Crime Junkie - WANTED: Yogurt Shop Killer in Austin
Episode Date: October 17, 2024This episode was originally released in February 2019, exclusively in the Crime Junkie Fan Club, and is one of sixteen episodes from the archives we'll be bringing you every Thursday, now through end ...of year... for good reason! ;) We highly recommend you listen to each episode between now and end of 2024, and follow us on Instagram @crimejunkiepodcast so you're the first to know what's coming next!
Transcript
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Hi, Crime Junkies, I'm your host Ashley Flowers.
And today for our throwback episode, we're headed down to good old Texas,
to a city I've actually been to a few times, Austin.
And I know Austin has a lot to offer.
But if you are like me, if you have the crime junkie brain,
then when you hear Austin, Texas, you probably think of one of its most infamous cases, one that has haunted
the community in Austin for over 30 years.
Hi, Crime Junkies. I'm your host, Ashley Flowers.
And I'm Britt.
And you guys, before we jump in and I tell you about our case today, does anyone care
if I give you like a little mini story before the story?
Always. Go on. That's great.
And I'm like, that's totally, yeah, it's a rhetorical question.
You guys are crime junkies.
Um, I don't know if you saw this Brit in the news.
There was a girl named Olivia Ambrose who was abducted and her sister, I mean, I think
she had an if I go missing folder because her sister was able to find her and save her
because she was able to do the find my iPhone and
locate her.
That's awesome.
Even more proof that everyone should have an If I Go Missing folder.
Yes.
That's literally like the whole crazy story.
She was out one night and there's like video surveillance of her getting like taken forcefully
away by this guy and police didn't know who this guy was or where she was.
And again, I don't know if she actually had an If I Go Missing folder, but she had a sister who at least knew her information enough that she could track it down.
They didn't have to wait for a warrant and they were actually able to go and save her before
anything really harmful physically happened to her. And so she is now safe. She's back with her
family. It's an amazing story. And again, a reason everyone everyone should have and if I go missing folder
Even if you don't want to use all of the information like there are some key pieces in there your family should have so
You can always go to our website crimejunkiepodcast.com to download that free resource
Highly recommend and now today is a special episode because it was picked for all of you by our patrons on Patreon.
I decided to let them choose our next case because I let them pick our
Halloween case on Patreon, which we did on Alisa Lam, and it has by far been the
most popular case we've ever done. People are still talking about it. So clearly
they know how to pick good cases and so I thought I'd let them do it again.
And this is the case of the Austin Yoghurt Shop murders. On December 6, 1991, 17-year-old Eliza Thomas got ready for work at her house, putting on
her I Can't Believe It's Yoga uniform and pulling her hair into a scrunchie.
When she left to make it on time for her 7 o'clock shift, she, nor her family, had any
way of knowing that she would never come home.
Eliza got to work and was soon met there
by her friend and co-worker Jennifer Harbison, who was also 17. And Eliza had
actually helped Jennifer get the job there. And both girls were just trying to
make some extra money. They were in high school, they wanted some spending cash,
wanted gas money, pay for their cars. So on that night, it was just the two of them
working that evening and their shifts were pretty short.
The store actually closed at 11 o'clock and if they could start cleaning up early, they'd be out of there pretty quickly.
And they were pretty sure tonight would be a breeze because Jennifer and Eliza had extra help.
Jennifer had a younger sister named Sarah who was. And Sarah had been hanging out at the mall,
which was just a couple of blocks away, with her 13-year-old friend, Amy Ayers. After the
mall closed, the two of them went over to the I Can't Believe It's Yogurt shop to
help Eliza and Jennifer close down. Amy and Sarah stayed in the back since they weren't
technically employees and they weren't in uniform. And I think they just kind of helped put things away, maybe wash some dishes.
They had some pizza and just kind of hung out while Eliza and Jennifer stayed in the front.
Now, my first job was actually at an ice cream place and we would always start the
nightly cleanup well before officially closing.
And that's what the girls did that night.
They started putting up the chairs,
they started wiping down the tables, cleaning out the machines, restocking the napkins, all of it.
Jennifer went out into the lobby while Eliza stayed behind the counter to do like the cleaning
in the back and ring up the couple of last minute customers that were flowing in. And we know it was
her behind the counter, not just because of witnesses, but it was her
register number used to check these people out. Shortly before closing, a woman enters the shop,
and she's actually just picking up some ice cream to take home to her husband. And when she enters,
she comes to an abrupt stop. There are only two other customers in the store and for whatever reason they make her very uncomfortable.
