Killer Stories with Harvey Guillén - The Killer Prophet: Ervil LeBaron Pt. 1
Episode Date: June 23, 2025In the 1920s, the LeBaron family settles in Mexico to practice their own sect of Mormonism. They establish a settlement, open a church, and work the farms. But after the family patriarch dies, the set...tlement becomes a bloody battleground for brothers all claiming to be a prophet. Guest host Madison McGhee of Ice Cold Case joins the podcast to discuss killer prophet Ervil LeBaron. Keep up with us on Instagram @serialkillerspodcast! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you walk through a small dusty town in Chihuahua, Mexico,
you'll hear one surname over and over again.
LeBaron.
The family's roots in Mexico date back more than a hundred years.
A settlement called Colonia Liberin was established in the 1950s
as a utopia for members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
to live in peace and practice their faith.
But in the 1970s, the peace is shattered by one man,
Ervil Liberin.
Ervil has drawn comparisons to Charles Manson.
Both were charismatic, messianic figures
who preached violence and ordered their devout followers
to kill their perceived enemies.
And Erval's enemy list was long.
It included everyone from Richard Nixon
to the president of the LDS Church.
He was the shot caller behind at least 33 murders.
But his first victims,
were his own family.
Welcome to serial killers, a Spotify podcast.
Every Monday, we bring you the true crime stories that stand out.
I'm Madison McGee.
You may know me from my podcast, Ice Cold Case.
For years, I've been investigating the unsolved murder of my father.
But what you may not know is that I'm fascinated by killer cults.
So join me on the next two episodes of serial killers,
as we talk about Ervil LeBaron,
the menacing leader of,
of an LDS sect in Mexico who's been compared to Charles Manson.
We'd love to hear from you.
Follow us on Instagram at Serial Killers Podcast
and share your thoughts on this week's episode.
Or if you're tuning in on the Spotify app,
swipe up and leave a comment.
This episode includes discussions of murder and statutory rate.
Consider this when deciding how and when you'll listen.
Stay with us.
This episode is brought to you by ZipRecruiter,
whether you're hiring for a role or searching for a killer.
The hunt can be exhausting.
When detectives looked and searched to find any kind of evidence
to find the person they were looking for,
like Jack the Ripper, the Golden State Killer, the Unit Bomber.
It's tedious work to find what you're looking for.
So if you're hiring, I've got news for you.
You can skip the lengthy investigation
and the tiresome process of sorting through hundreds of resumes.
Just use ZipRecruiter.
Try it for free at ZipRecruiter.com,
Because not only does ZipRecruiter have the technology to match you with potential candidates quickly,
it also just added a new feature that pushes candidates who are qualified and interested in your role to the top of the list.
They can even tell you why they're interested, making it easier for you to get a sense of who they are.
Cut through the standard and get to the standouts with ZipRecruiter.
Four out of five employers who post on ZipRecruiter get a quality candidate within the four.
first day. And now, you can try it for free at ziprecruiter.com slash killers. That's ziprecruiter.
com slash killers. Meet your match on ZipRecruiter. This episode is brought to you by Shopify.
Bonnie and Clyde, the lonely hearts killers, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. These are infamous
criminal duels. But you don't need to break any laws to find your perfect business partner because
you have Shopify. It's the commerce platform that can help you.
with literally everything, website design, marketing, shipping, and more.
So start your business today with the best partner, Shopify, and get that.
Sign up for your $1 per month trial today at Shopify.com slash killers.
That's Shopify.com slash killers.
Want to support your gut health?
Take Activia's gut health challenge by enjoying two Activia yogurt today for two weeks
and see if you feel a difference.
With billions of probiotics and 20 years of scientific expertise,
At least, Activia is one of the easiest and tastiest ways to start your gut health ritual.
Try Activia today.
Enjoying Activia twice a day for two weeks as part of a balanced diet and healthy lifestyle
may help reduce the frequency of minor digestive discomfort,
which includes gas, bloating, rumbling, and abdominal discomfort.
