right?
We know it wasn't the trunk.
And police are hoping that the cadaver dog
will be able to smell things that were missing from the trunk
or whatever, hair, fibers, anything.
But unfortunately, the dogs turn up nothing.
Now, the article that I read about this in,
which again was another one of Craig Shoup's pieces,
mentions something really interesting.
They say that police also brought a cadaver dog
to an apartment in the Somerton complex where her car was found.
Wait, like a specific unit?
Yeah, in the piece doesn't say what specific unit,
but it's clear that they didn't go searching every single one.
It sounds like they just went to a single one.
And if they think that she may have gone there on her own initially,
like she would have to have some connection
to someone who lives there, right?
Yeah, I mean, that's what it's seeming like, right?
Or like a specific renter is sticking out for one reason or another
because police specify that this is actually the second time
that they've searched this same apartment
and that they didn't find anything the first time around.
So now they were coming back with the dog.
So they're like zeroing in on someone there.
But at the time, they aren't telling anyone who lives there
or even what led them to search there or bring the dogs there.
But once they do for this second search,
the dog signals on the front door.
And here's where it gets more interesting
because even though the dog smells something on this apartment door,
indicating that human remains might have been there, are there, whatever,
police don't find anything that points to Heather being harmed in this apartment.
They did find some marijuana and some, quote, boxes of evidence,
but they won't elaborate beyond that.
These searches are front page news in Sandusky County
and the whole community really rallies around Heather's family
and especially her daughter Mackenzie, who's now facing a life without her mom.
Heather's coworkers at Whirlpool organized vigils.
They set up fundraising all while hoping and praying
that the searches will lead to a break in the case
and finally bring a killer to justice.
As the investigation carries on toward the one month mark,
police seem to be making some real progress.
They're narrowing down their list of possible people of interest,
ruling them out one by one through interviews, through their investigation,
and they're confident that their big break is on the way.
On May 8th, almost a month to the day of when Heather first was reported missing,
the Sandusky County Sheriff joined forces with the Bureau of Criminal Investigation
and Identification to search a house in Fremont, Ohio,
about 15 minutes west of Clyde.
Since Heather's murder is such a high profile case in the area,
police are going out of their way to really, like,
hit the balance between keeping the public informed
without giving out sensitive information.
So they do make this information public
and they go into a bit more detail about what they're doing there.
This house is a rental with two people staying there as tenants
and one of them is this woman named Keanna Bore,
who, by the way, up until recently used to live in the Somerton Apartments in Clyde.
Wait, so was it her apartment that they were searching initially?
You betcha. She is considered a major person of interest at this point.
Now, not an official suspect yet,
but she's been interviewed multiple times
and police have taken samples of her DNA.
Again, police make all of this public like,
hey, we're making progress, we're going to get Heather's murder solved.
The lead investigator on the case, remember Detective Sean,
he has a gut feeling that they're on the right track with Keanna
and the more he interacts with her, the stronger the feeling gets.
There's just something about her behavior that does not sit right with him,
like how she doesn't seem willing to talk to the police,
just this general vibe she gives off, you know,
and police find it very suspicious that Keanna may have had a red Mickey Mouse shirt
like the one found on Heather's body.
What do you mean by she may have had a Mickey Mouse shirt?
Like, I may have a Mickey Mouse shirt, to be completely honest.
It's a little vague, but according to 48 Hours,
Keanna was allegedly seen wearing a similar type shirt.
It doesn't give any more information than that,
like, you know, all my questions, when was she seen wearing the shirt,
what exactly did it look like, do they have receipts of this shirt?
Does she no longer have it anymore?
Yeah, so I agree with you, I think it's vague,
but all they're willing to say at the time is that, like,
she may have owned a piece of clothing like this at some point in her life,
that's it, so not super strong evidence.
Beyond just the shirt, though, Keanna's social media activity
raises even more red flags for police.
She went on Facebook on April 9th, the day Heather disappeared,
and she made this really weird post about how she can't believe what happened,
and then, in another post the same day,
she's talking about how a person can be charged with murder,
plead insanity, and only serve 8 to 10 years.
So, by now, between these cryptic posts,
this possible vague shirt connection,
and how much she doesn't want to help the investigation,
police, and especially Detective Sean, are convinced that Keanna's hiding something.
For her part, Keanna claims that she's being unfairly targeted
and even hires an attorney while the investigation continues.
