Mind of a Serial Killer - The Bodybuilder Love Triangle Pt. 2
Episode Date: November 13, 2025After Melissa James’s body is found, Craig Titus and Kelly Ryan insist they’re innocent — until the lies start to crumble. As detectives chase the couple across state lines, a twisted story of v...anity, manipulation, and violence emerges. From bodybuilding fame to life behind bars, Vanessa Richardson and Dr. Tristin Engels dissect how ambition, arrogance, and desire turned this once-golden couple into killers. What happens when obsession with perfection becomes a fatal flaw? 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.
All of us want to succeed to be admired to leave our mark.
But what happens when all that admiration takes a dark turn?
In 2005, Craig Titus and Kelly Ryan were a power couple in the world of bodybuilding,
creating their own fitness empire.
But when their toxic relationships spiraled out of control,
Craig and Kelly lost their grip.
Soon, they had no control over the monsters they had become.
The human mind is powerful.
It shapes how we think, feel, love, and hate.
But sometimes it drives people to commit the unthinkable.
This is Killer Minds, a crime house 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 Crime House 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 conclude 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.
As Vanessa takes you through the story, I'll be talking about things like how an obsession
with public image can damage someone's sense of right from wrong, how some killers
reveal their guilt through failed attempts to cover their tracks, and why a murderous couple
might turn on each other.
And as always, we'll be asking the question, what makes a killer?
In December 2005, detectives from the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department were investigating the brutal murder of 28-year-old Melissa James.
Her body had been found in the trunk of a burning car that belonged to her employer, 33-year-old Kelly Ryan.
Kelly and her husband, 40-year-old Craig Titus, were famous bodybuilders.
Melissa had worked on and off as their live-in assistant, most recently moving back into their
house two months before her death in October 2005.
After Melissa's body was found, police questioned Craig and Kelly, who claimed Melissa had stolen
the car and that they didn't know what happened afterward.
However, when investigators spoke to Craig's friend, a man named Anthony Gross, they realized
the couple had lied. Anthony told police that he'd helped Craig and Kelly.
set the car on fire in the desert and leave it there.
So police kept digging.
They subpoenaed the couple's bank records
to try and link them to any of the items found inside the car,
including a suitcase full of women's belongings and a barbecue set.
They discovered that Kelly's card had been used at a local Walmart
just hours before her car was found burning.
She had purchased seven bottles of lighter fluid,
which was a weirdly large amount.
along with a barbecue set and a bottle of juice.
The combination of items and the timing immediately struck detectives as suspicious.
To confirm whether it was in fact Kelly who had made those purchases, detectives reviewed
the Walmart's security footage.
On the video, they spotted a woman who looked a lot like Kelly buying all of those exact items
at about 3.30 a.m. on December 14th.
After that, parking lot cameras showed a large man jumping
out of a red car to help her load the items into the back seat. The car drove out of the lot
at 3.36 a.m. Less than an hour later, Kelly's red jaguar was found burning in the desert.
While the footage didn't completely prove that Craig and Kelly had murdered Melissa, it was enough
to arrest them. On December 20th, detectives drove out to the couple's sprawling home. They knocked
on the front door, but there was no answer.
Not only that, but Craig's car was gone, and all the doors were locked.
Officers realized that the couple had fled.
It's easy to say that innocent people don't run away or flee,
but psychologically innocent people could run because of fear, panic, or mistrust of authority.
But when an innocent person flees, it's usually impulsive, emotional, and disorganized.
