Money Crimes with Nicole Lapin - Born to Con Pt. 2: When Profit Turns Violent
Episode Date: April 19, 2026Sante Kimes and her son expanded their crimes beyond fraud. Their targets were chosen for money, property, and control. This episode follows how investigators uncovered the full scope of their operati...on. If you’re new here, don’t forget to follow Scams, Money and Murder to never miss a case! For Ad-free listening to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Scams, Money and Murder is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios 🎧 Need More to Binge? Listen to other Crime House Originals Clues, Crimes Of…, Crime House 24/7, Serial Killers & Murderous Minds, Murder True Crime Stories, and more wherever you get your podcasts! Follow me on Social 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, listeners, it's Vanessa Richardson.
Real quick before today's episode, I want to tell you about another show from
Crime House that I know you'll love, America's Most Infamous Crimes.
Hosted by Katie Ring, each week Katie takes on one of the most notorious criminal cases
in American history.
Serial killers who terrorized cities, unsolved mysteries that keep detectives up at night,
and investigations that change the way we think about justice.
Listen to and follow America's most infamous crimes.
Tuesday through Thursday on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
This is Crime House.
Blind Faith plays an important role in life.
Whether it's support from our friends, partners, or our parents, we often turn to others to steer us in the right direction.
Shantee Kimes expected her son Kenny to trust her implicitly, but she didn't develop that trust in a healthy way.
Eventually, Kenny had nothing and no one in his life except his mother.
And when Kenny took a leap of blind faith in Chantay, there was no turning back.
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 serial killers and murderous 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 serial killers and murderous minds and subscribe to Crimehouse Plus on Apple Podcasts
for ad-free early access to each two-part series.
Before we begin, please be advised that this episode contains descriptions of gun violence and murder.
Listener discretion is advised.
Today, we conclude our deep dive on Shanty.
Shantai Kimes, a con artist, fraudster, and killer, who used elaborate tricks to get what she wanted.
Following years of fraud and cruelty, Shante and her son, Kenny, carried out a string of crimes
across the United States in the 1990s.
But after a lifetime of lies, much of the truth about Shantay remains buried to this day.
While Vanessa guides you through the story, I'll be discussing things like the deep and bizarre
attachments, criminals sometimes form, how the power dynamics play out between those criminals,
especially when their parent and child, and why that child may go to unfathomable lengths to save
the very person who destroyed their life. And as always, we'll be asking the question,
what makes a killer? In September 1996, 62-year-old Chante Kimes and her son, 21-year-old
Kenny Kimes, allegedly murdered a banker in the Bahamas. And, September 1996, and her son, who
and dumped his body in the ocean. The man, Syed Bilal Ahmed, had tried to stop them from
fraudulently accessing funds in Shante's late husband Kenneth's offshore account. After Syed was
dead, Shante and Kenny escaped to Miami, Florida. Police investigated Syed's disappearance,
but never found him. Following his death, Shante kept trying to get the money from the account,
but it was out of reach. They were still living off of some of Kenneth's other well.
that Shantae had hidden from the rest of his family.
But even though they had plenty of money,
Shantay still turned to shoplifting
as one of her favorite pastimes.
Or it could be her impulse control issues
were more difficult for her to manage.
People with her personality structure often steal
not because they need the item,
but because the act itself gives them a sense of power,
excitement, or relief.
And right now, it would make sense
why she would turn to that.
In May of 1997,
she and Kenny strolled through a digital
discount store in downtown Miami, where Shantay tried to steal multiple tubes of lipstick.
An undercover police officer noticed what she was doing and tried to stop her, and Shanty started
swinging punches at him. Then she ran away. The officer grabbed Kenny before he could escape
too, and he was brought in for questioning. When officers ran his name through their system,
they didn't get any hits for him, but they did realize that the woman he'd been with at the store
was his mother, Shante Kimes, who had a long record. Kenny was eventually released,
but a judge issued a warrant for Shantay's arrest on a charge of strong-arm robbery.
Once again, Shanty and Kenny left town to escape the investigation. This time, they went back
to the West Coast, where they used Kenneth's remaining money to live lavishly. They rented out
an L.A. mansion under the aliases, Sandy and Manny Garon, paying
$8,000 cash up front for six months. Then they bought a brand new Lincoln town car from Kenneth's
former car dealer who was based in Utah, again hiding the fact that Kenneth had been dead for four
years. Chante paid for the car with a bad check and registered it under a false name. From there,
Shante hired a new group of household workers, this time pulling from classified ads and homeless
shelters. But she didn't just hire maids. Chante compiled a team of
accomplices. A former pizza delivery driver named Stan Patterson started running errands for her
and also acquired firearms for her and Kenny. Chantay also hired unwitting accomplices, such as an
unhoused man named Robert McCarran, who became Chanty and Kenneth's driver. Stan Robert and
the other employees noticed something about Chanty and Kenny right away. The mother and son
were close, too close. They were extremely affectionate and even slept
in the same room.
