Mind of a Serial Killer - The Bodybuilder Love Triangle Pt. 1
Episode Date: November 10, 2025At the height of their fame, bodybuilding power couple Craig Titus and Kelly Ryan were unstoppable — sculpted bodies, magazine covers, and a fitness empire built on success and control. But beneath ...the surface of their glamorous life was a world of drugs, jealousy, and rage.When their trusted assistant, Melissa James, is found burned beyond recognition in the trunk of Kelly’s car, police unravel a story of obsession and betrayal that shocks the fitness world. Fame built their empire. Greed and violence destroyed it. Killer Minds is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. For ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Don’t miss out on all things Killer Minds! Instagram: @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios X: @crimehousemedia YouTube: @crimehousestudios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, Crime House community. It's Vanessa Richardson. And if you love digging into the most
gripping true crime stories, then you need to listen to another Crime House original, Crimes of,
with Sabrina Deanna Roga and Corinne Vienne. Crimes of is a weekly series that explores a new
theme each season from crimes of paranormal, unsolved murders, mysterious disappearances, and more.
Sabrina and Corinne have been covering the true stories behind Hollywood's most iconic horror
villains, and this month they'll be diving into the paranormal.
Listen to Crimes of every Tuesday on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, or wherever you listen
to podcasts.
Lots of people want to become stars, but not everyone has what it takes.
discipline, sacrifice, and constant hard work.
Even some who do make it to the top can't handle the responsibility,
which causes everything they've worked for to come crumbling down.
This is the story of Craig Titus and Kelly Ryan.
In the late 90s, Craig and Kelly were professional bodybuilders.
They fell in love and set out to create a fitness empire together.
The superstar couple used every ounce of their power to gain more success,
fame and money. And when someone tried to get in their way, the consequences were deadly.
unthinkable. This is Killer Minds, a crimehouse original. I'm Vanessa Richardson.
And I'm Dr. Tristan Engels. Every Monday and Thursday, we uncover the darkest minds in history,
analyzing what makes a killer.
Crime House is made possible by you. Follow Killer Minds and subscribe to Crimehouse Plus on Apple
podcasts for ad-free early access to each two-part series. And if you can't get enough true crime,
go search and follow Crime House Daily.
Our team's twice-a-day show bringing you breaking cases,
updates, and unbelievable stories from the world of crime
that are happening right now.
Before we get into the story,
you should know it contains descriptions of sexual violence and murder.
Listener discretion is advised.
Today, we begin our deep dive into the lives of Craig Titus and Kelly Ryan.
He was a bodybuilding champion.
She was a fitness star.
Together they seemed unstoppable, but as their fame grew, so did the pressure to keep getting bigger
until their lives spiraled into a tangled web of obsession, betrayal, and deadly violence.
While Vanessa takes you through the story, I'll be talking about things like how people with ultra-competitive
personalities can spiral into violence, the ways that stardom, heavy partying, and risky sexual behavior are linked,
and how codependence and hero worship can enable someone with deadly tendencies.
And as always, we'll be asking the question, what makes a killer?
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Craig Titus was born to compete, and where he lacked natural talent, he made up for it with
grit and determination. Craig was born on January 14, 1965. He grew up in Riverview, Michigan,
a working-class suburb just outside Detroit. He was the oldest of three children, so he was used to
being in charge. And even though he was small and slim, Craig didn't let that stop him. In high school,
Craig was five foot six and 140 pounds.
He wasn't tiny, per se,
but when he decided to try out for the football team,
he knew he had his work cut out for him.
Craig made the team,
but he didn't seem to get a lot of time on the field.
So Craig started lifting weights to try and bulk up,
but he still didn't possess the natural brawn
that many of his teammates did.
However, weightlifting introduced Craig to a new sport,
one that he was better suited for,
wrestling. Craig instantly fell in love with wrestling. Success came down to individual skill,
so the spotlight was his alone. This brought out Craig's competitive edge. He began spending
hours at the gym lifting weights. In between sets to keep himself motivated, Craig read muscle
magazines. He poured over the photos of bulky bodybuilders with envy. Body image doesn't just impact
teenage girls. It also impacts teenage boys.
social pressure to conform to ideals of height, weight, and muscular form can influence and
impact self-esteem, social interactions, hobbies, and just overall mental well-being for
everyone. Negative body image can lead to increased risks of depression, anxiety, and even
eating disorders, especially if among peers messages regarding inferiority are being internalized.
And sports can have an amazing positive impact on an adolescent self-image, but in some cases,
is it can amplify negative social dynamics.
Team sports like football can reinforce social hierarchy ideals,
where size, strength, and visibility are emphasized as important and valuable.
So if a boy like Craig sits on the bench and gets less playtime on the football field,
he could be missing the validation that comes with being seen as strong or essential to the team.
