Criminology - The Coin Shop Murders

Episode Date: May 24, 2026

In the 1980s and early 1990s, a terrifying series of murders occurred connected to the so-called "Coin Shop Killer," believed to be longtime suspect Charles Thurman Sinclair. Multiple coin shop owners... across several states were targeted using a chillingly consistent method: a friendly, knowledgeable customer would gain trust before returning to rob and murder the shop owners. Join Mike and Morf as they discuss the "Coin Shop Killer." An interstate investigation linked the crimes at a time when cooperation between agencies was far less common than today. But there are still many unanswered questions involving these cases. Although a lot of evidence was found against Sinclair, he never made it to trail, and he took his secrets with him when he died.   You can help support the show through Patreon. We'd love to connect with listeners on social media. We are available on the following platforms: Facebook - Facebook Discussion group - Instagram - Threads - X Formerly Twitter - Blue Sky - Twitch - Tik Tok  Criminology is an Emash Digital production hosted by Mike Ferguson and Mike Morford. 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Criminology is a true crime podcast that may contain discussion about violent or disturbing topics. Listener discretion is advised. Hello, everyone, and welcome to episode 411 of the Criminology podcast. I'm Mike Ferguson. And this is Mike Morford. Mr. Morford, how you doing this week, buddy? Doing good, a little bit tired. I was just talking to you before we started.
Starting point is 00:00:50 I wake up super early, usually between 3.30 and 4.30 every morning. And by 9 o'clock when we record, I'm getting a little bit ready for you. for a nap. So that's what I'm thinking is on the slate for today. How about you? I'm doing great. But yeah, we just discovered that, uh, you're waking up pretty close to the time that I'm actually going to bed. So we have, uh, very different schedules. Yeah, I definitely can't handle that anymore at my age. Uh, you're lucky you still can. Yeah, we're just about a week out from CrimeCon Vegas. This episode actually drops the weekend before. crime con in in Vegas at Caesar's Palace.
Starting point is 00:01:32 So we wanted to give one final mention to listeners that we're going to be on creators row. So if you're there, please stop by. Say hi. We also want to remind everyone that we're having our annual joint criminology T-Cat CrimeCon meetup. And that's Saturday night,
Starting point is 00:01:48 May 30th at 8 p.m. At the vista cocktail lounge. So if you want to come by and hang out for a bit, that should be a lot of fun. And we hope to see you there. So now that we have all of that out of the way, Let's jump into this week's episode. And we're exploring a series of murders that happened in the 1980s and early 1990s
Starting point is 00:02:06 that targeted a bunch of different coin shop owners, all of which were killed in their shops. Although the murders happened in several different states, the cases were so similar that authorities began to work together to see if the cases were connected. And if so, to nab the killer. At the time, this is a pretty big deal because jurisdiction, didn't work together as closely as they do now, and information wasn't as readily shared between agencies. We've seen how the lack of cooperation between agencies and different jurisdictions has hindered investigations in the past, particularly when it came to serial killers who
Starting point is 00:02:47 were moving around, whether it was just one state or several. This was such a unique collaboration. In fact, that Pete Puccini, a deputy sheriff in Jefferson, County, County, Washington, told the LA Times, this case saw one of the unique joinings of police departments. In each of the cases we'll be discussing, a friendly and helpful stranger had recently started hanging around the coin shops where the murders would occur. This person, a very tall white male, was polite and knowledgeable about coins and valuables. The man was persistent, too, coming around all the time and just kind of making himself at home. He told each coin shop owner a different, but very similar story about being local.
Starting point is 00:03:28 but not too local that anyone would recognize him, and having some incoming money that he was looking for ways to invest. Once the store owners had gotten more familiar with his presence and started letting their guards down, but before he had worn out his welcome, the man would come back just before closing, armed, and he would strike. The weapon used in each case was a small caliber firearm. Luckily, in many of these cases,
Starting point is 00:03:52 the coin shop owners mentioned this new patron to others, helping investigators put together an ammo in a profile. Today, we do know the identity of the coin shop killer. There are multiple coin shop murders for which authorities believe Charles T. Sinclair is responsible. Though, as we'll discuss, Sinclair is not the only coin shop killer there has been. It does seem like he could be the one behind these specific murders. These crimes feel eerily similar and fit the pattern of Sinclair's other crimes, and it can be proven that Sinclair's, Sinclair was in the area at some point, or there was direct evidence that linked him to the crime scene.
Starting point is 00:04:35 And as we'll discuss, the Sinclair guy was very dangerous. But at the same time, he used his natural ability to gain the trust of his victims. Charles Thurman Sinclair, the youngest of four children, developed an interest in coins early on. Maybe it was inevitable. After his father died when he was young, his mother supported their family with a coin-related business. a coin-operated laundromat where she would also take him clothes to iron. As he grew up, Sinclair started his own coin collection. The interest was something that never left him.