If Ervil LeBaron were alive today,
he might say his path to becoming the killer prophet was divine destiny.
He may have been calling the shots with his followers,
but Ervil was simply following the orders of God.
It started with his father, Alma Day or Liberan.
For much of his life, Alma received messages from God.
Sometimes they came in the form of dreams, sometimes as visions.
Most frequently, they came in the form of a voice deep from within his own chest,
which he called Monitor.
Just as his son would later aspire to walk in his own shoes,
Alma aspired to walk in the shoes of Joseph Smith,
the founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
In 1823, Smith had a vision of an angel who instructed him to dig up a set of golden plates.
The scripture on the tablets eventually became the Book of Mormon.
These divine revelations continued throughout his life.
In 1841, God instructed him to take a second wife.
While polygamy seemed to directly contradict the words Smith had published in the Book of Mormon,
the prophet would not be deterred.
If God had called him to take on multiple wives, then it was his sacred duty and evidence of his own saintliness.
He took up to 40 wives and encouraged his male followers to do the same.
The United States government had other ideas and outlawed the practice in 1862.
The LDS Church eventually abolished plural marriages in 1890.
But in 1923, Monitor instructs Alma to fulfill Joseph Smith's command,
and take another wife.
He had never disobeyed the voice in his head before,
but it would put Alma at a crossroads with his church.
Luckily for him,
he wouldn't be making the decision alone.
According to author Scott Anderson in his book,
The 4 o'clock murders,
one night Alma is shaken awake by a firm hand
and looks up to find his deceased grandfather sitting before him.
The elderly man is draped in a white robe
with a gold scepter in his right hand
and a crown on his head.
Alma's grandfather claims he is the rightful head of the Mormon church
and the inheritor of Joseph Smith's mantle.
Now, he passes that title and responsibility on to Alma.
The only thing his grandson has to do
is obey the original teachings of Joseph Smith.
Most importantly, he must resurrect the practice of plural marriage.
The next morning, Alma informs his family
of the previous night's vision.
His wife, Maude, resists.
The punishment for polygamy is excommunication.
But after Maude herself receives a message from God,
she selects Oni, their 18-year-old housekeeper and babysitter,
to join the family.
Alma faces consequences for his decision.
He and his wives are excommunicated from the LDS Church.
A short time later, he hears that some of his neighbors
are planning to kill the LeBaron family.
Onee joins Alma, Maude, and their eight children
as they head south to escape the threats.
Late in 1924, they crossed the border into Mexico.
The Liberans move to Colonia Juarez,
a small Mormon settlement in the state of Chihuahua.
There, the clan will swell considerably.
Nineteen Libran children.
13 from Maude and six from Oni.
Ervil is born in 1925.
Alma had lived in Colonial Warres when he was a teen.
At the time, it was a settlement for members of the LDS to practice polygamy.
When he returns, he thinks he'll be among like-minded followers.
But the colonists ostracized the family for their practices.
The Liberian children are bullied by their peers.
Alma blames the treatment for a series of tragedies that occur to the Liberians beginning in the early 1930s.
In 1932, Maud gives birth to twins, who die the same day.
Then Oni leaves the family and moves back to the United States, taking her children with her.
The remaining LeBaron children begin to act out of character.
First, it's fourth daughter Lucinda, who starts to experience psychotic episodes in 1933 when she's 17.
Benjamin, the oldest boy, hears voices that tell him, he is God.
He would not be the last.
At some point in their lives, nearly every one of the LeBaron children
show symptoms like paranoia, delusions of grandeur, or visions.
Six of the seven boys report hearing voices.
Like their father, hears Monitor.
On one hand, the high number of LeBaron children who experience these symptoms
seems indicative of mental illness.
Hallucinations and paranoia have been linked to a number of conditions,
including schizophrenia, a disorder that prevents thoughts and reality from being in sync.
Benjamin would eventually be diagnosed with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder in adulthood.
That means genetics may have played a role.