She describes them as two teens who are facing one another as they like sit at
this table. They aren't eating frozen yogurt or anything at all from what she
can see but they're focused on some kind of sack in between them and the boy that
she can see she describes as having darker skin, maybe Hispanic, but maybe he could have just been very tan. But this one guy has
his hand in the sack and he's like rolling something around that sounds
like change or maybe marbles. And she remembers having the urge to ask the
girls if they were okay alone in there with these guys, but the girls seemed fine.
They were chatty, they were happy.
So she kind of convinces herself, like a lot of us do, that she's just being paranoid,
that she's being crazy.
So she decides not to say anything and she leaves the shop.
Later on, there's another couple that comes in.
They come in while the girls are doing their pre-closing routine. It's a man and a woman and when they come in they notice two guys
sitting at a booth closest to the cash register. And I kind of want to describe
this story to you. So when you walk in you basically see a row of booths on
your left. You see some tables in the middle and you see a row of booths on your left. You see some tables in the middle,
and you see a row of booths on your right.
And these boys were sitting in the row of booths
on the left side, and they were farthest away from the door,
but closest to the cash register.
And there's basically this long counter,
and then you can go through this doorway into the back room.
Okay, that makes sense.
Right, so the couple says that when they walk in, Jennifer was out in the lobby and cleaning
up just like we said, and Eliza was behind the register.
And they didn't even know it at the time, but there were the other two girls in the
back.
But again, they said we didn't see them, we didn't hear them, we had no idea.
The couple gets their yogurts and they sit down to eat instead of taking it to go.
And the woman said she was kind of eavesdropping on the girls, like as they were chatting.
And she felt like for whatever reason, the men were eavesdropping as well because they weren't really talking to one another.
They, as far as she could tell, weren't eating or drinking anything. So she too felt that it was a little bit strange that these men were just
sitting here so late without any kind of ice cream.
And as the woman is sitting in the booth, now she's sitting in the chair
that is facing the outside window and it's late at night, it's after 10 30,
which means that it's completely dark. And you know how when it's dark like
there's like the reflection you see more than you see
Outside when all the lights are on yeah
well
she said she remembers looking and she can see the two men almost behind her and
One of the guys has his back to her and so it's really hard for her to get an idea of what this guy looks
Like and she even says she's just assuming their guys based on like their general form
but the one with his back to her had a padded tan jacket on.
And the other one she could kind of see because he was facing the glass as well, and he looked
thin with maybe light brown hair, but it was really hard to make out any kind of distinguishing
features from that far away, like looking in a glass reflection.
Finally at 10.47, the couple decides
that they should probably leave.
Like the girls are clearly trying to clean up.
They don't want to be in their way.
And so they leave, leaving the two men behind
as the only patrons in the restaurant.
Now, it was policy for the store that at 1050,
about three minutes after this couple left, that the
girls were supposed to lock the door from the inside. This would basically
prevent any new customers from coming in, but it would allow the people who were
still inside to get out. And we know they did this because later on the keys would
still be found in the lobby door. And we know that they continued with their cleanup routine
because almost all the napkin dispensers had been refilled. Almost all of the chairs were
propped up on the table. All except for one. And this is something that to me, and many
people years and years later stands out. The booth closest to the counter, the one that everyone says they saw
two strange men or two strange boys at, still had, after they came and photographed it later,
an empty napkin holder when all of the other napkin holders in the place were full, and it
had no chair on the end of the table like all of the other booths.
And clearly that was because someone was in that booth preventing Jennifer from cleaning it.
What happened after 1047 is unknown.
Did the girls ask the two men to leave at closing time,
prompting the men to like pull a gun on them?
Did the men pretend to leave to ease their worries and then slip back in the back door which was later found propped open? We may never know.
All we know is that whatever happened likely happened at 1103 PM when Eliza hit the button
for no charge sale on the register which opened the cash register drawer. This was the triggering
incident when the killer or killers took around $500 in cash but the real thing
of value they took were the four lives of those girls in the shop that night.
About an hour later a cop on patrol sees smoke billowing up from the shopping
center where the yogurt shop is located. He calls it in at 1148 and the fire department is dispatched. Most of them
admitted that foul play wasn't even on their minds when they pulled up. The
windows were completely black, smoke was pouring out of them. It's very common for
businesses to leave stoves on after closing and they thought that's probably
what happened here. Like there was a a restaurant the place caught fire but what they'd eventually realize is
that the ICBY didn't have any stoves. The firefighters worked to put out the
flames and later the officers said you know had we had known what we were
stepping into we probably would have done it differently because when the
firefighters went in,
there was really no concern for preserving evidence
or a crime scene.