Starting point is 00:05:09 He was a Navy veteran and had served in the Vietnam War. Back home, he worked in the oil fields. Eventually, he was able to open his own coin shop in Hobbs, New Mexico. He put his own collection up for sale in the store, using coins he already owned to create an inventory for the shop. after a while he was able to start buying selling and trading weapons too some more if you ever collect coins or anything like that when i was a kid i had some coins that my grandparents got me a couple books with some coins in them and little boxes that came with some coins and i had some
Starting point is 00:05:43 stamps too but i didn't really get too heavily into it how about you no i i do tend to i don't know if collect is the right word but i do tend to get interested in owning multiples of certain types of things. But I've never been into coins. Trading cards I was into as a kid and even as I was an adult, but I don't do that anymore either. In 1985, Sinclair's shop and Hobbs called the shooter supply burned to the ground. Authority suspected that the fire was the result of arson,
Starting point is 00:06:19 but didn't have enough evidence to charge Sinclair since he wasn't able to operate the business anymore, he couldn't pay back a loan he had from the bank, and he ended up defaulting. The lender attempted to collect the collateral. He had put up for the loan, which was a few guns, but Sinclair had been ready for that and had a plan.
Starting point is 00:06:41 Instead of giving up his guns, he left town and began to move around the United States with his family. We know he was in Utah, Montana, California, Alaska, Wyoming, and Washington. Though it is suspected, he visited other states as well. After realizing that the Sinclair's had fled, New Mexico authorities noticed that they owed the state more than $30,000. As part of their business,
Starting point is 00:07:08 they processed and charged for hunting and fishing licenses. The Sinclair's failed to turn the fees they collected over to the state before the shop burned down and they skipped town. Authorities in New Mexico charged Debbie Sinclair with embezzlement. It didn't matter much at the time since the Sinclair family had left the state and had assumed new identities. But eventually, it wasn't just a matter involving money that had investigators trying to track down Sinclair. On May 4, 1990, 29-year-old Kelly Finnegan was shot in the head at his store, Legacy Coin Shop, located in Murray, Utah. Luckily, he survived and was able to provide investigators with a lot of useful information.
Starting point is 00:07:54 Finnegan told investigators that the shooter was a man from Texas named Jim Stockton, who had been coming around the shop recently. According to Finnegan, this Jim Stockton character was a newer but familiar face in his shop. So on May 4th, when Stockton came in right before closing, as Finnegan was locking away the most valuable items in his safe, he wasn't worried. He didn't feel unsafe. In fact, he let Stockton.
Starting point is 00:08:18 and used the restroom and even turned his back to him. Finnegan told the LA Times, I had gotten used to him, and that when he turned around to put something away, Stockton mumbled to him, you dumb bastard. I turned around to say what? And in that split second,
Starting point is 00:08:32 he shot me. Thankfully, the bullet basically grazed his forehead. Something usually attributed to the fact that he was turning around at the moment the gun was fired. But it was enough to hurt and enough to cause him to bleed so much so that he was able to convincingly play dead. He could hear Stockton walking around the shop,
Starting point is 00:08:55 stepping over what he thought was Finnegan's dead body. As he decided what to take with him, he seemed to be in no hurry. Ultimately, he stole about $60,000 worth of items, including gold, coins, and antique pocket watches. Finnegan was later able to confirm that Jim Stockton was actually Charles Sinclair using one of his many aliases. And man, Morf, what a scary situation.
Starting point is 00:09:25 I mean, you know, these types of businesses, I've never worked in one, but it seems like they'd be a little scary just because I think he was probably in there mostly by himself. You don't have any backup. You don't have anybody else around in case someone, you know, gets physical or in this case pulls out a gun. But to be shot in the head, no less, I mean, that's the stuff of nightmares. But I mean, luckily, it was just a grazing shot. And I think he was able to play it off. Like, this guy really thought he had killed him. And I think the way that he did play it off saved his life probably. It seems lucky that he was turning at that exact moment or he would have probably
Starting point is 00:10:12 taken a lot more bad shot to the head. Could have been one that ended his life. And to your point, these kind of businesses seem like a, like a target rich type of a store for people that want a quick dollar and want to escape. Because oftentimes you're located next to highways or on the edge of town where someone can commit a robbery and hit the highway and be out of the area quickly. So I think these store owners probably are often cognizant of that. A lot of times they have guns to defend themselves.
Starting point is 00:10:50 It just seems like in this situation, he was caught off guard. Well, the other thing is they're dealing in items that, I don't know, maybe are easily or more easily sold, resold than other stores. maybe a little harder to trace gold and coins than other types of items. Yeah, especially if you have a buyer lineup that will buy that kind of stuff without asking too many questions. On July 31st, 1990, just a couple months after the attack on Kelly Finnegan, there was a double murder at the Treasure State Silver and Gold Coin Shop in Billings, Montana. The owner, 60-year-old Charles Sparbo, and his assistant, 47-year-old Catherine Neustrum, had both been shot in the head during the apparent robbery.