And that can impact confidence, and it can heighten preoccupation with self-image and worth,
which is likely why Craig was being drawn to wrestling.
wrestling is an individual sport where performance is self-contained.
You win or lose based on your own effort, not whether the coach picks you or the team passes
you the ball, and that can give a sense of control and agency, which many adolescents crave
when they feel overlooked.
But it can also feel overwhelming, because the failure can feel deeply personal, too.
In a team sport, a loss can be shared.
People can blame the game strategy or the coach or the group dynamic.
But in an individual sport, when you lose, it can feel like a direct reflection of your worth or your capability.
And for adolescents who are already sensitive to self-image or have low sense of self-worth,
that can reinforce the idea that they have to constantly prove themselves to deserve approval or even attention.
And over time, that pressure can fuel perfectionism, competitiveness, or even obsessive focuses on the body.
What do you think it says about Craig that he was so focused on getting bigger, bulking up?
And do you think that had an influence on his ambition and kind of his self-image?
I think it clearly highlights that he felt deeply insecure about this and in a lot of ways inferior.
His focus on getting bigger, I don't think, was necessarily just about building muscle,
but likely more about building an identity or identifier that provided external validation.
For example, he's seeking less comments about how slim or skinny he was
and seeking more about how muscular he is.
And this is more about managing feelings of his own internal vulnerability.
And this went beyond a desire to find acceptance among his peers.
And I think it became more central to his identity.
And we'll see that take hold as you take us through the story.
Craig's early dedication to bodybuilding may have been his ticket to success.
Some sources say that in 1984, when Craig was a senior in high school, he won the Michigan State
High School Wrestling Championship.
However, according to the book Killer Bodies, there's no proof that ever happened.
Author Michael Fleeman says Craig never even made it to the finals.
One thing that is certain is that Craig didn't go on to wrestle in college.
In fact, he didn't go to college at all because he was so focused on bodybuilding.
He got a job in construction, partly because he wanted a physically demanding job, and spent the rest of his time at the gym.
So we can already see how this has become his identity.
Skipping college to focus on bodybuilding and choosing a job that kept him physically engaged are choices that show strength and appearance were how Craig wanted to define himself.
At first it was just about adding size, getting bigger, but the bigger Craig got, the more obsessed he became with sculpting every inch of his physical.
Zeke. Even when he was going through major life changes, Craig never sacrificed time at the gym.
In 1985, when Craig was 20, his work took him to Houston, Texas. That's where he met 26-year-old
Susan Bell. They started dating, and in August of that year, they got married. Despite being a
newlywed, the highlight of Craig's new life in Houston happened at the gym. One day he ran into a guy
named Lee Haney, who got first place in the Mr. Olympia bodybuilding competition in both 1984 and
1985 and would go on to win six more times. Craig idolized Lee, and when Lee noticed him working out,
he approached Craig to offer encouragement and advice. This brief encounter bolstered Craig's confidence
and helped him see what he was really capable of. Craig kept training, and three years later,
at age 23, he entered his first professional competition, the 1988 Houston Bodybuilding Championships.
He competed in the middleweight class at 176 pounds.
Stepping onto the stage for the first time, Craig felt overcome by the bright lights,
the judges scrutinizing glares, and the silent anticipation from the audience.
Every flex and pose was a test, and Craig was an instant sensation.
He won both his class and the overall title at the meet, and he was hooked on the feeling.
So I want to start by normalizing this first, because truly this would be a confidence boost for anyone,
especially when you consider how much time, effort, and dedication that went into that moment.
Winning anything that you've worked this hard for is validating and rewarding.
There is nothing wrong with someone being disciplined, committed, and willing to sacrifice for their goals.
We see it all the time with professional athletes or even Olympians.
But psychologically, when it comes to Craig, it seems like he was chasing an identity rather
than pursuing a dream or pursuing excellence. It's as if his self-worth is dependent on the outcome.
And because of that, winning this competition was likely reinforcing to Craig that when he looks
this way, when he's dominating competitions in the gym and his physique overall, that is when he and his
identity matters most. It does make me wonder what he would have done or how he would have
responded or coped emotionally if he had lost to this competition, especially when he had the
validation and support of one of his idols. What kinds of personality types are associated with a
need to be recognized to win or to be the best at something? So the drive to be recognized can show up
in several personality types, and not all of them are unhealthy. In moderation, ambition, and
competitiveness can motivate success. We all have a little of that. But again, in Craig's case, if
those needs dominate their identity, it can point to something deeper.
So that said, people with narcissistic traits often crave admiration and validation.
Winning or being, quote, the best, is often about maintaining a fragile sense of self-esteem.
They rely on external recognition to feel worthy, so every success temporarily fills an inner void
and every failure threatens their identity.
Others might lean toward compensatory or perfectionistic personalities.
These individuals strive to be exceptional
to escape feelings of inadequacy or shame
and their self-worth is conditional.