When a guilty person flees, however, it tends to look more calculated with planned roots,
destroyed evidence and efforts to manipulate the story in some way. In Craig and Kelly's case,
it did appear strategic and planned, and we'll get more into that. But given what we know about
Craig's need to feel strong, dominant, and competitive, facing the reality of what happened
could mean confronting failure and loss of power, which is likely why he chose to flee. But it
wasn't just about avoiding consequences, it was likely more about avoiding the loss of his identity,
which at this point was tied to businesses and his livelihood. For Kelly, giving him,
even what we know about her so far in the apparent pattern of her deferring to Craig from what we saw
with detectives, even in the video footage, with her buying the lighter fluid while Craig waited
in the car. Her decision was likely a mix of fear, dependency, and shared guilt. When someone
has been under the control or influence of a dominant partner, their decision making can become
fused to that person's decision making. She may have felt she had no real choice but to follow
his lead, which is by no means an excuse, because she did in fact have a choice. But in that
moment to her, the decision to leave may have felt like survival. There could have been a trauma
bond within that relationship as well. Authorities tapped the media for help, and word of the
investigation spread quickly through the bodybuilding community. Within days, multiple people came forward
with information that would shape the case. Over the next few days, investigators spoke to Craig and
Kelly's friends and neighbors, their combined statements painted a clear timeline of the
couple's actions in the days leading up to their disappearance. On December 14th, the same day
they had first spoken to police, Craig and Kelly spent the night at their friend Jeffrey's
house. However, Jeffrey didn't pick up on any odd behavior from them that night. But the next
night, they went to a different friend's house, and that's when they began leaving a trail of
breadcrumbs behind. That friend's name was Amanda Polk. On the night of December 15th, Kelly and Craig
went to Amanda's house, where she lived with her boyfriend, Ryan. When they got there, Ryan let them
in, and Kelly immediately ran upstairs to Amanda's room. Before Amanda could say anything, Kelly started
sobbing. After a few minutes, she finally caught her breath and confessed something shocking to Amanda.
Kelly said that on the night of December 13th, she and Craig had found Melissa dead in her room.
She had apparently died of an overdose.
The couple wanted to avoid bad publicity, so instead of calling the police,
they put Melissa's body in the trunk of Kelly's Jaguar, drove it out to the desert, and lit the car on fire.
Now, Kelly was in a full-on panic because the authorities had found her car with the body inside.
Between tears, she admitted to using her bank card at Walmart to buy lighter fluid,
and she said she was scared the purchase could tie her to the crime.
Kelly rambled on about how a scandal like this would ruin her career.
The whole time, Amanda listened in horror.
On the surface, Kelly seems far more concerned with protecting her image and her business
than the fact that her friend was killed.
Actually, murdered.
But when we look deeper and consider what we know about her relationship,
relationship with Craig and what we've outlined, I think there's more going on beneath that reaction.
Kelly's obsession with image was likely about survival. She'd built that image with Craig,
whose entire identity revolved around it. And within that dynamic, there were clear power and
balances. Kelly may have learned consciously or not that her safety and her sense of self
depended on keeping Craig calm, depended on falling into place, and preserving the image that they'd
created together. So her panic, I think, is multi-layered. She's afraid of exposure, afraid of
punishment, and afraid of disappointing Craig. And in high control or codependent relationships that
last fear there can be more powerful than the reality of what she has done. Her loyalty to him,
however destructive, likely had overridden any moral compass she had. And it's a reminder of how
psychological dependence can make even horrific choices like this seem in the moment like the only way
to survive or preserve a bond that they have with that person.
Kelly's story and behavior were alarming, to say the least,
but when Amanda went downstairs, she discovered that Craig was acting even stranger.
He had closed all the blinds and paced around the house nonstop checking the doors.
Eventually, Craig asked if he and Kelly could stay the night.
His demeanor was so intense.
Amanda and Ryan were scared to say no, so they reluctantly agreed.
Things got even more troubling the next day.
Craig and Kelly asked Amanda and Ryan to drive them to a nearby motel.
When they got there, motel staff asked for a credit card to reserve a room.
Craig tried to force Ryan to put the room under his name and credit card, but Ryan refused.
Craig exploded in anger.
He said a real friend would help him, but Ryan held his ground.
However, to try and get Craig to calm down, he drove Craig and Kelly to a different motel where they could pay in
cash. After that, Amanda and Ryan didn't talk to Craig and Kelly again. Craig and Kelly stayed in the
motel that night. After they woke up on the morning of December 17th, Craig went to a car dealership
to trade in his truck. He told the salesman he was headed to Utah for a relaxing vacation. He leased a
new truck using his business card and drove off the lot a few hours later. Next, Craig and Kelly met
with their business partner, a man named Greg Ruiz.
Greg had invested in Craig and Kelly's fitness clothing brand, Ice Gear.
Craig told him that he and Kelly were stopping in Boston
to cash out their assets before leaving the country.