They just went in to put out a fire.
And you know, I'm no professional,
so I don't know what the difference is.
To me, I think you can only put out a fire one way,
but maybe there are certain techniques they can use,
or maybe it's everybody looking back and just being a little harder on themselves,
knowing how the case ended up almost 30 years later.
But as they moved through the store, fighting off the flames, they could barely see through their masks.
But the one thing that caught their eye was a foot.
Embra, I don't know if this happens to you, but there are certain memories
that are like etched in my brain.
When someone brings something up,
like you get that first flash of something.
And the firefighter who found them
says that anytime he thinks back on the crime scene,
or he thinks about this case many, many years later,
it's that image that's conjured up in his mind
of that single foot charred black, but distinctly human.
And that's when they all realized that they weren't dealing with a normal fire.
They saw a second body almost right away, and then a third body, and something about the positioning of the first two.
The way the girls were stacked, one on top of
the other, naked and bound.
They knew that this was going to be a homicide investigation.
The homicide detective that was on duty at the time, his name was John Jones, and he
ended up being called to the scene.
And it's actually kind of crazy because we have tape of him getting this call that very night
Because he was doing a ride along with a news station. They were doing this story on crime in Texas
They'd been in Austin for a couple of days and really were getting nothing
Austin was still kind of a small town back in 1991 with very little violent crime
And there was even this offhand comment made on the very last day before this call
came in, something along the lines of like, you know, you probably won't get a lot for
your story here, but at least you're going to Houston the next day.
Like that's the big city.
That's where you'll be able to get crime to report on.
But little did they know that night, they would get one of the biggest crimes in Austin,
maybe even in Texas history.
Here is the call that comes in to Detective Jones.
Jonesy?
Yeah.
You hear about the call 2,900 West Anderson?
Yeah, I'm headed over there.
Okay.
I'll meet you out there.
Wow.
2,900.
2,900.
That's a business.
Go ahead, Wayne. 2900. That's a business. Alright, get on it.
Go ahead Wayne.
On the other side is three fatalities.
That's 10-4, warning out.
Sirens.
Sirens. I'm a murderer. I'm a great... I know, that's a shopping center. Uh, where do I need to come to in here? What place of business is this?
This is the, uh, I can't believe it's over.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road.
I'm in the middle of the road. I'm in the middle of the road. I'm in the middle of the road. I'm in the middle of the road. I men at the scene of the crime radio him back and
say, make that four bodies.
And even with the warning, Detective Jones had no clue what he was about to walk into.
When Detective Jones walked through the yogurt shop, still thick with smoke that was filling his lungs, he was horrified at what he saw.
The girls had been burned so badly that their bodies had melted and they had become part of the floor that they were found on.
They were all found in the back of the store, and in most of the retellings of this story,
you'll hear it generalized as they were stacked atop one another and then set on fire.
But that's not exactly right.
Or it might be right, but we really have no proof and it's kind of speculation at this
point.
The way that they were recorded as being found by homicide was Sarah was laying on the floor by the back
door, Eliza was laid on top of her, and right next to them was Jennifer.
And Amy was actually the farthest away, more towards the entrance leading to the front
of the store.
And it's possible that more than just Sarah and Eliza were stacked and somehow the velocity
of the water used possibly like pushed Jennifer off of the others, but it's also possible
that Jennifer and Amy were always positioned how they were.
And I think it's safe to say that at least Amy was never in the same area as the other
girls because she was the least burned of all of them.
Positioned on her stomach or her right side,
she was somewhat recognizable.
And it was her, the youngest of all of them,
that gave Detective Jones the first indication
that they would later find signs of sexual assault.
Between her nude and spread legs was an ice cream scoop
pointed up toward her pelvic bone.
Before the girls were transported one at a time to the medical examiner's office for
an autopsy to be performed, rape kits were performed on the scene.
Now usually this would be like super no-no, like you don't do anything on the scene, all
of this is done at the ME's office.
Protocol was clear on this matter.
But the detective in charge was adamant about breaking protocol.
Too much had already been lost due to the fire and the water damage.
They could not risk losing any more evidence or contaminating anything by transport.
So after a tiff with the ME's office,
like they kind of got into it,
they ended up agreeing and taking rape kits there.
Now I tell you this,
because by the time the medical examiner's office
got the girls,
there was so much hostility built up
between the ME and the detectives.