Starting point is 00:11:38 The killer got away with $50,000 worth of gold and valuable coins. Sparbo's son, Jim, had been in the shop earlier that day when a strange man had come in. He and his father had been suspicious of the man before the murders, and after what happened, Jim was sure he was the person responsible. Jim provided a description of the man, and it was used for a composite sketch, that was released to the media. He was described as a white man with a gap between his teeth and a scar on his right hand. The info Jim relayed to police was helpful.
Starting point is 00:12:08 He recalled his father telling him about a new customer that kept coming in. The man claimed to be a farmer and said he was from Laurel, about 15 miles away. He also claimed that he was about to sell his farm for $130,000 and that he would be looking to invest a large chunk of it in gold. Charles Sparbo had mentioned to his son how odd it was that the man parked his car, a silver Pontiac, far from the shop, and then walked the rest of the way. Jim had noticed that the man had what he called banker smooth hands, which made him very suspicious of the claim that he was a farmer. He felt no man who spent all day tending to his farm would have extremely smooth hands. And I think more if, you know, it's such a good, observation. And we talk in a lot of cases about people really being observant of others,
Starting point is 00:13:04 which is a good thing. But this observation that this guy's a farmer yet, you know, he doesn't have rough hands, no calluses, extremely smooth hands. It just doesn't seem like somebody who works with their hands day in and day out. Yeah, I thought that was a neat observation, you know, because if you think about it, if you see somebody with grease under their fingernails, maybe greasy hands, well, you could maybe guess, okay, this is a mechanic or somebody that works around machinery or farmer, something like that versus, you know, someone with well manicured, soft hands that, you know, they're likely in some kind of white color job where they're not doing a lot of stuff with their hands. So that's one important clue he was able to relay that may have given police some helpful information.
Starting point is 00:14:00 Billings Police had the sketch of the suspect, and they quickly circulated, and a tip soon came in. A coin shop owner in Spokane, Washington, recognized the man in the sketch as someone he knew as J.C. Weir. He had been a customer in that man's shop that spring. Looking up the name J.C. Weir in databases, authorities found that a silver Pontiac, just like the one owned by the supposed farmer who killed Charles Sparbo and Catherine Neustrum was registered in his name. Spokane authorities found that Weir's driver's license had been surrendered in Wyoming. The new license issued there listed a false address in Jackson Hole. A silver pineite was found abandoned at the airport there.
Starting point is 00:14:41 Authorities knew they had the right car because inside, they found a 22 caliber handgun, a silencer, and coins that had been stolen from Sparbo's shop and buildings. At around the same time, police developed information that J.C. Ware was really Charles Sinclair, and that Sinclair was already being sought by authorities in New Mexico. So I think, Morf, there's some really good police work here, but there's also people who are giving the police some really good information to work with, right? We've talked about a bit of it. The one thing that really jumped out at me here is that this person who they believe is Charles Sinclair. is going to kill two people, rob the store, and then flee, leave his car at the airport.
Starting point is 00:15:30 Now, that part doesn't surprise me. But inside, he leaves the handgun, the silencer, and some coins that can directly tie him to the Sparbo's shop. I mean, that doesn't seem like a master criminal, right? there's some things there that can really tie you to the crime scene. Yeah, I wonder if it was like a flippant attitude on his part. Like he didn't think the cops would find him or he wasn't prepared for them to find him that quickly. Maybe he planned to get that stuff hidden by the time they came looking for him if they ever came looking for him.
Starting point is 00:16:09 So maybe he was just sort of caught in the middle of his plan and wasn't able to get rid of that stuff. Yeah, it could be. but obviously, and I hate to say it this way, but it's an error on his part. Now, we like it when criminals make these types of errors because it's ultimately what helps, you know, them to being caught and being charged and convicted. So we don't want perfect criminals. But I think it's worth pointing out mistakes that they make that ultimately tie them to these crimes. They were the coins that were stolen from Sparbo's shop.
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Starting point is 00:21:33 One of Sinclair's friends in Hobbs, New Mexico, came forward to tell authorities that Sinclair had been bragging that he had enough money to buy him. a property with a lot of acreage that he could farm and have mules and horses. In reality, when the Sinclair family was found in Alaska, they were living in a rental home with no indoor plumbing. Investigators were able to execute search warrants for the Sinclair family storage units back in Sumas, Washington. They found evidence that linked Sinclair to multiple murders and a missing person's investigation. Officers recovered a clarinet.