After that, Craig contacted someone else, Melissa's mother, Mora James.
Mora had been trying to reach Craig for days.
She knew that the police had talked to him and Kelly about Melissa's death.
Craig told Mora he had nothing to do with.
with it. But that wasn't all. He said he didn't think the body found in Kelly's car was
actually Melissa's. According to Craig, Melissa had staged the entire thing as a way to start a
new life. Finally, he asked Mora to relay a message to Melissa. He wasn't angry about the car
damage because insurance would cover it. So all was forgiven.
It's a textbook example of psychological framing for self-preservation. By claiming
that Melissa staged her own death, not only is he removing accountability or responsibility,
he's recasting himself as both the victim and the hero of the story. And in doing so,
he can shift into sympathy. Notice how he positions himself. He's calm, forgiving, even generous,
telling Melissa's mother that, quote, all is forgiven. That's not remorse. It's image management.
He's crafting a narrative where he's the wronged but gracious party here. And he's absolving someone who,
in his version of reality, betrayed him. Psychologically, this fits with narcissistic and manipulative
defense patterns. When faced with exposure, individuals with these traits often distort reality
rather than confront guilt. They rewrite events to maintain control, and by extension,
control of how they are seen. It's about power through perception and an attempt to maintain superiority.
Did Craig call Mora because he thought she would help actually exonerate him? Did he
actually think she would believe him? So it's certainly a strategic move, and I do think he probably
believed, through impression management like charm, denial, and these selective truth that he could
manipulate her emotions, shape the story, and plant just enough doubt to protect himself in some way.
There's also a layer of arrogance here. I mean, contacting Mora shows how little empathy he truly
had for Mora's grief. He likely saw her not as a grieving mother, but as a potential.
potential tool, someone he could recruit and validate his story. It's an attempt to manipulate
her because in his mind he may have been thinking that if he can control her emotions, he can
control the story and maybe even erroneously believe that if Mora believed him, then so too
would police. And arrogance, unfortunately, can be very misleading for someone like Craig.
Although Craig tried to portray himself as a victim, his actions made him look guilty.
Because on the evening of December 17th, he and Kelly left Las Vegas.
Over the next few days, their escape gained widespread attention.
And on December 20th, warrants were issued for their arrest.
The next day, police warned the public that Craig and Kelly might be armed and dangerous.
They released images of the couple, hoping to generate tips on their whereabouts.
But by December 22nd, the Vegas authorities still weren't able to track them down.
So the manhunt went national.
with federal agencies joining in.
However, this still didn't help generate leads,
so the authorities decided to drum up public interest
by releasing Melissa's autopsy results.
On December 23rd, the public learned
that Melissa had been beaten, strangled, and burned.
Once the public learned these gruesome details,
Craig and Kelly's photos dominated newspapers,
websites, and nightly news broadcasts.
Now that everyone knew the full,
gruesome truth of her death. People were scared. Craig and Kelly were out there somewhere,
and who knew what they could do next? Soon, Craig and Kelly were drawn back into the spotlight,
like moths to a flame, and once they were caught, they could no longer hide the true depths
of their evil.
and 33-year-old Kelly Ryan were the primary suspects in the murder of Melissa James.
Once the couple knew the authorities were after them, they went on the run.
Investigators tapped the media for help, alerting the public,
hoping the heightened detention would bring in tips.
Then on December 23, 2005, nine days after Melissa was killed,
employees at a jiffyloob in Canton, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston,
2,700 miles from Las Vegas, greeted a very fit couple who said their truck needed an oil
change. The couple was relaxed and friendly. As mechanics worked on their truck, the woman even
showed off some dance moves in the parking lot. When the oil change was done, the man gave the
manager his phone number and told him to call if he was ever in Las Vegas. So this kind of
relaxed, friendly behavior given the context, is suggestive of psychological
compartmentalization. For Craig, this makes sense. Again, his entire identity revolved around control,
presentation, and dominance. So by pretending that everything was normal, he could maintain the
illusion that he was still in control of the situation and not the other way around. For Kelly,
again, it likely reflected emotional survival. Matching his energy, being cheerful, playing along,
showing off dance moves may have been a learned behavior, a way to keep him calm and avoid conflict,
Maybe it was deflective in nature.