And this could have led to the ME
not being as thorough as they normally would
because they didn't do something that normally is done
in every single arson case.
They did not swab any of the bodies for accelerant.
Now, part of the reason that this might have happened,
like in addition to the hostility,
is because everyone
at the scene agreed that they couldn't smell any accelerant on the girls, on the floor
where the bodies were found, or on any of the ligatures used to bind them.
But whether everyone agreed or not, standard practices dictated that they should have been
swabbed anyways, but they weren't, which is going to play a major factor in the case
later. And while we're talking about it, there's a lot that wasn't done, that looking back
should have been done. But Austin was not ready for this. Their crime scene tech had only processed
maybe one other arson case before this one. So no one dusted the bathroom for fingerprints.
Not everyone on the scene was wearing booties.
They didn't keep the lock on the back door
to see if maybe it was like tampered with.
They didn't save a lot of the materials
that were found in the back with the girls.
And maybe none of those things would have helped
solve the case years later or even at the time.
But now we'll never know.
Exactly.
The medical examiner's office was able to confirm
that at least some of the girls had been sexually assaulted.
They don't ever officially rule out any girls,
but I think some of them were so badly burned
that nothing could conclusively be saved or collected.
The girls had each been shot in the head with a 22,
but again, Amy's body was a little different
than everyone else's because she
had actually been the only one who was shot twice.
Once on the side of the head with the.22, but when that didn't kill her, a second larger
caliber weapon, likely a.380, was used to shoot her again.
She also had a bruise under her chin indicating that she had been struck and she'd also been
strangled before being
shot. Again, it's hard to tell if Amy was singled out for some reason or if all of the girls were
tortured like this before their death but their bodies were too burned to show any signs of it.
So who would have done this? This was really a gruesome scene and was it really a robbery gone wrong or were these
girls targeted and the $500 or so dollars that were taken was just an afterthought?
Neither scenario made sense to investigators.
These girls had no enemies, they weren't into anything nefarious, and if the 1103 register
opening is any indication, it seemed they put up no fight when handing over the
money.
So why?
Police tried to hold a lot of the crime scene details back in the early days.
They didn't want the public to know about Amy's bruises or how many times she'd been
shot or about the ice cream scoop between her legs.
They didn't want the public to know where the fire actually started, which according
to early reports was like this shelving unit next to Eliza and Sarah and Jennifer.
They didn't want to say what was used to bind the girls or how much money was even taken.
Okay, at 1147, one of our patrol officers called in to dispatch smoke coming out from,
I can't believe it's yogurt.
Fire department got here shortly thereafter.
What we found in the back there was we found four victims.
We're handling it as a homicide right now
because it appears that one of the victims
was struck in the head.
Were the victims together?
Were they in different parts of the building?
No, I can't.
Can't give you that either.
Were they bound in any way?
Can't give you that.
Was there any sign of forced entry to the building?
Can't give you that. What can you give? Just what I gave you. The idea was, if they could hold some of these key pieces back, they could weed out false
confessions and they'd be able to know if they ever got somebody for this, if he was
telling the truth by comparing statements to the facts never released to the public.
And this was a nice idea in the beginning, but slowly, facts started leaking out.
Like for example, someone who worked in the medical examiner's office would gossip with
their hairdresser, who would tell their next client about the latest insider news that
they heard on the case.
And just like that, the news outlets and the public started reporting on things police tried to keep quiet.
Not everything, but way more than the police wanted
because they, again, they did use those facts
to weed people out.
As crazy as it is to imagine,
they got lots of people who tried to confess to these crimes.
But one by one, Detective Jones would realize
that their account didn't line up and he
would eliminate them from the suspect pool.
But the pool of suspects was growing faster than they could even eliminate people.
At one point in the investigation, there were over like 350 suspects.
But a week into the investigation, one lead really jumped out at investigators. A 16-year-old named Maurice Pierce
was arrested at the mall nearby and found with a.22 caliber gun, the exact kind of gun police
were looking for in this crime. When he was questioned about the crime, Maurice started to
confess, but not saying that he did it. He fingered a friend of his.
He said that a 15 year old friend named Forrest Wellburn had borrowed the gun that night of
the murders and he was the one who killed the girls.
Now this feels huge to investigators.
You have a kid with the right kind of weapon saying that he knows who did it.