Many mental health diagnoses such as schizophrenia can run in the family.
Though Alma and Maude, who both reported messages from God, were never diagnosed with schizophrenia
or any other condition, their symptoms closely resemble what their children would later experience.
On the other hand, many psychiatrists argue that hearing voices is not always a sign of mental illness,
and note that auditory hallucinations have been reported by people without diagnoses or any other symptoms.
And celestial messages aren't totally unheard of within the LDS Church.
In the Mormon faith, anyone can talk to God, and God can talk to anyone.
For some, it's a reassuring connection.
For Erval LeBaron, it's deadly.
This episode is brought to you by Prime.
Obsession is in session.
And this summer, Prime Originals have everything you want.
Steamy romances, irresistible love stories,
and the book-to-screen favorites you've already read twice.
Off-campus, L, every year after,
The Love Hypothesis, Sterling Point, and more.
Slow burns, second chances, chemistry you can feel
through the screen. Your next obsession
is waiting. Watch only on Prime.
Every outfit starts with a choice.
What am I wearing underneath? Something comfortable?
And let's be honest. Something that keeps everything looking smooth.
That's where Vanity Fair lingerie comes in.
Their new smoothing wireless bra has four-way stretch fabric for all over smoothing,
soft lightly lined cups for a natural shape, and no wire comfort that last all day.
All over smooth, all-day comfort. Vanity Fair lingerie.
Find yours at Target today.
By the late 1930s, the Liberans still haven't found their footing in colonial waras.
The neighborhood children continue to ostracize the siblings, so they turn to each other for company.
This is particularly true for teenage Ervil and his brother Joel.
The two are inseparable.
Though Joel is two years older, Erval overshadows him in nearly every way.
Joel is short, mild-mannered, and quiet.
Irville is brash, tall, and classically handsome.
But most importantly, he knows how to talk.
Ervil seems to overflow with confidence and charisma.
He's well versed on the Bible and the Book of Mormon
and can speak on them for hours without stopping.
Ervil's chance to put his skills to use comes in 1940 when he's 15.
Joel is assigned to complete his mission,
a two-year period in which young LDS men travel to
the church's message.
Ervil is too young, but Joel refuses to go unless his brother is allowed to accompany him.
The church, in an attempt to bring the Lebarans back into the mainstream fold, agrees,
and Ervil reportedly becomes one of the youngest missionaries in LDS history.
The brothers spend the next few years traveling across southern Mexico, professing their faith.
But in 1944, they receive a telegram from their brother Alma Jr.
eldest brother Ben has opened his own church.
Alma Jr. is his right-hand man, and they need their brother's help.
So Ervil and Joel abandon their mission and head to Hidalgo.
Like his father, Ben hears messages from God.
According to these messages, Ben is what's known in the Mormon faith as the one mighty and strong prophet.
Back in 1832, Joseph Smith declared that one day he would send one mighty and strong,
to set in order the house of God.
His prophecy is now canonized in LDS Scripture.
According to some interpretations,
Smith was predicting a fall of the LDS Church,
one that only the mighty and strong prophet can restore.
In 1935, Ben declares that he will fill that role.
He sends letters to LDS leadership,
telling them that he will now be taking over.
By 1944, Alma Jr. is supposed to,
spreading his brother's message.
He too has had a vision.
His oldest brother is, in fact, the one mighty and strong.
He tries to convince mainstream LDS members to join Ben's new sect.
That, of course, ruffles feathers in the Mormon hierarchy.
It's only made worse when Alma Jr. begins proselytizing about polygamy.
He says that, though it's forbidden in the LDS fade, plural marriage is a right of passage.
It's the only way to reach the strongest level of celibre.
celestial power. Alma Jr. heads to Hidalgo to find a second wife. That's the last straw for the LDS
church, and they move to excommunicate him. When Alma gets to Hidalgo, he sends that telegram to Joel and
Erville, and they come running. When they arrive, Ben is there too. Ervil is convinced that his brother
is the one true prophet and joins his church. By June, all four brothers are excommunicated.
