Crime Weekly - S3 Ep285: J.C. McGhee: Family Betrayal? (Part 2)
Episode Date: March 21, 2025On the morning of July 11, 2002, 16-year-old Alyssa McGhee was jolted awake by the sound of a gunshot and her father’s scream. She rushed into the living room and found 45-year-old JC McGhee lying o...n the floor, covered in blood. Minutes later, just next door, JC’s nephew Omar Foston called 911 to report that his house had been invaded, his family had been tied up, and his attackers were still inside. As police arrived to investigate, they quickly realized this wasn’t your average robbery gone wrong—there were layers to this case, from a high-stakes custody battle to JC’s work as a confidential informant. And as investigators dug deeper, it became clear that there were several possible suspects, including family members. We're coming to CrimeCon Denver! Use our code CRIMEWEEKLY for 10% off your tickets! https://www.crimecon.com/CC25 Try our coffee!! - www.CriminalCoffeeCo.com Become a Patreon member -- > https://www.patreon.com/CrimeWeekly Shop for your Crime Weekly gear here --> https://crimeweeklypodcast.com/shop Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CrimeWeeklyPodcast Website: CrimeWeeklyPodcast.com Instagram: @CrimeWeeklyPod Twitter: @CrimeWeeklyPod Facebook: @CrimeWeeklyPod ADS: 1. https://www.EatIQBAR.com - Text WEEKLY to 64000 for 20% off ALL IQBAR products and FREE shipping! 2. https://www.TryFum.com - Use code CRIMEWEEKLY to get a FREE gift with your Journey Pack! 3. https://www.Hero.co - Use code CRIMEWEEKLY for 10% off your order! 4. Download the FREE UpSide App - Use code CRIMEWEEKLY and get an extra $0.25 back for every gallon on your first tank of gas!
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Hello, everybody. Welcome back to Crime Weekly. I'm Stephanie Harlow.
And I'm Derek Levasseur.
So today we're picking up with part two of the J.C. McGee case.
I'm going to give you a quick rundown on what we already covered. On the morning of July 11th,
2002, 16-year-old Alyssa McGee called 911 reporting that her father, J.C. McGee,
had been shot inside their home. Just minutes later, J.C.'s nephew, who lived next door, Omar Faustin,
made his own frantic 911 call, claiming the four men had broken into his house,
tied up his mother Pearl and his girlfriend Kim Smith, and held them hostage. When police arrived, they found J.C. McGee dead from a gunshot wound and Omar's home ransacked. Pearl and Kim told
investigators that the intruders were
armed, dressed in black, and demanding money and drugs. Both women were tied up, beaten,
and doused in rubbing alcohol while the men threatened to set them on fire. Because their
faces were covered, they didn't see much of what happened to Omar, but they could hear him being
beaten and taken outside, and moments later, they heard a gunshot.
That's when Kim was able to free herself,
hit the panic button in the kitchen,
which called the police.
And this was just as the attackers fled, allegedly.
Now, despite the brutality of the attack,
neither Pearl nor Kim could explain
why their home had been targeted.
We talked about this last episode.
Pearl was like, hey, we don't have money.
We don't live in like a wealthy neighborhood. Why us? Even though she had $2,000 in a suitcase from
a recent vacation, why would we be the target of this home invasion? Well, my question to Pearl
would be, why do you have a panic button in your kitchen if you didn't kind of suspect something
like this might happen? But Pearl and Kim, their stories remained mostly the same throughout multiple interviews. We know that
Pearl initially told police that there had been one person in her room with Omar when she woke up,
and this person was holding a gun to Omar's head. And then later, she told the police that there was
actually two individuals in the room with Omar. One was holding a gun on him. One was holding a gun on her. But other than that, their stories remained
mostly the same throughout multiple interviews. However, the same cannot be said for Omar.
And as we'll talk about in this episode, his version of events kept changing,
raising more questions than answers about what really happened that morning.
Yeah. And we did have the opportunity after discussing episode one
and talking about it and going back and forth. We did have the opportunity to hop on the phone
with Madison and give her kind of our opinions after episode one. And she was in agreeance with
basically everything we said. I talked about the fact that you and I had brought up JC's security system, Pearl's security system, the panic button, the money in the suitcase.
And Madison basically said, yeah, it's all warranted.
My dad was a CI.
He was a drug dealer.
That's what he was known for.
And it's very possible that could be what happened here. here but we also talked about the idea that omar was in on something more and that this was a
potential murder disguised as a setup yeah setup basically disguised as you know a home invasion
that went wrong and that's what was really going on here her dad was the target based on something
deeper than just drugs and we we already talked about that we agreed on it but she's very open
to it she says it right out she's not trying on it but she's very open to it she says it
right out she's not trying to hide anything she's like listen call it how you see it i know what's
happening here and and she also obviously agrees that her dad still deserves justice and that's
what we're here trying to do so i appreciate madison being so open about potential scenarios
because i do find sometimes that whenever I discuss a victim
and I bring up anything that could paint them in a negative light, there is some pushback.
There is some pushback sometimes by the family members. And I understand that, but
I always just try to push back by saying, hey, listen, sometimes you have to ask the difficult
questions if you really want to get to the truth. And they may not
always paint your loved one in a positive light. It doesn't cheapen what happened to them. But if
you really want to know what happened, we got to go there. And I love the fact that Madison's
willing to do that. And she's, she's beaten us to that punch multiple times, which is why I
mentioned the first one. And I'll mention it here as well. Go check out Madison's podcast,
Ice Cold Case. It's entirely
about her father's murder and she's breaking it all down. She's doing interviews with people.
Again, this is something personal to her, but I do respect her objectivity in this case. She's
been very straightforward with us. She's very straightforward in the podcast. I went and
listened to some of it. It's very good. Go check it out and it will give you a lot more detail,
a lot more insight on this investigation if that's what you're looking for. I think also most people understand
that there's no such thing as a perfect victim because there's no such thing as a perfect human
being. And honestly, there can be a stigma sometimes around true crime where we have to
make the victims look like these honorable, amazing people in order to, I guess, tell their story and show that what
happened to them was wrong. But in general, like I said, not any one of us is perfect. We've all
done things we're not proud of. We've all done things that were wrong. We've all intentionally
or unintentionally hurt people. And so to leave these things out, this is very important context.
And sometimes it's going to deter from having a full sense of the case when you're trying to paint or portray the victim as this
perfect victim, because there is no perfect victim. And so I think that's very important
to be aware of. Yeah. A couple of final house cleaning things, questions that I had.
We do not know, Madison does not know if there was a people on JC's door. Wouldn't be really
be relevant here because we don't believe that JC got to the door and we know that the door was
kicked in. But I just wanted to point it out there because it was a question I had in episode one.
Unsure if there's a people. And then also another thing that I wanted to ask her was the
distance between the two homes. And she wasn't 100 percent sure. She did say that the house
burned down since then. So you can't even go look now. Oh, wow. But she said't 100% sure. She did say that the house burned down since then, so you can't
even go look now. Oh, wow. But she said it was relatively close. They were next door neighbors.
The houses are, you're not sitting on top of each other, but it's basically one yard away. So you're
talking 15 to 25 feet max between the two houses. Very accessible for someone to run next door.
If it was a drug operation where, hey, listen,
I need to go grab more product. I can go do that. Or in this case, if these offenders are real,
very easy to go in one house and then transfer to the next one.
So let's talk about what Omar said to the police and how his story changed.
In his first interview, Omar told the police that as he and Kim sat in the living room watching TV in the early
hours of July 11th, he heard something shatter, and then he saw three black men enter the house.
They came through the front door, all armed with guns, and as soon as Omar got up, they put their
weapons to his head, and Omar said that he could see a fourth man outside acting as a lookout.
Now, according to Omar, the men ordered him to go
to his mother's room and wake her up. Then they dragged Pearl out of the bed and forced her into
the living room where she was placed next to Kim. They made Omar lie on the ground,
they pistol whipped him, and at some point they put a pillowcase over his head and tied him up.
Then they asked if he worked, and when he said no, that he was in
college, they accused him of lying and kicked him again. When they went over to his computer and
saw evidence that he was in school, one of the men allegedly said, quote, now I know where you
go to school, end quote. Omar said after that, they grabbed a bottle of rubbing alcohol, poured
it over him, and threatened to burn him alive. Then one of the
men forced him outside at gunpoint, made him get on his knees and held him there before bringing
him back inside. Totally makes sense, right? That makes no sense. Makes total sense. Stephanie,
why wouldn't you execute someone on the front lawn? Well, then not do it and bring him back
inside. Right? Like, I'm going to bring you out there. And this is really, if you're trying to get information out
of me, bring me outside where basically people could be driving by. Exactly. You're holding a
gun to my head and I'm going to threaten to execute you. And the fact that I brought you
outside is going to be the reason you finally give me all the information I need. And like,
I get it. Like maybe they forced him to his knees and try to scare him to think that they were going to shoot him.
But you wouldn't bring him outside where the neighbors going out to get their morning paper can see that.
Here's a better idea.
Everyone's seen the movies.
You take the blanket off Omar's mother.
You put the gun to her head while she's on her knees.
If he ain't going to talk for that, he ain't talking for anybody.
I'm not saying that to give anybody ideas, but that's what I'm talking about.
What we're saying in this scenario, bringing him outside away from his mom and his girlfriend to a public street at seven o'clock in the morning. I know criminals are dumb,
but this is extremely dumb. It doesn't make any sense. Nope. Okay. So they, they have him inside
allegedly put a pillowcase over his head.
We got this bottle of rubbing alcohol.
Again, is rubbing alcohol like super flammable, by the way?
Yes.
Is it?
Yes.
Is it like more flammable than gasoline?
I think it's about the same, probably.
I mean, gasoline is probably a little bit more, but alcohol, yeah.
I mean, you light a match on a cup of alcohol, watch what happens.
Not going to do that.
Yeah.
But, okay, so they got the rubbing alcohol.
Rubbing alcohol is extremely flammable.
Yeah.
I don't know.
Okay.
I don't read bottles.
I have bad vision.
I have bad vision.
Stephanie, douse yourself with alcohol.
Let's see if you.
I'm not going to do it.
Let's see what happens.
No, I'm not going to do it.
