Dark Downeast - Introducing: 13th Juror
Episode Date: January 16, 2026Go inside the investigation of the murder of Liberty German and Abigail Williams—two bright, beloved girls from Delphi, Indiana—on the first episode of the 13th Juror. Hosted by Brandi Churchwell,... unpack the long, twisting search for answers, the arrest of Richard Allen, and how the prosecution built its case. Listen to 13th Juror now on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts! Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everyone, Kylie Lowe here. If you've been a dark down Easter for long, you know the show is dedicated to the stories that have shaped and impacted my home here in New England. But my community is not the only place whose history has been changed by a complex case. Cases that are so complex with more than one side to the story and details debated in front of a jury in search for justice. And now there's a show dedicated to diving into both sides, the prosecutions, and the defensive.
and it invites you to be an additional 13th juror for these cases.
Each week on the podcast 13th juror, host Brandy Churchwell walks you through the heart of a case,
not just the crime but the trial, the prosecution's strategy, the defense's counter-argument,
the testimony the jury heard, and maybe the evidence they didn't hear.
Brandy breaks down complicated investigations in courtroom drama with clarity, compassion,
and deny for the details that matter most.
And today, she's tackling one that shook the entire country
while shattering a small Indiana community, the Delphi murders.
Brandy is taking us inside the investigation
into what happened to Liberty German and Abigail Williams,
two bright, beloved girls whose lives were stolen on a February afternoon.
She unpacks the long, twisted search for answers,
the arrest of Richard Allen,
and how the prosecution built its case as the courtroom became a battleground
of emotion, evidence, and national attention.
And Brandy is offering you a preview right here, right now.
See, this is the path that you're down.
There's no path going there, so we have to get down here.
It's one of the most haunting recordings in American True Crime.
A grainy image of a man walking along a dilapidated railroad bridge toward the camera,
seemingly unaware he's being filmed.
He's wearing jeans and a blue jacket layered over something darker,
with his hands buried deep in his pockets.
His head tilts slightly forward as he steps across the uneven railroad ties.
The shadow falls on his face, making him even harder to identify.
The clip lasts just a few seconds.
And right at the end, just as the camera pans toward the ground,
four words are spoken, barely audible over the crunch of gravity,
in the blowing wind.
An unidentified voice gives a calm but commanding order.
Guys, down the hill.
That short recording became the centerpiece of a double murder case
that would shake the small town of Delphi, Indiana.
Two middle school best friends set out for an afternoon hike
along the winding Monon High Bridge trails and never came home.
Their bodies were found the next day,
and the only clue to who might have done this to them
was that recording captured on the phone of one of the girls.
A chilling fragment of evidence marking the final moments of their lives
in the beginning of a mystery that would haunt their families, their town, and the nation.
For more than five years, he was known only as bridge guy.
Then in 2022, police gave him a name, Richard Allen,
a 50-year-old CVS employee who had admitted to being on the trail that day.
But as the investigation unfolded, the case divided nearly everyone who followed it.
Some were sure police had their man.
Others were just as sure Richard Allen was innocent, and they pointed the finger elsewhere.
As the case wound its way through the legal system, the twist and turns only multiplied,
each revelation leaving the public more stunned than the last.
What happened along that trail in Delphi became one of the most chilling and fiercely debated,
murder cases in Indiana history.
The prosecution says it's justice served.
The defense says it's at the expense of an innocent man,
but it's the jurors who have the final say.
This is the 13th juror podcast,
where we break down real court cases and put you in the juror's seat.
Two sides, the same evidence.
You decide what to believe.
I'm your host, Brandy Churchwell.
Today's episode is Indiana v.
Richard Allen. Part 1, The Prosecution Story.
14-year-old Liberty German and 13-year-old Abigail Williams were the kind of best friends who
balanced each other in all the right ways. Libby was the more outgoing of the two, adventurous,
confident, and a little bold. She loved softball and swimming and had an eye for photography,
always capturing the world exactly as she saw it. She spoke her mind, asked questions
few others thought to ask
and had a way of making people laugh.
Abby, the younger of the pair at just 13,
carried herself with a confidence
far beyond her years.