Around the same time, Alma Sr. goes fed up with how the community treats his family.
He receives a new message from Monitor.
Alma should fulfill his destiny as the rightful heir of Joseph Smith and the true head of the Mormon Church.
To do so, he'll need to break away from Colonia Juarez and establish his own Zion.
According to Mormon doctrine, Zion is a sort of utopia, a place where people can live out the LDS Commandments in peace.
Alma Sr. thinks he's found it, 50 miles southeast of Colonia Juarez.
So, in 1945, he once again sets off into the desert with his family in tow.
They establish a ranch, eventually naming it Colonial Liberin.
Alma Sr. would never get to see his Zion.
For the six years he spends in Colonial Liberin,
the settlement is little more than a handful of dilapidated sheds and a dusty,
unkempt field. He spends the last year of his life paralyzed due to lead poisoning, a result of his
career as an itinerant house painter. He dies in 1951 at the age of 64. Almost immediately, the brothers
squabble over which of them should inherit their father's mantle as the rightful leader of the LDS
church. Ben makes the first claim. He's already established a church near Colonial Liberin and is
slowly collecting followers. But his ambitions are soon overwhelmed by the mental illness that
he's been experiencing for most of his adult life. According to one story, on a trip to Salt Lake
City, Ben attempts to complete 200 push-ups in the center of a busy intersection. He's picked up for
stopping traffic and committed to a psychiatric hospital where he spends the majority of the next
decade. By this time, Ervil and Joel had already begun to distance themselves from Ben and his church,
choosing instead to join a more established polygamous sect run by a man named Rulen Allred.
Here they finally got to see what a real fundamentalist LDS sect could look like.
Unlike their father's ramshackle homestead filled only with his own relatives,
Ruland's church has hundreds of followers, led by a council of elders.
Joel and Erville take leadership roles in the church.
In 1955, the brothers are ready to put what they've learned to use.
Joel announces that he, not his older brothers,
has inherited the mantle of the one mighty and strong prophet
and will be starting his own church.
Joel travels to Salt Lake City
and files paperwork to incorporate the church
of the firstborn of the fullness of times.
He convinces several of his brothers,
including Ervil and Alma Jr., that he is the true prophet.
The LeBaron matriarch mod also joins Joel's congregation.
Joel serves as the prophet and head of the firstborn church,
while Erville takes the title of patriarch, Joel's second in command.
Using what they'd learn from Ruland's sect,
the two brothers get to work doing something that their father had never bothered to attempt,
seeking out non-family members to join their congregation.
At first, they focused their efforts on members of rival sects,
even stealing from the ranks of Ruland's flock.
Before long, however, they include LDS followers from the United States.
They make frequent trips back and forth between Utah and their ranch in Mexico,
spreading their beliefs in polygamy, strict adherence to the Ten Commandments, and the teachings of Joseph Smith.
In 1958, three years after founding the Church of the Firstborn,
they convert a group of 12 missionaries who had recently been excommunicated from the mainstream LDS Church.
these young men become some of their most devoted and outspoken apostles.
They spread the word in the United States,
and Joel's fire and brimstone sermons attract followers.
The Church of the Firstborns ranks slowly swell,
and by the early 1960s, it has over 500 followers.
But it doesn't take long for Erbil to take advantage of his position of power as the patriarch.
He wears expensive shoes and drives new cars,
while Joel still uses the same old pickup he's had for years.
The church is in debt and Ervil's wives live in poverty, but Ervil often gambles away money in Las Vegas.
Ervil also uses his position of power to get out of anything resembling hard work.
There's plenty of it to go around on the still developing ranch community, and Erbil is in charge of doling out jobs.
Unsurprisingly, he's too busy reading scripture to the workers to contribute to manual labor.
But the area where Ervil uses his status most is with women.
Ervil has always been considered handsome, but now he has power.
He tells Joel's female followers that it's his sacred duty to find a man for them to marry.