Sometimes people who didn't know them
mistook them for a couple.
In episode one, I talked about psychological enmeshment
and what it is, what it looks like, and how it develops.
So as a quick recap, enmeshment happens in relationships,
mostly families, when boundaries are blurred or non-existent
and people's identities, emotions, and needs
become so intertwined that it blocks autonomy.
So we already outlined how this dynamic formed
between Chantay and Kenny and how deeply it affected
his ability to function independently. But what we're seeing here is alarming, and most people would be
justified in their concern. From the outside, it's understandable why someone might worry about an inappropriate,
possibly even incestuous relationship. But in reality, this level of closeness is actually not
uncommon in profoundly enmeshed parent-child relationships. It is most certainly a breakdown of boundaries,
but not necessarily a sexual relationship. Shante has always relied,
on a partner for validation and emotional stability.
Kenneth has been dead for four years,
and during that time she's had no romantic partner to latch on to,
likely because she's had to maintain the appearance that he's still alive.
Historically, when she lacked a partner, she immediately chased a new one.
But now she's older.
She's under intense scrutiny, and she's fleeing multiple criminal investigations.
Kenny becomes the only consistent person in her orbit,
much like she is to him.
So she clings to him in the way she's always clung to partners.
And for someone as boundary blind as Chante, that affection and closeness can take forms that
look wildly inappropriate to outsiders.
But the function is the same.
It's emotional regulation, validation, and control.
She's controlling where Kenny slept, eliminating his privacy, and overwhelming him with affection.
All of those were her strategies.
They were ways to maintain her grip on him and reinforce the dependency that she'd been
engineering since he was a child. This is about possession and psychological fusion. It's not
necessarily sexual, but it is profoundly unhealthy. Do you think Shante's behavior with Kenny ties back
to her past with her older brother? Do you think she was possibly continuing that cycle of
abuse with her son? Well, it's definitely possible. When a child's first lessons about
closeness come from someone who violates boundaries, it can distort their understanding of what
intimacy and connection are supposed to look like. Those early experiences can carry into adulthood,
but I do want to dispel the myth that everyone who is abused goes on to abuse others. That's simply
not true. However, it is true that many people who do become abusive have their own history of
trauma. And that's not because their trauma or their abuse turns them into abusers, but because
it disrupts healthy attachment, distorts boundaries, and sometimes normalizes dynamics that should never
feel normal, especially when there's no intervention, education, or support. In Chanty's case,
those blurred boundaries from childhood may have made it harder for her to recognize what was appropriate
and harder for her to build relationships that weren't rooted in control. So while we can't draw a straight
line from her trauma to her behavior, we can say her early experiences could have set the stage
for patterns that she did repeat with Kenny in the end.
Kenny was clearly willing to do whatever his mother asked of him,
and in early 1998, Chanty enlisted Kenny's help in another sinister scheme.
Their cash was starting to run low,
so Chanty transferred the deed of her Las Vegas house
into the name of an acquaintance, David Cazden, without telling him.
Then she forged his identity to take out a large loan against the property.
Every dollar went straight into her own account.
Finally, the house went up in flames, which investigators later ruled as arson.
Weeks later, David Kazden learned that he owed $280,000 for the incinerated house.
David was shocked and started looking into the matter.
That's when he learned that an insurance policy on the house had been taken out under the name Robert McCarran, Chante's new employee.
David had dealt with Chante before and immediately recognized her scheme.
He hired a lawyer and a private investigator to get to the bottom of things,
then called Chanty and told her he was going to out her.
Chanty was furious.
No one had ever stood up to her like this before, and she wouldn't stand for it.
That's where Kenny came in.
On March 13, 1998, he loaded the Lincoln Town car with heavy-duty plastic bags,
duct tape, a pair of black gloves, and a gun.
Then he drove to David's house, knocked on the door,
door and shot him in cold blood. He cleaned up the scene, then stuffed David's body into the trunk
of his own car, drove to an area near the Los Angeles International Airport, and left his body
in a dumpster. Kenny abandoned David's car before returning to the Lincoln and driving home.
So let's discuss what would allow Kenny to do Shantay's bidding so easily. And before I go into this,
I want to emphasize that this is an explanation, not an excuse.
I've outlined most of this already, but years of dependency, isolation, and emotional control
likely impaired Kenny's ability to see himself as separate from his mother.
Her needs became his obligations.
Her enemies became his problems to solve.
And the more he conformed to her expectations, the more his moral boundaries weakened.