She loved the outdoors and sports,
especially volleyball,
and had a creative streak
that came out in her school projects and her art.
Her family described her as fiercely loyal
with a quiet strength all her own,
someone who could stand her ground
without making a scene.
Abby and Libby had been best friends for years,
inseparable in the way only middle school girls can be.
They were in the band together, played volleyball together,
and even vacationed with each other's families.
They traded clothes, shared inside jokes,
and spent countless afternoons together,
wandering trails, joking around,
and enjoying the freedom of being young.
On Monday, February 13, 2017, in Delphi, Indiana,
Abby and Libby woke up from their sleep over the night before.
Their school was closed for a teacher workday,
so Abby had spent the night.
night at Libby's house. The girls wandered into the kitchen to find Libby's dad making banana
pancakes. They ate, joked around, and talked about what to do with their free day. The weather was
unusually warm for mid-February in Indiana. The frost had melted, the sun was out, and there was
just the slightest hint of spring in the air, the kind of day that pulls kids outside after months of a
bitter Midwestern winter. Abby and Libby didn't want to waste it indoors, so they asked for permission to walk the
local trails. Delphi is a small town with a population of only about 3,000 people, but it's defined
by its historic trail system. Miles of wooded paths wind through the landscape along the
Wabash River and Deer Creek, crossing old bridges that have held more than a century of footsteps.
The trails are a favorite place for the local kids to explore, to stretch their sense of
independence, and to make the most of their day off of school. Their plan was simple. Kelsey, Libby's
older sister would drop the girls off. They'd walk the trails, take some pictures, and Libby's
dad would pick them up later. On the way to the trail, the girls sat in the back of Kelsey's car,
laughing and taking selfies. They arrived sometime around 1.45 p.m., and Kelsey watched as they
climbed out of the car, walked toward the trailhead, and disappeared down the long, winding path.
By 205 p.m., they had reached the Monon High Bridge. Monon High Bridge was a local landmark, a relic
from another time.
Once a rail line carrying trails
through Carroll County, it was abandoned
decades ago and became a destination
for hikers, photographers, and
local kids looking for a challenge.
Technically, the bridge wasn't
part of the trail system. It marked
the end of it, and crossing to
the far side meant stepping on
to private property, but
that didn't stop kids from crossing it anyway,
whether on a dare or
just for bragging rights.
It's the kind of bridge that demands
your attention when you step onto it. There are no rails to keep you from falling off the sides.
The ties are weathered and uneven, and the gaps between them give way to dizzying views of the creek
far below. One wrong step could mean a serious fall. But it was incredibly beautiful. Libby opened Snapchat
to share what she and Abby were up to. She posted one photo of the bridge's weathered wooden ties
stretching out into the distance.
Another of Abby, standing in the center of the bridge.
Her hair pulled up, her hands tucked into the pockets of her zip-up hoodie.
She was wearing jeans and converse sneakers.
Her eyes were fixed downward, watching her footing as she made her way across the deteriorating bridge.
A few minutes later, at 2.13 p.m., Libby grabbed her phone again and pressed record.
In the now infamous video, Libby is standing at the end of the bridge
with her phone camera pointing down at the ground,
showing the spot where the weathering railroad ties end
and the gravel begins.
She begins to talk about some confusion
over where the trail ends,
and you can hear the sound of gravel under her shoes
as she moves around.
Then the camera shifts upwards
as Abby comes into view just down the bridge.
But unlike in the photos Libby just shared,
this time, Abby's not alone.
There's a man trailing behind her
as she makes her way toward Libby at the end of the bridge.
bridge. His head is down. His hands are in his jacket pockets. As Abby makes it to the end of the bridge,
Libby tells her the path they were on has ended. They're trying to figure out where to go as the
man closes in behind them. And then comes the voice. Guys down the hill. The camera moves just in
time to see a blurry vision of Abby, then cuts off forever. It was the last recording Libby would ever make.
I'm definitely reporting for jury duty on this one because justice isn't just delivered by 12 people in a jury box.
It's shaped by those who seek to understand what really happened.
You can join me in listening to the rest of this episode on 13th juror, wherever you're listening.