Usually, this man was himself.
Throughout the 1950s and 60s, Ervil is constantly in pursuit of a new wife.
His marriages include two pairs of sisters and several women who are already wed to members of the firstborn congregation.
Eventually, he'll have at least 13.
wives and 50 children.
Some of Ervil's wives are underage girls.
He attempts to justify his pedophilia by invoking the Bible.
Ervil claims that the Virgin Mary had been 14 when she gave birth to Jesus Christ,
making this age the most ideal time for marriage.
Ervil's crimes go unchecked, but his penchant for stealing other men's wives is less
well received.
In 1961, Erval's childhood best friend worked.
returns to Colonial Liberon from a trip to the United States
and discovers that his wife has divorced him and married Erval in his absence.
The friend complains to Joel, who shortly thereafter, has a new revelation from God.
From now on, women must wait six months after a divorce before remarrying.
Ervil is furious.
This is the first crack in a schism between the brothers that will end in murder.
Are you looking for support in your weight management journey?
Zepbound, Terseppatide, may be able to help.
Zepbound is a prescription medicine used with a reduced calorie diet and increased physical activity
to help adults with obesity, or some adults with overweight who also have weight-related medical problems
to lose excess body weight and keep the weight off.
Zepbound is approved as a 2.5, 5, 7.5, 10, 12.5, or 15 milligram injection.
Zep bound contains terseptide and should not be used with other terseptide containing products
or any GLP1 receptor agonist medicines.
It is not known if Zepound is safe and effective for use in children.
Don't share needles or pens or reuse needles.
Don't take if allergic to it, or if you or someone in your family had medullary thyroid cancer,
or if you've had multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2.
Tell your doctor if you get a lump or swelling in your neck.
Stop Zepbound and call your doctor if you have severe stomach pain or a serious allergic
reaction. Severe side effects may include inflamed pancreas or gallbladder problems. Tell your doctor if you
experience vision changes before scheduled procedures with anesthesia if you're nursing, pregnant,
plan to be, or taking birth control pills. Taking Zepbound with a sulfonel urea or insulin may cause low blood
sugar. Side effects include nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting, which can cause dehydration and worsen kidney problems.
Talk to your doctor. Call 1-800-545-99-79 or visit Zepbounds.
about lily.com.
Transport your senses with Sol de Janeiro's limited edition perfume mist collection.
At Sephora, spritz on lush notes of rainforest orchid and crisp sea breeze with
fresco paraizzo.
Embrace a floral and fruity scent inspired by Rio's nude beach with cheeky bikini or
capture sun-kissed bliss with limonada gelada, where zesty Brazilian lemonade accord meets
coconut milk and golden brown sugar.
Don't miss Sol de Janeiro's limited edition perfume misconduct.
collection only at Sephora.
Tensions between Ervil and Joel
continue to escalate until
in 1965 they put
600 miles between each other.
Joel purchases a property
in Los Melinos, a town on
the Baja California Peninsula.
He spends most of his time
there working to establish a new branch
of the firstborn church.
Meanwhile, Ervil is left in
charge back in Colonial Liberen.
Finally operating without
supervision, Ervils
beliefs take a more militant edge. The Church of the Firstborn has always preached devout adherence
to the Ten Commandments. But Erval wants to take things a step further. He preaches about the gruesome
punishments prescribed in the Old Testament for those who defy God's law. Ervil says it's the
responsibility of the firstborners to take up arms against their enemies, who he defines as
non-believers and anyone who refuses to acknowledge the ascendancy of the Liberan Order.
In addition to the militant language, Ervil's behavior becomes more erratic.
His sermons grew longer, sometimes lasting over 10 hours.
He goes several days at a time without sleeping and frequently goes into trances.
He starts experiencing paranoid delusions.
He carries a pistol at all times and warns followers that the Knights of Columbus and the Catholic Church may send assassins to attack Colonial Liberin at any moment.
Many of the firstborners are frightened by Erville's violent rhetoric.