That's what happens when your identity is built around pleasing someone who has no boundaries
of their own.
And that can happen in very severe and meshed relationships like this.
He had been conditioned to play this role his entire life, and that's deeply sad when you consider how his development was shaped.
But it's also true that he was an adult with the capacity for rational thought.
Both things can be true at once.
His autonomy was damaged, but not erased, and that's what makes this kind of case so psychologically complex.
You can see the harm that shaped him, and you can also see the choices that he ultimately made.
How is it that neither of them seem to recognize their own destructive patterns?
Well, for Chante, recognizing her own destructive patterns would mean acknowledging vulnerability, responsibility, and limits.
That is not tolerable for someone with strong narcissistic and antisocial traits.
So instead of seeing patterns, they see problems caused by other people, not problems that they're causing to other people.
And for Kenny, the issue is different.
His lack of recognition is rooted in years of conditioning, like I mentioned.
He's insulated in an ecosystem that was built and controlled by Chanty.
It's very coercive, almost like he's been indoctrinated.
There was no healthy outside relationships or even contrast to help him recognize that what he was doing was harmful or even abnormal.
But at the same time, they both knew that they were breaking the law because they were both going to great lengths to hide their crimes.
Once again, Shante and Kenny's lives were completely uprooted, and it was their own fault.
David's body was found the next day, and the LAPD launched a homicide investigation.
Pretty soon they connected with arson investigators in Las Vegas.
When the LAPD learned about the suspicious deed transfer, they quickly zeroed in on 64-year-old
Chante and 23-year-old Kenny as their prime suspects.
But they couldn't bring the mother-son duo into the station because they'd already skipped town.
They packed their bags and drove the link into Palm Beach, Florida.
where they planned their next move.
Chante knew they needed to pull off something big,
something that would set them up for life.
She'd been eyeing New York City,
and she started researching wealthy New Yorkers she could target.
Chante floated around elite social circles in Palm Beach
and chatted with people casually about wanting to move to New York.
People were eager to name-drop their high-profile contacts,
and Chanty took note of each one.
She even wrote people's names in a notebook.
Finally, she narrowed it down to who she believed was the most vulnerable target,
82-year-old Irene Silverman, a former ballerina who owned a townhouse on East 65th Street in Manhattan.
Irene rented out rooms in her home, and Chante thought this would be the perfect way in.
She and Kenny could pose as people looking for a place to stay.
Next, Chantay checked title records and confirmed that Irene was the sole owner
and that the property carried no liens.
She also learned that the elegant townhouse was worth a whopping $7 million, and it could all belong to her and Kenny.
All they had to do was get close to Irene, forge some paperwork, and then get rid of her.
I think it's clear that Chante is motivated by greed, but this level of planning in detail really shows how much she needs to feel in control, validated and dominant.
She consistently gravitates towards wealth and status and influence as a way to protect herself emotionally and practically.
So targeting Irene was her way of reclaiming a sense of superiority after years of instability, legal consequences, and the loss of her husband.
And she's specifically targeting somebody that she knows is also vulnerable.
Irene is elderly, and she's the sole owner of this townhome, making her a perfect target.
Chante's personality structure also thrives on manipulation and thrill.
When she's not planning something, she's stealing something.
She needs to feel mastery, entitlement, or both.
And of course, her relationship with Kenny plays a role in this.
Keeping him dependent ensures that he won't question her,
which means her plans, her worldview,
and their relationship all remain intact.
Has Chante learned from her past mistakes as a criminal?
I don't mean morally, because obviously she has not learned anything morally,
but as far as the high level of planning for this next chapter,
Is this another form of thrill-seeking for her?
It doesn't look like Chanty learned from her past mistakes at all, morally or otherwise,
because if anything, her crimes become more elaborate.
All of this planning and detail is part of the thrill for someone like her for all the reasons I outlined,
but also the risk reinforces her belief that she's smarter than everyone else.
So this isn't growth or insight.
This is actually escalation.
Chante was not only prepared.
she was able to act totally natural when she carried out step one of her plan.
In May 1998, Chante phoned Irene Silverman and introduced herself with a fake name.
She casually name-dropped a supposed mutual acquaintance to build trust,
then explained that her son, Mani Garon, needed a short-term apartment in New York.
Step one was a success.
Irene agreed to rent out apartment 1B, and they scheduled a move-in date for June 15th.
Chantey and Kenny packed their bags and headed for the townhouse on East 65th Street in Manhattan,
where less than one month later, they'd unleash hell.
By the beginning of June 1998, 64-year-old Chantay Kimes and 23-year-old Kenny Kimes were headed to New York City to close in on their next mark,
82-year-old Irene Silverman, who had agreed to rent an apartment to Kenny, who she believed was named Manny Garen,
in her townhouse on East 65th Street in Manhattan.