We've seen how threatening Craig became toward friends when they set boundaries.
That makes me wonder how threatening he became with Kelly if she had tried the same.
So she's taking on an emotional caretaking role for Craig due to coercive control or trauma bonding dynamics and for survival.
Again, I don't say that as an excuse because there is no excusing her involvement or her behavior in any of this,
but rather an explanation as to how she could go along with something like.
this. For both of them, however, it's really reflective of their detachment from the moral and
emotional reality of their crime, but for different reasons. Do you think Craig gave out his number
because he somehow thought their lives could go back to normal, or do you think he might
have been showing off? I think on the one hand, he genuinely did believe that things would go back
to normal. People with narcissistic or psychopathic traits often live with a distorted sense of
reality. They compartmentalize so completely that the danger, guilt, or consequences simply don't
register. Giving out his number might have felt like maintaining normalcy, like I said. But on the other
hand, it's also performative and showing off. That gesture signals arrogance and bravado. It's a way of
asserting dominance again in a situation he doesn't feel he can control. So in that sense, it was once again
about reinforcing his identity, which was presently under threat.
So defaulting to performative normalcy was a way of coping with that.
Craig and Kelly might have been acting like nothing was wrong,
but the authorities were quickly closing in on them.
The couple's business partner, Greg Ruiz, had spoken to authorities back in Las Vegas.
He told them about Craig's plan to cash out their assets
and gave them the name of the man who was supposed to help them do that,
Matt Klein. From there, they were able to track Craig and Kelly from the Jiffyloob to a small
shopping plaza, where Craig stayed in the vehicle while Kelly headed into a nail salon.
Minutes later, a SWAT team swarmed the salon. Other customers screamed as the agent
surrounded Kelly's chair and told her she was under arrest for the murder of Melissa James.
As they led her out, Craig was still outside in the truck, completely unaware of what had happened.
And then agents surrounded the truck, opened the door, and pulled Craig out.
He was placed in handcuffs before he even had time to react.
Later that day, Craig and Kelly were placed in separate interrogation rooms at the Canton Police Station.
Detectives hoped that by splitting them up, they could get one of them to break.
They spoke with Craig first.
He was aggressive and obnoxious.
When asked why they fled, Craig answered with profanity, adding,
quote, I ain't going to jail for nobody.
He insisted he was innocent.
But his story was different from what witnesses had told authorities.
According to Craig, he and Kelly didn't find Melissa dead in her room.
Rather, she had died of an overdose while she and Craig were having sex.
From there, Craig freely admitted what Kelly had confided to her friend Amanda,
that he and Kelly had disposed of Melissa's body by burning it.
He said that he had stuffed her body in the tree,
of the car with a needle still hanging from her arm, but he insisted that he and Kelly did not
murder Melissa. Kelly corroborated Craig's account, adding that in addition to being concerned
about bad publicity, they were worried that if police searched their house, they would find
steroids and possibly send Craig back to prison. She admitted that it was a bad decision to try to
dispose of Melissa's body, but that they had panicked. By now, investigators thought
Kelly would be the one to break. To try and get her to confess, they told her she didn't have to
take the blame for a murder committed by her husband. They said this was her chance to make
things right. But instead of making a statement against Craig, Kelly stopped talking and asked
for a lawyer. The different approaches while being questioned just affirm what I've been outlining
about the two of them and their dynamic, which is not uncommon with co-offender dynamics among
couples. Craig's approach, aggressive, profane, boastful is unsurprising. He's been a substance
abuser and a steroid user with mood liability, possibly substance related, and a pattern of
narcissistic deflection. He's going to assert dominance in any environment where he has none,
and an interrogation room is one of those environments. So by swearing, over explaining, and inserting
himself as the center of the story, he's trying to reestablish control and intimidate
investigators. Even his, quote, I ain't going to jail for nobody line, is revealing. It's not a
statement of innocence. It's declaration of self-preservation. His story shifts, but the goal stays the
same. Protect his ego and maintain the illusion of control. This is a pattern I would expect in any
environment where he feels inferior in any way, and it explains his reaction to his friends when he
needed help securing a hotel room. In that situation, he was not in control. He was dependent on
them, and he was desperate. I imagine, again, the same pattern with Kelly, if she was not
obedient or dependent on him or if she didn't align behaviorally with what he wanted.