But she still hasn't been officially named a suspect yet.
No, she is still just a person of interest.
And in late May of 2015, police name another person of interest in Heather's murder.
According to another one of Craig Shoup's pieces for the News Herald,
this man's name is Omar Satchel.
He's 34 years old.
He's got a criminal record for home invasion and weapons charges.
And now, he's currently in jail in Sandusky County on theft charges
for having a weapon while on probation and for having a warrant out for his arrest up in Michigan.
And what's interesting is that a quick glance at his visitor logs
shows a name that investigators are very familiar with.
And seeing it there with this new person of interest raises their suspicions even higher.
At some point after his most recent arrest, Keanna Bohr came to visit Omar in prison.
Now, I got in this weird like chicken or egg situation,
and I didn't figure out what police don't specify is if they got to Omar through Keanna going to visit him,
or if he was already someone that they were looking into,
and then they saw a connection to this other person of interest,
and they were like, oh, something has to be going on here.
But either way, to them, that's proved that two of the people who are now high on law enforcement's list
know each other and have some kind of connection.
Okay, but with each other, what's their connection to Heather,
or even just one of their connections to her?
Because I'm kind of lost about how either of these people became people of interest at all.
Yet initially, police don't give a reason to the public for the rest of the summer.
So I think everyone was kind of confused about how these two were,
or at least one of them were connected to Heather.
But as time goes on and more and more information about Heather's death becomes public,
the connection starts to become better known.
You see, in June, police revealed that the results of Heather's toxicology test
came back positive for marijuana.
And then in August, Detective Sean announces that the weapon Omar's in trouble for
might have been the gun that killed Heather Bogle.
It's this 380-cobra, small-caliber-type weapon that belonged to Omar's fiancé, Margaret.
And since the gun was registered to Margaret, police now know it's like Macon Model.
There's just one problem.
Police can't find the gun to prove it.
And they also haven't found out where Heather was actually murdered at this point.
As Craig Shoe reported, though, that doesn't stop Detective Sean
and the Sandusky County Sheriff's Department from naming Omar and Kiana
as their prime suspects in Heather's death on September 12th,
a little over five months after she was killed.
Since they're still building their case and Omar is already in jail,
law enforcement holds off on arresting Kiana for some reason.
But they think that they may know what Heather's connection to Omar was
and what she was doing at the summertime apartments that night.
So, like I just told you, the toxicology report came back
showing Heather had used marijuana at some point.
And Detective Sean has this theory that he thinks she might have been
at the summertime apartments to buy some pot.
You had said earlier that the police did seize marijuana from Kiana's apartment
during one of those really early searches.
Yeah, so that's the only thing we know for sure that they got from her apartment
since police have never disclosed what other evidence they took.
Detective Sean is pretty vocal with his suspicions that Omar in particular
is involved in the drug trade.
And he basically alleges that Omar could have been selling prescription pills,
I mean, even crack cocaine and heroin in Sandusky County before he was arrested.
I think what they're alleging is that because Heather had pot in her system
and we know that Kiana knew Omar, Omar is alleged to have sold drugs,
they're thinking Heather went to the summertime apartments to buy marijuana
either from Kiana, who knew Omar, or directly from Omar,
who we know could have been there because he knew Kiana.
That's like basically the whole thing that they're putting forward.
And we know that marijuana was in the apartment.
So, like, there's this big like string board in my mind
connecting all these things right now, but it seems a little bit...
The investigation continues all through the fall of 2015 into the winter
with no additional arrests being made.
Detective Sean puts out a call to the public asking for tips
about Omar's alleged drug business,
in particular, asking for information about these multiple cell phones
that he thinks Omar uses.
Like, if he can get those numbers, then maybe he can get the records,
maybe he can trace the pings,
and I think he's trying to, like, obviously, like, place it with Heather
or point out some inconsistencies in his story, whatever.
In December of that year, Omar breaks his silence
to the news messenger from prison.
And he, like Kiana, denies ever even meeting Heather
or having anything to do with her death.
And he says that he and Kiana are being targeted,
even alleging that Detective Sean told him, quote,
I know it's not you, but I'll make it you, end quote.
He says that he feels that part of the reason they're being targeted
is due to them both being African-American
in an overwhelmingly white town like Clyde.
He admits that, yes, he has made mistakes in his life,
including substance use,
but he's adamant that he is not a murderer.
Omar goes on to lay out his alibi
for the days surrounding Heather's murder.