They arrived on June 14th,
and Irene welcomed them inside the six-story home.
Irene lived on the top two floors,
but her office was located on the first floor.
As soon as they stepped inside,
Kenny played the part of a polite young man from Palm Beach.
He handed over $6,000 in cash.
Then Irene wrote and signed a receipt, which she gave to him.
At the same time, though,
Irene felt a little suspicious of him.
Even though he was polite, something just seemed off.
Irene only became more skeptical over the next few days
when she noticed a strange woman going in and out of her new tenant's apartment.
Of course, Shante had snuck into apartment 1B.
Kenny told anyone who asked that she was his secretary,
and what Irene didn't realize was that while she was keeping an eye on them,
they were watching her too.
Irene's office was in apartment 1A, right across from the unit Kenny and Chantay were staying in.
They watched her closely and learned her routine.
One day when Irene was out and none of her employees were around,
they attached a listening device to her phone line.
Then they started eavesdropping on Irene's calls so they could learn enough about her to feign her identity.
Chante kept track of their progress in a notebook.
Each day, she jotted down reminders and items on a to-do list.
like get signature, get checks, get keys, and get social security number.
That last one would be the hardest.
In an attempt to figure it out, Chante called Irene one day,
pretending to be a sweepstakes employee and claimed Irene had won a free trip,
but Irene wasn't easily fooled and hung up.
However, Chante was able to cross Irene's signature off the list
since Irene had signed the receipt she gave to Kenny.
She used it as an example to forge Irene's signature on a deed of sale that would pass ownership of the house to a shell company that Chanty operated.
Chanty knew the document alone wouldn't be good enough.
If she wanted it to pass, she'd need to get it notarized.
If she wanted to do that, she'd have to pass as Irene.
So she made an appointment for a notary to come by the apartment on July 1st.
Then she bought a red wig that looked like Irene's hair.
On the day of the appointment, while wearing the wig,
Shantay climbed into bed, tucked herself into the blankets
so she was barely visible and pretended to be sick.
She thought this would be enough to pass herself off as Irene,
but she was wrong.
When the notary arrived, they realized right away what was going on and left.
However, this still wasn't enough to dissuade Shanty and Kenny.
Kenny simply contacted another notary who came the next day,
And this time the ruse worked.
She notarized the deed, as well as some other real estate papers that Kenny had pulled out at the last minute.
It's not surprising at all that she'd go through these theatrics to reach her end goal.
Chante loves a performance.
She loves the thrill, and she carries this entitlement.
People with strong, antisocial, or narcissistic traits often developed something called optimism bias.
They overestimate positive outcomes, like they won't get caught,
and they underestimate negative outcomes, like how blatantly risky that was.
The payoff is too exciting.
The goal is too important to them, and the thrill of the manipulation becomes part of the reward.
So in that sense, this fits her personality structure perfectly.
But what is shocking, and what I think our listeners are probably responding to and we'll agree to this,
because I'm sure they're sitting there with their jaws to the floor like we are, Vanessa,
is how much she's willing to risk just for those thrills and for that end goal.
When that first notary sees through the act, Shantae doesn't panic or rethink the plan.
If she was worried that that specific notary would report what she was doing, which is clearly trying to be, you know, engage in fraud, she clearly didn't show it.
Instead, she continued to see opportunity and perhaps even felt more pressure because she just tries again and she does it in a very fast pace.
And this is because getting caught isn't a deterrent for her.
It's an inconvenience.
The theatrics of it all just reinforce her internal belief that she's clever enough, bold enough, and superior enough to pull off anything that she decides to do.
So with the documents notarized, Chante and Kenny were so confident they'd pull their scheme off, they started recruiting people to help run the townhouse after they took it over.
They contacted their old acquaintance, Stanley Patterson, who worked for them in L.A. and got them guns,
and asked him to fly to New York to become the manager of the building. What they didn't know was that the
authorities had gotten to Stanley first. L.A. detectives had traced the gun used to kill David
Kasden back to Stanley. They told Stanley he could be charged in connection with Kasden's murder
unless he cooperated. So when Chante called Stanley, he agreed to meet her in
Penny in New York on July 5th.
Then Stanley told police, and the LAPD, NYPD, and the FBI formed a joint task force.
Their plan was to ambush Shante and Kenny during that meeting.
However, Shante and Kenny had additional plans of their own.
On July 3rd, two days before the scheduled meeting,
Kenny confirmed with Irene's housekeeper that only Irene and another employee, Martha Rivera,
would be in her office on the fifth.
That morning, just before noon, Martha left and went upstairs to her own apartment, leaving Irene alone.
When the building was quiet, Kenny and Chante forced their way into Irene's office.