They bring him outside, force him to his knees, and then they're like, get back up.
We're going inside.
Bring him back inside.
Once they're back in the house, they kicked him in the face. They ordered him to lie
down again before continuing to ransack the home. Then at one point, the men went outside. And this
is when Omar claims he managed to free himself and run outside. Once again, how is Omar tied up,
right? They said that they made him lie on the
ground. They pistol whipped him. At some point, they put a pillowcase over his head and tied him
up. What did they tie him up with? Because Pearl, his mother, and Kim, his girlfriend, were tied up
with telephone cords, which seems like the best instrument to use to tie people up. But what was
Omar tied up with, right? And also when the police got their pearl and Kim had marks on their wrists, did Omar.
So this is when he manages to get free and run outside.
He claims when he ran outside, he saw a black van with a white or silver stripe on the side.
He then ran towards Brake and Block, which was a local automotive business. And as he
did, the men fired shots at him. And when he got inside, he told the employees to call 911. So
maybe this is what Pearl heard, like a shot. And then she heard Omar yell, you didn't get me. But
how would she have heard that when he ran out of the house and was running to a business?
And wouldn't there have been multiple shots fired, not just one? And did police recover bullets or casings from outside the house on Omar's
journey from the house to break in black? This is what makes me believe, by the way,
that these guys are real. I don't think there's a scenario where Omar's just making this all up.
Oh, no, I don't either. None of it happened. There were definitely other people there and they probably recovered some forensic evidence to support that. Even
this gunshot where they could have found a shell casing or something. I think it's all real. I
think it all happened. The question is under what pretenses? Did they fire the gun in the air
nowhere in the direction of Omar as he was running away? That could also be true.
Did he fire a gun and just yell out, oh, you missed me? Exactly. Was that all theatrics? Was it all to create an illusion
for the people that were inside so that they would feel that it was real enough to corroborate the
story later? I mean, you have to remember, I don't know the relationship that Pearl had with JC,
but they were brother and sister. They were, yeah. So it's very possible if their relationship was
good,
she would not have been on board with this.
And Omar had to create the illusion for her as well.
So when I said last episode that I believe Pearl, if there was some illegal drug activity going on
in JC's house or her house or both,
I believe she knew about that.
Yes.
But I don't believe that she necessarily knew
that her brother was about to be murdered.
I would agree with that as well.
And even talking to Madison from our conversation, it doesn't sound like she believes that either.
Madison did tell us that she interviewed Pearl much later.
And she said right out that based on her interview, she believes that Pearl believes what happened happened at that time when she interviewed her.
That was her reality. Her house was being robbed. That was Madison's opinion of that
interview. So yeah, I agree with you. I think Pearl, whatever the actual circumstances were,
believed in that moment that her life was in danger.
And also if, if, if you're running to safety and people are shooting at you and they're shooting at you
and they don't hit you, would you be like, you guys missed and give them verbally and
audibly with your voice a sense of where you were?
It sounds cartoony, but I could see that happening, actually.
Someone's shooting at you.
If they hit you, you're going to die.
And you're like, I can't catch me.
I'm the gingerbread man.
Well, if we're to believe that he was mouthing off to them the entire time because of a lack
of medication, I mean, it wouldn't be the craziest thing.
Yes, I guess.
Right?
I mean, he's thinking he's like a gangster.
He's in this moment and he's, I don't know, he's a tough guy.
But that's all based on the belief that everything we're hearing is exactly what it is.
And I do want to go back and forth throughout this episode and qualify it by saying we're hearing is exactly what it is. And I do want to go back and forth throughout this episode and qualify it by saying we're given a scenario where Omar's in on the whole thing.
Omar knows exactly what's going down.
There is also a scenario where Omar and JC and maybe Pearl, maybe not, are involved in something.
And this was actually a home invasion where it was a collaborative effort through amongst a group of people. And there was a lookout and they were going to try and steal the
money and the drugs. And unfortunately the person who entered JC's house was a lot more trigger
happy than the three that entered Omar's house. And maybe when that guy goes in there, he gets
spooked, thinks that JC has something in his hand and shoots him. And I don't even know if it was
an intentional shot to hit him like that because it's such a tough shot to make. It almost seems
like it was lucky. Maybe the guy just turns around and fires around and is running away
and unfortunately hits JC in the head. So I'm not sitting here telling you about Omar completely
disputing or discrediting the notion or the idea that this is exactly what Omar is
describing in a home invasion that went wrong. Okay. So I don't believe that it was just an
accidental shot. I think they sent somebody there that they knew could make that shot.
And why would this person have intentionally kicked in? I mean, they just went in the house
next door, managed to restrain and tie up three people. And now you just have one unarmed man approaching the door and you're going to shoot? Why?
It's a great question. Let's take a break. We'll be right back.
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All right, we're back.
And I'm with you.
But here's the thing.
So if this was an intentional shot, I'm posing this question to you, Steph.
If this is an intentional shot, then that means this was a premeditated murder because the guy never went in the
apartment afterwards. They took off, which would suggest that this was a ruse. This wasn't a real
home invasion. There's more to the story than we know. If it was an unintentional shot,
the question becomes, why did he run away? You could answer that by saying, oh shit,
he didn't intend on killing him when he realized realized what he did, instead of going for the drugs and the money that may potentially be in JC's house, the offender fled the area. Maybe that's why they didn't go inside.
Why wouldn't they have fled the area when they were shooting at Omar outside? omar outside it's almost like they want us to believe that was simultaneous right like as omar
was escaping team number two was in jc's house that's what's so hard about this story to believe
think about what has to happen there basically it's a shootout going on in the middle of the
street this is like suburban neighborhood yeah and and there's no witnesses nobody saw anything
or heard anything yeah and also i want to add this It's kind of odd that Alyssa didn't hear those shots,
right? We didn't talk about that, but she heard the pop inside the house. You would think she
would have heard, even if she didn't see the getaway van, she would have said, yeah, when I
got up, they were shooting at me because according to Omar, he they're shooting at him. He gets to
the business. He tells the employees what's going on.
He tells them to call 911.
So this is minutes after JC would have been shot.
So you would think Alyssa at minimum would have heard the other shots intended for Omar.
And that's what I'm saying.
Pearl only heard one shot.
Kim only heard one shot.
Alyssa only heard one shot.
Didn't Pearl say she heard the shot where Omar's
like, you didn't get me? Yeah, but it could have been the shot for JC is what you're saying. Yes.
So she still only heard one shot. Interesting. I gotcha. I gotcha. So where's all these like
gunslinging battles happening that nobody can hear because everybody only heard one gunshot.
Right. So what you're saying is if the shot was intended for JC and Omar's present,
he yells out, you didn't get me to again, intended for JC and Omar's present, he yells
out, you didn't get me to again, build that narrative that he's a victim as well to not
only law enforcement, but more importantly to his mom, to Kim, to anybody else who may
hear it because they're going to be his alibi later.
Yeah.
But I mean, I still have a hard time believing that Kim would have heard Omar yell out.
You didn't get me unless Omar, while the guys were going to the house next door, stood directly outside Pearl's house and yelled, you didn't get me,
when he heard the shot. Yeah, it's very confusing. The whole thing is hard to believe if you just
take it at what Omar and everyone wants us to believe happened. It's just a really convoluted
story. So in the interview with Omar, investigators like us spent a lot of time trying
to understand Omar's story. They asked if he knew the men and he said he didn't. Now, this obviously
contradicted what he had told the 911 dispatcher. If you recall from part one, when the dispatcher
asked if he knew the attackers, Omar said yes, and that they were from California. When investigators
asked about his change of story, Omar explained that he didn't know them personally,
but he knew they were from California because they said so.
Because, you know, that's what they're going to do.
They're going to be like, we're here robbing you with guns.
And here, we're from California, by the way.
And this is the name of our gang.
They also gave their social security numbers, just in case.
Yeah, and this is the name of our gang, okay?
That's Tone over there.
And we're from California.
They're giving all of these identifying details that, honestly,
if they were legit criminals from some gang, they probably wouldn't be doing that.
No, I agree.
Investigators had a lot of other questions, like,
why would a group of armed men suddenly show up at Omar's house demanding drugs and money?
How would they know his mother lived there too?
And why would they leave his mother lived there too? And why
would they leave his house and go straight to JC's home to kill him when JC had no apparent
connection to what was happening at Omar's? He wasn't the one who could identify the robbers.
Omar, Pearl, and Kim were, yet they were still all alive. Omar said he had no idea why they
had targeted his home. He didn't have drugs or money. He insisted that he wasn't involved in
drugs at all, which was hard to believe considering that during their search,
police found three cannabis plants in his driveway. On top of that, one of the interviewing
detectives knew a CI recently purchased drugs from Omar. So they knew for a fact that he was
lying about this part. There you go. Yep. There you go. And that just reinstills our belief that there's
more than meets the eye. So Omar's lying about drugs. And here's the thing. And you could say,
well, if he knew this was going to happen, why wouldn't he have gotten rid of the cannabis
plants? Well, this is my perspective on it, okay? I think that he, in my opinion,
did know what was going to happen. So he got rid of all the drugs in the house.
But cannabis plants are strange because a lot of seeds come off of them. And sometimes,
even if you pull up all the ones that are there, you'll have stray ones growing that you didn't know about because they pollinate. The seeds blow or they get carried by insects or animals,
and then they start growing. It's a very hardy plant. It will grow. And so I
think he just didn't know those three plants were there. I don't know if they were in the ground or
if they were sitting in pots in his driveway, but either way. And he might've just said like,
oh, well, like I'll just leave the weed plants because who cares it's weed, but I'll get rid
of anything else that I have in the house. That's what I'm thinking. I mean, I've been
to a million houses where we find weed plants in the backyard. And I got to tell you, it's not our number one concern.
A lot of the times it's for personal use. I'm not there kicking down doors for weed plants. I'm
sorry. Just not what I'm doing. So if there's hard stuff in the house, the stuff that could
get you a felony real quick, that stuff's going to be gone. Yeah. The weed plants outside in the garden. Whatever. Yeah. Well, for quite some time, Omar continued
claiming he didn't know why the men were there to rob him. But then he changed his tune and told
police that the attackers mentioned someone had ripped them off for two thousand dollars. Where
have we heard that number before in this case? There you go. Suitcase.