Kelly's approach, in contrast, is far more avoidant and self-protective. Her cooperation
only went as far as she thought was safe. When pressure mounted, an investigator's
appealed to her conscience, trying to fracture her loyalty to Craig, she shut down. That withdrawal
is common in codependent or trauma-bonded partners. Once the emotional statement,
stakes rise or fear or abandonment or retaliation, that overrides logic. This is also not a surprising
response given what we know about her and what we have outlined. It will take time, separation,
trauma-informed therapy, all of that before she would be willing to speak against Craig in any way
if ever. Craig, on the other hand, would be likely to turn against Kelly the moment she was no longer
functional for him.
Well, in the end, Craig and Kelly did nothing to help themselves or each other.
They were both arrested and held in jail until they were extradited to Las Vegas.
Kelly on January 26, 2006, and Craig on January 28th.
The couple was arraigned on January 31st and charged with murder with a deadly weapon,
accessory to murder, first-degree kidnapping, and third-degree arson.
They entered not guilty pleas to all charges and were held without bail.
For his part in helping dispose of the body, Anthony Gross faced charges of accessory to murder and third-degree arson.
He was released on $13,000 bail and placed under house arrest.
But even though they'd been charged with murder, Craig and Kelly continued to hold out hope that they would be exonerated.
They knew that the evidence showed that they had displayed bad judgment, but they didn't think the authorities had enough to,
prove murder. After all, Melissa's body was burned so badly, it was impossible to determine how she
had died. But what they didn't know was that another witness had come forward, and her testimony
changed everything. Her name was Megan Pearson, and she was a friend of Kelly's. Megan had
idolized Kelly. For years, she had trained with Kelly several times a week, hoping to follow in her
footsteps and become a fitness star. The two were so close that Megan had even asked Kelly
to be the matron of honor at her upcoming wedding. But now, Megan clearly saw Kelly for who she
really was, and she told investigators everything. According to Megan, on Monday, December 12th,
2005, she worked out with Kelly at her home gym. During the session, Kelly vented about Melissa
and accused her of stealing. She was fuming.
didn't know Melissa that well. In fact, she wasn't even sure who Kelly was talking about,
but the next evening she learned a lot more about Melissa than she ever expected.
On the night of Tuesday, December 13th, Megan's phone lit up with repeated calls and voicemails,
not just from Kelly, but also from Craig, which was unusual. They sounded upset and wanted her to
come over. When Megan got there, Craig led her inside. He was agitated, pointing out a
bag of crystal meth and bloody needles, claiming they belonged to Melissa. He told Megan that Melissa's
drug use was why he had to kick her out of the house. Then Megan went upstairs, where Kelly had
just gotten out of the shower. Speaking in hushed tones, Kelly explained that they had kicked
Melissa out earlier and that Craig had taken her to a motel. But then, according to Kelly,
Melissa came back. She was angry and she marched into Kelly's bedroom with a taser. Kelly,
described a violent struggle. Melissa lunged at Kelly with the taser, but Kelly managed to wrestle
it away and ended up shocking Melissa in the neck, but it barely slowed her down. So Kelly said
she'd called for Craig, who ran upstairs, grabbed Melissa and body slammed her to the floor.
After that, Melissa calmed down. She took a Xanax, then went to her room and fell asleep,
but Kelly was still mad. So while Melissa was unconscious, Kelly went into her room and began
began beating her relentlessly.
Melissa woke up, and another struggle ensued.
Craig ran into the room again, pinned Melissa down,
then took out a syringe and injected Melissa with morphine.
Assuming that what Megan is sharing is true,
and she has nothing to gain from this like attention or paid interviews,
then I would have to say that I'm skeptical that this is an accurate account
rather than a fabricated one.