Chanty stunned Irene with a taser, and Kenny allegedly choked her until she stopped breathing.
Irene Silverman was dead.
Kenny then carried her across the hall to his apartment, where he placed her in the bathtub before
he and Chanty returned to the office.
They gathered Irene's personal documents, financial papers,
checkbooks, and $10,000 in cash she had stashed away.
Kenny also took Irene's set of keys.
After that, they hauled Irene's body into a large black duffel bag,
which Kenny placed in a Lincoln's trunk.
When he came back, Chanty was cleaning the apartment with rubbing alcohol.
When she finished, they grabbed the rest of their belongings,
piled them in the backseat of the car and drove off.
There was a lot of detailed planning that went into the takeover and ultimate murder of Irene.
We call this instrumental violence, a type of harm committed out of calculated intention.
And research consistently shows that instrumental violence is far more common in individuals with antisocial traits
because it requires emotional detachment, long-term planning,
and a willingness to use another person purely as a means to.
an end. And with Irene, there was months of monitoring her movements, brainstorming, manipulating
notaries, and now this. And this is someone acting with confidence, entitlement, and superiority.
The methodical nature also shows how completely she had absorbed Kenny into her thinking.
When someone is this enmeshed, the crime becomes a shared mission. She was willing to pull her son
deeper into the behavior, reinforcing their bond through secrecy, risk, and shared guilt. That's
a hallmark of coercive controlling relationships. The more extreme the shared act, the stronger the
psychological hold. And this was a calculated decision by someone who believed that she was intouchable
and who saw planning a murder the way other people plan a home renovation. It's unnerving. And it's
also exactly what we expect when entitlement, manipulation, and thrill of control all come
together like that. What level of obedience would this require from Kenny? I mean, has Chante just completely
taken control of his mind at this point? So obedience at this level requires years of conditioning,
dependency, and a lack of identity or autonomy. This is unfortunately exactly what Chanty created in
Kenny, but I want to be clear she didn't take control of his mind. It's not like mind control or
anything. It's coercive influence layered over developmental vulnerability. Remember,
Kenny grew up without autonomy, without stable attachments, and without opportunities to form his own
identity. Chante isolated him. She interfered with any relationships he tried to form, and she taught him that
loyalty to her was the only path to safety. And by the time Irene entered the picture, or by the time they
got here, his ability to think independently or challenge her was very compromised. So the obedience
required here psychologically, like we covered previously, comes from a place of enmeshment,
fear, loyalty, and identity fusion. Kenny wasn't functioning as a
a separate adult, making separate decisions. And that's what makes this so tragic. His autonomy
wasn't erased, but it was so distorted that obeying her felt like the only viable option.
And again, this is not an excuse. It's just an explanation of how he got here.
Do you think there's anything that could have prevented this for Kenny?
Several things could have interrupted Kenny's path long before he reached this point, and the biggest
factor would have been consistent outside influence, like from teachers, mentors, friends, therapists,
anyone who could have shown him a different version of relationships and helped him build a sense of self separate from Chante.
Isolation is what made him vulnerable, but connection is what could have protected him.
He needed to learn stable boundaries and he needed space from Chanty, physical, emotional, and psychological space.
That would have given him perspective.
There was one plan that fell through, however.
On the other side of town, federal agents picked up Stanley Patterson at the airport and drove him to the Hilton Hotel in Manhattan.
Shantay had told Stanley to meet her there at 11 a.m.
At 1130, Chanty called to say she and Kenny were delayed by car trouble, and Stanley said he would wait.
Stanley waited for hours before Chanty and Kenny ever arrived.
And in the meantime, Irene's employee, Martha Iver, made a frightening discovery.
At 4.42 p.m., Martha knocked on her office door, but there was no answer.
Martha opened the door and noticed that not only were Irene's things missing, including the $10,000
in cash, but she was nowhere to be found. Martha feared that Irene had been robbed and kidnapped,
so she called the police. Officers arrived and searched the entire townhouse, and soon they
discovered something puzzling. When they entered Department 1B, they found that the
tenant known as Manny had banished as well. All that was left behind was a roll of duct tape,
a box of heavy trash bags with four missing, and a shower curtain with no liner. Then just before
five o'clock, Chante stopped at the Plaza Hotel and checked a small black duffel bag with plans
to pick it up later that day. Then she walked over to the Hilton and found Stanley, who was
sitting at the bar wearing a large cowboy hat. Chante said Kenny would be.
be there soon. Over drinks, she went over Stanley's duties as the new manager of the townhouse
they were buying. She didn't know that FBI agents hovered in the background. They didn't want to move
until Kenny and Chanty were both there. Just after 6.30, Chanty and Stanley left the Hilton to
stroll through a street fair just outside. As they walked, Chanty spotted Kenny up ahead. He looked
sweaty and exhausted. She hugged him. Then Stanley stepped forward to say hello.
removing his hat in the process. That was his cue to the agents waiting in the wings.