Suitcase. This happened to be the exact same amount of money Pearl mentioned having
in a suitcase from a recent vacation. Now, when investigators pressed him further,
Omar claimed that it was Dwight McGee, JC's nephew from California, who had stolen from them.
He said the men had told him they weren't leaving this fucking hick town unless
they got some money and that they were going next door to JC's house to get some dope. And this does
a little bit kind of correspondent support where you said last episode where if there's an operation
going down like this, you usually don't keep the drugs and the money in the same place in case they
do get robbed, in case they get raided by the police. That's it. So one house will have the money, one house will have the drugs.
The most common thing I see.
And investigators had as many issues with this explanation as well.
Like, why would the robbers drive from California to Ohio for a $2,000 ripoff?
I mean, it feels like it would cost you that much in gas to get there.
It just didn't make any sense.
But Omar wasn't in the mood to give up any further
information and the interview ended. So investigators followed up with the automotive shop,
Break and Block, where Omar claimed he ran after escaping. The owner said Omar arrived at 6.45am
wearing only shorts, which didn't match what he had on when the police found him. He seemed winded. He asked them to call 911
before walking back home when he saw police cruisers. Other employees reported suspicious
activity around Omar's that morning. One saw a Lincoln and a Cadillac with two black men inside.
Another saw a small dark car in Omar's driveway and a black Lincoln with three men, one of whom
ducked to avoid being seen.
With all of this information, the investigators worked to determine who these men were and why
they targeted Omar's home before going next door to murder J.C. They had a few leads to follow
immediately, and one of the strongest was J.C.'s ongoing custody battle with Deneen over their son
Shane. J.C. was set to finalize custody of his son
on July 12th, just a day after he was murdered, making it a key lead for investigators. And as
we mentioned in part one, his ex Deneen was dating Dwayne Butchie Griffin, who did have a personal
vendetta against J.C. Not only did he hate him over the custody battle, but he also blamed him for his
indictment as a confidential informant. There's no doubt J.C. didn't have a shortage of enemies.
He had a lot of people that would want to hurt him. That's what complicates this case,
because the suspect pool is so vast. Yeah. And I think that, you know, once again,
was it the custody thing? Or if it was a setup, did they choose this date
to make police say, oh, wow, this timing is perfect. They murdered him right before he was
about to get custody, right? It has echoes of like the Dan Markell and Wendy Adelson kind of case.
Like as they're going through this contentious divorce and this horrific custody battle,
Dan Markell ends up dead. Wendy Adelson, his ex-wife,
ends up with custody of her sons. And the problem is solved, for Wendy at least, right?
So obviously, the police are going to interview Deneen and her boyfriend, Dwayne Butchie Griffin.
During these interviews, Deneen made it clear that she and JC had a contentious history. Dwayne admitted that he despised JC, but denied any involvement, claiming a cousin had once offered to take care of JC, but he had declined.
So Dwayne's pretty much being like, hey, I had the chance to take out a hit on this dude and I didn't.
So why would I now?
You know, it's like clears you up.
And the fact that he's well, I think it does in a way's he's like clears you up and the fact that he's well I think it does
in a way because he's like admitting I hate I don't think he's responsible for it but no I don't
think admitting that you you know my cousin said he would kill him for me is probably the best thing
because this is what somebody's doing when they're like holy shit like I know this looks bad but
I did hate him he's not saying like oh we are fine it wasn't that bad like yeah we had words
sometimes you know he's not trying to like minimize the hate that existed between him and
this victim. He's being honest. He's saying, yeah, like I despised this person, but I did not have
involvement in this. You know, I thought about it. I thought maybe even had a conversation with my
cousin. But so Dwayne actually agreed to take a polygraph test, which he passed. So for now, it seemed that this lead maybe wasn't going to be as strong as it initially
appeared.
Now, JC's daughter Madison told us that JC being murdered the day before the final custody
hearing was suspicious, but the more she has investigated the case, the less she believes
the two things are connected.
The other lead came from Omar's first interview with detectives.
During that interview, he was asked if the robbers mentioned who had ripped them off. And at first,
he didn't provide an answer, but eventually he said it was Dwight McGee, JC's nephew. And
obviously investigators wanted to look into this claim and they really didn't have to go that far.
So we're going to take a quick break. And when I come back, we're going to talk
a little bit about Dwight McGee. Okay, we're back. Let's continue on with this timeline and talk a
little bit about Dwight McGee, who is JC's nephew, who Omar claimed was the one that had ripped off
these California burglars. So on July 13th, just two days after JC's murder,
Omar's aunt, Debbie Jones, called the police.
And she told them there was bad blood within the family
and that Omar had actually ripped off Dwight,
who lived in California, as well as his own brother,
Omar's own brother, Richard Boots Faustin,
who lived in Columbus, Ohio.
Debbie was aware that during the attack,
the men had asked Pearl about her safe, which Pearl said both Dwight and Richard knew about.
She suspected that Richard was behind the robbery and JC's murder because in her words,
quote, nothing bad happened to Pearl, end quote. All right, so Aunt Debbie, Omar's Aunt Debbie, who is also Pearl's sister, who is also JC's sister, right? She's like, listen, I think that Richard, who is Omar's brother that Omar stole from, and Dwight, they are the ones that did this. And the reason I believe this is because there's bad blood between them. Omar stole from them. And also Pearl wasn't harmed, so they didn't want to hurt their own aunt.
Then that makes sense. Yeah. They left her kind of unscathed. The only damage she had was
basically the alcohol poured on her back. And she had like marks on her wrist. Yeah. Yeah.
From the cords. Yeah. The phone cords, right. So Debbie also revealed that on July 12th,
Omar had confided in her about what had happened during the attack.
According to what he told her, the men tied him up and demanded money, and Omar told them that his Uncle JC had money.
Now, at that point, two of the men dragged Omar next door, and as they forced him towards JC's house, he claims he yelled out,.C., help. They're going to kill me. This is what Omar
told his Aunt Debbie. Now, Debbie said that J.C. responded by shouting, I got my child in here.
She said that when J.C. reached for his gun, which he kept in the closet by the door,
one of the men shot him and the gunshot gave Omar a chance to escape. This don't make no sense.
Okay. This doesn't make any sense.
Why doesn't it make sense to you? Because I thought the closet that JC kept the gun in was
in his room and he wasn't in his room, which means when he made his way out of the room towards the
door, he would have had a gun in his hand. Yeah. I mean, I just feel like there could have been
a scenario where the shooter felt like JC had a gun. I get
what you're saying. Logistically, he couldn't have had the gun, but was that Omar's perspective
where when he yells out for his, for JC, JC goes, I got my kid in here. And they, you know,
the offenders that are with Omar realize it was about to be a shootout. They're looking for a gun
and they think that JC has one in his hand. And that's why the first, as soon as they
kick that door in and JC standing there, they shoot him. No questions asked. But if they thought
he had a gun, why would they even kick the door in? I mean, that's, that's something where it's
like, Hey, let's get to him before he gets to us type thing. I, it doesn't make sense for you. And
I, if someone says they have a gun inside, we're not running in there. Right. But that's not how
these criminals think. Sometimes they're like, Hey, you know what? I'm going to get in there and I'm going to kill him or he's going to kill me.
Okay. So here's my question then. Omar says he ran out of the house. They were shooting at him.
Yeah, that's bullshit.
And he was able to get to the auto body shop and he's like, hey, you missed me.
That's what his mother, Pearl, heard. That's what she told the cops. She heard a gunshot and then he said, ha, you missed me. But here, the gunshot that's killing his uncle JC is giving him a chance to
get away and he's not yelling, ha, you missed me. Well, I will tell you, that's something I
thought about. Is it possible? Because we haven't been at the actual crime scene. We're thinking
about what the apartment or I should say the house looks like in our heads, we don't know
how big it is, right? We don't know the proximity of everything. Is it possible as Omar's running
away, shot goes off as they're shooting JC, Omar thinks that that shot was actually intended for
him and that's why he yells it. Maybe, I guess. Ah, you missed me. No, dude, the bullet wasn't
even coming in your direction. You know?
Okay.
I'm not trying to give benefit of the doubt.
I'm just trying to explore all scenarios.
All right.
So obviously Aunt Debbie, she calls the police on July 12th.
And she's like, yo, something shady is going on here.
Here's what Omar told me.
This is the day after the shooting.
Yeah.
And the police are like, well, that version of events that Omar told you is completely
different from the version of events that Omar told you is completely different from the version of
events that Omar told us. So they call him back in to discuss the inconsistencies in his statement.
And when he comes back into the police station, Omar told the police that the attackers were
after the money that Richard Fulston, his brother, had stashed at their mother's house. Omar also claimed that the men told him to
send Richard a message. He then changed his account of his escape, now saying he was taken outside and
forced to point out different houses before he heard a gunshot and started running. Now, this
doesn't make sense now. With Pearl hearing him say, ah, you missed me, if he heard a gunshot and
started running, he wouldn't think that they were actively shooting at him. He says the way he makes it seem
is these guys are all standing outside with their guns drawn. He runs out of the house. They start
shooting at him. He knows they're shooting at him. And he's like, ha ha, you missed me. But now he
just hears a shot. He doesn't know where it's coming from. He doesn't know where it is. And he
starts running. Right. So Omar also mentioned seeing a purple PT cruiser nearby, but he was unclear on the details.
He then agreed to a polygraph, which, surprise, surprise, he showed signs of deception.
No.
I know.
It's crazy.
Omar, man.
I was rooting for you.
Man, Omar.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I don't know what, like, once again, when you have so many different versions of the same story
And it's not a long time after it's like a day. It's the day of and then the day after
Stephanie the truth we're we're getting this the truth is in there somewhere though
Of course
There's some things that you've said and i'm trying not to step on everything because you're telling a story here and I don't want
to interject every line
But there's things you're starting to say
That answer a lot of the questions
we had in episode one. And there might not be completely truthful, but there is some truth
within it. Now, Kim, Omar's girlfriend, her story remained mostly consistent. And she was also
brought in for questioning again. And this time she told the detectives she didn't believe the
robbery was about drugs. and neither she nor Omar had
enough money to make them targets. She believed the attackers were after Richard's money, which
was kept in Pearl's safe. She also suspected her brother-in-law, Justin, had tipped them off
because he was beaten up the day after the murder. So now we're adding more people in here.