Up until now, they'd consider themselves peaceful, law-abiding citizens who value family and devotion to Scripture.
Now, their patriarch refers to them as an army.
By November of 1969, Joel has lost all patience for his brother.
He summons Ervil to a meeting at his house, along with their younger brother, Verlin.
He tells Ervil that his actions are threatening the ministry,
Some members are beginning to leave their congregation and move back to the United States.
There's only one solution.
He must strip Ervil of his position as patriarch.
The normally unshakable Ervil breaks down and sobs.
He thanks Joel for removing him from the position, which he now claims has become too overwhelming.
The next day, Joel stands before the firstborn community and announces that his younger brother is stepping down.
Ervil cries again
while promising he would continue
to work as a member of the church.
If Erval feels
any genuine contrition for his actions,
it's short-lived.
While he accepts the demotion,
he does not give up his radical beliefs.
He still feels it's the church's responsibility
to punish God's enemies
with violence and death.
In fact, the list of God's enemies
has just grown.
His brother Joel
has taken the touch.
top spot. For the next year and a half, Erval distances himself from colonial liberan.
As a regular member of the church, he's now expected to follow the rules, and he's lost his
source of income. Without his title of patriarch, he no longer has access to the church's money.
Instead, he and his right-hand man, Dan Jordan, travel through Mexico, swindling unsuspecting
victims out of their cash. Ervil's rift with Joel grows over the new development.
in Los Melinos. While Joel is determined to use the land as a farm community for new converts,
Erville wants to turn it into a beachside resort. When Joel attempts to force him off the project,
Erbil reveals that he has an ace up his sleep. When Ervil filled out the paperwork to purchase
the 8,500-acre property, he wrote his own name on the deed, not the church. Los Melinos is his to do
with as he pleases. On May 8th,
1971, Joel sends a warning to his younger brother Erbil.
He's on the verge of excommunication.
The announcement is not particularly shocking.
In the two years following his demotion from Patriarch,
Ervil has accused Joel of being a false prophet.
He's repeatedly advocated for mutiny against his older brother.
Two weeks later, Erbil responds to Joel's warning with a declaration.
Like his father and brothers before him,
he has received a divine revelation from the Lord.
God has told him that Joel has betrayed the teachings of Joseph Smith
and is now a fallen prophet.
Ervil has now inherited the mantle of the one mighty and strong.
According to Ervill's revelation,
the Church of the Firstborn is now in a state of apostasy
in direct opposition with God's law.
The only recourse for followers is to renounce Joel's church
and join Ervils,
the Church of the Firstborn of the Lamb of God.
Ervil hopes that his bold proclamation
will send the majority of the firstborn followers running to his side.
But he's sorely disappointed.
While a select few defect to join the Church of the Lamb,
the vast majority remain with Joel.
Several families take the opportunity
to abandon the Labarans altogether
and flee to the United States to escape the brewing war.
Erval's threats forced Joel's hand.
he publicly announces Erbil's excommunication from the Church of the Firstborn.
Meanwhile, Erbil's violent sermons in the Church of the Lamb escalate.
He wants to introduce the concept of Blood Atoment into its doctrine.
The controversial topic was discussed in the 19th century by LDS leader Brigham Young.
Ludd Atonement refers to the killing of a member of the church to pave for certain sins,
such as breaking one's covenant or murder.
Officially, it was never put into practice.
In 2010, the Church of Latter-day Saints issued a statement clarifying that blood
atonement is not a part of its doctrine.
But according to scholars, some leaders of fundamentalist splinter groups have used the concept
as a way to justify the murders of their enemies.
One of these leaders is Ervil LeBaron.
In his eyes, his brother is a false prophet who represents the forces of Satan.
The only way for Joel to reach salvation is to shed his blood.
On August 20th, 1972, Joel drives the 600 miles between Los Melinos and Colonial Liberin
with two of his wives and several of his children.
They make a few stops along the way to visit with friends and church members.
One of these stops is in the town of Ensenada.
