Crime Weekly - Crime Weekly Presents: Suspect

Episode Date: August 31, 2021

We just started listening to a new True Crime Miniseries from Wondery and Campside Media. It’s called SUSPECT. A big Halloween party at an apartment complex in Redmond, Washington. Themed rooms an...d costumed partygoers. But by the end of the party, one of the hosts is dead. The police look to the partiers as the prime suspects: was it the guy in the devil mask, the bank robber, the construction worker? As investigators comb through forensic evidence, witness testimony, DNA, and even consult with a psychic, they zero in on one suspect in particular. But for what reason? Host and reporter Matthew Shaer (Over My Dead Body) returns to the scene of the crime, speaks with everyone about a night that still haunts them years later. It’s a series about race and policing, mislaid justice, cutting-edge science, and the kinds of weighty choices that cops and prosecutors make every day -- choices that, once made, are difficult to reverse. If you want to check out SUSPECT, click the link: http://wondery.fm/Suspect_CrimeWeekly

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey listeners, I just started listening to a new true crime miniseries from Wondery and Campside Media that I'm completely hooked on. It's called Suspect. It starts in October 2008. The residents of a Redmond apartment complex were throwing a big Halloween party. Dozens of people in costume mingling, drinking, and dancing. But after the party started to quiet down, one of them was murdered in her home. The police spent weeks piecing together the night with hazy recollections, spotty DNA evidence, and dozens of party photos. Eventually, they had a suspect. His story kept changing.
Starting point is 00:00:40 His DNA was at the crime scene. When he finally came in for questioning, the detectives felt like they were a breath away from a confession, but that didn't happen. And so the police decided to focus their attention on another man, a man with a criminal record whose DNA was also found at the crime scene, and he just so happened to be the only black man at the party. Suspect starts out as a compelling whodunit and then becomes a story about cutting-edge forensic science and mislaid justice, about race and policing,
Starting point is 00:01:14 and ultimately the kinds of weighty decisions that cops and prosecutors make every day. Decisions that, once made, change lives forever and are almost impossible to reverse. We're about to play you a brief preview of Suspect, but while you're listening, make sure to follow Suspect on Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, or you can binge all nine episodes ad-free by subscribing to Wondery Plus and Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app. Campsite Media. At the time of the Halloween party in 2008, Jay was in his 30s, a successful programmer.
Starting point is 00:01:58 He lived in the Seattle area, but he kept in touch with a lot of friends back home, including Dr. Janaga, whose daughter had moved down the road from Jay to an apartment complex in Redmond. Very beautiful girl and very brainy. And above all, she's very caring. I noticed that you speak about her in the present tense.
Starting point is 00:02:18 Yes. Yeah. Three days after the costume party at the Valley View, Jay woke up, walked downstairs, checked his phone. He saw a bunch of missed calls from Arpana's dad. He called Dr. Janaga back immediately, and he could hear his friend was in a bad place. There was no sign of Arpana.
Starting point is 00:02:43 She wasn't answering her phone. Her friends, Sri and Lalitha, couldn. She wasn't answering her phone. Her friends, Sri and Lalitha, couldn't get in touch with her either. Jay hung up and tried Arpana himself. Nothing. I called him back and saying that he's going to Iceman. And what do you want me to do? He said, can you go and check on her?
Starting point is 00:03:08 Jay had been to Arpana's place once before, but all he remembered was that you had to walk up a set of stairs to the top floor. To be honest, I don't even know that unit number. So that's why I took the steps, then I was knocking on the wrong door. I knocked for almost like 30, 40 seconds. No one was there, then I waited. Then I again knocked, No one was there. Then I waited. Then again, knocked. No one was replied. That's where I saw the gentleman.
Starting point is 00:03:29 I don't even know who he is. The guy Jay saw coming towards him was in his mid-20s, with a goatee and sideburns. Average build and height. It was Cameron Johnson, Harpana's next-door neighbor. And I asked him, do you know this girl? He said, yeah, I know. So I asked him, do you know this girl? He said, yeah, I know. So I asked him, like, where she lives.
Starting point is 00:03:48 By then, me and Cameron, we both were standing just in front of that apartment. Jay pushed gently on the door, and a bolt fell off. Someone seemed to have bashed it in. The lock was broken, and there were splinters all around the jam. Then I turned to Cameron, I asked, like, hey, looks like somebody broke our apartment.
Starting point is 00:04:09 What the hell is going on, right? So can you come and help me out? And he said, okay. Then we both went inside the apartment. I was yelling at her, basically. Jay was yelling, calling for Arpana, but no one was answering. The two men crossed the threshold of the apartment.
Starting point is 00:04:31 Jay noticed Arpana's motorcycle helmet was on the counter, which to him at least was notable. She wouldn't have ridden her bike anywhere without a helmet. She was too careful for that. So he speculated that either her bike, which had not been in the parking lot, was in the shop, or Arpana was still in the apartment. He headed down a short hallway towards the bedroom. That's when he saw a figure lying on the floor next to the bed. I spent the past two years talking to everyone involved in the investigation into the murder of Arpana Janaga. The cops.
Starting point is 00:05:13 Somebody lying to conceal something that they didn't want to tell us. The lawyers. We get the police's version of events, and then we usually get their criminal history. But if those were the only facts, everyone would be guilty. And the man ultimately charged with her murder. They say things to scare you and be like, you need to just take this deal or we're going to give you 100 years.
Starting point is 00:05:35 It's bully tactics, man. Follow Suspect on Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, or you can binge all nine episodes ad-free by subscribing to Wondery Plus and Apple Podcasts or the Music, or you can binge all nine episodes ad-free by subscribing to Wondery Plus and Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.

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