More people. It feels like everybody knows. Everybody knows about why this is happening, right?
But they're not saying that right away.
At first, Pearl's like, why us?
Why us?
And Kim's like, why us?
But it's like, actually, there is money that was taken and in Pearl's safe.
And my brother, he was running his mouth.
He got beat up, things like that.
So Omar and Kim then helped police create composite sketches of the suspects.
But Omar's composite sketches and Kim's composite sketches, they look nothing alike.
Nothing alike.
So I would honestly, I would obviously, if I was the police, I would go with Kim's composite sketches.
But what do I know?
So before the end of that month, Omar, Kim, and Pearl all went back to the police station to view photo lineups of potential suspects.
And Omar was able to identify one of the men in the photos as a man named Daryl Smith.
And Kim did the same.
She said Daryl was the one with the shotgun.
Omar told police that he recognized Daryl from a class the previous year.
But the police later learned the truth was that they'd known each other since they were kids.
So they didn't just have a class together. Omar and Daryl, they'd been tight since they were
little. Daryl was also friends with Omar's brother, Richard Faustin, the guy whose money
Pearl is apparently hiding in her safe. Omar also told police that Daryl's ex-girlfriend, Tisha,
drove a purple PT Cruiser, the same kind of car he had recently mentioned seeing near J.C.'s house on the morning of the murder.
He added that he saw both a black Lincoln Town car and a dark colored PT Cruiser leaving J.C.'s house.
He also told investigators that Tisha had dated Dwight McGee at one point and had an affair with J.C.
So this is getting a little tangled, a little tangled,
a little complicated. I'm running out of paper here. We got more people coming in. Tisha now,
she's been all over. She's been with JC, apparently our victim. She's been with Dwight
McGee from California, and she's dating, or she had dated, Daryl, the man with the shotgun,
Daryl Smith. Isn't Kim's last name Smith as well? Yeah, I'm telling you, I'm not even joking with
you. I mean, you guys can see it on YouTube. This is my, I don't know if it's blurry right now,
but I'm writing on the side here too, because I'm running out of real estate. I'm going to
have to go to page. I like to try to keep it all on one page so I can refer to it.
So you can refer to it.
Yeah, I know exactly what you mean.
I might have to change up the strategy.
So we got a lot of people here,
but I want to talk about the cars really quick
because the automotive people at Brake and Block,
they had mentioned seeing some cars outside.
The employees at Brake and Block,
they said that they had seen suspicious activity around Omar's that morning. They saw a Lincoln and a Cadillac, and another saw a small,
dark car in Omar's driveway, and then a black Lincoln with three men. Now, would you consider
a PT Cruiser to be a small car? Oh, yeah. Okay. So it could have been that black PT Cruiser that Omar is also talking about,
but none of those employees mentioned seeing a purple PT Cruiser.
It could have been such a dark purple, though.
Could have been.
But what would it have been doing in Omar's driveway?
Well, that's the problem, right?
That would suggest that Omar is involved more than he's saying.
Yeah, because they're not going to pull up in the driveway and, you know,
like kidnap these people or keep them hostage in their own home that Omar's involved more than he's saying. Yeah, because they're not going to pull up in the driveway and, you know, like,
kidnap these people or keep them hostage in their own home while their car's parked
in the driveway to be identified.
I also found it odd that Omar said that
him and his girlfriend Kim were just, like, watching TV
before things went down because
it was 5 a.m. Yeah, it was 5 a.m.
6.40 in the morning, you guys were just
watching show tunes? Like, what are we doing here?
I think they were watching Matlock. That's what she said. That's right, that's right. They did say Matlock at 6 in the morning, you guys were just watching show tunes? Like, what are we doing here? I think they were watching Matlock.
That's what she said.
That's right.
That's right.
They did say Matlock at 6 in the morning.
Yeah.
Okay.
Like, do you sleep?
I hope that law enforcement went and checked to see if an episode of Matlock was playing at that time.
And not only that, but it's like, Omar's apparently this college student.
Do you not have class the next day?
Like, what's going on here?
So in addition to Daryl Smith, Kim was able to identify another attacker with 100% certainty.
However, that person's name was redacted in police reports, strangely enough.
Kim also thought she recognized a third man, but she wasn't completely sure.
When we spoke to Madison, she told us that the names most frequently mentioned in this case
belonged to Daryl Smith, Danny Banks, Tone, and another man named Duncan Waits.
So there's names being brought up.
Now, whatever name that Kim said, that second name where she was like,
I'm 100% sure I know this person.
I saw him.
This is his name.
It's redacted from police reports.
This case has gone cold.
It's unsolved. So with all this
information, with knowing that there was somebody robbed, with knowing that there was money being
stored in the safe, with having actual names, cars, descriptions of cars, all these other people,
for the police to redact one of these names and then not have gotten further in the case,
it seems a little weird.
I don't love that.
I don't understand why that one name would be redacted.
I don't understand it.
It's potentially a scenario where that person's a CI.
I don't know without being inside the four walls of that police department.
But there was something I said on the phone to Madison,
and this might be a good time to bring it up now.
And we said it in last episode.
There's no doubt JC was a CI and law
enforcement is working with these guys. And when I was in charge of the narcotics unit, there was a
lot of times where if we'd hear about a CI get in trouble, get arrested or get injured or something
like that, we wanted to know all the specifics of it because even though they're their own person
and they, you know, they sign waivers and all these things, if you end up having a CI get hurt or robbed or worse killed,
that can come back on your unit. It's a big deal. Not only from a professional standpoint of,
oh, people are not going to trust you anymore to protect them if they work with you,
but also just as a police department and the responsibility we have that if we're using these
people for these types of actions, we do have a certain level of responsibility when it comes to their safety.
Yeah, because you're basically holding their past crimes against them saying, hey, work for me.
But knowing that you're putting them at risk in a very dangerous position.
Yeah, that's right.
So, you know, they're on their own.
We're not we're not you know, there's a big waiver you sign.
Like when you when you become a confidential informant, you get signed up and there's this whole process. We go, we do your background check. We go, we do an interview with you or a pre-interview. And then you also sign a waiver basically saying like, I understand these are the reasons that I'm doing this. And that if any, you know, there is some inherent risk with doing it and it could i could be hurt or because of it and even though
they're signing that away even though i guess technically we're protected it's not good and
that's not what we do and i always put an emphasis on that we only had maybe we'd be running four or
five cci cw's at a time because you wanted to have control of all of them and i made sure that my
guys knew who were handling each CI that
they kept tabs on them, not only for their safety, but also to make sure that they didn't think they
had the right to go out there and commit other crimes. It even got to a point where if our CIs
were talking, like if they got stopped by police officers on the street from our own department,
they weren't allowed to say to them, Hey, I'm working for Derek. Of course. Yeah. But if I got
word that they were disrespectful or they were involved in something, a fight or whatever, that they were there and I
saw it on the dispatch log, they're done. That's it. Not going to be a CI anymore? You're done.
And then what? Then what happens? Is their deal redacted? Do they go to prison?
They don't go to prison. So here's the thing. These are good questions, I think. And I think
this is something that I automatically assume people know. Here's the reality. If someone is arrested for a serious crime and we work out a deal, it has to be worked out with the AG. Like, it's not something where we can say, hey, we're going to not prosecute this case right now. That has to be agreed upon. What actually happens a lot of the time, let's say we get them with a,
you know, a piece of crack cocaine, right? It's like 20 bucks worth. I may get that. I'm going
to process it. I'm going to do all the paperwork for it. And I'm going to say, Hey, listen, here's
the deal. I have discretion with this. I can charge you with it or I cannot, I'm not going
to fingerprint you. I'm not gonna do anything right now. I have this, but I could charge you
later with it because I have to wait for the official
results, the toxicology results to come back.
So I could still charge you at that point.
Here's the reality for, you know, I know there's not too many criminals listening to this.
If I don't arrest them at that point, the case is already weakened.
I'm not going to charge them later, but they don't need to know that.
So I may have the weed or the crack, but guess what?
99.9999% of
the time it's getting destroyed the appropriate way. And I'm just, I'm basically giving up that
arrest. So I'll say to them, Hey, Stephanie, this is what I got you with. This is what I want in
return. And they agree to it. Now they could bunk out on me and not come back. Yes. I'm pointing
at you. It could be you. Um, they could, they could say, yeah, I'll do that for you. And then guess what? They never pick up my phone again. There's nothing
I can do about it. But my thing was, hey, once you work off your beef, like let's say I get you
with something, you can get me something bigger. Then what I would always say is, okay, well,
I can't pay you for this. This is working off of beef. But if you ever want to make some money,
let us know. Oh, so they're just kind of now the initial thing that they do, that's over,
and they make money. They are paid for their role as CI. Absolutely. So it's like a job.
Absolutely. Like a job. Yeah. I mean, it's one of those things where we are paying them
for that service. And it's very well documented. You have to report, you have to make sure you keep track of every single dollar, but it may be something where,
Hey, listen, there's a house over here. I know you're not directly connected to it. You're not
bringing me the information, but what I want you to do is go over there and see if you can do a
hand-to-hand. We're just going to be monitoring. Don't worry about where we are. You just go do
your thing. They'll come back. They'll have to write up a small thing. We'll obviously search
them before they go make the buy. We'll search them after they make the buy to make sure they
don't have anything else on them. And then we write it all up. We have to keep observation
of them the entire time while they're going to the house, while they're returning from the house.
And we can use that not to get an arrest, but for an affidavit for a search warrant,
because they're not going to testify to it. So that's what we do
there. But then in exchange for that service, I won't say exactly what we pay them, but we pay
them a certain amount. It's not a lot, but we pay them a certain amount. And most of the time
they come back and that's when we will draw up the official paperwork and say, Hey, you're going
to be a CI. You're on the, you're on the payroll, but guess here's some of the rules.
Can't get in trouble. Can't be out there using this as a get out of jail free card. If I hear that you mentioned that you're working for Derek or one of my other guys, you're done.