It's as if they're saying,
I'm only good enough if I'm the best.
And you can also see this pattern
in obsessive or control-oriented personalities
where achievement gives them some kind of sense of order.
Craig's taste of the limelight left him wanting more.
After his 1988 victory in Houston,
he trained harder than ever,
but he still had to keep his day job in construction.
because soon, Craig had even more responsibility on his plate.
On July 11, 1988, Susan gave birth to twins, Aaron and Ashley.
Since he couldn't be at the gym as much as he wanted, Craig hired a nutritionist who helped him prepare for competitions.
He was trying to gain as much control over his body as possible.
But in 1989, Craig quickly lost control over other parts of his life
when his six-month-old son tragically died of sudden infant death syndrome.
The loss weighed heavily on Craig and Susan.
However, Craig continued to train and enter competitions.
Maybe it was a way to distract himself,
or maybe nothing could keep him from it.
Either way, the tragedy broke his marriage.
A few months after the loss of their child, Craig and Susan divorced.
Craig didn't seem too heartbroken over the split,
especially because in 1989, the same year his son died, he once again won the overall title
at the Houston Bodybuilding Championships, this time weighing 180 pounds.
Over the next four years, Craig gained about 40 more pounds.
He quit his construction job and became a personal trainer.
As he spent more time at the gym, he started competing in more high-profile competitions,
including a national one, sponsored by ESPN, where,
he earned third place in his weight class. Craig was gaining huge momentum. In 1993, the 28-year-old
was featured in one of his favorite muscle magazines. His name was finally out there, and he
couldn't get enough of the attention. But more fame came with more pressure. Craig's regimen soon
went far beyond constant diet and exercise. Like many other bodybuilders, he started taking
anabolic steroids to maintain bulk.
Craig's rising stardom also affected his personal life.
In 1994, he started dating a Playboy model named Debbie Halo.
He left Texas and moved to Marina del Rey, California, close to the bodybuilding mecca of Venice Beach.
It seems like his daughter mainly lived with Susan, because Craig was busy living the
bodybuilder's dream.
But there was a downside to all her.
his success. Craig's steroid use caused major anger issues. In 1995, he had a huge outburst when he came
in second place at a competition. Craig thought he should have come in first, so he stormed off stage
and destroyed his trophy. After that, Craig was suspended from competing for six months, but it turned
out to be just a minor setback, because the incident earned Craig a reputation as the bad boy of
bodybuilding, which he fully leaned into. When he wasn't training, Craig was partying and womanizing,
going out to clubs and taking ecstasy, and soon his freewheeling lifestyle caught up with him.
In 1995, federal authorities caught Craig sending 500 tablets of ecstasy in the mail. He was charged
with conspiracy to distribute drugs. He eventually pleaded guilty, which seemed to help him avoid prison.
Instead, Craig lived in a halfway house for eight months, then eight more on house arrest before
being on supervised release for three years.
But he still did whatever it took to maintain his status in the bodybuilding world.
Throughout his probation, Craig continued to train.
In June 1996, he returned to the stage at the NPC USA Championships.
This time, he won first place.
He was at the top of his game, which seemed to cloud his judgment.
Due to the terms of his probation, Craig had to submit regular urine samples for drug testing.
Between October 1996 and January 1997, six of his samples tested positive for steroids,
as well as a substance called epitestosterone, which is used to mask steroid use.
In July of 1997, Craig was sentenced to 21 months in prison for violence.
violating his parole. So when Craig moved closer to Venice Beach, he was moving into the epicenter of the bodybuilding world, which also happened to be a culture of partying, nightlife, drugs, and constant validation. And these things challenged self-control and discipline. And he was subsequently becoming part of the culture that he immersed himself in. And psychologically, his substance use seemed to meet several needs at once. It maintained his physique, enhanced his performance, numbed some self-doubt,
and allowed him to coexist in an environment that influenced drug use.
He may have also needed to sell drugs just to support himself financially as well.
But over time, substance use can create a cycle of reward that rewires the brain, which
causes pleasure and relief to outweigh logic and fear.
So there's also an element of psychological invincibility here.
And I've seen this often when I worked in correctional settings, and incarcerated individuals
tested positive on drug screens
despite the fact that they're incarcerated
and should not even have access to drugs,
but they also attempted to cover it up.
In very creative ways, might I add,
people with narcissistic or high-risk traits
often believe that they can outsmart the system,
charm the people in charge,
or push their limits without paying a price.
And it seems the same can be said about Craig.
The benefits of using outweighed the risks,
and it seems he felt that he could get away with it.
