Going West: True Crime - The Lake Andes Mystery // 110

Episode Date: March 3, 2021

In late 1992, a couple was driving after a night of partying when they got into a terrible car wreck. When their bodies were found at the crash, this small, South Dakota town wondered if they had gone... off on their own or if someone had abducted them. 3 months later, a bizarre discovery was made and it brought more questions than answers to the case. This is the story of Arnold Archambeau and Ruby Bruguier. *BONUS EPISODES* patreon.com/goingwestpodcast *CASE SOURCES* https://unsolvedmysteries.fandom.com/wiki/Arnold_Archambeau_and_Ruby_Bruguier https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/147856667/valerie-rose-picotte https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/201214058/ruby-ann-bruguier https://www.reddit.com/r/UnresolvedMysteries/comments/64k73h/the_mysterious_deaths_of_arnold_and_ruby/ http://www.thinkingsidewayspodcast.com/archambeau-bruguier-disappearance/ https://www.newspapers.com/image/239873722/?terms=Arnold%20Archambeau&match=1 ( https://www.newspapers.com/image/239873722/?match=1&terms=Arnold+Archambeau ) https://www.sarahjwinter.net/2019/02/into-unknown-arnold-archambeau-ruby.html https://unsolved.com/gallery/arnold-archambeau-ruby-bruguier/#comment-35900 https://www.newspapers.com/image/239873722/?terms=Arnold%20Archambeau&match=1 ( https://www.newspapers.com/image/239873722/?match=1&terms=Arnold+Archambeau ) Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 What is going on to crime fans? I'm your host Tee and I'm your other host Daphne and you're listening to Going West. Quick thank you to all the awesome people that still leave us nice reviews even though we don't do shoutouts on the show anymore. We still read them and they always make our days when you guys say sweet stuff, so just know how much we appreciate you. Reviewing the show really helps us get more notice and helps more people find the show, so a huge thanks to you guys, and just everyone who listens and shares the show in general, I love you all. Yes, big thanks to you guys who left us reviews.
Starting point is 00:00:46 Also, for our patrons of Going West, we just released a bonus episode for you guys on the Indiana Dunes mystery. And that one actually correlates with our last week's episode on Helen Brock. So if you listen to the Helen Brock episode, you're gonna wanna listen to this one. If you wanna subscribe, head over to patreon.com slash
Starting point is 00:01:07 going west podcast. Yeah, that one is a full length ad free bonus episode. It's available along with over 35 other episodes total. Full length episodes. So if you guys want that, check it out. And regarding today's case, it's very bizarre. It may seem a bit different than cases we usually cover, but it just has such a strange story,
Starting point is 00:01:28 and it features indigenous victims, and we haven't yet covered a case regarding an indigenous person and felt it was about time. And this story doesn't seem to be too well known at all, so here it is. All right guys, this is episode 110 of Going West, so let's get into it. In late 1992, a couple was driving after a night of parting when they got into a terrible car wreck. When their bodies weren't found at the crash,
Starting point is 00:02:25 this small, south Dakota town wondered if they had gone off on their own, or if someone had abducted them. Three months later, a bizarre discovery was made, and it brought more questions than answers to the case. This is the story of Arnold Arshem Bo and Ruby Brueyer. Ruby Ann Brueyer was born on January 11, 1974 in Wagner, South Dakota to parents Myrtle and Quentin Brueyere. She grew up in the nearby small town of Lake Andy's South Dakota, which has a population of about 1,000 people, along with her
Starting point is 00:03:18 five brothers and two sisters, so massive family here, and Lake Andy's is located within the Yankton Reservation, which is home of the Yankton Sioux tribe of the Dakota tribe. Ruby grew up being all around, incredibly loving, and always made people laugh. She was respectful to her loving parents, and always seemed to have a smile on her face. She attended school in her town of Lake Andes, and at Andes Central School, which is where she met fellow teen Arnold R. Shambo, who was a year older than her. Arnold R. Shambo was born in 1972 in Wagner, South Dakota, just like Ruby was, to parents Raymond and Deborah R. Shambo, along with his sister's Tiffany and Valerie.