If you're out there getting in fights or you're getting in trouble or you get caught with something
else, you are going to jail for it. Okay. So that's what I was going to ask. It's kind of expected
that they should probably be keeping their noses clean. Like you don't want them out there outside of their role as an
informant buying and doing drugs or selling drugs. No, they can never, they could never come to me
after and say, Oh, I was only doing that to test the waters for you later. Nope, not buying it.
Go to jail. So if JC was actively at that point running some sort of drug operation
with his sister or his nephew outside of these two homes, that would be frowned upon by the police
that he was informing for. Now, am I going to sit here and tell you, I'm telling you I never did it,
but am I going to sit here and be naive enough to say that there probably isn't detectives out there
who have CIs working for them that are also dealing drugs and they know about it and are choosing not to hit that specific house at that specific time.
Right.
Of course they are.
Of course.
Of course they are. You know, you may, you have a lot of houses that are selling drugs.
If one of them happens to be someone who's working for you, getting a lot of drugs off the street,
is that going to be your top priority to go hit it? Are you going to send a CI over there to go
do that one when you have others you could be doing? Probably not. Okay. Okay. So if you're,
especially if you're a good CI, you're bringing lots of information in, maybe they just kind of
turn a blind eye, look the other way. But that is not said directly, maybe implied, but I can tell
you with my, I can only speak from my experience. I told them, Hey, listen, understand this. Not
only do you not have a get out of jail free card
You're more under the microscope now if you don't stay clean if this isn't your chance to turn things around
I'm going to make sure that we hit you with everything we can
school zone
Distribution manufacturing intent to deliver i'm going to hit you with everything because now you and I are making an agreement
So not only are you?
Doing something illegal, but now you're spitting in my face.
So if I'm putting money in your pocket, you got to do me right too.
And if you're out there still selling drugs, because listen, I'm not telling them, hey,
you're going to work for me and you can still go sell your drugs.
I'm hoping that it's an opportunity for them to not do those things anymore.
Here's your reason to get out of this game.
Yeah, because they got an opportunity. They got caught doing something wrong. And instead of being in prison and having that on their record, here's your second chance. Here's your
second chance to make the most of it. And they don't have to do that for me. Once they work off
their beef, they can just go away scot-free. But if they want to make money, that's how,
that's how it works, you know, but there's definitely risks involved with all of it.
But to bring this all back, when I have informants that are working for me, I do have an official responsibility to ensure that
I do whatever I can to make sure that they're safe. And that if there's anybody who figures
out who they are and what they're doing, that I get to them first and get them to a safe area.
I don't think that's what happened here with what happened to JC.
I think based on everything we've gone over so far, there's much more to this one.
And I don't think it had anything to do with one of the current cases he was working.
Now, the bigger case for 75 indictments,
where people went away to prison for life from what Madison was telling us,
could one of those people have an ax to grind?
Absolutely.
And could somebody have figured out somehow that he was a CI and been like,
oh, this dude is still being a snitch?
Of course.
Could have been Omar.
Could have been anybody.
Could have been Richard.
Could have been one of these many players you mentioned.
So there's a lot to it.
But it is a tricky game.
Narcotics, best four years of my career working narcotics. I'm sure it was action packed,
but it's also the most dangerous time of my career. Like you're, you're going after really
bad guys, but you're also become befriending a lot of bad guys too. Yeah. Cause you're,
you're involved with money, which people will kill for. You're involved with drugs, which
changes people and it makes them do things that they
normally wouldn't do.
And you're kind of trying to put all these pieces in a way where everybody's protected
and you're protected and you're still able to solve some of these crimes and put bad
guys away.
But it feels very complicated.
There's a lot of gray areas there, it feels like.
Trust me, there were many nights where I'm sitting in the car in the passenger seat,
the front seat, and the CI, who who's a bad dude sitting directly behind me and i got one of my partners sitting
next to him and i can't tell you how many times i was nervous like man make sure you search this
fucker good that's behind me because he could take me and you out right now yep many of those nights
yeah where we're trying to like hey what's what's the deal? We'd meet in an
alley somewhere. We're in this unmarked car. And I'm thinking, for all we know, they could be
getting a drop on us right now. How do we know he didn't bring us here to set us up? Yeah.
Lot of scary nights. Damn. It's not the same thing, but I just watched a YouTube video where
some 17-year-old kid said that his friend wanted him to bring him to a bad part of town. And,
you know, he finally agreed to do it. And then they get out of the car and this kid
just turns on him and shoots him multiple times with this like birdshot in the stomach.
He ended up surviving this. And then he was like hitting him and pistol whipping him. And he was
like, oh, this guy set me up because it was some like gang initiation. And that was how he got into
his gang by killing somebody he knew. And it just, he happened to pick me,
but it's like, you just never know.
You never know.
When someone's gonna-
You don't know what their agenda is until you know.
And just to round this out and to bring it back to JC,
why was this name redacted?
It could be one of the many reasons I just laid out to you
or it could be completely-
Could be another CI.
It could be completely unrelated.
We don't know because after all these years, they haven't released it.
That's where the questions come.
Well, let's take a quick break and then we will be right back.
Okay, so Pearl, Omar's mom, she's back at the police station.
She's kind of, you know, identifying people.
They're trying to figure out if her story is consistent with Kim's story and Omar's story.
And before the end of her interview, Pearl told police that on either July 24th or July 25th,
Kim's sister had been at a restaurant when three men approached her.
And one of them was Daryl.
This would be Daryl Smith.
And as they walked by, one of them asked her,
how was your sister's head? Which I don't know if that's super suspicious because it probably
would have already gotten around what happened in that house. But he could also be saying it
as in like, shut your mouth. Yeah, keep your mouth shut. 100%. So the next day, the very next day,
Daryl was arrested and charged with J.C.'s murder.
And when he was questioned by police, Daryl denied any involvement.
He claimed he didn't even know J.C. had been killed until someone told him about it the next day.
And he insisted that he was being set up.
He alleged that J.C.'s mother had asked Tisha for a photo of him before the lineup.
And he believed it was so that Kim would
be able to pick him out of that photo lineup. He also accused Kim, Pearl, and Omar of lying about
the attacks, though he didn't speculate on why they would lie. He said he wasn't sure what
happened to JC, but he had heard that a safe had been brought down from Columbus for safekeeping.
Yeah, the safe is a big part of this story.
And what I said earlier, that there's some truth in there,
the security system, the safe in the house,
when you don't have a ton of money, a ton of valuables,
$2,000 hanging out in a suitcase,
there's some truth woven in between these bullshit stories.
And I do think that that's safe, the money.
There was a lot of people believing
that there was a stash in that house at that time.
And they weren't completely wrong
because it was too grand in the suitcase.
Yep, yep.
And when Daryl was arrested,
he had been with a new girlfriend named Jill Templin.
So Jill told police that she'd been with Daryl
on the night of July 10th.
She said they were at a bar called Michael's
until around 3 a.m.
before they headed to another bar, Sundown,
which closed at 3.30.
I don't know why you'd be at one bar till three
and then go to another bar for 25 minutes, but okay.
After that, they stood outside talking with friends
until around 3.45 a.m.
When they finally left,
they went to Daryl's mother's house
where he was living at the time.
But when they got there, Daryl realized he didn't have his key and he didn't want to wake his family
up. So he asked Jill if she had a tent in her car and she did. So they decided to go camping for the
night. Does Jill not have a place she lives? Does Jill not have a home? Does Jill not have a place
she lays her head at night? Like a little impromptu
camping? Like, do you have a tent in your car? Actually, I do. I do. What? This is craziness.
Why would you say that though? Because you can't be like, they can't put you anywhere. If you're
camping in the wilderness. They're not going to track anywhere in the middle of the woods. You
could be anywhere. Nobody's going to be able to confirm your story. It's a great alibi. It's four o'clock in the damn morning. And he's like, Hey, you want to get like,
why wouldn't you sleep in the car? Yeah, no, it's bullshit. Hey, you want to go camping? Yeah. Why
the hell not? I happen to have a tent. Daryl's not looking good here. Daryl's not looking good.
And what's interesting about this as we, you know, we're halfway through this episode,
a little more than halfway. We've all been looking at JC as the target. When if this is true and Daryl's the guy, then Daryl, then Omar's the target.
Not JC.
Interesting, right?
Why would they go to JC's then?
Well, there could be some truth to what we've been hearing where they're looking for the money and they're thinking it's going to be in one of these two houses.
They're stashing it set down somewhere.
If it's not in this safe, it's got to be at the other house.
And maybe Omar says, yeah, it's over there, you know, or he yells out for JC, but they came down to look for the money,
knowing it was in one of those two houses. Okay. I'm just saying, it's interesting that as we get
to this point, now there's this other version emerging where if Daryl, who's not looking good
is one of the guys, then the target was Richard and Omar,
not JC and Omar. And that's fascinating to me.
Well, we have to talk about the camping still.
Oh yeah. We got to go back to the Coleman stove, the whole thing.
Yeah. Jill gave some details. She said they arrived at the campsite between 4.15 and 4.30
a.m. Totally normal. And they went to sleep around 5 or 5.15 a.m. They woke up at 8 a.m. because that's enough sleep.
Conveniently, right in the window when the shooting would have happened.
Yeah, they were in the woods camping at the time that the shooting was going on.
Totally believable.
Because you definitely would go to sleep in a tent in the middle of the woods after being
up all night and falling asleep at 5.15 a.m.
And then like clockwork at 8 a.m., you're like, I'm refreshed.
I'm ready.
What time was the shooting again? Oh, 6.45. 6.45, 5.15 a.m. And then like clockwork at 8 a.m., you're like, I'm refreshed. I'm ready. What time was the shooting again?
Oh, 6.45.
Shooting was around 6.45.
Right there.
So they got up at 8.
They didn't leave until 9.
You know, they had to have their coffee
and make their bacon outside.
And then they had a marshmallow or two.
I know, right?
Maybe.
Get the whole experience.
Run with the bears.
So they headed back to Daryl's mother's house, and they got there around 10 a.m., and that's where they stayed for the rest of the day.
Now, Jill told police that Dwight McGee had called her and threatened her the following month.
She said he told her that she, quote, better come forward with information on Daryl Smith or she should, quote, watch her back.