What can we learn about Craig from the fact that he was so competitive, but also he was really
his own worst enemy in a way? I think Craig's competitiveness likely came from this deep need
to prove to himself and to feel significant and superior. But that same drive was fueled by
an underlying fear of not being good enough. And when someone's self-esteem depends entirely
on winning, failure can be unbearable. And ironically, self-sabotage can feel strangely
comforting to someone like Craig, because if you're the one who ruins your own success, then in
their warped mind, you control the loss. It hurts, but at least it's on your terms. And at least
that's, again, the subconscious logic that someone like Craig would be using in this situation.
When Craig was released from prison in 1999, he was ready for a comeback. But he found something
else entirely. Love. At his birthday party that year, he reconnected with a woman named
Kelly Ryan, who he'd met before going to prison. Kelly was 27 years old and a shining star in
the competitive fitness world. She'd won overall titles at competitions like Miss Fitness America
and Team Universe Fitness. She and Craig had run into each other before, but something about
her performance that day had Craig completely mesmerized. She knew all of the
about his bad boy reputation, so when he approached her, Kelly was hesitant to get to know him,
but Craig quickly opened up about his shady past and swore he was a changed man. This won Kelly over,
and soon they were a power couple, regularly training and competing side by side. About a year after
they met, on June 6, 2000, the couple traveled to Las Vegas to get married in the famous Little White
Chapel. Their union cemented their status as bodybuilding icons. But what Kelly didn't know was that
deep down, Craig hadn't changed at all. His bad boy streak would only reach new heights,
and their romance would prove deadly.
Titus and 28-year-old Kelly Ryan were the it couple of professional bodybuilding. And when the pair
got married, they became a force to be reckoned with, especially when it came to their growing
fitness empire. As a couple, Craig and Kelly signed high-profile endorsements, appeared on magazine
covers, developed coaching programs, and hosted seminars. They even signed on as celebrity party
promoters for the American Federation of Bodybuilders, or AFBB.
Their success enabled them to purchase a 3,000 square foot home in Las Vegas, the hub of the bodybuilding world.
It featured a professional gym and a private movie theater, ideal for both training and entertainment.
They also began collecting luxury cars, including a bright red jaguar for Kelly.
In addition to promoting parties for the AFBB, they also threw wild celebrations of their own at their new house.
At these events, alcohol flowed freely, and drugs like ecstasy and methamphetamine were reportedly easy to come by.
Before they got married, Craig had told Kelly he was a changed man, but now he was sucking her into the hard partying lifestyle.
Soon their parties escalated even further, between all the substance abuse and guests whose physical appearances were their top priority,
things became extremely sexually charged.
some guests apparently swapped partners
while others engaged in group encounters.
Let's talk about that because people are drawn to non-monogamy
for many different reasons and it's important to separate
intentional and ethical non-monogamy from impulsive or destructive behavior.
So for some, consensual non-monogamy is about openness, freedom, or authenticity.
It can be a healthy expression of autonomy and communication.
But for others, especially those driven by ego or insecure,
multiple partners can serve as ongoing validation. It can reinforce the idea that desirability equals
value. Drugs and alcohol can and often blur that line even further. Substances lower inhibitions
and guilt and they heighten sensations. They can make risk feel liberating. And given their level of
success, there was likely pressures to maintain visibility and image. It's also true to many that
drugs, nightlife, and risky choices can feel like rewards for hard work or can feel like
ways to keep the excitement and relevancy going, especially for a couple like Craig and Kelly
who are at the height of their fame and their success. When Kelly first met Craig, she was kind
of hesitant about his partying lifestyle. Why do you think she went along with these parties?
Kelly may have genuinely believed that he was changed or that she could ground Craig. Maybe
Craig loved her in the beginning. But when one partner has a dominant personality or is highly
charismatic and a lifestyle is tied to image and excitement, the other can slowly get pulled into
that orbit. And I think that's happening here. It's not necessarily conscious. It often happens
over time through emotional conditioning. There's also the element of shared identity. Because once they
became a quote power couple, like you said, in bodybuilding, her self-image became tied to his.
Saying no to his lifestyle might have felt like saying no to their shared success or saying no to part of her own identity now.
Substances likely blurred those lines even further.
Again, drugs and alcohol can create false intimacy and shared highs that can make dysfunction feel like connection.
And there was likely also possibly coercive control occurring in their dynamic as well.
And I think we'll probably see more of that as you take us through the story.
Well, it's possible that Craig somehow convinced Kelly to go along with things,
especially since the men at their parties seemed to use women as a form of entertainment.
One of those women was 24-year-old Melissa James.
Craig had met Melissa at some point and invited her to a party.
The two seemed to have a lot of chemistry, even though they claimed they were just friends.
However, it was clear that their friendship was unlike any of Craig's others,
because at some point he hired Melissa to help out with his and Kelly's business ventures.
Not only that, but Craig let Melissa live in their house rent-free.
At first, Melissa seemed to enjoy the setup.
She wanted to get more involved in the bodybuilding world.
Working for Craig and Kelly was a dream come true.