Starting point is 00:04:02 He was mostly raised by his mother who died when he was just 13 years old, and from then on he was raised by his loving and current tuddle who was his mother's sister. In high school, Ruby and Arnold began dating, and by all accounts were a compatible and happy couple. And while Ruby was finishing up her high school career, she became pregnant with their first child, a daughter named Erica, who was born in the spring of 1991 while Ruby was 17 years old. Since the couple was still very young, Arnold and Karen let them, along with Baby Erica, live with her in the town of Wagner, South Dakota, which again is where both Ruby and Arnold were born and raised.
Starting point is 00:04:44 At this time Arnold was working at the Fort Randall Casino in Lake Andy's South Dakota, which was a very big employer for this area, and some of their other family members actually worked there too. On the evening of Friday, December 11, 1992, Arnold and Ruby wanted to go out for the night and hang out with some friends, so they had Ruby's uncle watch baby Erica while they went out with Ruby's 17-year-old cousin Tracey Dion, and they just kind of hopped around to different parties and bars. Hours later at 6am, the three of them returned to Tracey's house where her father said that it probably wasn't a good idea for Arnold and Ruby to take Erica home yet since they
Starting point is 00:05:24 had been drinking. So he advised that they come back for her later when they had sobered up. But they probably shouldn't have been driving either, because just minutes later, something awful happened. Arnold was driving with Ruby and Tracy in the car as they approached an intersection very close to the Yankin reservation. It being a small town with no one around, Arnold began to speed up as he reached the stop sign while, according to Tracy, saying that he didn't see anyone coming.
Starting point is 00:05:56 Seconds later, the car spun out of control and ended up in a ditch by the road, and the car was upside down. Tracy remembers being in the car while it was upside down and she remembers Ruby crying and saying, oh my god, oh my god, and hitting the inside of the car. But when Tracy looked around, she didn't see Arnold. So she didn't really know if Arnold was somehow thrown out of the car or if he had gotten out before she had come to. Moments later, the passenger door opened and Ruby tried to squeeze her way out. She was able to make it out despite
Starting point is 00:06:30 the car being badly crushed. As soon as Ruby exited the vehicle, Tracy didn't hear another sound, and suddenly she was left all alone. And Tracy just didn't understand why Ruby didn't help her out of the car and why she didn't hear anything after Ruby got out. She has since explained that Ruby wasn't the kind of person to just leave in a situation like this without helping, especially since they were very close cousins. It was so strange to Tracy that Ruby seemingly left without helping her out, but where did she go?
Starting point is 00:07:04 The next time Tracy heard a car was when the police and paramedics arrived minutes later and pulled her from the still upside down vehicle. When she got out and looked around, Arnold and Ruby were nowhere to be found. How did they get away? Why did they leave and where did they go? None of these questions could be answered by Tracy at all.
Starting point is 00:07:26 Especially since it was absolutely freezing out that night. We read that it was in the single digits so everything was frozen and this is not the kind of weather that you want to take a long walk in. It was December in South Dakota after all, so the roads were incredibly icy, hence Arnold's car spinning out. And under Arnold's car was actually a thick layer of ice, so the car had landed on hard, solid ice. As police searched the area, they didn't see any sign of Arnold or Ruby. But according to interviews with the deputy, they didn't think that this was too strange, because Tracy had told police that they had all been drinking throughout the night.