Suddenly, the street was swarming with law enforcement. Several men jumped on Kenny and wrestled him
to the ground. He fought back, but it was no use. Sante was handcuffed and watched as Kenny was frisked.
She saw them remove a knife and a set of brass knuckles from Kenny's pockets, and then she noticed
that he had urinated on himself. Shante and Kenny were placed in separate.
squad cars. A detective took Shantay's purse and immediately noticed how heavy it was. He looked inside,
expecting to find a weapon. Instead, he found stacks of cash, almost $10,000. Authorities knew all about
Chanty's history with various fraud and robbery charges, but still, this was a lot of money.
The detective dug through Shanty's purse some more and found something else. Underneath all the
cash was a slip of paper to collect her bag.
at the plaza. Shante didn't realize the detective had found the slip of paper, so from the backseat,
she made excuses about the $10,000. She claimed it was hers and that she was on vacation. She said,
quote, you can never come to New York with less than $10,000. Whatever story Chante was trying
to sell them, authorities wouldn't let her and Kenny feed off each other. They were placed in
separate rooms, and they were both told they were suspected of stealing a car from a dealer in
Utah. Chanty seemed relieved to hear this was the only thing she was supposedly in trouble for,
but the more questions Kenny was asked, the more agitated he became. Then, when he learned
that Chanty was being held in a room two doors down, he started shouting after every question,
Mom, what should I do? And this is a classic sign of extreme dependency in exactly what we would expect
from everything I'd described. His entire sense of stability came from her directing his thoughts,
emotions, and decisions. He was never allowed to develop internal coping skills. He didn't learn how
to regulate himself, how to make independent choices, or even how to trust his own judgment.
He'd spent his whole life responding to her cues and relying on her to define what's right,
what's wrong, and what comes next. So now he doesn't know how to function without her. He's too
psychologically dependent, to the point that his entire world falls apart the one.
moment she isn't there to hold it together.
When detectives realized how panicked Kenny was, they decided to search him again.
This time, they found a number of credit cards and IDs belonging to an elderly Florida
lawyer, a Florida ID card in the name of Manny Garin, and an American Express card belonging
to Irene Silverman.
At this point, the members of the task force had no idea who Irene Silverman was.
The investigators thought Kenny and Chante had stolen these items from people they
encountered on their way from California to New York. Pretty soon, they were also one step closer
to nabbing Chanty and Kenny for stealing the car because they also found two sets of keys
and a parking stub for a Manhattan garage. Someone was dispatched to the garage where they found the
Lincoln. The car had temporary Utah plates, and the back seat was piled high with luggage,
plastic bags, and papers. Between all this evidence, Chanty and Kenny were booked on fraud charges,
and bail was set at $20,000.
It was a good start, but they still needed more proof
that Chantay and Kenny had murdered David Kazden.
For the next two days, the task force awaited the arrival of LAPD detectives.
Meanwhile, the disappearance of Irene Silverman made headline news.
Police had fanned out around the city looking for her
and held a press conference asking for the public's help.
Pretty soon, authorities realized who was really.
really sitting in their interrogation room.
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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 Hixed. 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.
In July of 1998, NYPD detectives were on the hunt for Irene Silverman and whoever was behind her sudden disappearance.
During a press conference, they said they were searching for Irene's tenant who had also disappeared, a man named Manny Garen.
Another NYPD detective who was part of the Joint Task Force saw the news and realized that Manny Garen was sitting in his interrogation room because he was actually Kenny Kimes.
Now that authorities were all on the same page, the task force realized they might know where Irene's body was.
Detectives returned to the Lincoln and searched it again, looking more closely at the jumble of items in the back seat.
In addition to luggage, plastic bags, and papers, they found many items, including a jar of roofies, syringes, gloves, mace, and multiple notebooks.
The trunk was empty, except for a large room.
black duffel bag, big enough for a person to fit inside. But when they opened it up, Irene wasn't
there. However, back at the station, authorities realized that the keys found in Kenny's pockets
belonged to Irene. However, they still didn't have any evidence to physically connect Shante and
Kenny to Irene's disappearance. As their investigation continued, Shantay and Kenny
lawyered up. Chante urged her lawyer to retrieve the small black duffel bag she had checked at the
Plaza Hotel. But police beat them there. Someone had remembered the slip of paper found in Chanty's
purse. On July 23rd, a little more than two weeks after Irene's murder, police figured out that
it was a ticket for something she'd checked at the plaza. They issued a subpoena and retrieved
a small black duffel bag. When they opened it, they found a 22-caliber,
semi-automatic gun, masks, stolen credit cards, more notebooks, and a folder labeled
Final Dynasty. Inside this folder was the forged deed to Irene Silverman's house.