The only downside was that Craig and Kelly both had hot tempers.
Sometimes their fights got so bad.
Craig had to check Melissa into a hotel for a few days
until the tension died down at home.
At the same time, Melissa was indispensable to the couple.
She managed everything from their schedules to their finances.
She even ran all their errands for them.
Melissa was extremely enmeshed in their world.
And within months of moving in,
she wasn't just their employee,
but a regular participant at their parties.
In addition to all the sexual behavior,
Melissa started using cocaine and recreational painkillers.
Craig and Kelly weren't just Melissa's employers. They controlled her environment, her income, and to some extent, her social identity. That can create situational dependency where Melissa's sense of belonging and stability or safety are tied to keeping them happy. And this can put Melissa at risk for grooming, exploitation, abuse, and coercion without her maybe even realizing it. And when you add substance use to that, again, the boundaries get more unclear.
judgment reasoning impulse control emotional regulation everything becomes diminished and in these kinds of
dynamics the persons in power can rationalize that control as friendship or even mentorship while the subordinate
in this case melissa may mistake that closeness for equality when in actuality emotional manipulation
is what's likely occurring here she's already experiencing explosiveness by craig and kelly she's taking on
emotional labor that she should not be taking on. She's likely driven by fear and she's dependent on
them. And unfortunately, that is an extremely difficult relationship dynamic to navigate safely or
freely, not unlike it is for those in romantic relationships with similar control dynamics.
It seems like the dynamics of Craig and Kelly's relationship did get to be too much for Melissa
at some point, because in 2001, after living with them for a few months, she moved out.
Melissa told her friends she'd taken another gig that required her to travel, but Craig told
people that he kicked her out because her drug use had become too much of a problem.
Regardless of what prompted her to leave, without Melissa, Craig and Kelly's success started
to flounder.
All of their partying began to take a toll on their physiques.
By 2003, Craig wasn't winning competitions anymore and started having more angry outbursts at judges.
At the same time, Kelly started getting plastic surgery to maintain her appearance.
The more they felt their youth slip away, the more they partied as a way to blow off steam.
By 2005, 40-year-old Craig and 33-year-old Kelly finally took a step back from competing
to focus on other ventures, including a sports clothing line called Ice Gear.
It was a huge endeavor, and they needed help.
They had apparently kept in touch with Melissa over the years,
and when they set out to launch Ice Gear, Craig called Melissa and asked her to come back.
He told her that helping them with the brand would give her valuable connections in the business and fitness worlds.
Melissa agreed, and in October 2005, she returned to Las Vegas and moved back in with Craig and Kelly.
From the outside looking in, it can be hard for people to understand why someone like Melissa would
willingly return to an unhealthy or potentially unsafe environment. But psychologically, in situations
like this, people often return to unhealthy environments because they crave familiarity. Even dysfunction
can feel safe to some people when it's predictable. There's also the element of intermittent
reinforcement, the same psychological pattern that keeps people tied to abusive relationships.
One day there's tension or fear. The next is affection or validation. That up and down cycle actually
strengthens attachment because the brain can become conditioned to chase the, quote, good moments
that they have. But more importantly, Craig and Kelly also promised Melissa a hope for a future
in the business through networking, making that lure of returning even stronger and more desirable
for her. They painted this return as something that was very positive for her.
Yeah, whatever her reasoning was, Melissa seemed happy. She even,
even told her friends and family that the new venture inspired her to finish her college degree.
But Kelly didn't share her enthusiasm.
She had never wanted Melissa to move back in, and soon Kelly started accusing Melissa of stealing from them.
Eventually, Melissa decided she didn't want to put up with Kelly's accusations,
and on December 13, 2005, just two months after moving back in with Craig and Kelly,
Melissa called her mom and said she was flying home to New Jersey for the holiday,
and that she was planning to stay there.
She had bought a ticket for a red eye
and expected to get to New Jersey the next morning.
But Melissa never made it onto the flight.
And investigators would soon find out why.
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In December of 2005, 28-year-old Melissa James left her job as an assistant to bodybuilding's power couple,
40-year-old Craig Titus, and 33-year-old Kelly Ryan.
Not only did Craig and Kelly fight all the time, but Kelly also accused Melissa of stealing
from them. So on December 13th, Melissa called her mother and said she was moving back home
to New Jersey. She was expected to arrive the next morning. But the next time anyone saw Melissa,
it was under horrifying circumstances. Just after 4 a.m. on December 14, 2005, a truck driver
made his way along a dark desert highway just outside Las Vegas.
He noticed an unusual glow in the distance.
As he got closer, he realized a car was on fire.
The driver called 911.
Firefighters quickly arrived and put out the flames.
Once they could see things better, they identified the car as a red jaguar.
Then the fire captain got a closer look at the car's interior.
It seemed like the fire was centered in the back seat.