Starting point is 00:22:12 that had been purchased by the suspect in the murder of Robert and Dagmar Linton, using a credit card stolen from the couple after they were killed. Robert and Dagmar Linton were a married couple living in Stockton, California. In the summer of 1986, they decided to take a road trip up to Vancouver, British Columbia, and attend the World Exposition on Transportation and Communication. We know they made it up to Washington, where they dropped out of contact with her son. They had been giving him regular updates about their location until they disappeared, and their travel trailer was found abandoned at the Naco West Campground in Brennan, Washington.
Starting point is 00:22:52 The last thing they told their son was that they were planning a day trip to Mount Baker. The Linton's pickup, a 1982 Dodge Ram 1500, was found at the Seattle-Tacoma Airport. There were bloodstains and hair found inside the truck. Authorities are still not sure where, exactly when, or even why the Lentons crossed paths with some It appears that it happened after they left the Naco West campground, but before they had a chance to make it back. What Sinclair was doing in the area, we don't know. He was an outdoorsy type of guy, though.
Starting point is 00:23:22 He could have just been there on a day trip of his own to Mount Baker when he saw the Lentons as an easy target for some quick money. The Lenton's bodies have never been found, but police have no doubt they were killed by Charles Sinclair. The Lenton's credit cards were used to buy gas in a movie, 125 miles away from Brennan. where their trailer and belongings had been left. Someone used their cards as they traveled south through Oregon. And one coin shop owner may have been very fortunate that the credit card declined
Starting point is 00:23:53 when the suspect tried to buy two 50 peso Mexican gold pieces for $1,000. It's possible that this purchase would have been the way that the suspect posing as Robert Linton made himself seem trustworthy and worthwhile to have a around a coin shop before coming back and killing the owner, robbing the shop and leaving investigators to search for a man who was already dead. That specific shop, though, may have been intimidating to him. It was set up for the staff safety. They always worked in pairs, and they were always armed. It would be a lot harder to make a clean getaway. At this shop, this may be why the man, after claiming he would be back later with the cash to
Starting point is 00:24:41 by the pesos just never came back. And I mentioned it earlier more if, you know, some of these shops, I think people were working alone, but not this one, right? They always worked in pairs and they were always armed. That is not the type of store that, you know, you want to try to rob. It's why you never hardly hear on the news of gun stores being robbed. anybody who's ever gone into a gun store, almost everybody is armed. It's not a good place to try to rob.
Starting point is 00:25:17 Yeah, I think if you're a criminal, you're looking for an easy target, someone that's not going to fight back. But when you have multiple employees armed and able to shoot back, that's probably a place you want to avoid. Well, and you have to assume they're probably pretty proficient, right? With firearms being around them all day, they probably shoot a lot and stuff like that. But you and I have done so many cases over the years about serial killers. And I don't know that the thought is all that much different. What are we normally talking about? What do we hear even serial killers say?
Starting point is 00:25:54 And it's that they're looking for, in most cases, vulnerable types of individuals. They don't want to go after people who could potentially put up a major fight. They're looking for vulnerable types of victims. And I think this situation is no different. You know, if you're a person who robs stores, you're using that same sort of mentality. You're not looking for the toughest nut to crack, right? You're looking for the most vulnerable type of store. Yeah. And there are cases every once in a while where the person is very impulsive and they will take chances and despite the risk to themselves, they'll attack someone that might be armed or able to protect themselves, but more often than not, like you mentioned, it's always
Starting point is 00:26:51 these people looking for someone they feel that they can overtake without much resistance. Investigators in the Linton case were starting to catch up to the suspect, but an article about the missing Lintons noted that the suspect was being tracked by their credit card usage. After that article ran, the suspect stopped using the cards, and the trail went cold. But as we now know, the killing didn't stop. The description given of the suspect that was used in the Linton's credit cards was that of a very tall, large white man with a beard and a bandage on his right hand, and it perfectly matched up with Sinclair, who had scars on his right hand,
Starting point is 00:27:28 except that Sinclair was clean-shaven when he was arrested. This slight change in his appearance actually made Deputy Sheriff Pete Puccini, who was investigating the murder of the Lenton's, initially overlooked the connection. It turns out that Puccini had once interviewed Sinclair in a pawn shop, a tall man with a bandage on his hand, because he was acting suspicious. He didn't realize it was his suspect at the time.
Starting point is 00:27:51 However, the same stolen card used to buy the clarinet had first been used to buy gas and marble mount just 50 miles away from the town of Deming, Washington, where the Sinclair family lived at the time, though they were going by the last name Weir. Sinclair had assumed Jimmy Charles Weir's identity in 1985 and never looked back. That clarinet Sinclair bot left a trail of its own. His daughter played clarinet, and investigators were able to see that her school records
Starting point is 00:28:18 had been transferred from Washington to Alaska. Deputy Sheriff Puccini told Seattle PIA.com, the Littins were killed because Sinclair's daughter needed a clarinet. His wife needed a crock pot, and he needed some more coins. And we talk about so many, you know, senseless murders, right? Almost all of them are. But to think that this guy is basically robbing and killing as a way of life. I mean, that's like, I mean, he's making his living almost.