According to him, he was at the days in on Ohio State Road 53
from April 8th to April 10th.
And I looked at the hotel's location on Google Maps,
and it looks like it's just north of Fremont,
about 20 minutes away from Clyde where Heather lived.
Omar says that he spent April 10th
at a trio of local bars in Fremont
and then got back to the hotel at 11.30 p.m. that night.
So can any of this be verified by police?
So here's what I read in that same article.
Detective Sean isn't disputing
that Omar was where he says he was,
but basically he says he's not ruling out the possibility
that Omar moved around during that time frame.
So I don't know, I kind of like side-eye that
because reading between the lines a little bit,
it sounds like the thought process is,
the alibi's good but not good enough
or doesn't fit enough.
And so if it doesn't fit enough,
give me some proof, right?
Yeah, and we talked about this in a recent case,
where how many boxes does an alibi have to check
to be good enough to rule somebody out or rule somebody in?
Obviously if you have more people verifying it
and corroborating it, fantastic,
but what's the lowest bar?
Why isn't this good enough?
And I think potentially this could be why he's so intent
on looking for these other cell phones
and getting those numbers and tracking those pings
because I'm sure that the phones that he did have,
probably, again, I'm totally guessing,
probably corroborate Omar's story.
And he is where he says he is.
And so he's trying to prove a bigger conspiracy
that he left his phone maybe with someone
and was out traveling with these other phones.
And I don't know where the line is.
I appreciate the thoroughness,
but we're starting to venture into a territory of like,
are you being thorough?
Are you trying to prove something,
a theory that you have even when the evidence you have
isn't fitting it?
Yeah, and I think of like,
how can I prove that I'm home all day
with my son who's doing virtual learning?
When it's just me and my son here,
my phone hasn't moved, but there's no one else.
Would that be good enough to clear me from a crime?
I don't know.
From now on, I think you need to be seen in those Zoom calls.
Over the next few months,
the investigation keeps going with Detective Sean leading the way.
Craig Shoup, who's still keeping an eye on this case
for the News Herald, reports in February of 2016
that Kiana gets arrested for theft
and using an elderly woman's credit card
to buy pizza and gas.
Even though she's still never been charged
with anything to do with Heather Bogle's murder,
Detective Sean is thrilled to have her off the streets.
Like, he actually tells the media that he's convinced
of Kiana's guilt in Heather's death
because in his mind, this quote shows what she's capable of.
Um, I'm sorry.
At least in my mind, there is a gigantic difference
between credit card fraud for pizza and fuel
and committing this brutal murder like Heather's.
Like, unless Kiana's actually being charged with that murder,
it just seems like a really irresponsible thing
for any law enforcement to say.
Yeah, it's hard to say exactly where Sean's getting his views from.
Like I said, we don't have all of the evidence,
but it is starting to feel kind of personal, right?
And also too, if I was him,
I'd be afraid of getting sued over statements like that.
I mean, that's pretty bold
if you're not going to arrest someone.
Yeah, yeah, I mean, we use the word alleged
and allegedly all the time for a reason,
and so do law enforcement, or they're supposed to at least.
Yeah.
But time goes on, Sean's mind doesn't change,
and the first anniversary of Heather's death comes and goes.
After one year and two suspects,
police have no arrests, no charges filed,
and none of the breakthroughs
Heather's family and the public have hoped and prayed for.
Omar is eventually sentenced to three years in prison
on the weapons charges,
but again, this has nothing to do with Heather's death,
and the gun that they believe could be, maybe,
might be linked to Heather's case is still missing.
But then, on April 19th, 2016,
a year and nine days after Heather's body was found,
Detective Sean announces a third suspect in the murder,
a man named Kayree Jeffery, also known as Manny.
Kayree is 26 years old,
and according to Detective Sean in another news messenger piece,
Kayree knows Omar Satchel from their time
as friends up in Detroit, Michigan,
and came to Fremont after him.
Sean also says that he has evidence to connect Kayree
with Heather's death, but he won't say exactly
what the evidence is.
For his part, Kayree's like,
listen, Omar and I have drinks together sometime,
but we are not like BFFs or anything.
Just like Kiana and Omar, he says,
I've never met Heather Bogle in my entire life,
and I do not have anything to do with her murder.
So, obviously, at this point, there is a ton of
he said, she said, he said,
they said all around this investigation.