Not only that, but one of the back seats had burned through to the trunk, where the captain noticed a strange, bulky object.
He pointed his flashlight at it, then jumped back.
It was a body.
The captain quickly called the police.
Detectives Robert Wilson and Dino Kelly from the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police arrived at the scene.
And when they saw the state of the car and the body in the trunk, they knew they had a murder on their hands.
Whenever we see a scene like this where there's a body found in a burned car, it's rarely random.
More often than not, the fire is intentional, set to conceal evidence, because flames can destroy DNA, fingerprints, trace materials, and even obscure the manner of death, making it harder for investigators to reconstruct what happened.
From a psychological perspective, this kind of act usually reflects panic mixed with a need for control.
The perpetrator, whoever did this, knows that they've crossed an irreversible line and is desperate to regain power over a situation that spiraled out of control.
Setting the fire becomes both practical and symbolic.
It's a way to erase physical evidence and at the same time try to erase the reality of what they've done.
It's not a rational act, and yet it reveals something important about their mindset.
They need to dominate the story and ensure that even in the death, the victim's story and their responsibility in what happened remain concealed at all costs.
Detectives knew they were dealing with a cold-blooded killer.
In order to catch that person, they needed to identify the victim first.
So they called in the license plate number to see who the car was registered to.
In the meantime, they examined the items that remained intact inside the vehicle.
First, they carefully removed a suitcase from the back seat of the car.
Inside, they found women's clothing and personal items, as well as medical syringes.
In addition to the suitcase, they also found something slightly bizarre, a brand-new barbecue set.
However, they didn't find anything with a name on it, so they still had no clue whose car it was
or whose body was in the trunk.
But when the Clark County Arson Investigator arrived, they were able to form a clear
picture of what happened. The arson investigator confirmed that the fire had been ignited with
an accelerant, and a lot of it. This proved that the fire was indeed intentional. After that,
the investigator used a crowbar to break the lock on the trunk. Detective Zoe Kelly and Wilson
examined the horrific sight before them. The person's hands and feet were completely burned off,
and the head was wrapped in a blanket with something tied around the neck.
Based on the size of the body, the detectives believed the victim was a woman.
Not only that, but some clothing remained, including denim jeans, a blue sweater, red underwear, and some jewelry.
Other than that, they couldn't make out any identifying features.
Fortunately, they soon received a call back from the station about the car's registration.
It belonged to a Las Vegas resident named Kelly Ryan.
Later that morning, Detective Wilson and another colleague, Detective Mogg, pulled up outside her house.
They were prepared to deliver the grim news to Kelly's family that she'd been found dead.
They knocked on the door and a petite blonde woman answered.
The detectives asked the woman her name.
She responded, Kelly Ryan.
Wilson and Mogg were stunned.
If this was Kelly, then whose body was in her car?
That's when a stout, muscular man came to the door.
Detective Wilson immediately recognized the man as Craig Titus, the bodybuilding star.
Before the officers could say much, Craig invited them inside.
Once they sat down, Wilson and Mogg asked Kelly if she knew her car was gone.
Kelly admitted that she'd noticed it was gone when she'd woken up that morning.
The detectives got straight to the point.
They told the couple that Kelly's car had been found in the desert, burned, and with a body in the trunk.
Kelly acted shocked, but Craig was stone cold.
Then, detectives explained that because her car had been used in a crime, they needed to ask them a few questions.
To start, why didn't they report the car stolen?
Kelly said it was because they assumed their roommate Melissa James had taken it,
and apparently Craig didn't want to call the police because he thought it was a private matter.
Instead, Craig had called his friend Anthony Gross to help search for Melissa in the car.
He said they'd looked for an hour, but to no avail.
Craig eventually thought Melissa would return on her own, so they stopped looking and went home.
As Kelly relayed this information, the detectives couldn't help but notice how Craig guided her through all the details, like he was steering the story.
So Craig steering the story like that on the surface, it might look like you simply helping her recall facts, but when we consider the context and what we know about Craig and their relationship,
so far, this is more likely psychological control. From a behavioral standpoint, he likely wanted
to control the narrative as tightly as possible, because in risky situations like this,
people with controlling or narcissistic traits often fear losing power more than they fear
consequences. So by coaching Kelly's responses or steering her, Craig is managing not just what's
being said, but how he is perceived through her. There's also a relational layer here. Over time,
In coercive or manipulative relationships, the dominant partner conditions the other to defer automatically
to look for cues, approval, or correction before speaking.
So Kelly, hesitating or deferring, may have been a conditioned response over time, and therefore it's now habit.
But also, of course, at the core, it could indicate an attempt to ensure that their story was aligned.
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The detectives found Craig's behavior suspicious.
They decided to split the couple up and try to learn more.
Kelly went with Detective Wilson,
and Craig sat down with Detective Mogg.