Starting point is 00:08:04 So police were thinking that he was probably just trying to avoid getting a DWI, also known as driving well intoxicated, and that he and Ruby would soon turn up. And despite saying that you wouldn't want to walk in this temperature, the crash site wasn't far from civilization at all. The area was mostly farmland and not a ton of houses, but just up the road was town, so they absolutely could have walked into town. But police didn't see them while driving in, so they did walk around the general area and make sure none of the frozen water spots had been broken to ensure that neither one
Starting point is 00:08:37 of them were walking on a small body of water and maybe possibly fallen through. And they didn't find any broken ice, so they felt confident that that wasn't what happened, because there was no evidence of that. And again, they truly felt that Arnold and Ruby would show up very soon. But days passed and there was still no sign of either of them. Then days turned into weeks, the holidays approached and Arnold and Ruby didn't come home nor make any contact with any of their loved ones. Arnold was typically a responsible guy, so his parents and family were incredibly confused and worried as to why he didn't contact them at all, saying that he was okay. They were all very close, and this is apparently not something that he would have done if he could help it. His aunt Karen said, quote,
Starting point is 00:09:26 I knew he wouldn't hide. He would have come home to us or called us and told us I'm over here don't worry about me. But we never heard anything from him. And this was also incredibly strange for Ruby not to contact her parents because she always came to them if she messed up and would know her parents would be worried sick about her. So for neither of them to reach out just did not make sense. And they had an infant daughter who they loved dearly.
Starting point is 00:09:53 And Ruby was breastfeeding Erika at the time, so police speculated how strange this was, because Ruby was a very caring mother, and she wouldn't abandon her child like that. Of course, again, police wondered if Ruby and Arnold had run off so they wouldn't get in trouble for having alcohol in their system while driving. Well, while Arnold was driving. But neither of them had any kind of criminal background, and no one believed that they would have purposefully disappeared for this reason alone. Especially since police publicly stated that there were not warrants
Starting point is 00:10:25 out for their arrests after the crash. So it was like public knowledge that they weren't going to be in trouble, and they did that on purpose so that they could hopefully then come home safely. Yeah, I don't even think that this comes into play here because if you had just gotten into this, you know, crazy car crash, you're not going to go on the run because you're afraid of getting a DUI. That's just so outlandish. Yeah, I never come back.
Starting point is 00:10:50 A $1,000 reward was quickly put together by the R-Shambo and PeruYear families for the missing couple and everyone locally was looking for them. Although this was a very small area and definitely in everyone knows every one type of area, the public was told to look for Arnold, who was a 20-year-old 5'10 man who weighed 220 pounds and had brown hair and brown eyes. And Ruby was described as being 5'6, 190 pounds, with dark hair and brown eyes, glasses and a tattoo on her right ankle that said love.
Starting point is 00:11:28 It didn't appear that anyone other than Tracy had information that could help find them, so people were just dumbfounded at where they went and what had happened to them. Almost three months to the day later, on Wednesday, March 10, 1993, a motorist who was driving by the accident site, which of course had since been cleaned up, saw what looked like a body off the side of the road. This passerby quickly got a hold of police and explained the situation, and they arrived at the scene almost immediately. 75 feet from where the accident occurred was the body of Ruby Brieher lying in the ditch. They didn't know if it was her right away because her
Starting point is 00:12:11 body was in a very advanced state of decomposition and was unrecognizable. But they were able to identify the body having the same tattoo that Ruby had, the love written on her ankle. Her eyeglasses and her shoes were missing from the scene, but it was confirmed that she was wearing the same clothes that she was wearing the night she went missing. By this time, the weather was kind of starting to warm up a bit, not too much we're talking like 50 or so degrees Fahrenheit tops, but it was enough for all the winter ice to have already melted. So the ditch near where Arnold's car had flipped was now a big pool of water.
Starting point is 00:12:51 Police wondered if Arnold's body was in the area, so they searched the entire general region as they began pumping the water out of that ditch. And the very next day, 15 feet away from where Ruby's body was found, they found Arnold's body submerged in water. The weird thing here was that he was at a completely different stage of decomposition than Ruby was. His skin color was normal, and the deputy explained that he wasn't frozen to the ground, and neither was his clothes.