Starting point is 00:28:50 I know that's a strange way to say it, but he is by robbing stores and killing people. I mean, his daughter needs a clarinet. His wife needs a crock pot. Well, how am I going to get that stuff? And in his mind, robbing and killing is what he came up with. And it makes me wonder what he was using the money for besides that kind of stuff because we mentioned some pretty large takes in a couple of these crimes. Yet when they caught up with him, he was living in a rented house with no indoor plumbing.
Starting point is 00:29:25 So it doesn't sound like he was living any kind of lavish lifestyle for sure. why just wonder he's probably not working all that much, maybe not at all, maybe that was his only form of income. And it would last for a while, but it's not going to last forever.
Starting point is 00:29:43 And then it has to be replaced. So the storage locker of Sinclair's yielded a lot of clues that connected him to the murder of the Lenton's, but evidence in the storage locker also connected Sinclair to other cases. According to
Starting point is 00:29:59 Vacaville, California Police Department Sergeant Mike Cook. In an interview with the Desert News, very specific evidence related to the murder of the owner of the Golden Hills coin exchange was found in Sinclair's possession. It's unclear what the evidence was, but Sergeant Cook was confident, saying, we have more than enough evidence to charge him. They also found a sales book belonging to Ruben Lucky Williams, who was murdered in his shop in California in 1986. When Sinclair was arrested, he had an antique pocket watch in his pocket.
Starting point is 00:30:36 It had been stolen from the safe of legacy coin shop in Murray, Utah. It was also discovered that a Rolex Sinclair's son was wearing had been stolen during the same robbery. So Sinclair had apparently shared the spoils of his crimes with his wife and children. When they found out their father, Charles, was arrested and that he was a murderer. His children were said to be devastated. As for Sinclair's wife, Debbie, Deputy Sheriff Puccini told SeattlePI.com, she was like an ostrich who just never asked any questions.
Starting point is 00:31:05 He would bring home coins, cash them in, and they'd party, and then he'd go out again. It was almost as if she didn't want to know how he was getting his stuff, but was happy to have it. And that's such an interesting quote, right? She was like an ostrich. He didn't say it, but it's almost like, you know, she kept her her head. down in the sand. She obviously had to know something strange was going on. How was he getting all this stuff? But she didn't ask any questions. She was happy to have it and apparently didn't care where it came from. While being held in Palmer, Alaska on $500,000 bail, authorities in Montana and Utah charged Sinclair
Starting point is 00:31:49 with murder, attempted murder, and aggravated robbery. He fought extradition from Alaska and moved to a facility in Anchorage, his wife Debbie was also arrested and extradited to New Mexico. To face those old embezzlement charges related to the hunting license fees, it seemed like justice was on the horizon for the victims and families of these various coin shop attacks and that Sinclair would have to answer for his crimes. But that wasn't to be. On the morning of October 30th, 1990, 44-year-old Charles Sinclair was found unresponsive in his cell at the Cook Inlet pre-trial facility in Anchorage, Alaska.
Starting point is 00:32:31 He was rushed to Humana Hospital, but after half an hour, he was pronounced dead. The cause of death was ultimately a heart failure, but it initially appeared that he intended to die, as the toxicology test showed that there was an elevated level of propranolal found in the system. The medication had been prescribed to him to treat his high blood pressure following a heart attack in 1989. A coroner's jury determined that there was a drug drug overdose. The massive dose of the drug, three times more than he should have had in the system, apparently caused his heart to stop. The jury found that the overdose was accidental and not intentional. Charles Sinclair's death was not the ending anyone wanted. They wanted to see him tried and convicted
Starting point is 00:33:14 and sentenced for his crimes. Kelly Finnegan, the only victim known to have survived an attack by Charles Sinclair told the LA Times, I feel cheated. Authorities were suddenly facing a roadblock in the cases that were definitely connected to Charles Sinclair, but also in the cases for which they suspected him. And they definitely felt he had more victims. Deputy Sheriff Puccini told the L.A. Times, we all felt Sinclair was a serial killer of the same stature of Ted Bundy. And Vackaville Sergeant Mike Cook told the Desert News,
Starting point is 00:33:51 Our suspect sounds like the typical serial killer. But when Sinclair died, they suddenly lost the ability to question him. There was no hope that anything could convince him to spill his secrets. And investigators believed he had a lot of them. They also believed he could be responsible for up to 15 murders and two sexual assaults in addition to the attempted murder of Kelly Finnegan. And I'm going to go back to what Kelly Finnegan. again said. He felt cheated. And I completely understand how he would feel that way. I think I would