So the next step is to bring in Forrest and see what he has to say about Maurice's statement the night of the murders. When they talk to him, Forrest
swears that he had nothing to do with the crime. He says the night of the
murders he was with Maurice and two other guys, both these 17 year olds named
Michael Scott and Robert Springsteen, and all four of the boys had taken a stolen
car to San Antonio, Texas. So not only was Forrest denying this now,
but there was little to no details for Maurice
that matched the real crime scene.
The only thing that tied them to the case
was the fact that it looked kind of fishy,
that this Maurice kid had a.22 caliber on him.
But when that gun was tested,
it turns out that the ballistics didn't match
and it wasn't the gun actually used at the crime.
So Maurice and the three other boys
were just another set of names
that Jones scratched off his list.
There was eventually a profile made of the perpetrators,
and it kind of went like this.
They said, there's at least two men.
One of them has a dominant personality.
Likely these two men are both white and in their late teens to mid-twenties.
One of these men is the dominant one and the one that really like pushed this crime forward.
They think that in school he was likely an underachiever.
He probably resents discipline.
He has an explosive personality.
Like he gets really angry really easily.
And it's even worse when he's mixing like drugs and alcohol.
He's just kind of like impulsive and explosive.
They say that he's likely to get involved in physical confrontation,
but only when he has the advantage and he's probably
unemployed or has like a very menial job,
but has history of changing jobs all the time. He's not super dependable.
Likely because of this, he lives with his parents or some kind of older person. They think that this
person would have been a frequent patron of the ICBY, familiar with the area and the streets,
maybe even a resident of that very neighborhood. They think the person would have had a criminal
record. This person could have likely been abusive to women or especially young women. And they think that this person has
no remorse about what they did but might be acting strangely because he's super
stressed that whoever he did this crime with is gonna be like his downfall
because maybe that person is feeling some kind of regret. And this
confrontation, like him being stressed
and this other person regretting it,
might lead to some kind of violent fallout.
Their belief is that after this deed was done,
they probably went to a secure location
and they may have even come back that night
to watch police and the firefighters,
but likely went away for a while after
and probably missed school or work
or wherever they were supposed to be.
Now, this profile is kind of thorough,
but unfortunately it wasn't quite specific enough
and it really could have been
any number of young men in the area.
Yeah, I feel like a lot of the traits they described
were like, yeah, that sounds like someone who would do this.
It's not very... It's so broad, you know?
It is, yeah. Like any kind of...
Any kind of violent offender.
Who's a young man, like anyone who's been in and out of the system.
I mean, this again, very, very broad to any troubled young man.
And Austin, again, was a small town in the idea that there wasn't a ton of violent crime,
but it was still a big enough town that you had a very large pool of suspects.
Now more weeks would pass, turning into months and eventually years.
This case took an immense toll on Jones, who eventually had to take a month's leave from
the job because he was experiencing PTSD symptoms, like linked to the case.
It's all he thought about day in, day out,
night and day, day and night.
His relationship with his family became strange.
He would have nightmares about the event.
This thing consumed him.
And he was really frustrated with his own people,
with the police, because publicly,
they were saying all the right things.
They're saying this case isn't cold.
We have active resources working on it.
It's of the highest priority for us. But Jones felt
like it was a little bit of BS because if it was of the highest priority, why
weren't they getting more people assigned to the case? Like they had a
group of investigators for like a month or so, but then everyone got pulled off.
Eventually, Jones would even be pulled off as well after about three years he was promoted
to another position.
And it would take nearly eight years after the crime before there would be any new developments
in the case.
In 1999, an officer named Hector Polanco was the new lead investigator on the yogurt shop
cases.
And when he looked at the case as a whole, the same thing kept popping out at him, those
four boys.
In his gut, he felt that they had something to do with the crime and he was going to prove
it.
He re-interrogated the boys, pressing them for hours at a time. Maurice and Forrest
held firm. They were not involved. But those two 17 year old boys, well 17 at the night,
now it's 8 years later, these are 26 year old grown men, they were not as strong. When
Michael Scott was interviewed, he started by saying he had no idea what happened to
those girls and his memory was terrible.
But the detectives didn't take that to mean he didn't do it.
They decided it was their job to help him remember what happened.
Hour by hour, they break him down, eventually getting him to admit that they had cased the
place earlier.
And he was outside of the shop when everything went down.
And he says
that it was Maurice and his other friend Robert who were inside.
Well a few more hours into the interrogation and then Michael puts himself inside the store
holding a gun.
At some point in this interview, Michael tells police that he thinks he needs a lawyer, but
they don't stop questioning him. Um, that's super illegal, right?