Starting point is 00:13:23 He was recognizable, but as far as his clothes went, they couldn't be confirmed to be the same clothes that he was wearing the night that he had last been seen, because Tracy couldn't remember since it was months later. Both the Arshem Bo and Brueyeir families were informed of the gruesome discoveries, and both of their bodies were sent to the lab for formal autopsies since their cause of deaths weren't obvious. But when the corner had a look at their bodies, it only brought more questions to the conditions the bodies were in and the environment they were found in, the coroner couldn't pinpoint either of their time of deaths.
Starting point is 00:14:19 And there's something I want to bring up that we've never talked about on this show, and it's the difference between a coroner and a medical examiner. So a coroner is a person elected by the jurisdiction for typically a two to four-year term, and they determine cause of death, body identification, notifying next of kin, or raging the death certificate, etc. But a coroner does not require any medical training or qualifications to do their job, whereas a medical examiner must complete forensic pathology training and receive a board certification to perform autopsies and determine cause of death.
Starting point is 00:14:55 And they stay in this position throughout the length of their career instead of having terms like a coroner does, and if you're a coroner out there, I'm in no way trying to downplay your career at all. I just think it's important to point out the difference since medical examiners often times are, you know, technically more qualified to do the job. And we absolutely need corners as well because often times, when we're talking about a small town with little crime, it's unnecessary to appoint a medical examiner. And that's the situation here as well. Super
Starting point is 00:15:25 small town, not a ton of violent crime or murder, so there was just a coroner to determine the cause of death here, and they came to the conclusion that Arnold and Ruby died from exposure. Often times in cases like this, it seems that law enforcement goes along with what the coroner or medical examiner says and just tries to close the case. But that's not what happened here. Deputy Youngström felt this ruling was incorrect, and he thoroughly believed that foul play was involved.
Starting point is 00:15:55 To quote him in his unsolved mysteries interview, he stated, �Death by exposure is like they froze to death. I cannot actually buy that. They may have froze to death, but they didn't freeze to death in that ditch. It's impossible that they could have been there the entire three months. I myself personally walked that ditch several times during that period. I've gotten written affidavits from people that also watched, walked it, people that have nothing to do with the case.
Starting point is 00:16:23 They couldn't have been there. They couldn't have been there. They couldn't have been missed. As we stated before, everything was frozen at the time that the crash happened, so if their bodies were there, they wouldn't have been in water, but on top of thick, solid ice. There's also a big question mark surrounding Arnold's car getting into that ditch, because yes, the roads were icy, but how his car would have flipped and ended up in a ditch without hitting another car or anything else, seems like a mystery to police.
Starting point is 00:16:52 But after reviewing the car's exterior, it didn't appear to have hit another vehicle, and they feel pretty sure about that. But then came some more puzzling questions. As we always say on the show, you can check out photos of this case on our socials, and we were able to find a photo of Arnold's car as well as photos of Arnold, Ruby, and Tracy, so you should go check them out, but there are no photos from the site of the accident.