Starting point is 00:34:29 feel the same way. It's like this person who did something terrible to you. Luckily, he survived when no one else did, but they finally figured out who it was. They caught this guy and he's going to be charged and go to trial. And then all of a sudden you learn that, No, that's not going to happen. That must be very frustrating. Yeah, frustrating for the victims and their families, but also frustrating for police because they might have been able to use a leverage against him, later sentences, more favorable conditions if he shared secrets about his crimes, but they didn't have that chance to ask
Starting point is 00:35:12 him or question him in those other cases. For many years, it was believed by some law enforcement officials, including Deputy Sheriff Pichini that Charles Sinclair could be responsible for the murder of 18-year-old Amanda Stavick in Bellingham, Washington. We covered her case back in episode 391. Mandy, as she was known to friends and family, was attacked and killed while on a jog the day after Thanksgiving in 1989. According to CT Insider.com, the search of Sinclair's storage unit had apparently uncovered a high school yearbook belonged to Sinclair's son, with Mandy's picture circled and a yellow flowered
Starting point is 00:35:49 bed sheet and pillows that supposedly matched the linen used to strangle and wrap the body. But Ron Peterson, a former Watcom County Sheriff Civil Deputy, who recovered Mandy's body, disputed this and said that her body wasn't wrapped in anything. There was nothing for the sheets or the pillow to match related to Mandy's case. In 2013, new DNA technology helped investigators develop a new suspect to focus on in the Stavoc case, Timothy Bass, who lived in the same neighborhood as the Stavix. It took another four years for investigators to finally collect his DNA and confirm their suspicions that Bass had killed Mandy.
Starting point is 00:36:28 After nearly 30 years, the Stavik family had answers, and the list of cases Sinclair could have been involved in got shorter by one. Police also felt that Charles Sinclair could be responsible for the murders of Jay Cook and Tanya Van Kylanborg. We covered their case way back in the case. season four. The two were last seen alive on November 18, 1987. Getting on to a ferry in Bremerton, Washington, headed to Seattle. Tanya was found six days later. On Thanksgiving Day, she had been left on the side of a rural road in Alger, Washington. She had been sexually assaulted and shot in the head.
Starting point is 00:37:08 The couple's van was found the next day, near the Bellingham Greyhound Station, full of evidence. Jay's body was found one day later, about 60 miles from Tanya's body. He had been strangled and bludgeoned with a rock. Their murders reminded some authorities of Robert and Dagmar Linton. Jay and Tanya drove through Brennan, where the Linton's trailer was abandoned. A man named William Earl Talbert II was convicted of their murders in 2019, after investigators used new DNA testing technology. While investigators may have gotten it wrong and Charles Sinclair wasn't involved in Mandy Stavik's case,
Starting point is 00:37:49 or in Jay Cook and Tanya Van Kylenberg's, they still think he's a good suspect in the other cases that fit his normal ammo, that being targeting coin shop owners. Unfortunately, with no DNA to test, we may never know the answer in these coin shop murders. The nature of these murders kind of obscure as important details. There are a list of dozens of coin shop murders over the years, seemingly unrelated. ones throughout the United States and Canada. And it's likely that this kind of thing happens in other countries, too. When you deal in valuables, you're often a target, so we certainly can't say that Charles Sinclair is responsible for every murder of a coin shop owner. But various agencies
Starting point is 00:38:28 came together and pulled their resources and shared details. And collectively, they came to believe that there's a very high likelihood Charles Sinclair was responsible for some very specific murder cases. One of those cases took place in Everett, Washington. On January 27, 1980, David Sutton was found dead in his antique shop, the Bennington Auction Company in Everett. He had been shot in the head with a 38 caliber weapon. $80,000 in the form of silver coins had been stolen from the shop.
Starting point is 00:39:02 Another case thought to be connected to Charles Sinclair happened on August 28, 1984. That's when 41-year-old Thomas Roar was found dead in the coin shop he managed in Mishawaka, Indiana. The following year, on November 1, 1986, Ruben Lucky Williams was found dead in the coin shop he owned in Vacaville, California. The 59-year-old was a military veteran. Sinclair had Lucky Sales Book in his possession when his storage unit was searched. Another murder police think Sinclair is responsible for is that of 45-year-old Leo Cashett. On July 14, 1987, he was found dead in his coin shop in Spokane, Washington. He had been shot in the head.