Yeah, so this comes up later, but what the detectives say is he says he thinks he needs
a lawyer, the detectives kind of leave, and then they come back and just start questioning
him again, and he keeps talking.
So the police say that they just thought he was thinking about getting a lawyer and not
actually asking for one right then.
By seven hours into this interview,
Michael is now admitting to having the gun
and being the one shooting on Robert's command. I either shoot him or you're next. That's what I didn't want to do it.
Right.
I either shoot him or you're next.
What do you remember hearing then?
I remember looking at the scroll.
I cry.
I hear Robert saying, do it, do it.
I hear the gun go off.
I only pulled the trigger once.
I turn around. Here's your stupid gun."
In one of the craziest parts of the interview, one of the investigators brings in a revolver
to air quotes help Michael remember, and he even jabs something against the back of his
head to help him remember.
And this is like very clearly seems like intimidation. It's scary. You can kind
of start to see why maybe somebody would want to confess under these like pressures. And the
investigator says that he just used a finger and it wasn't really the gun, but it's still
a terrifying tactic that I'm sure contributed to the confession that they got.
Nicole Aspina Yeah,
they keep pressing Michael for details, those details that they got. Uh, yeah. They keep pressing Michael for details.
Those details that they had been holding back
that only the killer would know.
Like, what were the girls tied with?
At first, Michael tries to kind of skirt around it,
saying that he didn't tie them up, it was Robert,
but Polanco's like, no, no, no,
it takes more than one person to tie them up,
so tell me what you used.
So you can tell in the interview,
Michael's like trying to reach and trying to come up with something, so he me what you used. So you can tell in the interview, Michael's like trying to reach
and trying to come up with something,
so he starts talking, he's like,
well maybe a T-shirt, and Polanco's like,
okay yeah, like a T-shirt and what else?
And then he's like, I wanna say some kind of cord,
and Polanco's like, no, it wasn't a cord, what else was it?
And they do this for a while, where he's like naming things
that he could have tied them up with,
and Polanco says no, try again, he's like, what that he could have tied them up with and Polanco says, no, try again.
He's like, what about napkins?
And he says, no, that's not possible.
So while he's not telling them what to say, he's very clearly leading him to whatever
it is he wants to hear.
After 20 hours, they have a confession from Michael they think they can use and a confession
that they truly believe in, I think.
So then they try the same techniques on Robert Springsteen.
And he starts much the same, swearing that he has nothing to do with it.
The problem is, we don't have our options.
I cannot give you any more truth than I've already given.
Where do we go from here?
Why can't you?
Because you're going to dig yourself into that thing?
Well, you're already there. You've already dug the hole. The hole's there. Oh, that I'm in it?
I don't know. That's what I keep telling you guys. I mean, my God, this was seven years
ago. But this is one of the most significant things that ever happened in your life. That's
what I keep trying to explain to you. If I was there and I partook in this, I would remember
these things. And don't remember these things
but you know that you're the coldest guy i've ever talked to in my life
are you cold-blooded murder
no sir i'm not i think you are i think what we said absolutely true about you
well then
you're the coldest guy i've ever talked to
pardon me? then let's take whatever actions we need to take
if that's what you believe and that's where you think this case needs to go, then let's go there.
We don't want to go there.
But I'm doing everything I can
and have exceeded my limits of helping you guys.
Where do we go now?
After hours and hours, they break him down as well
until they have him confessing
that he killed some of the girls himself.
There was no talk of rape until police kept pushing,
what else did you do?
What else did you do?
And he kept saying that he doesn't know.
And finally, the detectives get fed up
and they're tired of waiting.
And he just flat out says, tell me how you raped her.
And Robert, clearly defeated, just says, fine.
I stuck my in her and that is all police needed.
Most of Michael and Robert's confession matched, likely because I think that they were led by the same guys.
But those investigators think they matched because they really did it.
With their confessions, Polanco puts together his theory of events.
He says that 16 year old Maurice was the mastermind of this.
Robert and Michael were the ones who pulled it off.
And Forrest was the lookout.
As word of this theory trickled back to the original investigator Jones, he didn't believe
it, still doesn't believe it.
But he had no control over the case anymore, and it was in someone else's hands now.
Polanco took his theory to the prosecutors who would evaluate the case against these
boys.
Ultimately, only two of the four men were taken to trial.
Maurice and Forrest had never confessed to the killings and because there was no physical
evidence, I repeat, no physical evidence linking them to the scene, it would have been a really
hard conviction to get.