She also mentioned that despite living in California, Dwight had been seen back in Ohio recently.
So the detectives then interviewed Daryl's ex-girlfriend, Tisha, who Omar had claimed drove a PT Cruiser and had, I guess, had relations.
I wouldn't say dated both J.C. and Dwight, but had relations with both JC and Dwight.
Now, Tisha admitted that she occasionally saw JC,
but denied ever having an affair with him.
And she confirmed that she had dated Dwight in the past
and was familiar with his parents.
She told police that they should be looking more
into JC's family than Daryl.
According to her,
aside from his sudden relationship with Jill,
Daryl seemed perfectly normal in, aside from his sudden relationship with Jill, Daryl seemed
perfectly normal in the weeks leading up to the murder. She said the last time she saw him before
JC was killed was the night of July 10th, and everything seemed fine. Next, detectives interviewed
Nicole Daniels, who claimed Daryl Smith had committed multiple robberies and used two cars in his crimes. She also linked him to a
home invasion targeting Sherman Griffin. So Sherman told the police that in 2001, Daryl and another
man tied him up, robbed him, and stole his car before abandoning it. He also accused Daryl of
previously shooting him, and other sources confirmed that Daryl had been involved in home
invasions where victims were tied up.
So it looks like his M.O. might be lining up with what happened to Omar and his girlfriend and his mom.
Absolutely. Absolutely.
However, this seems to also be common knowledge.
So Omar could know that about Daryl and could have made his story and his whole setup mirror what Daryl would have done so that people like us would have an easier time
believing it. Well, yeah. Oh, yeah. Look, he's done it before. Why wouldn't he do it again?
That is his M.O. So this is when detectives spoke with Dwight McGee. And Dwight told them that he
believed the key to solving the case lay with Richard and Omar Faustin. He explained that on
the day of J.C.'s funeral, all the McGee and Faustin cousins got together to discuss the murder, trying to figure out if anyone had any connections to what happened, even if it had been unintentional.
And during that conversation, fingers were pointed at Richard Faustin, who became so angry that he had to be removed from the discussion.
I don't know how that, like, what do you mean?
He had to be physically, like, removed from the house? Or were they just like, we're not talking to you? You don't get how that, like, what do you mean? He had to be physically like removed from the house
or were they just like, we're not talking to you.
You don't get the talking stick anymore.
I'm not sure, but apparently he was in an elevated mood.
And so the police then went to Daryl for an interview
and he told them that there were rumors
that Richard Faustin had borrowed $250,000 for drugs
and never paid it back.
And allegedly, Omar had been instructed to watch the money.
So this is starting to make more sense.
If there's $250,000 out there unaccounted for,
that would make sense why somebody would drive from California to Ohio.
But $2,000, less likely, less of a motive.
Bingo.
See what I'm saying?
There's truth in there somewhere.
I don't want to go off the path too much, but I've said it before.
I actually wrote about this in my book.
When you're interviewing a witness, especially someone who has something to lose, you want
to shut up and listen.
And you want to create this awkward silence because it's natural psychologically for one
human to want to fill that void, that emptiness.
So I had given the example in the book where you ask someone, you say, Hey,
did you see what happened over here? And then, nah, man, didn't see anything. Don't, don't immediately respond to another question. Just give it a couple seconds. I mean, I saw a car
driving over this way, but I couldn't get out the plate or anything. Just kind of, you know,
write something down, pretend you're looking around. It doesn't always work, but then you,
okay, listen, I might've seen a plate.
It was AR275, but that's all I know. That's all I know. Then you ask some more questions and you start to drive down that road. And then a lot of the times what they initially told you, which was
nothing, will end in them giving you a name, a description, the time and all this, because
they know that they, or at least they believe that you know more than
you're telling them. So that awkwardness, that guilt creates an opportunity for them to disclose
more than they should. And I really do believe that what you're describing here throughout this
episode is an example of that. It started off with a really vague story that didn't make a lot of
sense. And as time goes on and people are getting nervous
and feeling like they have to do something to protect themselves, they're starting to roll on
each other and they're starting to divulge more information. But here's the unfortunate part.
They're giving you certain pieces of truth, but with mostly bullshit. And it's on us to figure
out what's fact from fiction. And what you just did two minutes ago is a perfect example of that. A home invasion at this level with multiple people, this coordinated effort to kill people
and go in these houses for two grand. Two grand, yeah. That doesn't make sense. Add another zero.
Makes a lot more sense now, doesn't it? You would risk jeopardizing your own freedom and getting
caught. Exactly. For 200 grand.
$2,000.
It's not a small amount of money,
but it's not worth the risk of going to prison.
Yeah, it's not worth the risk of going to prison
for the rest of your life.
But just one little detail that they mixed up.
Oh, it was 2,000.
They're not going to say 250
because if they say that,
then the police are going to say,
where'd you get that amount of money from?
That would implicate them.
So they give you a bullshit number and it doesn't compute with what we're saying. Why would they bring them outside? Why would he potentially threaten to execute him in the middle of the day?
For 200 grand, people would do a lot more than that. And Pearl didn't even really have to talk
about, I mean, unless the police found it in the suitcase, she didn't really have to even talk about the fact that she had $2,000 in cash in the suitcase. I would argue
that if Pearl didn't know about it, they brought Omar outside to say, listen, motherfucker,
you know why we're here. Where's the fucking money? Where is it? Like they didn't want to
do it in front of her because there is some knowledge that they all know each other. So they're not going to do it in front of her because they're trying to give him an opportunity
to say where the money is without exposing him to her, to his mom. Yeah. Well, it's interesting.
Pearl and Omar have a safe in the house. The police open the safe. It's empty. But Omar
allegedly was tasked with watching this 250 K that his brother Richard had borrowed for drugs and never paid back.
Borrowed, air quotes, air quotes.
So Daryl also told the police that he believed Kim had been coached in her statements,
which is possible. Investigators then spoke with Kim Smith's brother-in-law,
Justin, and Justin told police that while he was at a bar, he overheard someone talking about JC's
murder. And he heard
three names said in relation to this murder. Daryl Smith, Danny Banks, two names we've already heard.
Yep.
And then another one we haven't heard, Brandon Creighton. Now, he said that they were all
referred to using code names. Daryl's code name was Be Nice, Danny was Dan Bino, and Brandon was Black.
So some codenames here that don't make any sense and some that are super uncreative.
Justin also said that at one point while he was at the bar, he got up to shake Brandon
Crichton's hand, but instead of greeting him, Brandon started cussing him out as Justin
left and threats were yelled at him.
He also confirmed to police that
Daryl used to drive a dark-colored PT Cruiser. So police then spoke to Danny Banks, who was
Daryl Smith's cousin. Danny admitted that he knew Brandon Creighton, and he said that on the night
of July 10th, he'd gone out to a few bars with his sister and her friend, and at some point,
someone hit him in the face, and he ended up in the hospital. He was
released around 5 or 6 a.m., but returned to a different hospital a few hours later. Man, these
people have eventful lives. One minute they're hanging out at the bar, the next they're camping
in the woods. One minute they're hanging out at the bar, the next they're spending hours in
different hospitals. Criminals like this in this lower level tier, this is a
common story. They're just always getting in trouble. And it's this incestual group of people.
They all kind of know each other. They're all sleeping with each other. They're robbing each
other. They're fighting each other. And then the next week they're hanging out at a party together.
It's very, very common. I guess so. Well, listen, we're going to hear what Brandon
Creighton has to say because the police are going to talk to him. But first,
let's take our last break and we'll be right back.
Okay, we're back.
So when police questioned Brandon Creighton, he told them that on the night of July 10th, he had been with his girlfriend, Angela.
Let's see what Brandon got into that night.
That night of July 10th, was he camping?
Yep.
What was he doing?
He was at the campsite next to Danny. He remembers Astral Projector. Or Daryl, I should say. Yeah.
He was flying around the neighborhood in his dreams. Okay. So he says he's with his girlfriend,
Angela, on July 10th. But here's the thing. When investigators spoke to Angela, she said she didn't
actually remember what had happened that night.
She only remembered what Brandon had told her.
So Angela's not a good Bonnie to Brandon's Clyde, okay?
Yeah, not a good alibi.
So at this point, no one seemed to have an airtight alibi. We got camping, we got hospitals, all sorts of things.
The police brought Omar back in for questioning, and once again, his story changed.
This time, he told investigators that two
of the attackers were daryl smith and brandon creighton and that daryl was the one who shot
and killed jc he claimed that while he knew both daryl and brandon he had not recognized them during
the attack because they had changed their voices remember they're wearing hoodies, no masks. They have hoodies on, no masks.
They're not geniuses, Stephanie.
He does not recognize them. They disguise their voices. But then he contradicted himself by saying
that he had seen Daryl's face during the attack and knew it was him. So Omar is also not looking
good. Daryl, Omar. Which, by the way, also happens a lot where it's, you know, criminal on criminal crime.
They get arrested.
Oh, you want to tell us who did it?
Nah, I'm good.
Like this code.
But it's funny because all of these people know each other.
They're all in, like you said, low level crime.
And so it's almost like I don't believe anything you say because you didn't say Brandon's name until it came up with Kim's brother-in-law. And now all of a sudden
you're saying Brandon's name and now you didn't know who these people were, but now you know it
was Daryl and you saw his face, but it's because you already know that these people like you
are into like illegal stuff and it won't be hard to believe that they would do something like this.
So it's hard to believe that as the story evolves and develops and more details are added and more
people are added, that it's not just happening as a convenient way of being like, oh yeah,
actually I do remember. Oh, and actually Brandon Creighton was there. Oh, and actually I didn't
see Daryl's face, but I did. I do think it is convenient that none of these guys that are
being mentioned have any type of alibi though. I will say, I get what you're saying, but the fact
that they all have horrible alibis does not make them look good. And I will say, I get what you're saying, but the fact that they all have horrible
alibis does not make them look good. And I will say that I just mentioned that you'll ask these
guys, Hey, did you see who did it? Nah, I didn't see some of its code, but another explanation
could be that Omar and Richard know why they came after them. And they're not, if they tell you part
of the story, the other part could come out that they are ripping people off, that they're selling drugs. So just as a self-preservation
move, they're not going to implicate anybody directly at first because they know it could
come back on them. So yes, it could be them just using it as a matter of convenience because the
name is getting thrown out there. It could also be being done as a form of self-preservation to
not expose themselves.