It differs vastly from the one that she had told Amanda, and beating Melissa while she is unconscious
just does not seem to fit Kelly's profile. While I believe she played a very significant
role in Melissa's murderer, I believe it's very likely that Kelly was taking the fall in some way
to protect Craig. This is something she did with investigators too when she said she was protecting
Craig from police, finding steroids in their home and sending him back to prison. It's a pattern she
has. But let's break down what she said here. Her story conveniently minimizes Craig's responsibility,
enough to make it believable, but not enough to make him the aggressor. In her account,
Craig shows up only when he's needed, he acts decisively, and then he steps back, while Kelly herself
assumes most of the blame. That kind of narrative often emerges in trauma-bonded or codependent
relationships, where the submissive partner feels an almost compulsive need to protect the dominant one.
Second, her story mirrors Craig's earlier statements, which suggests coordination or some kind of
alignment. When two people in a high-control relationship share overlapping and self-serving
stories like this, it's often the less dominant partner who subconsciously adopts the other
version in order to preserve their bond. Third, the emotional tone of this so-called confession
matters. Kelly's account isn't grounded in empathy or grief at all. It's focused on explaining
behavior and maintaining control of the image she and Craig had shared. That's consistent with
someone who's operating under psychological dependency and fear and not full transparency.
She's looking more at exonerating rather than explaining or sharing empathy and grief and
guilt. So while it's impossible to know a certainty, the balance of behavioral evidence suggests
her story was at least partially constructed to shield Craig to protect him,
to protect their shared identity, and to maintain a sense of loyalty that had long replaced
her independent moral judgment.
And given what we know about Craig, his profile does fit with someone who is capable of this
kind of violence, who is capable of beating somebody up who is already unconscious.
Kelly's story was disturbing enough, but Megan noticed other troubling details.
For example, while Kelly was talking, Craig came into the room several times.
Whenever he did, Kelly stopped talking and waited for him to leave before picking back up again.
Aside from Kelly's secrecy, Megan wasn't sure what to make of the whole thing.
The story was almost too outlandish to believe.
However, Kelly showed her bruises on her hands, which seemed to prove she'd been in some kind of an alter.
Finally, when Kelly finished telling Megan everything, Megan asked where Melissa was now.
Kelly said she was downstairs, and Megan assumed she was unconscious in her room.
Megan thought that was the end of it, but then Craig came back in. He casually asked Megan if she
knew how to strangle someone. When she said no, he wrapped his massive arm around her neck and
squeezed. Megan struggled to breathe. Finally, Craig
Greg let go. Then he looked at Megan, started laughing, and told her that was how he had killed Melissa.
Apparently, it had all started as a joke. He and Melissa had been messing around, but things got out of
hand and he'd killed her accidentally. So now they had to get rid of her body.
Craig told Megan that he and Kelly planned to burn the car with Melissa in it and make it look
like she'd been raped. By now, Megan just wanted to get out of there. Finally, around
2 a.m. she left. But before she walked out the door, Craig handed her a gym bag and asked her to
hang on to it for a few days. Megan took the bag, but she didn't hold onto it like Craig had asked.
Instead, she came in to tell her story to detectives. When she finished talking, Megan gave them
the bag and told them she hadn't looked inside. And when detectives opened the bag, they found
something that blew the case wide open.
Some cases fade from headlines.
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I'm Ashley Flowers, and on my podcast, The Deck,
I tell you the stories of cold cases featured on playing cards
distributed in prisons designed to spark new leads and bring long overdue
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Listen to the deck now wherever you get your podcasts.
In January of 2006, Kelly Ryan's friend, Megan,
told detectives about their strange encounter on the night Melissa James was killed.
According to Megan, the couple admitted to killing Melissa
after she and Kelly had an intense altercation involving a taser,
Not only that, but Craig gave Megan a gym bag that same night and asked her to hold on to it.
Megan didn't just bring her testimony to the police.
She brought the bag, too.
She said she never opened the bag.
When police unzipped it, they found a taser inside.
What Craig did was calculated manipulation, and I think it was designed to serve multiple purposes at once.
First, there's the element of control through intimidation.
by handing her an object, a taser in this case, that's tied to the crime potentially,
Craig was silently forcing her to be part of this now.
It's a subtle but powerful way of creating fear and complicity at the same time.
If Megan ever thought about going to police, the implication could linger that she has the evidence.
This is another form of coercive control.
It's a pattern that Craig has.