Detectives now felt certain that they had their killers. However, without a body, the case
would be hard to prosecute. In the meantime, while authorities worked to build a murder case,
Chantay and Kenny were indicted for credit card fraud. They immediately applied for bail,
which was denied. Between July and November 1998, Shantay and Kenny applied for bail 13 times
and were denied by nine different judges. Los Angeles authorities wanted to extradite them
back to California in connection with the murder of David Kasden. However, the New York District
Attorney's Office finally decided to proceed with murder charges of their own, even though they
couldn't find Irene Silverman's body.
Chante and Kenny were indicted on 84 counts between the two of them, including conspiracy, forgery, weapons possession, grand larceny, and second-degree murder.
Their trial began in early 2000 and lasted almost four months.
Prosecutors laid out an elaborate history of Chanty and Kenny's fraud and deception.
They outlined Chanty's schemes in California, Las Vegas, the Bahamas, Florida, and finally,
New York. They presented all the evidence in Irene's murder investigation and called witnesses
including Stan Patterson, who sold them the gun, Robert McCarran, who had briefly worked as their
driver in L.A., and both notaries that Chante and Kenny had met with in New York. But the most
dramatic evidence came from Irene Silverman herself, because as it turned out, Irene had recorded
the call in which Chanty tried to trick her into providing her social security number.
Not only that, but everything Chante had said in the recording was scripted in one of her notebooks.
Shantay had clearly planned this out from the start.
So it's interesting because I don't think Chanty wrote everything down in notebooks because she wanted to be organized.
I think it was because it was another way for her to feel powerful, in control, prepared, and a step ahead.
And like we've seen throughout both episodes so far, and in a lot of episodes,
we have covered that involve individuals who are overly confident or entitled, they assume that they
can control every variable. They don't imagine getting caught, so they don't imagine things like this
becoming evidence. That's optimism bias, again, at work. The, it won't happen to me mindset.
And ultimately, that superiority and overconfidence often becomes the very thing that takes them down
in the end. These notebooks exposed her plans, her intentions, her targets, and even the steps she and
Kenny took. It's a striking example of how her need for control and precision ultimately
stripped her of both of those things. After 43 days of testimony, 129 witnesses and over 10,000
pages of transcript, the prosecution rested. Then the defense pushed back hard. They argued that
there was nobody, no blood, no DNA, no proof at all that a murder had even occurred. They said
the prosecution's case might have sounded compelling, but it was built entirely on circumstantial
evidence, and that there was no proof that Chanty had actually written what was in the notebooks.
Neither Chanty nor Kenny took the stand. Instead, they sat close together at the defense table,
often holding hands, until the judge told them to stop. The jury deliberated for three days,
and on May 18, 2000, they reached their verdicts. In the crowded courtroom,
mother and son sat perfectly still as the jury forewoman rose and read all the verdicts.
Chante and Kenny were found guilty on every single count.
They were both facing life in prison for their crimes in New York.
At sentencing, a month later, Chanty was allowed to address the court.
True to form, she used her time not to apologize, but to lash out,
criticizing nearly everyone involved in the trial.
At one point, she stood up and said, quote,
This is the first time in United States history
that an innocent mother and son
had been convicted of a crime that didn't happen.
She kept talking until the judge finally made her sit down.
Even facing life in prison, Chante couldn't resist performing.
This is another very common behavior in individuals
with narcissistic trades and a strong need for control.
It's a psychological defense mechanism,
and I talked about it a little bit in episode one.
If Chante can reframe herself as the victim as the misunderstood figure at the center of some conspiracy,
then she doesn't have to confront the reality of what she's done,
and she can maintain a reputation and image that she's comfortable with.
Admitting guilt would mean admitting weakness, flaws, and a loss of control,
and those are intolerable to someone with her personality structure.
So she does the only thing she knows how to do.
She performs.
She reframes, blames,
and distorts. In her mind, if she can control the story, she can control the outcome,
especially if she is facing life in prison, because to her, what is there to lose? Not that
consequences ever meant anything to her in the first place. The only thing that matters is
maintaining her image and her identity, and that is someone too clever to be caught, too
important to be wrong, and too special to be guilty. So this is her last grasp at power.
Shante's words did little to sway the judge, who sentenced her and Kenny to the maximum sentences possible.
Chante, 120 years to life.
Kenny, 126.
But the legal system wasn't done with him yet.
They still faced extradition to California for David Kasden's murder.
And if they were convicted of first-degree murder in California, they could face the death penalty.
which is why they weren't done fighting.