In this case, Omar and Richard being exposed not only as drug dealers, but also thieves
who owe someone a lot of money.
All right.
So what you're saying is Omar could be lying, but he could be lying not because he was involved
with what happened to JC.
He could be lying to protect himself because whatever he and his brother did triggered
this thing to happen.
Stephanie, that's the narrative you're laying out right now. And I'm buying it, by the way.
I'm buying a scenario and I don't want to bury the, I want to get there first, but
it's really looking like JC was just at the wrong place at the wrong time right now,
even with his past.
Even with everything?
There has been nothing that suggests someone went there directly for him because you and I asked the question episode one, why go to this other house of JC's right there?
Why create all these extra variables where you can be discovered?
They didn't go to the first house to create a ruse.
They went to the first house because that was the target.
JC was brought into it by Omar potentially after the fact.
So we'll get to in the end.
I already have a million things I want to say, but what you're saying as you're laying it out, we're getting there. We're pulling back the threads
one by one. There is some truth in here. And I feel like when Omar's originally questioned,
he's questioned in a way where he's being treated as a victim and he wants to remain that way.
And just to add onto something that Madison told both of us, now this is her opinion.
She was told by someone in law enforcement investigating this case that Omar was quote,
always to be treated as a victim, right? That's what she said. Now that's not directly from us.
That's from Madison, but that's what she was told. So that is interesting, but it would make sense
why Omar wouldn't want to say anything that would make him look like a criminal as well okay well you're not you're not agree i mean are you with me kind
of i yeah kind of i am kind of with you i just think that it's such a coincidence once again
like he's shot nobody went through his house nobody looked through his house for money if
they genuinely thought 250 000 could be in jc's house they still would have gone in there after
they shot him to look for it. You think so?
Because at that point, somebody could have heard the pop.
Yes, they do.
And they hear all the people in the house.
I don't know.
Maybe.
Let's finish this up and then we'll go over the scenarios because I think we have so much
to talk about.
All right.
All right.
All right.
So later, Omar changed his explanation again.
Now he said he hadn't originally told the police that Daryl was involved because they
had been treating him like a suspect.
He also claimed he had doubts about whether the man he saw was actually Daryl.
Omar told police that he had heard the name Tone before and that Tone lived in Columbus and had been involved in a robbery.
He also recalled something specific about the way the attacker spoke during the break-in.
At one point, he said they kicked Pearl and called her a, quote, West Virginia Northern bitch, end quote. And that detail stood out to
investigators because West Virginia Northern was the name of the place where Pearl worked.
So Omar then said he overheard the attacker saying, there's no money in here, we're going
to the next house. He claimed he never heard any gunshots,
but when he escaped, he saw a PT cruiser parked in JC's driveway. So now he hasn't heard any
gunshots. Now they're not shooting at him as he runs. Now he's not like, ha ha ha, you missed me.
It's a completely different story. And during another follow-up interview, Omar identified a new man in a photo lineup.
This person's name is redacted. And Omar said he was 99% sure the man had been involved in the
attack. He told police that he had known this person before the home invasion because they'd
taken a math class together. But when police asked why, if he already knew the man, he hadn't
identified him sooner, Omar said that he wasn't certain it was the same person.
So Omar was interviewed at least two more times after that.
In one of those interviews, he added another name to the list of alleged attackers, Danny Banks.
This is a name we've heard before.
This is the name that Madison told us has often popped up alongside her father's murder.
Omar also told the police that a woman named Nicole had been the lookout for Daryl and
that she'd been driving a PT Cruiser that belonged to Tisha.
In another interview, Omar named several men he believed were present during the attack,
though some of their names were redacted in police records.
He said Daryl Smith and another man had acted as lookouts.
He also claimed that a few people outside of the family knew the layout of both the McGee and the Faustin houses
and that it was common knowledge that J.C. had a safe
with thousands of dollars inside.
Omar also reported seeing several cars at the scene,
a black custom pickup truck, a black Cadillac,
and a green Cadillac with spinning rims.
He said he had previously seen the Cadillac at the auto shop where Dwight
McGee worked. All right. So in January of 2004, Daryl Smith, who was now at that point serving
a 30-year sentence in federal prison on drug charges, he was offered a deal in J.C.'s case,
which he was charged with murder in. Prosecutors told him unless he was directly involved in
or responsible for J.C.'s murder,
they would reduce his sentence in exchange for information.
Darrell spoke with a lawyer about the offer, but ultimately turned it down.
What does that say to you?
I don't want to look too deep into it.
It could be something where if Darrell's completely innocent, he's like, I can't tell you anything
because I don't know.
I truly don't know.
Or maybe he spoke to his lawyer and he said, Hey lawyer, I don't think they have anything.
And the lawyer said, yeah, I don't think they have anything either. Let's just keep our mouths
shut because if you do talk, it's going to be even worse for you here in prison or even out
on the streets because now you're a snitch and the people you're dealing with is going to,
they're going to come after you. So it could be a lot of variables that played into the decision not to say anything to law enforcement.
And for everybody, it's different.
Well, at some point, either in or before 2004,
a grand jury was convened to determine whether Darrell could be brought to trial for J.C.'s murder.
However, during the proceedings, the charges against him were dropped and no one
else was ever arrested. Now, when Madison spoke with the investigators, they told her that they
simply didn't have enough evidence to take Daryl to trial. So there's your answer. So and maybe
Daryl picked up on this and his attorney picked up on this where they said they don't have anything.
They're trying to get something. If we just keep our mouths shut, this is going to go away.
That's probably what happened.
Well, Madison believes that after the charges were dropped, the police saw the case as finished,
not because it was solved, but because they considered it unsolvable.
She described it as hitting a roadblock.
Rather than trying to push through it, they just turned around.
She also believes that investigators didn't think JC's case mattered
to anyone outside of his family. Because of that, they didn't see it as important enough to solve.
In her words, quote, they didn't think anyone would be protesting that this wasn't getting
solved, end quote. And I mean, there's a million things, and I don't know if the police did this,
but there's a million things they could have done. They could have gone to the site where Daryl
claimed he and his girlfriend were camping to see if there was any evidence of a
campsite there, any evidence that people had been staying there. Looked at traffic cameras leading
to that location. Looked at traffic cameras. They could have done forensics and stuff on all of
these vehicles to see if there was any forensic evidence there. Cell phone triangulation. Yeah,
I don't know if they did this stuff. I really don't.
Did they even talk to the neighbors? Did anybody have surveillance cameras that were pointing outwards toward that house? Like all of these things, I wonder if they were done.
And as far as actually cell phone triangulation, we're talking 2002. So I remember 2002, I was
basically rocking a pager. Cell phones were not abundant at that point. So that might not have
been an option. Yeah. But they said that someone was using maybe a Nextel phone or walkie talkies.
Yeah. Yeah. It could have been right around that time because Nextels were used. And I remember
when I was in college, a lot of people were using a Nextel. So it was pretty, it was still new.
It's possible they had phones on them, but if anything, it probably would have been GPS. It
would have been, like I said, just bouncing off different towers.
So obviously nothing happens now. JC's murder went
unsolved. And for a long time, Madison had no idea that her father had even been murdered at all,
because after JC was killed, Madison's mother obviously wasn't sure how to handle the situation
because Madison was so young. So instead of telling Madison the truth, she told her that JC
had died of a heart attack, which I completely understand. Yeah. She was yeah. Yeah, she was like, I think, seven at that point.
Seven years old when it happened for when I ever died.
What are you going to tell?
What are you going to tell her?
And then obviously that little white lie becomes kind of a secret as Madison gets older.
But to keep that secret, Madison was kept away from her older sister, Alyssa.
It wasn't until 2012, 10 years after his death,
when Madison was 16, that she finally learned the truth.
And it was devastating to hear,
and she suddenly felt like her entire life had been a lie.
But she was finishing high school
and about to go to college,
and for a while, she put that information aside.
It wasn't until 2019 that she decided to start looking
into what had really happened to her father.
At first, it was just curiosity.
She wanted to understand the truth.
But the more she read through case files and listened to stories from people in the community,
the more she realized that she needed to know what happened.
And from there, she knew she had to do something about it.
She started speaking with the police, who told her J.C.'s murder was a home invasion gone wrong.
But when she asked them to reopen the case and actually investigate, she wasn't getting anywhere.
So she decided to take matters into her own hands
and that's when she started her podcast,
Ice Cold Case, investigating the murder
of John Cornelius McGee.
Madison has now spent more than five years
investigating her father's murder
and through her research,
she has developed her own theories
about what really happened.
Madison believes the home invasion was a cover for J.C.'s murder, with the attack on Omar's
family serving as a distraction. She thinks police wrongly looked at it as a robbery gone wrong,
taking focus away from J.C. being the intended target. Madison also believes that Omar was used
to lure J.C. into opening the door. She pointed out that her father
wouldn't have unlocked the door at 6.30 a.m.,
especially with Alyssa sleeping inside,
unless he thought someone he knew, like Omar, was outside.
One detail that has always stood out to her
is the fact that JC wasn't armed when he was killed.
Madison said that to open the door,
he would have walked past several guns.
If there had been a stranger or a potential threat outside early that morning, she, he would have walked past several guns. If there had been a stranger
or a potential threat outside early that morning, she believes he would have grabbed one. But
because he heard Omar's voice, he didn't feel the need to. And I agree with that.
I mean, not unless Omar's voice was distressed.
Yeah, but Omar's voice wasn't distressed. Because if he was like, Uncle JC, help me,
then John would have had a gun.
That's what I'm saying. So we have to believe that Omar, under this scenario, is like, hey, JC, come on out here.
I want to show you something.
Yeah.
OK.
But then the doors are kicked off the hinges, though.
Remember that.
Yes.
John's apartment, he didn't open the door.
So I'm saving it.
I'm saving it, guys.
I'm waiting.
I promise.
All right.
Another thing that doesn't sit right with Madison is how quickly JC was killed.
He was shot once in the head from several feet away, and she believes that level of
accuracy suggests intent.