Starting point is 00:39:50 On March 12, 1988, 52-year-old Leroy Hoffman was found dead in his shop in Kansas City, Missouri. Coins worth several thousands of dollars had been stolen. Before he was killed, he had told his wife about a farmer that had recently been in the shop looking to sell his coins. Hoffman's wife told the LA Times that her husband was planning to buy the man's large collection. It's not clear that Sinclair was ever in Missouri, but this farmer role was part of his exact ruse. Different weapons were used in the murders of these coin shop owners. Some were 22 caliber, some were 38 caliber, but Sinclair did have access to multiple guns. After all, he sold guns, along with coins out of his own shop. According to an
Starting point is 00:40:35 FBI bulletin, along with Jim Stockton and J.C. Weir. Sinclair also used the names Carl Lynch, Charles R. Williams, Robert Jarvis, and John. It turns out that Sinclair regularly went hunting with a man named J.C. Weir. How he ended up with his car, or even if it was the real J.C. Weir's Pontiac isn't clear. Investcares recovered equipment for making false ideas. identification cards in the Sinclair family storage unit. So maybe the Pontiac belonged to Sinclair, but had been falsely registered in J.C. Weir's name. It's unclear whether Weir was aware that Sinclair had stolen his identity. In 1990, Charles Sinclair traveled through Quebec, Ottawa, Yukon, and White Horse Canada.
Starting point is 00:41:28 The FBI's map of Sinclair's movement has him in every single Western state from 1982 to 1990. with the exception of Nevada and Arizona. Some people find this odd that he would go to every western state, but those two especially, because in Nevada, with Vegas and Reno, you have a seemingly endless supply of potential coin shops that he could have targeted. If we look close enough,
Starting point is 00:41:52 we may find crimes in those two states that match Sinclair's MO, but officially there are no crimes that are connected to him. And I just wonder, Morp, if maybe he skipped Nevada, and especially, you know, Vegas and Reno, yeah, they do have a lot of coin shops. But I feel like many of them are of the larger variety with probably more people, more security, than maybe a small town type of coin shop. Again, if you're looking for maybe the easier type of coin shop, robbery situation. You want to hit, at least in his mind, probably these smaller places where there might
Starting point is 00:42:42 only be one person working. You don't want to go into Vegas with all these people and hit a large store. Yeah, there's probably more to gain from it, but there's also a lot more risk involved. But the other thing that jumps out at me is this guy is all over the place. He's in so many states in the U.S. He is in a bunch of territories up in Canada. I mean, it just seems to me that this guy was essentially living his life, funding his life, by moving around, using different identities, and robbing these types of stories.
Starting point is 00:43:27 I don't think there's any doubt about it. Now, how many robberies and murders can be attributed to him? Okay, there are questions there. But I don't think there's any doubt that there's quite a number of them that he committed over the years. I do believe this guy was a pretty serious serial killer. You know, when you go to that many states, it seems like an endless supply of stores that might have coins or similar businesses that he could have focused on. And maybe some of those cases in those states haven't been connected yet. He may have other victims.
Starting point is 00:44:09 Well, and it's easy to say, okay, any coin shop killing, let's attribute to Charles Sinclair. But let's not forget, they actually found legitimate. evidence in his storage unit regarding some of these robberies and murders. So I don't think it's just a matter of, you know, doing a Henry Lee Lucas type of thing here where any murder that this guy could have possibly been anywhere near were going to attribute to him. There's actual evidence here connecting him to some. Some people believe that there was more than one coin shop killer and that when Sinclair died,
Starting point is 00:44:52 Similar cases happened, but, you know, we talked about it earlier. Coin shops and their owners likely make for appealing targets. Just like there was more than one night stalker, more than one fast food killer. This is another moniker that may pass on to new suspects for as long as there are coin shops. For example, if you just look up the coin shop killer, you're going to find some more recent articles that are not even about Sinclair. articles from as recently as last month are referring to a man named Douglas Smith when they talk about the coin shop killer. Douglas Smith was found guilty of killing 67-year-old Dwight Brockman and 76-year-old George Doc Manley at the coin shop in Cheyenne, Wyoming in July 2015. He was actually the one who called 911 to report a robbery happening at the coin shop.