Starting point is 00:17:21 There have been recreations done since again, this was aired briefly on unsolved mysteries back in the early 90s, but there aren't any photos from the real accident. In a newspaper article from the Argus leader paper of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, Arnold's cousin Mike R. Shambo asked at a news conference after the bodies were found, quote, how come nobody took pictures of the wreck. Deputy Bill Youngstrom said that he took photographs that day at the scene, but they didn't turn out. He was quoted saying, through whatever error,
Starting point is 00:17:54 every negative was blank. And Mike Arshambos' response to this was, quote, it sounds like you're trying to cover your butt. It sounds like you didn't investigate in the first place. And this could very well be true because if the police arrived and thought it was just a drunk driving accident and that Arnold and Ruby would just show up sooner or later, maybe they wouldn't have cared enough to really look into this. But from my research, it did seem like the deputy was trying to figure it all out and
Starting point is 00:18:23 cared about this case, but I definitely understand the family's frustrations when there's this many questions and so little to go off of. After the discovery of the bodies were made, a full investigation of the scene was done, an officer's found a tuft of hair in the same ditch next to the bodies. Officials believe this hair to be rubies based on a side-by-side comparison, but no testing was done later when the technology became available, so it's kind of unclear if this did indeed belong to Ruby or not. Another odd discovery was the keys that were found with Arnold's body. There was one car key along with a key that appeared to go to a house, but the strange thing is that the car key did not match with his vehicle and the house key did not match
Starting point is 00:19:10 with his house. Deputy Youngström tested the keys on numerous sources determined to find a match, but he never did. And he even kept these keys so he could keep trying them as time went on, but nothing has been a match. Shortly after the bodies were found, six people came forward, saying that they saw Ruby and Arnold after the crash. One person came forward, saying that they saw Ruby and Arnold get into a car after the
Starting point is 00:19:38 accident, and the car headed east. And another said that she saw Arnold accompanied by three other people on New Year's Eve, so about three weeks after the crash. And this woman even took a polygraph test and passed. Another person reported seeing Ruby in a neighboring town at the end of January. So this is really difficult because her body was in advanced decomposition, but since we don't know what her time of death was, it makes it really hard to determine if these sightings could even be real or not. I would assume that if her body was in decomposition, or at least that far, into decomposition, that
Starting point is 00:20:19 there's probably no way she would have been seen in January. I agree, and also I'm thinking about this woman who says that she saw Arnold on New Year's Eve, and she passed a polygraph test. Like, I don't necessarily think she was lying, but I definitely think she was mistaken. Yeah, that definitely can happen. Well, the reason I personally believe this is because
Starting point is 00:20:38 if Arnold was with three other people in a public place, she said she was at a party, then why didn't those people come forward and why didn't anyone else? Like this is a small town people would know who he was and that he was missing. So how is she the only person to come forward from this party? And it also doesn't make sense for Arnold and Ruby to have been hiding in plain sight, and then somehow both end up dead in the very same spot of the crash?
Starting point is 00:21:04 And why didn't this woman approach Arnold and say, oh my God, you're not missing. Like, for her to come forward months after the fact, it's just what? Yeah, it doesn't make sense for her to say this later on. Why didn't you say at the time that you saw Arnold who you knew had been in a crash and was missing? It doesn't make any sense.
Starting point is 00:21:23 It doesn't make sense. So I know we've talked about missing person cases before, and people will come forward saying that they saw them, and it was determined that, later it was determined that the time this person said to have seen them, they were actually dead. So it's not weird that there are sightings, but I just don't believe them.
Starting point is 00:21:41 Yeah, I don't believe them in this case. And maybe in some cases, they're more credible. Like I remember we talked about the sightings of briceless pizza, which there were a lot of them and none of them could be corroborated. To me it's very hard in situations like this because you want to believe that somebody is still alive and you want to believe that they're still out there, but it's very very hard to determine whether or not it's true. And what's the explanation for them going missing, but not contacting their family at all, yet they're still in the area, and then they both die.
Starting point is 00:22:14 And I would assume that a lot of people would probably bring up the amnesia theory, which is like, oh, I hit my head after this crash and it wasn't aware of who I was and was just walking around. But here's the issue with that for me. If that was the case, how did their bodies end up back at the crash site? That, to me, just doesn't, wouldn't make any sense. And I totally hear you on the whole amnesia thing
Starting point is 00:22:40 or the days after a crash, but then why would he at a New Year's Eve party with people? Where does that come in? Yeah, yeah. I-I-I-this just doesn't sound credible to me. And Ruby's father thoroughly believes that they died somewhere else, and someone put their bodies in the same ditch as where they crashed to make it look like they had died there. Since there was no obvious cause of death, it's believed by many that exposure was the
Starting point is 00:23:04 default ruling, if you will, and many don't feel as though the exposure ruling should Since there was no obvious cause of death, it's believed by many that exposure was the default ruling, if you will, and many don't feel as though the exposure ruling should be taken very seriously. Because if you think about it, then being abducted and dying from exposure somewhere else and then being put back in that area just seems like a bit of a stretch. So if we feel that this was foul play, which we personally do, we have to think of other ways that they could have been killed that would have been more inconspicuous because if the likely killer wanted to hold them hostage and then kill them, but make it look like they had died in the accident, he would have wanted to kill them in a way that wouldn't look like they were murdered, right?