First, the detectives wanted more background information
on the couple's relationship to Melissa.
Kelly told Detective Wilson that Melissa was a friend
who she and Craig had hired as a live-in assistant.
In another room,
Craig told a similar story, except he included another crucial detail.
He admitted to Detective Mogg that he and Melissa had had an affair in the past,
but Kelly didn't know about it.
One thing they both admitted was that Melissa had allegedly been stealing from them.
They said she'd withdrawn money from their accounts
and charged things to their credit cards without permission.
Apparently they'd confronted Melissa about it
and told her they couldn't tolerate her behavior anymore,
so they'd kicked her out.
And on December 12th, Craig said he booked Melissa a hotel room.
According to Craig, he spent one night with Melissa at the hotel,
while Kelly thought he was elsewhere.
They both claimed that on the afternoon of December 13th,
Melissa returned to the house,
but Kelly told her she was no longer welcome.
Then Craig booked Melissa a flight back to New Jersey for that night.
Kelly said she helped Melissa pack,
and then the two of them got into her jaguar.
She said Melissa was wearing a blue, long-sleeved top and jeans.
Around 2.30 p.m., Kelly dropped Melissa off at a nearby convenience store
where she was supposed to get a ride to the airport.
However, Craig's story was a little different.
He said Kelly dropped Melissa off at the store in his silver Dodge Viper, not the Jaguar.
Both agreed this was the last time they saw Melissa.
They also both claimed that Melissa must have snuck back into their house late that night and stole in Kelly's car.
When the detectives asked why she would do that, Craig said Melissa had a drug problem and that she may have owed one of her dealers.
At this point, detectives had no reason to think Craig and Kelly did anything wrong.
The main question on their minds was whether it was Melissa's body in Kelly's car.
That afternoon, the medical examiner got to work identifying
the victim and to understand exactly how she died. And once the autopsy was underway, the
discoveries were horrifying. First, the ME, medical examiner, removed a layer of soot from the victim's
head and realized her head was wrapped completely in duct tape from her chin to her forehead. When the
M.E. removed the tape, he realized that some of the victim's facial features had been preserved,
despite the intense burns.
Based on a photo of Melissa James,
he could see resemblances.
But in order to be sure,
he sent a tissue sample off for DNA analysis.
From there, the ME found that a wire
and a thick cord were wrapped around her neck.
And despite the burns,
he found wounds that suggested the victim
had been violently attacked before she died.
Still, he couldn't determine the exact cause of death.
But it seemed likely it was strangulation or blunt force trauma,
which suggested her killer had acted out of extreme rage
and then burned the body to try and cover up the true cause of death.
We touched on this a little earlier.
The concealment of the body was likely due to panic mixed with control after the fact.
But the act of strangulation is often deeply personal.
Unlike a shooting or stabbing from a distance,
strangulation is not instantaneous.
It takes time and intention.
that makes it one of the most intimate
and emotionally charged forms of violence
and I agree because as a result
it often does reflect rage, domination
or a need to silence the victim
it isn't just about ending a life
it's also about asserting total control
over another person
so if the fire represented an attempt to erase
or undo the crime then the strangulation
if that was what the cause of death was
likely represented the emotional breaking point
that led to her
death. With all the evidence, do you think it seems like one person was capable of all this,
or do you think more than one person did this? All right. So given the nature of the crime,
it's definitely possible that more than one individual was involved. Melissa's murder involved
multiple complex stages. She was restrained, likely strangled or killed via blunt force trauma,
then transported in her vehicle to an isolated location where it was then set on fire,
and the suspect or suspects left the scene, which had to have been in another vehicle given where
the scene was. So when we lay out that sequence of events like that, it seems highly probable that
this was a coordinated event. But it's certainly possible that one person can do all of that
alone when you consider the behavior that both Craig and Kelly are displaying and have been
displaying, how they've been treating her to this point, also their mismatched stories and the
apparent power dynamics between them, I feel like it would be negligent not to investigate the
possibility of shared involvement.
The medical examiner soon made another discovery that added even more speculation to the
nature of the victim's death. A toxicology report confirmed that she had high amounts of
opioids and other drugs in her system at the time of death. This was consistent with Craig Titus
and Kelly Ryan's claims of Melissa James heavy drug use, and soon the DNA analysis confirmed
that Melissa was indeed the victim.
Detectives had to share the heartbreaking news with Melissa's mother, Mora.
During that conversation, they also learned that Mora had spoken to Melissa shortly before
her death.
She confirmed that Melissa was supposed to fly home to New Jersey on December 14th, but
according to Mora, Melissa was the one who decided to leave Craig and Kelly.
and go home, whereas Craig had told detectives that he sent Melissa away.
Now, detectives were skeptical of Craig and Kelly's entire story,
and their suspicion only grew when they spoke to some of Melissa's friends.