Starting point is 00:45:47 He claimed that he had been held at gunpoint and gave a detailed description of a suspect he made up. He was arrested after a nine-year investigation, which he continued to both insert himself in and interfere with. In April of this year, 2006, Smith died at the Wyoming Medium Correctional Institution in Tarrington, Wyoming. He was 70 years old. Is it possible that he had more victims? It turns out that Charles Sinclair wasn't even the first coin shop killer. Years before Sinclair's first known murder, the moniker coin shop killer referred to Forrest L. Ethington, though there are those that believe that it was Sinclair, not Ethington,
Starting point is 00:46:28 who killed Robert Rossburg, the owner of a coin shop in Pantigo, Texas, in 1985. At one point, authorities even floated the idea that the two were working together. David Chapman, assistant district attorney in Tarrant County, Texas told UPI.com, Ethington was always looking for someone he could recruit. someone cold-blooded to commit these types of crimes, and it would explain how coin shot murders continued when Ethington was behind bars. Chapman believed that Ethington certainly could have planned and supervised these types of crimes from inside the Texas penitentiary. Eventually, Ethington's conviction was overturned and he was released on parole. In the end, we don't really know
Starting point is 00:47:18 how many victims Charles Sinclair had. There may be more, but barring some new evidence coming to light years after his crimes, we may not find out what else Charles Sinclair did. Perhaps FBI special agent Ken Marishin said it best when he told the LA Times, the only one we know who knew the whole story was Charles Sinclair and he took it to the grave with him. And as we wrap this one up, more, I mean, it is a fascinating story, the story of Charles Sinclair. I think that quote, though, is exactly right. You know, anytime you have a situation like this where you seemingly have this one person
Starting point is 00:48:06 who's out robbing and killing and they die before they ever go to trial, they do take pretty much all the information with them to the great. And like we said earlier, right, it's frustrating for victims, the families of victims, but also law enforcement. You made a great point earlier when you said, you know,
Starting point is 00:48:32 had they been able to talk to Sinclair, they could have made, you know, some kind of plea deal with him where they were able to, you know, close a bunch of cases. if he was involved, but that all went away the moment he died. Yeah, and luckily he was not a master criminal because he left things in his storage unit
Starting point is 00:48:57 that police were able to connect to other crimes. He left that car at the airport with stuff in it that was connected to a case. So he did make mistakes. And as you mentioned earlier, we like it when criminals make these mistakes because that helps police solve a lot of these cases. And I just wonder, because I keep making the parallels here to different serial killers, and I do think Charles Sinclair was a serial killer, I wonder if some of the stuff he kept in the storage unit were his trophies.
Starting point is 00:49:32 Now, we know some of it was used, right, given to family members, used by Sinclair, used by his wife, his kids, but there were some things that police found in that storage unit that were never going to be used. They weren't useful to anyone. And I just wonder if he kept them as a trophy or trophies. Yeah, that's definitely something serial killers do. I wouldn't put it past him because I agree. He definitely seems like he was a serial killer. And one thing, speaking of serial killers that I took away from this was I felt there was a little bit of a of Henry Lee Lucas, where they were trying to pin other crimes on him just because he was in the vicinity.
Starting point is 00:50:20 You know, we talked about a few of them, you know, the murder of Jay and Tanya and Mandy. They were a little bit different than his typical MO, and there were sexual assaults in them as well, something that as far as we know, he didn't do. So, you know, I found that interesting, that police were trying to connect. these cases to him even though it wasn't in his normal wheelhouse. But it's so natural, right? We do it. When I say we,
Starting point is 00:50:51 I mean, the public does it, law enforcement does it. You're trying to make sense of some of these unsolved murders. And you find out about these really bad people. And you find out that they were in the area. It's kind of natural to think, well,
Starting point is 00:51:07 could they have been responsible for some, of these as well. Now, we know that he wasn't responsible for some of those, but I also think there's no way that authorities know his full scope of crimes. You think about someone traveling to as many states in areas as he did. Also traveling, you know, throughout Canada, he lived in a bunch of different places. I mean, it's scary to think. how many stores he could have robbed, how many people he could have killed. If it came out next week that some kind of physical evidence linked him to other crimes back in the 80s, I wouldn't be shocked at all because I think there's probably more victims out there.
Starting point is 00:51:56 Yeah, me neither. I'm right with you on that. But no doubt, you know, he was a very nasty individual. To me, this thought of earning your living for a lack of a better way. way of saying it and providing for your family by robbing others and killing them. Not to mention, you know, this thought that his wife, kind of had an inkling, let's say, maybe even more than an inkling, that he was getting stuff that he probably shouldn't have. She didn't know how he was getting it, but she didn't ask any questions.
Starting point is 00:52:36 and then he think about his children who are obviously blameless, but they're going to learn, right, at some point, and now I'm sure they're much older, obviously, but that they used a clarinet to play, let's say, in the school band that was provided from a robbery and murder. The son had a Rolex that he would learn at some point came from a robbery and murder. So, I mean, that's, I don't know how you square all of that along with the fact that your dad was this prolific murderer. And I think that proves that there were victims too in this. So far reaching effects from his crimes. Yeah, absolutely. But that's it for our episode on the coin shop killer.
Starting point is 00:53:27 As always, if you love the show, but you haven't done so yet. Take a minute. Go out, leave us a review, leave a rating. Also, keep telling your friends, word of mouth about the podcast really helps us out. If you want to find us on social media, we're on every major platform to search for criminology podcast on your favorites. And for news, old episodes, and more, head over to our website, Criminology Podcast.com. And if you want to join a discussion group about the podcast and the cases we discuss,
Starting point is 00:53:55 head over to Facebook and search for Criminology Podcast, discussion, and fans. So that's it for another episode of Criminology, but Morph and I will be back with all of you next Saturday night with a brand new episode. So until then for Mike and Morph. We'll talk to you next week. Take care, everyone.

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