I mean, both sides, the suspects and law enforcement
are saying about what we'd expect, right?
But just when it seems like things are going to keep
running as usual, new revelations emerge,
and they turn the entire investigation upside down.
On Friday, June 24th, 2016,
Detective Sean O'Connell is placed on administrative leave
from the Sandusky County Sheriff's Office.
What?
Yeah, according to Matt Westerholz reporting
in the Sandusky Register, Sean's under investigation
for alleged workplace misconduct,
and he's not allowed at the Sheriff's Office
without specific authorization from the Sheriff,
or unless he's got business there as a private citizen.
The same article shines a light on the pretty serious issues
going on behind the scenes at the Sandusky Sheriff's Office,
not just around Sean, but higher up the chain of command
as well, all the way up to the Sheriff himself.
It turns out that the relationship between Sean
and Sheriff Kyle Overmire has been disintegrating
over the past year before Sean was put on leave.
You see, Sean did an investigation into the Sheriff,
an investigation that led him to filing a report
with the county prosecutor alleging that the Sheriff
didn't properly dispose of prescription medication
turned over to the police.
And now, less than a year after making these
pretty serious allegations against his boss,
Sean's on administrative leave
facing these allegations of his own.
So there's definitely some bad blood
between Sean and the Sheriff?
Definitely.
Over the next couple of months,
the Sheriff's Office keeps taking these hits,
which, like calls into question, they're in higher credibility.
And on August 19th, Craig Shoe reports for the news messenger
that an outside investigative body has found
that Sean released confidential information
related to the Heather Bogle case,
violating department policy,
and maybe Ohio State law in the process.
Less than a week later, on August 24th,
Sheriff Kyle Overmire is charged with
43 separate criminal counts, including 38 felonies.
Oh my God.
Yeah, a good chunk of these charges
are related to Kyle's substance use issues
around prescription medication like hydrocodone,
OxyContin, Percocet,
and the things that he did to obtain those drugs.
That September, Sean ultimately resigns from the department,
and three months later, in December,
now former Sheriff Kyle is sentenced to four years in prison
after losing re-election.
The audacity to run for office again
with over 40 charges just hanging over your head.
I don't even know how that was allowed,
because to me, that's totally bananas.
Maybe you shouldn't be in the middle of being charged
with felonies if you're going to run for chair.
While you're campaigning.
What do I know?
So like I said, Sean resigns,
but he's put under investigation himself
on charges that he misled public officials
and tampered with, destroyed, and concealed evidence
all in Heather's case.
Oh, wow.
Meanwhile, Heather's family has watched all of this.
I mean, they're watching how this investigation
into their loved one's murder has been weighed down
in this department's mess for almost two years.
And the only thing they can do is pray
that whoever this new incoming sheriff is,
like whoever takes over the case from Sean,
decides to do some actual police work.
Yeah.
One of the first things that the new Sandusky County Sheriff
does after taking office in January of 2017
is announce that there are no suspects.
Kiana, Omar, and Kari are off the hook.
The new lead investigator, Major Nick Costopoulos,
is basically starting over from square one.
Over the next few months, he conducts over 50 interviews,
and then on June 1st, 2017,
over two years after Heather's death,
he makes a stunning announcement.
They have arrested a man whose name
never once entered the investigation under Sean O'Connell.
Who?
According to the news messenger,
his name is Daniel Myers,
and he was a co-worker of Heather's
on that third shift at the Whirlpool plant.
Apparently, you're never going to believe this.
His DNA was found on Heather's cuticles.
What?
Yes, and police got to his camper and trailer
with evidence from her cell phone.
And get this, Sean O'Connell knew about this dude.
No.
Yeah, records show that he got an email tip
that pointed to Daniel as a possible suspect,
literally two days after Heather's body was found,
and he never followed up on it.
Oh, awesome. I hate that.
Yeah, this makes me so freaking mad.
Seriously, oh my God.
You see, what this new and factually based investigation
under the new investigator found
was that at 6.30 a.m.,
less than 15 minutes after she left work,
Heather's phone put her inside his trailer
just a few miles from the plant where they worked.
They believe she went there upset
and looking for comfort after failing her nursing exams,
and that Daniel likely came on to her at some point.
They believe that when she turned him down,
he turned violent.
To make it even worse,
he did his best to blend in after the murder.
Like, he donated $125 to the GoFundMe
set up for Heather's daughter Mackenzie
and even left a message on the page.