From prison, Chante contacted reporters
so that she and Kenny could tell their side of the story.
On July 19, 2000, CNN sent Larry King to speak to her in prison.
However, Chante was just as insincere
as she'd been during her sentencing hearing.
When Larry King asked her if she thought she'd done nothing wrong,
Chantay said, of course she had.
she'd grown up homeless and used to steal cheese.
No matter what, Chante couldn't help but play the victim.
She even denied all her past convictions
and claimed her first husband's family members
were actually the ones guilty of slavery
against household employees,
and they'd set her up.
Suffice it to say, Chanty's interview didn't help her reputation.
So she set up another sit-down with court TV.
However, that didn't do anything to help improve her reputation
either. So next, it was Kenny's turn, and his tactics made matters even worse for the mother and son.
In October 2000, Kenny agreed to do an interview with court TV from his jail cell.
A reporter named Maria Zone arrived at the maximum security state prison in upstate New York.
Once she was there, Kenny quickly made it clear he had no intention of going through with the
interview as planned. Instead, he grabbed Maria and held a bar.
ballpoint pen to her throat. He refused to let her go unless authorities agreed not to extradite
his mother to California. After four tense hours, authorities finally agreed to spare Chante from the
death penalty and Kenny let Maria go unharmed. In exchange, Kenny agreed to plead guilty to David
Kasden's murder and testify against Chante. This was an action driven by desperation, especially when
you understand Kenny's psychology and the years of conditioning that he'd been subjected to.
Taking the reporter hostage was him in pure crisis mode, trying to save his mother's life. He reacted
the only way he knew how, which was impulsively, dramatically, and with total disregard for the
consequences. I don't think he was thinking long-term in that moment at all. But once that immediate
crisis passed and he succeeded in protecting her, he faced a new crisis, which was his own survival.
And for the first time, he had to rely on his own instincts, which was independent of Chanty.
He had to figure out how to protect himself without her directing every move.
So while it looks contradictory because it certainly does, he agreed to testify against her after saving her life.
Psychologically, it actually isn't.
Testifying doesn't undo the protection he'd already secured for her, and it didn't put her life at risk.
But it did help him safeguard his own.
And for someone who never made a truly independent decision before,
That shift from protecting her to protecting himself is actually a sign that this dependency of his was starting to actually fracture just a little bit.
Kenny might have understood what it meant to hold himself to account because he held up his end of the bargain and then some.
He went on to tell investigators everything about he and his mother's string of crimes, including details of Irene's killing.
He said that he had dumped her body in New Jersey, although it was never found.
Kenny also confessed to helping Shantae murder Syed Bilal Ahmed in the Bahamas back in 1996.
Kenny claimed they drugged him, drowned him, and then dumped his body in the ocean.
However, no charges have ever been filed against Shante or Kenny for Ahmed's death.
Finally, Shante and Kenny were found guilty of David Kasden's murder in July 2004.
They both received additional life sentences as a result.
After more than a decade in prison, Chante died of natural causes in her cell at the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility in Westchester County, New York, in May 2014.
She was 79 years old.
Today, Kenny remains incarcerated at Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility in San Diego County, California.
He will spend the rest of his life confined from the outside world the same way Chante had raised him.
Kenny's blind faith in Chante led him down a rabbit hole of deceit, violence, and death.
And in the end, they both ended up all alone.
Thanks so much for listening.
Join us next week for a deep dive into the mind of another murderer.
Serial Killers and Murderous Minds is a Crimehouse Original Original, Powered by Pave Studios.
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Serial Killers and Murderous 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 Serial Killers and Murderous Minds team.
Max Cutler, Ron Shapiro, Alex Benadon, Lori Maranelli, Natalie Pertzowski, Sarah Kamp, Heather Dundas,
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 they call them grifters by Alice McQuillen.
Thank you for listening.
A mother is on trial for allegedly luring her own son-in-law to his death
and her search history may have given away everything.
This is Vanessa, the host of Crime House 24-7.
Right now in a Utah courtroom, 60-year-old Tracy Grist is standing trial for murder,
accused of masterminding a family plot to kill her son-in-law, Matthew Rostelli.
Prosecutors say Matthew was lured from California under the pretense of picking up his wife and kids.
What he didn't know, he was walking into a trap.
Within seconds, he was shot seven times, three of them in the back.
And months before the killing, investigators say Tracy sent a text to one of her daughters that read,
quote, Matt made it so I want to kill him.
He straight up lied, I'm going to kill him, end quote.
Hear the rest of that story and never miss another on Crimehouse 24-7.
where we cover breaking true crime news daily.
Follow Crimehouse 24-7 wherever you listen to podcasts,
so you never miss a story as it breaks.
Thanks for listening to today's episode.
Not sure what to listen to next?
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