The fact that the first shot immediately killed him meant that the men didn't stick around.
They left right away because they had accomplished what they came to do.
They did not search his house for a safe, and they didn't even rob him of the chain that he was wearing.
I agree.
They came all the way from California.
There's $250,000 that they're after, and you're going to kill him and then be like,
you know what, we've done enough for one day.
Let's leave.
I see where she's coming from.
Now, Madison believes her father's murder was a revenge plot carried out because he was working with the police and had made enemies. But what she doesn't know
is who was ultimately behind it. She wonders, was it the person directly who felt that they
needed revenge? Or was it someone sort of behind the scenes, Wizard of Oz-like, orchestrating all
of this? And she thinks that that will be revealed when motive comes into play. Madison is also uncertain about Omar's role in the murder.
She pointed out that there is a five-minute gap from when Omar goes outside with these guys to the time that Omar makes the 911 call.
And she says she doesn't know if we'll ever know what happened in those five minutes, at least not from Omar.
While she doesn't believe that Omar was the one who pulled the trigger, she knows that his constant lies and changing stories don't make him look good.
When she has spoken to him, he's switched between angry that she's turned on him publicly
and praising her for seeking the truth, saying that she is, quote, doing the right thing.
Now, despite everything Madison has uncovered, police still insist that J.C.'s murder was a result of a home invasion gone wrong and that Daryl Smith was involved.
They tell her that the case is open, but she doesn't feel like they're doing much.
For example, they once told her they wanted to re-interview Omar's girlfriend at the time, Kim, but they couldn't find her.
However, as soon as Madison left the police station, she pulled up her Facebook and was able to contact Kim immediately.
Horrible. Horrible police work.
Now, Madison isn't sure if the police
will ever solve her father's case or if she will either. And she's come to terms with that. For her,
justice isn't necessarily about getting a conviction or seeing someone put behind bars.
It's about knowing what happened to her dad. She told us, quote, I had to decide in the beginning,
very early on, where my bar would be for some sort of peace. And I think just knowing if I can get to a point where I'm like,
all of this evidence lines up in my head,
all of this makes sense to me.
And this is what happened to my dad,
whether or not a court of law is going to convict someone,
whether or not they're going to arrest someone or whatever.
If I know that this is what happened and I can get this confirmed by the
right people and the right witnesses and the right evidence for me,
I'm good. I did what I came here to do. Yeah. End quote. That's great. That's great.
I think Madison's an amazing person. That's why we agreed to do this. Met her multiple times,
had some good times with her as well. It's not always doom and gloom talking about this. She's
just a really amazing person. And she had actually known some people from Big Brother. That's how
when she came up to me, she's like, hey, she's out in the L.A. area. She's like, I know this, you know, this woman,
Hannah, for all the Big Brother people. She knows Hannah Chata. That'll make sense to some of you.
Not a lot. So that's how we started. And then she got into her father's story and she's gotten a
couple of nominations for this podcast and she's doing a great job. She's going to be at CrimeCon
in Denver, too. She will. She will be there. She will be there.
I don't want to sound redundant.
So I'm going to give my opinion where I stand right now without going over all the details
that you just laid out because you have them here.
And also you can go check out Madison's podcast as well.
But here's the overview of what I think though.
The big headline for me is Omar is lying.
We all know that Omar is lying.
The question is why?
So as we're going through all these scenarios,
I got three that I think stand out to me.
The first one is it wasn't Omar and JC that these people were targeting.
It was Omar and Richard.
And I do think there's some truth to the idea
that Richard stole a large sum of money
and these guys from Ohio or California,
wherever they were from,
knew the money or thought the money
was being stashed at Omar or JC's house.
And I don't think this was the first time that Omar, JC, Richard have
been involved in something like this. Hence the high security, hence the safes. Okay. Do I think
Pearl was in on all of it? No, but as I've seen many times over the years, although she may not
be directly involved, she's definitely turning a blind eye. She knows what's going on inside that
house. She knows why there's so much security. So I think it's a real scenario, especially with
all the names that are coming out and the consistency of those names, Daryl, Darren,
Brandon, Richard, Omar, it's all the same people. And I think potentially the reason Omar was lying
in the first place, because he knew, which you had alluded to,
that at the end of the day, Omar and Richard are a big reason why JC's dead today. So in that
scenario, they go to the house, they go to the main house where Omar is, they're looking for the
money. Omar says it's next door. I can't tell you why the shooter did it, but I don't think this was a precision shot in that
scenario. I think the person kicked in the door, was startled and surprised to see JC standing
there, throws a shot. Maybe it's blind. Maybe he's looking right at him. And unfortunately,
or fortunately, hits him in the head. Most of these low level criminals are not lethal assassins. And unfortunately,
sometimes even with police officers, they just get lucky with one shot and they end up killing
the cop. And it wasn't even an intentional shot. They just happened to get them in a good spot.
So I do think that's a very plausible scenario that they went there for a large sum of money
that was allegedly there. They broke into
one house. Omar maybe dimes out JC and JC becomes collateral damage or to not make JC look like just
completely innocent in this. Maybe JC knew about the money being stolen. Maybe he had some knowledge
of that. Would that be completely out of the question? Absolutely not. The second scenario,
which we talked about in episode one, is that Omar
set him up. JC had a lot of enemies. He's been involved in the drug game for a long time. He's
snitching on people. He's doing his own thing. And maybe Rico reaches out from prison and he's like,
Omar, help me out because they would be related. They're related. They're all in on us together.
And they say, hey, we want him. You're going to help me get him. You're going to set him up.
We're going to come to your house. We'll toss some things over. We'll throw some
alcohol on you. We'll beat you up a little bit. That's going to give you an alibi with law
enforcement. It's also going to give you an alibi with the family. You're going to help us. Would
it be the first time that family took out family? Of course not. That would go in line with what Madison's saying, that they intentionally went there.
JC was the target the whole time.
I just don't understand why you wouldn't go kill him first to make sure he doesn't hear
the home invasion next door and then go trample over some things, knock a table over and just
lie to police and tell them, oh, they came same time.
I don't know because the timing has to be right.
And because four minutes and because Kim and Pearl had to be kept in the dark.
So they had to put on a show for them.
That's where I'm leaning.
I think, in my opinion, that Omar set his uncle up and maybe he was forced to because
he's got family who's behind bars because of JC.
And they're like, hey, if it's not him, it's you, dude.
So, you know, figure it out.
It is. There's a lot of risk in that that could have went bad for Omar as well. But it's it's
also still plausible. And then the final one, which you kind of hit on there, which is Rico
and all these other people that are in prison for a very long time and can't get to JC directly,
but can get to him through other means and throw in some money out there. There's a world where Rico or one of these other guys hire a group of people who don't
have a lot of money and say, listen, there's drugs, there's money in that house.
No matter what, make sure you kill JC.
I want him dead.
I'm in prison.
I want him dead.
Maybe Omar's in on it, but also maybe Omar isn't.
Maybe Omar's just collateral damage in this scenario where they're
going there for JC. They don't know which house he's in. They hit both houses. Omar rats him out
and says he's right next door because Omar's got a gun to his head and they kill JC and get out of
there because they were never there for the money in the first place. And when we talked to Madison,
that was a scenario that she mentioned as well, where there's a lot of people who we haven't said directly by name in this story, but there are at least 75 people who know JC ratted him out.
At least 75 who know that them being away from their friends and family is because of JC.
So would they have an ax to grind?
Absolutely.
And some of them are in there for life for what Madison was telling us. So could they have the means and the ability to gather a group of people to go out there and take them out down in West Virginia? Of course. So where do we stand on this one for me? More than one person knows what happened here. I do think the truth is out there. A lot of loose lips and they do sink ships. Madison, you have to keep digging.
And I'm hoping that with the exposure you get here on Crime Weekly and other platforms,
someone does come forward, whether it's for financial incentive or just wanting to do
the right thing.
Or they just slip up.
They could also just slip up.
They get caught and they come forward and they snitch because they're trying to get
themselves a deal.
Well, apparently Madison's gotten like she hasn hasn't said from who, but she's, when she started digging in, she got some messages
from a family member and this family member was like, Hey, you better stop looking into this or
else. I don't doubt that one bit. I don't doubt that one because when you do get close, that's
when the heat starts getting turned up. So I'm really hoping, and I love Madison's outlook on
this, right? She doesn't know if there ever is going to be an actual prosecution.
She just wants answers.
She just wants to know.
I truthfully believe, and I don't want to put words into her mouth.
She can, she can counter this if she wants to.
But I truly believe that if someone came to her and said, Hey, here's what happened.
You're never going to get us to say it publicly, but here's what really went down.
I think Madison would be good with that.
I think she just wants to know now, would she still fight for justice for her father? Of course.
But I think that at minimum, the uncertainty, the unknown is why a lot of us tune into these
shows every week. We want resolution for these families. We want the answers to the puzzle.
Our brains want to make sense of something that's nonsensical.
Correct. Correct. Why would they do this? And there are a lot of suspects in this pool,
but I do think it's already been narrowed down by law enforcement and by Madison.
And I wouldn't be surprised in the least if within a very short period of time,
there is a break in this case where Madison's updating all of us, letting us know, hey,
someone is finally being charged with my father's murder.
Well, on that note, the third and final season of Ice Cold Case drops in April,
and Madison is exploring new possible leads she's learned, including other confidential informants,
family members, and more. So go check her out, send her some love, let her know we sent you.
Yes.
And let's all give her our support in this journey that she's taking.
And thank you to Madison for allowing us and entrusting us to cover this.
This is your story to tell about your father.
And it's not easy to let someone else take control.
She didn't ask to be part of the episode.
She said, hey, come to your own conclusions.
And I absolutely respect that.
I think it's amazing.
So thank you for entrusting us.
We hope that we did a service here and we did you right. And you're happy with the outcome of what we've had to say.
Weigh in down in the comments below. Let us know what you have to think. Make sure you go follow
Madison. Any final words, Stephanie? No, that's it. A very interesting case. I'm glad we covered
it. And I'm glad that Madison is continuing to push for the answers that she needs. And I hope that she has all of our support
and I know she has our support.
Well said.
Guys, we appreciate you being here.
Everyone stay safe out there.
We'll see you next week.
Bye.