Here, I'm gonna have you read it for everyone.
The message said, quote,
Heather, you are such an amazing person.
Although we've only known one another for such a short time,
I have came to appreciate our talks about our kids.
I am distraught that there will be no more of your smile at work.
You will always be in my thoughts.
Your daughter will always be in my prayers.
God bless you, little missy, end quote.
I bet you'll always be in your thoughts.
What? You psycho?
Oh my God.
Now, once news of Daniel's arrest breaks,
the floodgates open.
Female colleagues at Whirlpool come forward
and say Daniel made them uncomfortable.
And one older woman who was a trainer at the plant
actually tells police
that she would tell her younger female employees
that she was training to stay away from this guy.
Which, like, shout out to that lady
for trusting her gut and looking out for others.
Yeah, but also, where's HR when you need them?
Truly.
Like, I have no idea if they reported their concerns,
but what a nightmare
to have to tell all of your female employees
walk around eggshells around this guy
because he's a total creep.
You know, did they not report it
because they didn't know if they believed
if they didn't want to get fired?
Like, they're relying on these jobs.
Well, and it's so unfair to put that responsibility
on multiple different female employees
versus, I don't know, just getting rid of the creep
in the first place.
Exactly.
I mean, I think this goes back to, like,
a more fundamental issue.
I don't care if no one reported it.
If everyone knew that this guy was a creep,
what the heck?
Yeah, like, I mean, my ear is on fire right now.
We can keep going.
Yeah.
Well, it only gets worse from there.
After he's arrested and charged with Heather's murder,
10 women come forward to police
and accuse Daniel of rape and assault.
Every little thing they learn about this man
paints a darker and darker picture
of a sadistic individual hiding in plain sight.
And there are people who firmly believe
that Heather isn't his first victim.
In 2009, Daniel's former girlfriend,
a woman named Leigh Ann Sluder,
died from a gunshot wound to her chest.
The gun was right there.
It's this.22 caliber rifle.
And so at the time, the Sandusky County Sheriff's ruled
she died by suicide.
But Leigh Ann's family always believed Daniel killed her.
According to 48 Hours, the investigation was botched.
I mean, like, police didn't even test Daniel's hands
for gunshot residue, just like a big mess
that we've seen the department is certainly capable of.
And now, with everything about Heather's murder
and the Sandusky County Sheriff's Department's
whole mess out in the open,
a lot of people start to wonder
if Leigh Ann's death wasn't a suicide at all.
I mean, based on everything you've told me
about Daniel so far, what a creepy was
and how he went to such great lengths
to clean up Heather after he killed her,
you know, I really wouldn't be surprised
if he did have other victims.
Like, he fits that sort of profile.
I agree. And he's fit it for decades
because according to police reports obtained by Craig Shoup
and reported in multiple newspapers
around the USA Today Network, he is a monster.
I mean, the reports include interviews with women
who'd had interactions with him before
and they tell a similar story of a violent,
sexually deviant man with tendencies
toward non-consensual bondage, humiliation,
and ultimate control.
Multiple partners describe being raped and battered
over the course of their relationships with Daniel.
I mean, really brutal, awful stuff.
The damage he caused before going to jail
extends even further because this article shows
Daniel's own daughter was interviewed by police
and told them how it warped her own life.
She describes really heartbreaking generational trauma
because since she saw her dad being so abusive to women,
that was her norm, you know?
And she wound up in physically abusive relationships
as a result of that trauma.
Right. Like, unless they reach out and get help,
kids really do grow up modeling their views of love
and relationships on what they saw as a child at home
and they have no control over how dysfunctional that may be.
Yeah. I mean, according to his daughter,
whose name's redacted, by the way,
when she was growing up,
she witnessed Daniel's need for total control firsthand.
In the reports, she says she grew up so afraid of her dad
that she would purposely wet the bed
because she was too scared to get up
and walk past his bedroom to the bathroom.
Oh, my God.
As far as Daniel's relationships,
she talks about one incident where he battered an ex-girlfriend
for removing her nail polish
because in his mind, it made her less feminine,
which he found totally unacceptable.
And in another instance, she says Daniel actually ripped
a woman's nails off for not wearing nail polish.
The daughter also said that Daniel had very strict ideas
about how women should wear their hair
and that he stopped talking to her when she had short hair
because she, quote, looked like a boy.