According to them, Melissa had been struggling with substance abuse, but so was Craig.
Not only that, but there were rumors of a love triangle between Melissa, Craig, and Kelly.
This made detectives wonder if Kelly had killed Melissa, and Craig.
and Craig helped her cover it up.
Authorities needed to find some sort of concrete evidence,
so they subpoenaed Kelly and Craig's phone records
and what they found raised even more questions about the couple's actions
and their version of events.
On the night of December 14th, just hours before Melissa's body was found,
Craig had made several phone calls to his friend Anthony Gross,
who had supposedly helped Craig search for Melissa after she,
she allegedly stole Kelly's car.
Detectives brought Anthony into the station
to find out what he and Craig had talked about
during those phone calls.
First, Anthony described how he had always looked up to Craig.
He was Anthony's bodybuilding inspiration.
Anthony had always wanted to be just like him.
But that changed on the night of December 13th.
According to Anthony, Craig had called him after midnight
and asked to meet at a gas station not far from the couple's home.
Anthony drove there in his truck, and Craig and Kelly were in the jaguar.
Craig told Anthony that they needed to ditch the jaguar in the desert and set it on fire.
Anthony didn't ask questions.
He followed the couple out to the desert, then helped Craig douse the jaguar in gasoline and lighter fluid,
before setting it on fire.
Afterward, he drove the couple home.
Anthony told detectives he didn't know why he'd gone along with it.
It wasn't until he heard what happened that he realized he may have helped cover up a murder.
So let's talk about the concept of hero worship because this could have influenced Anthony here.
Hero worship is essentially the excessive admiration of someone and that excessive admiration can diminish critical thinking.
In cases like that, the admirer can start to internalize the hero's values at the same time overlook warning signs and rationalize questionable behavior.
It becomes less about what's right and more about staying aligned with the person that they idealize.
That dynamic can lead people to cross boundaries that normally they would not do,
especially when the hero frames the situation as urgent, private, or morally justified.
So when Anthony helped Craig that night, he might have sought as protecting someone that he respected
rather than aiding in a crime, and that's because of the lens through which he viewed Craig.
How would one distinguish between unhealthy hero worship and a normal mentorship?
So in a healthy mentorship or a normal mentorship, there's mutual respect and clear
boundaries. The mentor encourages autonomy, critical thinking, and personal growth. You can
question them. You can disagree and you can still feel supported. A good mentor wants to see you
develop your own identity, not replicate theirs. In unhealthy hero worship, the power
dynamic becomes imbalanced. The admirer stops thinking independently and starts idealizing the other
person as flawless or all-knowing and there's no room for criticism or disagreement. And the relationship
becomes about maintaining favor rather than mutual growth. And the quote hero often reinforces this
by rewarding loyalty and punishing autonomy. So in essence, one builds independence, the other
dependence. One has healthy and respectful boundaries and the other lacks them.
Whatever role Anthony may have played here, the detectives were certain that Craig and Kelly were
behind it all. They knew they needed to find a way to arrest them both and fast. After talking to
Anthony, officers pulled security footage from the gas station where he said he'd met Craig and
Kelly. The footage clearly showed Anthony at the station, as well as a red jaguar, but
investigators weren't able to get a clear image of Craig and Kelly inside the Jaguar,
which meant the footage wasn't enough to warrant an arrest. Investigators had to keep digging,
and soon they found exactly what they needed to nab the couple. The only problem was,
by the time authorities had enough evidence to arrest Craig Titus and Kelly Ryan,
the couple was nowhere to be found.
Thanks so much for listening.
Come back next time to learn how police tracked Craig and Kelly to the other side of the country,
and how even after they were arrested, they continued to protest their innocence.
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Killer Minds is hosted by me, Vanessa Richardson, and Dr. Tristan Engels, and is a crimehouse original powered by Pave Studios.
This episode was brought to life by the Killer Minds team, Max Cutler, Ron Shapiro, Alex Benadon, Lori Marinelli, Sarah Camp, Sarah Batchelor, Heather Dundice, Sarah Tardiff, and Carrie Murphy.
Of the many sources we used when researching this episode, the one we found the most of the most of the most of the most of the most of the most of the most of.
most credible and helpful was the book titled, Killer Bodies, a glamorous bodybuilding
couple, a love triangle, and a brutal murder written by Michael Fleeman.
Thank you for listening.
Looking for your next Crime House listen, don't miss Crimes of with Sabrina Deanna Roga and
Corinne Vienne.
Crimes of is a weekly series that explores a new theme each season from Crimes of the
paranormal, unsolved murders, mysterious disappearances, and more.
Their first season is Crimes of Infamy, the true stories behind Hollywood's most iconic horror villains.
And coming up next is Crimes of Paranormal, real-life cases where the line between the living and dead gets seriously blurry.
Listen to Crimes of every Tuesday on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