So the prosecutors ended up dismissing all charges against Maurice citing lack of evidence.
And they actually tried a little bit to take Forrest to trial, but after two grand juries
wouldn't indict him, they decided to drop the charges against him as well. But with Michael
and Robert, they had confessions and they thought with those they could get
convictions.
Because of the confessions, it made it an uphill battle for their defense attorneys.
Though each man had recanted their confession and said they only confessed due to coercion,
it was too late and those confessions would be used against them in court.
They were each tried separately and Michael's confession was used in Robert's trial
and vice versa, but they didn't have the actual man come
and testify because that would have been a disaster.
Like say Michael shows up at Robert's trial,
takes a stand, he would have repeated
what he's saying in his case,
like, hi, my confession was a total lie.
We didn't do it, they just made me say that,
and that's not very convincing. So instead of bringing the men into court, they just used their taped confessions from
earlier and showed that to the jury and they didn't actually bring them in, which means that
they weren't allowed to actually confront their accuser, which is a pretty unconstitutional thing
and is going to come up later in our story. Now the one thing that the defense did try to point out in the trial was that there were
parts of their confession that didn't quite match up to the facts in the case.
Both men couldn't agree on what they used to prop open the back door, but I think the
most important detail, each man said that the girls were stacked and that they used
accelerant to douse the girls were stacked and that they used accelerant
to douse the girls and light them on fire. Now in every original report it
said that the fire was started on the shelves near the girls not actually on
the girls and remember we said all the people who were on the scene didn't smell
accelerant on the girls or their ligatures or on the floor around them. But after this confession,
some experts were brought in and they changed the official ruling years later to say that the girls' bodies
were the point of origin of this fire.
Now normally, this would have been something that could easily have been refuted by a defense team once the case went to trial if
we would have had those swabs.
But remember, for whatever reason, the swabs were not taken in this case. The defense tried to push
that the men were forced into confessing, but by the time these men were in court, it's 2001.
And the idea of false confessions were still a very foreign idea to the general public
So a jury found it very hard to believe and both men were convicted of the murders
Robert was sentenced to death and Michael was sentenced to life in prison
Both men would spend years in jail before getting any of their appeals granted
Both men appealed their convictions on the basis of not being able to confront their accuser, which as I mentioned earlier is a constitutional
right. The higher courts agreed and in 2006 the Court of Appeals threw out
Robert's conviction and Michaels was thrown out one year after in 2007. But
even though their convictions were thrown out, they each had to remain in
jail while the prosecution decided
if they were going to retry the case.
In 2008, the defense teams for the men do something bold.
They request to have the evidence retested using all of the new DNA technology that's
available.
That's brave.
If the DNA evidence doesn't come back in their favor, it could ruin everything, right?
Agreed.
But I think that's a testament to how much they were trying to get others to hear them
when they said that they were innocent.
They knew in their heart of hearts that that DNA would not come back to matching them.
And it didn't.
There was at least one unknown male sample that was found in the rape kit that didn't match Michael or Robert
or anyone connected to them.
And this was groundbreaking.
The defense thought here, here is our proof
that you have the wrong guys.
Go out and find the right people for this now.
But that is not exactly what the DA
and the investigators did.
But that is not exactly what the DA and the investigators did. They doubled down, and they didn't reinvestigate or look for new suspects.
Rather, they only looked at the case again to see what else they could do to tie it to
their jailed men.
And that new DNA, it didn't bother them.
They came up with a slightly different theory.
In their mind now, there
aren't four men involved. There is this magical fifth man who they don't know about.
And has never been brought up in any of the confessions. On top of this man literally
just appearing, doesn't it go against what Robert said in his confession that he was
the one who raped the girls?
Yeah. So the confession that they're using to say that they did it is now clearly wrong,
but they're saying like, oh, the confession's
kind of not true, like only part of it,
the parts we want to be right are right.
And listen-
Oh right, they're picking and choosing.
Yeah, and listen, I get it from both sides a little.
I'm sure that some of these people really believed
that they were guilty and they were just doing
their best job to keep who they thought
were dangerous men off the street.
But I think it's also important to point out
that after the men were convicted,
Polanco had actually gotten into some trouble
on another case that was overturned
where they proved that he had forced a false confession.
So knowing your lead detective on this case had a history of doing that,
maybe you should take a second look, but it seems everyone was convinced.
No one on the case or in the prosecution had second thoughts about the men's
guilt and they wanted to find anything they could that would prove that,
but they couldn't find anything more.