Oh, so him cutting off Heather's hair is actually right in line
with him having these violently misogynistic ideas
about how women are supposed to look.
Cutting her hair was probably this major insult in his mind,
taking away her womanhood, her femininity,
and really truly devaluing her as a person in his mind.
Right.
The Sandusky County prosecutor mentioned at Daniel's sentencing
that it might have been part of the plan
to cover up DNA evidence, like removing her hair.
But based on what we know about this guy
and what a creepy is, I mean, I think you're right.
I think that, again, I don't know what DNA maybe he didn't want.
I don't know.
I think cutting off hair produces more DNA than anything else.
And I think it was more like trying to cut her down.
Like, how dare this woman turn me down?
She's not even like what I consider.
Like almost like the twist of the knife type thing.
Oh, God.
Yeah.
Daniel spends the next couple of years in jail
while his case winds its way through the courts.
Now, he initially pleads not guilty,
but before the case can finally go to trial,
Daniel has a change of heart.
And on February 13th of 2019,
instead of facing the death penalty,
he pleads guilty to the murder of Heather Bogle
and is sentenced to life in prison
with zero possibility of parole.
In the summer of 2020,
48 Hours does an episode on Heather's story
with more insight into how bad the original investigation was.
They talk to Keanna Bore,
and she tells a really damning story.
She details Sean O'Connell's behavior
towards her Omar and Kari
went beyond just like a dogged investigation.
It was stinking tunnel vision,
and he tried to bend the facts to fit the crime,
even as the evidence took him in different directions.
As a result of Sean's actions,
Keanna tells 48 Hours that she lost her job,
her home, she got death threats
against both her and her family,
and she actually had to pull her son out of school
due to the harassment that he was suffering.
Furthermore, she alleges that Sean
and the Sandussey County Sheriff's
went out of their way to make her life worse.
Keanna claims that police made sure
to get rid of her family photos
when they searched her apartment,
and that when they served the warrant to collect her DNA,
they stormed in the nursing home where she was working
with their guns out
as if she was like this violent criminal.
And to add insult to injury,
she says Sean never once asked her
if she had an alibi for the night of Heather's murder.
She also gives some background
about just where his animosity probably came from.
You see, Sean O'Connell has dealt with Keanna before,
back when he was involved in getting her child's father
locked up on a mandatory 10 years in prison
for a drug charge.
So, turns out that is the very same incidents
that she referenced in the Facebook post
that Sean claimed read like a confession.
And I mean, since she has this history with Sean,
then it's no wonder she didn't really seem
super gung-ho to talk to law enforcement
back at the very start of this investigation.
Totally.
Now, Sean actually pled guilty in 2018 to one,
just one of the felony charges against him,
the one where he omitted the tiny detail
about Keanna Omar and Kari being cleared by DNA evidence,
and he was sentenced to two years in state prison.
He served his time,
and he was actually released in July of 2020.
Oh, my God.
Of course, paying his debt assigned to him by society
doesn't erase what Sean did or the damage that he caused.
Omar Satchel is currently incarcerated on unrelated charges,
but Keanna Boer has spent years trying to rebuild
her life and her reputation,
while Heather Bogle's family suffered through years
of an unnecessary prolonged murder investigation.
Everything about these people and the way their stories intersected
is a reminder to stay vigilant,
not just against predators hiding in plain sight,
but against corruption where it might not be expected
or where it is expected but shouldn't be.
Stay informed, stay curious, and of course, stay alive.
If you guys want to check out the source material for this episode,
you can find all of that on our website,
crimejunkiepodcast.com.
And be sure to follow us on Instagram at crimejunkiepodcast.
We actually have next week's schedule off,
so we won't be back with our regular episode,
but, like, wink, wink, tune in anyways.
And if you're in the mood for a story,
stick around for Prophet of the Month.
Crimejunkie is an audio chuck production.
So, what do you think, Chuck? Do you approve?
Okay, so, Ashley, I have double good news.
I love good news for Prophet of the Month.
Yeah, so after some very, very sad Prophet of the Month segments,
one, like, last month I talked about Lucy, who had moved out,
and Lucy's mom, Olivia, is part of our team here at Audio Chuck
and was super gracious in letting us tell all of you guys
about her journey with Lucy.
And this past weekend,
she adopted the sweetest little lab mix puppy named Finn.
And, I mean, I'm speaking for myself, Ashley,
but I think we're all kind of obsessed with him.