Second, it reflects overconfidence and arrogance, traits that are consistent with his
personality. He may have believed he was untouchable that no one would dare cross him or even
suspect him. Giving away a piece of evidence might have even thrilled him because it could have
allowed him to flaunt his control, like he was playing a psychological game with Megan. And I think
that's also evident in the way he was playfully showing her how to strangle someone. Overall,
it's sinister, it shows a lack of empathy, and it's also showing the depths of his cruelty.
Whatever Craig was trying to do, it backfired big time.
With the taser in their possession, authorities acted fast.
First, they contacted the manufacturer.
Tasers transmit electronic records every time they're discharged,
and the device's records showed that it was fired six times
between 2.10 p.m. and 2.12 p.m. on December 13th.
This timeline matched the story that Megan had provided.
Now that they confirmed that the taser's,
had been used, investigators had something to search for, because when a taser is fired,
it also releases tiny confetti-like tags, each printed with the weapon's serial number.
So a forensic team searched Craig and Kelly's house, and they found tags scattered all over
the house, including in the living room, Melissa's room, and in the laundry.
There were 26 tags total, and they all matched the serial number of the taser that Craig gave
to Megan. Police now had the evidence they needed to prosecute Craig and Kelly.
In March of 2006, prosecutors laid out their case against Craig Titus and Kelly Ryan before
a grand jury. Using witness testimony and forensic evidence, they reconstructed the final
hours of Melissa James' life, which involved some shocking revelations about both Craig and
Kelly's involvement in Melissa's death.
December 13, 2005, the victim, Melissa James, called her mother and said she was flying home
that night. Shortly after, she went to Craig and Kelly's house to pack her things. Later that
day, a taser discharged six times inside the Titus Ryan residence. Authorities weren't sure
who exactly fired the weapon, but based on witness testimony, they strongly believed that
Kelly fired it at Melissa. Once Melissa was subdued by the taser, Craig dragged
dragged her downstairs and assaulted her.
He then restrained her while Kelly injected her with a fatal dose of morphine.
After she died, Craig bound Melissa's hands and feet, wrapped a bathrobe tie and a wire around
her neck, and covered her face with duct tape.
He then contacted Anthony Gross, and together the two men, along with Kelly, transported
Melissa's body to the desert in Kelly's car.
they soaked the jaguar in lighter fluid and gasoline, set it on fire, and left the scene in
Anthony's truck. Three days later, Craig and Kelly went on the run. The evidence was graphic. The
timeline was damning, but in the courtroom it was Melissa's mother, Mora James, who reminded the jury
of what all this really meant. When she addressed the grand jury, she didn't speak of tasers or
gasoline or duct tape, she spoke of her daughter, of her loss, her devastation, her grief.
Her testimony cut through the procedural detail, making it impossible to forget that at the
center of this case was not just a crime scene, but a young woman whose life was stolen.
I'm really glad more got the opportunity to do that because the way that they treated Melissa
before during and after her murder shows a mix of dehumanization.
dominance, and emotional detachment.
Before the murder, Melissa was already being objectified.
They treated her as an accessory in her lives,
someone to control, someone to use,
and then discard when inconvenient.
Craig and Kelly didn't see Melissa as a person with autonomy or worth.
They saw her as a reflection of themselves,
useful only when she reinforced their image and their needs.
She was mistreated, and there were very poor boundaries in place.
the murder itself was very personal and it was about asserting control in the most absolute way possible
by dominating, subduing, restraining, and silencing her. And what they did to her after killing her was symbolic
and it suggests an inability to see her humanity and a need to erase evidence and guilt as if destroying her body
in the car would destroy their accountability as well. But in the end, their behavior reflects a shared belief
that their image, their control, even their relationship mattered more than a human life.
Mora's testimony helped the court focus on the fact that a woman's life was at the center of this case,
as you mentioned. Ultimately, the grand jury found there was enough evidence to proceed to trial.
On March 29, 2006, Craig Titus and Kelly Ryan were formally charged with the murder of Melissa James
and held at the Clark County Detention Center pending trial.
For the next two years, the case went through delays
as prosecutors continued to build evidence
and defense attorneys filed motions.
Kelly spent her time reading and answering mail from friends.