And when the old jury was polled,
they found out that seven of the 12
wouldn't have convicted the men
had they known about the DNA evidence.
So the prosecution then realized
that they didn't have a case against these men
and they were forced to let them go.
On October 28th, 2009, all charges were dismissed against Michael
and Robert. Now they let them go, but that does not mean that they are found innocent.
And realistically, they could be recharged if the DA ever wanted to do that or if they
ever found anything and the men can't sue saying that they were like wrongfully convicted. It's like a very sticky spot for them. Now subsequent testing was done
and a second unknown male's DNA had been found on other items of evidence which
makes this fifth man theory harder and harder to believe. Nothing in the shops
or on the girls has ever been linked to the four men.
Maurice ended up passing away in 2010 after a totally unrelated altercation with the police.
The other men are alive and maintain their innocence, but I don't think anyone is taking
a new and critical look at this case. And to me and to many people, the key to really cracking this case is to find out who those
two men were sitting in the booth that night at the yogurt shop.
I don't think it was any of the four men accused of this crime.
And I think it's someone else who is still walking free.
There was another person in the store that night, like much
earlier in the evening when it was still kind of hustling and bustling, which makes me think that
these men were hanging out like a really long time, which makes them even more suspicious.
But this other yogurt shop goer was actually like an off duty oruty or ex-police officer, and he had a weird interaction with a guy
that kind of matches one of the descriptions of the two men.
And this guy's like standing in line
and lets everyone like go ahead of him,
go ahead of him, go ahead of him.
Like he doesn't know what he's doing
if you're just going to let everybody get in line ahead of you.
And the guy gets like a little bit fishy,
and he asks him like, are you a cop?
And the guy's like, yeah.
And he's like, okay, go ahead, go ahead.
He's like, no, you go ahead.
And the guy gets up to the counter and he just buys a soda.
And then he says he actually like walks back and goes towards the back of the store.
Now you have to enter in the back to go to the restrooms.
But he also this person could have easily gone in the back and propped open the door for them to come in later,
when the girls would have asked them to leave.
So again, I think the key to whatever happened that night is finding those two men sitting at the booth.
I feel like I bring this up in like every case, but this one seems just perfect and ripe for it.
Is there enough DNA evidence to run through
a genetic matching program or system?
So I would think because they had such a good sample from Amy's Rape Kit.
I don't know if there are any swabs left, but again, we've said this before, before anyone who wants to take us up on it,
But not if it will expose a mistake that their team made. Right, like there could be some real answers, but if they're afraid of being proven wrong
and like finding out that it's linked to somebody that they can't link back to their four guys,
they might not want to.
And I'm not sure why being right is more important than finding justice for four young girls,
but I worry that that might be the case here.
Can't the four men's defense team request it?
No.
And this is what totally sucks about the justice system.
When you are the defendant, you can only request testing be done if they are like coming after
you.
So unless they were to bring charges against the men again,
like that's the only time they could request things be done.
If no one has charges pending against them.
There's no defense to be made.
Yeah, the only people who can get testing are like the DA,
are the police, and it's totally in their hands.
And not even like the family members.
I mean, I'm sure they could push pretty hard,
but they can't like demand it. You can't get a court order for it. It seems a little bit
backwards knowing there's so much at our fingertips now. Not ideal, but that's kind of the place
that we're in. I would, you know, if I were the family, I think we said this in other
episodes as well, like I would be constantly pushing on the police. I don't know if the
family still believe these four men did it, or if they're kind of wondering
if it's someone else as well.
Even if they still think it's these four men, like I don't see what harm it would cause.
There was obviously someone else involved.
And if we can maybe get that person, maybe it brings us closer to justice, whatever that
means.
So I would encourage them to be putting the pressure on police, putting the pressure on the prosecution. I don't know what that looks like, just
getting public attention, starting petitions, getting on the news, but it's
never too late and it shouldn't be too late for these girls.
If you want more information on this case, if you want to see some pictures of the layout of the store, of that booth and how there was like nothing on it and why we think there
were men sitting there, you can check out those pictures on our website, crimejunkiepodcast.com.
You can also follow us on Twitter at crimejunkiepod and on Instagram at crimejunkie podcast. And we will be back next week with a brand new
episode.
This episode of Crime Junkie was researched, written, and hosted by me with co-hosting by Brit Prewat.
All of our editing and sound production was done by David Flowers, and all of our music,
including our theme, comes from Justin Daniel.
Crime Junkie is an Audio Chuck production. So what do you think, Chuck? Do you approve?
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