Yeah, like, he's just amazing.
And, yeah, just thrilled for Olivia,
but that's his story.
It's brand new, like, literally a couple days old
when I'm telling you this,
but that's not what I'm going to tell you about today.
I'm going to tell you about Angel, the Alaskan Malamute.
So, this story comes to us from our listener, Paige,
who wrote in about how she met her very best friend, Angel.
Paige is a grad student at the University of Washington
and really far away from her family
and kind of usual support system back on the East Coast.
So, even though she's always wanted, you know, a dog of her own,
she knew, like, a grad student across the country
wasn't really, like, in a place to get a brand new little puppy
like Olivia just did, but also she's one of us
and has a huge soft spot for senior pups
and, like, you, Ashley, a good, howly, kind of wolfie breed.
And, again, she knew she wasn't ready for a dog quite yet,
but she decided, I'll just go to the Washington Alaskan.
I know you're laughing already.
The Washington Alaskan Malamute Adoption League.
And I'll just walk the dogs and play with the dogs
and get my fix that way, but...
Which is, like, honestly, can be a great thing for people.
The dogs need a chance to play.
I thought she was just going to say, I'm going to go look,
and that's where it always goes downhill.
But if she was, like, going to volunteer, I get it.
But this is almost worse because you're, like,
heavily interacting with the dogs and then going home...
Falling in love.
Falling in love and then going home to no dogs.
Yeah.
So she goes there and it just makes her want a dog even more.
So she puts in an application with the adoption league,
specifically for a senior dog, and waits for a match.
And then a little over two months later,
they had a volunteer reach out and say,
hey, there's this dog I think would be great for you.
But she's not actually here.
She's three hours away.
You see, the dog's former owner had passed away.
And even though the other pets had been re-homed to a family friend,
Angel, this particular dog, was eight years old
and wasn't really taking kindly to the family friend's husband.
So they needed to adopt her to someone else,
someone like our listener, Paige.
So Paige immediately hops in the car with her friend,
drives through the treacherous, snowy,
Washington state January to get to Angel.
And when she gets there, this dog is so sweet,
but super, super shy.
And by the time they get home,
Angel's even shaking when Paige tries to put on
the new harness and the new collar.
Like, I mean, think about it.
This sweetheart had lived all eight years of her life
with her human who was just suddenly gone.
And now she's somewhere new with people she doesn't know.
But Paige said over time, she got a lot better.
And she's even gotten over her fear of men for the most part,
which I think is a huge thing for dogs
when they have like any sort of concern or heightened anxiety
around like a specific look of a person or type of person
or like energy.
So that has been amazing.
And the biggest struggle that Angel has had
has been separation anxiety, which I mean,
again, she lost her first human.
Right. I can totally see why.
I get it.
And in their first year together,
Angel would actually howl and howl and howl
when Paige was at work, which the other people
in the apartment building weren't.
I'm sure they loved. Yeah.
Huge fans of.
So Paige actually started taking Angel to work with her
and one that helped socialize Angel even more,
but also Angel basically became the emotional support dog
for Paige's entire team, which is adorable.
I just love like same dogs make work better.
You guys, I'm sorry.
It's just the truth.
There's no getting around it.
But one of my favorite parts about this is remember,
Paige is a grad student at University of Washington,
whose mascot is a Husky.
Oh, I love this.
So when Paige would be walking Angel around campus,
everyone thought that Angel was like the official mascot
of the school.
That is so cool.
Which I think is just hilarious and perfect.
And like what a life Angel lives.
Like she people think she's a celebrity and she's like,
I'm just a really anxious dog having the time of my life right now.
I think we need to start a petition to make her the official
mascot of the school.
So Paige said that Angel has truly blossomed into this
super happy, goofy, social girl who loves squeaky toys
and really has come into her own in her senior years.
And Paige said she is so lucky that she gets to experience
these years of Angel's life as Angel's mom.
And again, this is a happy story, you guys.
I was so excited to see pictures of Angel.
We're going to post them on our website.
And Paige also wanted to make sure that we definitely pointed
you guys to the Washington, Alaskan, Malamute Adoption League
as our organization to shout out in today's segment.
It's where she got her dog fix in the early days.
And also the people who pointed her to Angel and the place
that brought the two of them together.
So I'll be linking that on our website, of course pictures
of Angel and maybe even a picture of our newest
edition at Audio Chuck Finn.
Music playing.