Starting point is 00:23:41 Exactly. So, and that's what makes it so hard, at this point, it's pure speculation because their cause of death is so questionable. Which I hate. Like, there's so many questions. That's the unfortunate thing about, you know, decomposition is that you lose a lot of evidence through that and it's very, very hard to determine how a person died once that decomposition sets in, especially, you know, the further along it goes. Right. And I want to go back really quick to when you were just talking about Amnesia or being in a days after a crash. So I was listening to this true story on a podcast a couple weeks ago about this girl who had gotten into a car accident and a car pulled
Starting point is 00:24:19 up and it was a man who was trying to usher this girl into his car. And since she was days from the accident, she kind of just went with him and did what he said. But as she got into his car, her dad, who was also in the accident, came running over, freaking out that this guy was trying to take his daughter, and stopped the whole thing from happening, because pretty much this guy was trying to abduct her. So I wonder if a car pulled up and ushered Arnold and Ruby inside, and they drove off without Tracy, maybe against Ruby's wishes, and then something happened to them with this person? Like, I know Tracy said she didn't hear any cars or noises,
Starting point is 00:24:57 but since she had been in an accident too, I wonder if her senses were blurred at all. And obviously this is just a theory, and we like to talk about theories on this show, but it would make sense if somebody had pulled up and maybe tried to help Arnold and Ruby, but their intentions were not good. I don't really know. I don't know, I just can't figure it out. I just really think that someone with ill intentions picked them up. I mean, they were wearing the same freaking clothes, well at least Ruby was, from the night they went missing. Like, I just don't buy that they were out hiding in plain sight in the same clothes, and not checking
Starting point is 00:25:33 in with their family, and then they just happened to die. And also, where were Ruby's glasses and shoes, and why did Arnold have keys on him that seemingly didn't belong to him? Yeah, the keys is a very strange thing in this case because... That's just so weird. Having keys that don't belong to your house or your car... Just seems like a very weird and strange thing, right? Yeah, where did they come from and where are your... Your actual keys and belongings? And I'm assuming that police would have checked with Ruby and Arnold's family and said,
Starting point is 00:26:04 Hey, are maybe these keys your guys' is or something? Oh, he definitely did. The deputy took this part really seriously. He tried those keys on every door and car he came across. During the initial investigation, two men were being considered persons of interest. They had both been seen nearby the crash site just before the bodies were recovered, driving a dark, Chevy Blazer. That's all the information police released at the time, and they were never able to find or identify the men.
Starting point is 00:26:33 According to some online forums, there is a local rumor that Arnold and Ruby were abducted from the crash site and held captive in a cabin north of Lake Andes. They were killed at the house and then brought back to the crash site, like we said, in an attempt to cover up the crime. They even have the name of this man, but it's unknown if police have ever seriously looked into him. Although he is known to have a lengthy criminal record. His name is Harold Lewis Young, and he's since moved out of the area and now resides in Texas. I thought that was a really interesting comment, and I always really like to know what the locals think of a case because obviously they know people that we don't know all the way
Starting point is 00:27:14 here on the west coast, you know. So hearing someone say that that's what people they think happened is really interesting to me. Yeah, I'm actually very interested in this as well because I want to know why locals think this. And obviously we know that this guy is a criminal and he has a criminal background, but that doesn't automatically make you a killer. So I wonder if there's some other details that we just don't know about this guy that would make locals believe that he would be capable of killing Ruby and Arnold.