Once a week, she was allowed to talk to Craig on the phone for half an hour.
In August 2006, Kelly was allowed to leave jail to attend her mother's funeral,
and she was heavily guarded the entire time.
Craig, for his part, had a more difficult time behind bars.
Shortly after his indictment, he fired his attorneys and hired new ones.
He sold his home gym and put his and Kelly's house on the market to pay for his new team of lawyers.
Craig also gave interviews.
He told one local newspaper that he was not a murderer, but rather guilty of, quote, bad judgment.
He also began working on a tell-all book, but it's not clear whether he ever finished it.
Craig and Kelly's joint trial was set to begin in May of 2008.
When they made their first court appearance, Craig and Kelly looked like ghosts of themselves.
In their gray prison clothes and without their spray-on tans, they looked pale and sickly.
They had lost the muscular physiques that once mattered so much to them.
Then a few days before their trial officially began, Craig and Kelly changed their pleas from not guilty to guilty.
They'd both made deals with the prosecutor to avoid first-degree murder charges that risked the death penalty.
In the end, Craig and Kelly's guilty pleas answered the question of what happened, but not why.
And without these answers, the judge decided that they should pay a high price for what they did.
On August 22, 2008, Craig was convicted of second-degree murder, kidnapping, and arson.
He was sentenced to 21 to 55 years in prison.
As of this recording, he's incarcerated at Lovelock Correctional Center, a state prison in Nevada.
The same day, Kelly was convicted of one count of arson and entered an Alford plea to one count of battery with a deadly weapon, resulting in significant bodily harm.
The Alford plea means she didn't admit guilt, but acknowledged that enough evidence existed to convict her.
She was sentenced to two consecutive terms of three to 13 years in prison.
Kelly ultimately served nine years at Florence McClure Women's Correctional Center
before being released on parole on October 24, 2017.
She filed for divorce from Craig in 2009, shortly after her conviction.
The divorce became final in 2017, the same year she was released.
Since his conviction, Craig has given more.
interviews, trying to argue for his innocence, he once told reporters that he wasn't even there
when Melissa died and that Kelly was the only one responsible.
That's not surprising. I even alluded to that being likely what would take place, given what we
know about his personality. Once Kelly's loyalty and her usefulness ran their course, and of course
she's divorced him or filed for divorce early on, he experienced possibly a narcissistic injury,
and that kind of ego wound often triggers rage or retaliation
because it threatens the illusion of superiority and control.
And by turning on Kelly, Craig was doing exactly what we'd expect in that dynamic.
He's protecting his ego and punishing her for no longer validating it
by rewriting the story and claiming to be the victim and her the perpetrator.
In doing so, he's trying to protect his self-image
and reassert dominance over her independence.
It's also a form of psychological projection,
assigning his own guilt and shame to her so he doesn't have to be
to face it himself. Kelly's act of leaving him wasn't just rejection to someone with a fragile
sense of self like Craig, it's humiliation. And rather than process that loss, he transformed it
into blame, ensuring that in his version of events, he is still the victim and she's still the
problem, a pattern of his that does not seem to have changed. It's possible this was Craig's
attempt to convince the parole board of his innocence. However, his earliest eligibility date isn't
until December 23, 26.
Craig and Kelly were driven by ambition
and the need to be seen as winners,
but their need for success became blinding,
and by chasing victory,
they lost everything that truly mattered.
Today, they remembered not for their bodybuilding triumphs,
but for the death and devastation they caused.
Thanks so much for listening.
Come back next time for a deep dive into the mind of another murderer.
Killer Minds is a Crimehouse original powered by Pave Studios.
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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 Dundis,
Sarah Tardiff, and Carrie Murphy. Of the many sources we used when researching this episode,
the one we found the most credible and helpful was Killer Bodies, a glamorous bodybuilding
couple, a love triangle, and a brutal murder by Michael Fleeman. Thank you for listening.
Getting ready for a game means being ready for anything. Like packing a spare stick. I like
to be prepared. That's why I remember 988, Canada's suicide crisis helpline. It's good to know,
just in case. Anyone can call or text for free confidential support from a
rain responder anytime. 988 suicide crisis helpline is funded by the government in Canada.
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.