He'd left his Buick with a follower named Benjamin Zarate to be repaired, and it was time to pick it up.
But unbeknownst to Joel, Zerate has been able to.
switch sides to support Ervil.
Joel's family drops him and his stepson Ivan at Zarate's house to pick up the repaired car.
When Joel walks through the door, he finds two of Erval's followers waiting for him.
Ivan is outside waiting in the car when he hears a window shatter.
He looks up to see the two men beating his father with a chair.
Before the teenager can react, he hears one of the men shout,
kill him, followed by a pair of gunshots.
A moment later, the men emerge from the house.
Ivan sits frozen as they hurry down the street, climb into a station wagon, and flee the scene.
Ivan enters Zarate's house and finds his father on the floor bleeding from his head.
Joel Lebaran, the prophet of the church of the firstborn, is dead.
One month after Joel's murder, Erville sends a long-winded letter to the firstborn congregation.
In it, he simultaneously denies taking any part in Joel's murder
and blames his brother for being the one to start the violence.
The letter ends with an invitation and a threat.
The firstborners who denounce Joel are welcome to join the Church of the Lamb of God,
as long as they are prepared to pay the tithe.
Those who do not comply, he said,
are not fit to live on the earth.
Once again, he doesn't get the reaction he expects.
Instead of following,
Ervil, the firstborners choose his brother Verlin to be their new prophet. They start gathering
evidence and testimony to build a case against Joel's killers. Erval spends the next few
months hiding out in the United States. And then, in December 1972, he walks into an Ensenada
police station and turns himself in. Ervil boldly announces who he is and demands that all
charges against him be dropped. He believes that he has found a loophole to protect. He believes that he has found a loophole to
protect him. Mexican law at the time requires accusers to surrender evidence within 72 hours
or drop their case. But Verlin is ready, and the firstborn lawyers have no trouble bringing
sufficient evidence in the required time frame. Ervil is charged with Joel's murder and held
in jail to await trial. Nearly one year later, he's found guilty and sentenced to 12 years in prison.
Verlin and Joel's disciples rejoice.
Their prophet has been avenged
and the man who had killed him is behind bars.
Or so they thought.
Just a few months after the sentencing,
Erville walks out of the Ensenada prison.
A higher court has overturned his verdict on a technicality.
The news that Erval is free sends a tremor
through the church of the firstborn.
After 14 months behind bars,
his frustration over not being recognized as prophet
has turned into a fresh determination.
In prison, God has given him a new revelation.
Verlin is yet another false prophet.
Before Ervil can claim his rightful place
as the leader of God's kingdom on earth,
Verlin has to die.
Thanks for tuning in to serial killers,
a Spotify podcast.
For more information,
amongst the many sources we used,
we found the 4 o'clock murders,
the true story of a Mormon family's vengeance by Scott Anderson,
and the colony,
Faith and Blood in a Promised Land by Sally Denton,
extremely helpful to our research.
Stay safe out there.
This episode was written by Andrew Kelleher and Chelsea Wood,
edited by Chelsea Wood,
fact-checked by Lori Siegel,
and sound designed by Alex Button.
I'm Madison McGee.
Want to hear something?
Spooky.
Some monster
It reminded me of Bigfoot.
Monsters Among Us is a weekly podcast
featuring true stories of the paranormal.
One of the boys
started to exhibit demonic possession.
Stories straight from the witnesses' mouths themselves.
Something very snake-like
lifted its head out of the water.
Hosted by me, your guide.
Derek Hayes.
Somehow I lost eight whole hours.
Listen now on Spotify or wherever
you get your podcast.
A beloved
75-year-old man washing up getting ready for bed is brutally beaten and killed. Despite an
exhaustive investigation, the killer avoids arrest and then strikes again. I'm Global News
crime reporter Nancy Hicks. You might listen to a lot of true crime podcasts this year, but they're
not crime beat. Search for and follow the award-winning podcast Crime Beat on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon
Music, and wherever you find your favorite podcasts.