Starting point is 00:27:45 It must just been a thing of I heard this and this person knows him and he told somebody I'm assuming it's something like that like kind of like probably a game of telephone. Yeah. And regarding Erica the daughter I'm sure some of you are wondering what ended up happening to her. I don't know who she was raised by but I know that she did and still does have the same last name as Ruby and they they had a huge family, so I know she didn't go into foster care, and I know that she was cared for by Ruby's grandparents for a good deal of the time, but she was raised by the family. This case was closed by the FBI in 1999, so seven years after the bodies were found,
Starting point is 00:28:22 due to lack of evidence that a crime took place. If you have any information about the mysterious deaths of Arnold R. Shembo and Ruby Buryer, please contact the Yankton Sue Tribal Police at 605-487-7500. 7500. Thank you so much everybody for listening to this episode of Going West. Yes, thank you guys so much for listening to this episode, and of course, like I always say, next week we'll have an all new case for you guys to dive into. I really think that this case is very strange, there's a lot of details that make me question everything really, and one of those things that I have considered is whether or not police I really think that this case is very strange, there's a lot of details that make me question everything, really.
Starting point is 00:29:05 And one of those things that I have considered is whether or not police actually did a thorough search. But to me, talking about the fact that there was other people helping search for Arnold and Ruby makes me feel like they did indeed do a, you know, credible search for Arnold and Ruby, but nothing was found. Well, and I really do agree with the deputy that those bodies were not there the whole time. I just don't believe that.
Starting point is 00:29:30 I think they had to have left or been taken away from the scene or maybe they left because they had been drinking and they were worried and then something happened to them. Maybe they had to hide with someone and then something happened while they were hiding with that person. Like, there's so many possibilities, but I definitely think that they were murdered.
Starting point is 00:29:48 Or that some form of foul play is involved. I really think so. We'd love to hear what you guys think about this case. We do have a discussion group on Facebook. It's just going west discussion group. Please comment, comment on our social medias. We want to know what you think of this case. Absolutely, I would love to hear you guys' theories.
Starting point is 00:30:04 And also don't forget about that episode on the Indiana Dunes mystery that's connected to last week's episode on Helen Brock. If you guys listened to that episode, you'll definitely want to check out that Patreon episode on the Indiana Dunes mystery, head over to patreon.com slash going west podcast. Yes, and thank you so much to all of our patrons who have joined in the last week. Thank you so much to Anita, Almouth, Amy, Danielle,
Starting point is 00:30:30 Jasmine, Erin, Jenny, Marge, and Cassie. Big thanks going out to Bridget, Allison, Yadira, Mona, Missy, Amy, Casey, and Catherine. And thank you so much going to Lynn, Faith, Victoria, Katie, Brian, Holly, Zach, Kim, Serena, and Ashley. Thank you to Yagmer, Diane, Melinda, Lauren, Brandy, Drew, Kristen, Stacey, Ron, and Victoria. And last but not least, thank you so much to Sharon, Elizabeth, Mallory, Kiki, Bridget, Amy, Jennifer, Tracy, Ariana, Sylvia, Lisa, and Nicole. We love you guys so much.
Starting point is 00:31:19 It means the world when you join our Patreon. It's what keeps going, West going. So go check it out. We got a ton of bonus episodes. All right guys, so for everybody out there in the world when you join our Patreon, it's what keeps going west going, so go check it out. We got a ton of bonus episodes. Alright guys, so for everybody out there in the world, Cheerio and Don't Be a Stranger. 1 tbc sdmdc 1 tbc sdmdc 1 tbc sdmdc 1 tbc sdmdc 1 tbc sdmdc 1 tbc sdmdc
Starting point is 00:31:52 1 tbc sdmdc 1 tbc sdmdc 1 tbc sdmdc 1 tbc sdmdc 1 tbc sdmdc 1 tbc sdmdc 1 tbc sdmdc 1 tbc sdmdc you

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