Money Crimes with Nicole Lapin - The Burger Chef Murders, Robbery Gone Wrong Pt. 1
Episode Date: January 8, 2026In November 1978, four young employees were finishing a late shift at the Burger Chef fast food restaurant in Speedway, Indiana. Later that night, they disappeared… and were later found dead on the ...outskirts of town. The police had no idea who murdered them — or why. If you’re new here, don’t forget to follow Scams, Money and Murder to never miss a case! For Ad-free listening and early access 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 Daily, Killer 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, Crime House community. It's Vanessa Richardson.
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For so many young people, a job flipping burgers is a right of passage. Their first paychecks, their first co-workers, their first co-workers, their first coworkers, their first, their first,
adult responsibilities.
When everything about working is brand new, even scrubbing grease of a stove can be kind of
fun, at least if you're doing it alongside your friends.
That's how four young employees felt during their closing shift at the Burger Chef
Fast Food Restaurant in Speedway, Indiana, on November 17, 1978.
At 11 p.m. that night, they were laughing and chatting as they locked the doors and started
to clean the kitchen.
But by midnight, when another co-worker stopped by to check on them, the entire closing crew had vanished without a trace.
None of them would ever be seen alive again, and their killers would never be brought to justice.
Keep your friends close, but your enemies closer.
It's not just a saying.
It's a means of survival because in the world we're entering trust is a trap and betrayal is often fatal.
I'm Carter Roy, and this is scams, money, and murder.
And I'm Vanessa Richardson.
Every Thursday, we'll explore the story of a money-motivated crime gone wrong, whether it's a notorious con, fraud, burglary, or even murder.
From the archives of Crime House, The Show, Murder True Crime Stories, and Killer Minds,
these are some of our favorite cases that have kept us lying awake at night wondering
if money didn't make the world go round, could all this have been avoided?
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Please support us by rating, reviewing, and following scams, money, and murder wherever you get
your podcasts. This story comes from the archives of murder true crime stories. It's the first of two
episodes on the Burger Chef murders, a horrific unsolved quadruple homicide that's baffled investigators
for nearly 50 years. On the surface, it seemed to be the result of a fast food robbery gone
terribly wrong. But as the investigation went on, it seemed to go much deeper than that. Today,
I'll walk you through the night for promising young people were kidnapped and killed.
Next time, in part two, I'll take you through the investigation and the many obstacles detectives faced,
including a number of critical errors that were committed during the investigation.
Finally, I'll reveal who some detectives believe committed this terrible crime
and why we may never know the truth.
All that and more coming up.
On November 17th, 1978, business was good at Indiana's favorite fast food joint,
Burger Chef.
With a Thanksgiving holiday coming up in Speedway, Indiana, it was the perfect time for folks
to fill up on Big Chef and Super Chef burgers.
Orders quickly flew from kitchen to counter, thanks in no small part, to 20.
year old assistant manager Jane Freight, who always made sure every customer left happy.
Jane was born on May 2, 1958, to George and Carolyn Freight of Terre Haute, Indiana.
Around 1970, Jane's family moved to the Indianapolis area where she would eventually
attend Avon High School.
From an early age, Jane showed herself to be ambitious and hardworking, and when she was
17, she started working for Burger Chef. At that time, it was one of the largest hamburger chains
in Indiana. Unlike most kids working in fast food, Shane saw her job as more than a chance to
earn some spending money. It was a career. She knew that Burger Chef liked to promote from within,
so she made herself indispensable, hoping to work her way up to a high-paying corporate job.
In May of 1978, when Jane was 20, she transferred to the Speedway Burger Chef location at 5725 Crawfordsville Road.
Just three months later, in August, she was promoted to assistant manager,
wanting to make the most of the opportunity, she worked 52-hour weeks and took on any extra responsibility she could.
Despite the long hours, Jane always had a special.
smile on her face. Her sunny disposition was so well known, her customers nicknamed her
Sweet Jane. It's not easy to find an employee as dedicated as Jane, especially in fast food.
Corporate even decided to put her in charge of a location of her own starting the next year.
Though she didn't know it yet, she was slated to be a store manager before she turned 21.
And Jane wasn't the only ambitious employee at the Speedway Burger Chef.
17-year-old Ruth Ellen Shelton was intelligent and driven.
But unlike Jane, she didn't see herself staying at Burger Chef long term.
Ruth loaded her high school schedule with honors classes in math and science.
After graduating, she hoped to study computer science at a prestigious university.
And she wasn't short on extracurriculars either,
On weekends, Ruth sang in her church's choir and enjoyed studying the Bible.
With so much on her plate, Ruth wasn't able to keep up with a long hour she was expected to put in at Burger Chef.
She'd resigned a few weeks earlier, though she agreed to stay on through the busy holiday season.
As Ruth was moving on from her job at Burger Chef, 16-year-old Daniel Davis was just getting started.
and he was just as ambitious as his coworkers.
Daniel hoped to join the U.S. Air Force after graduating high school, just like his older brother had done.
To prepare, he joined the Civil Air Patrol, the Air Force's volunteer program for young civilians.
While he endured the long wait to enlist, Daniel fed his passion by photographing airplanes.
He even learned to develop the photos himself and talked his parents into helping him set up.
a home dark room.
When he wasn't on air patrol, taking photos, or working his 20 to 30 hours per week at Burger
Chef, Daniel was an honor roll student at Decatur Central High School.
With his work ethic and academic ability, everyone who knew Daniel felt he would be a great
asset to the Air Force when the time came.
The fourth and final employee working that night was 16-year-old Mark Fleming's, born on
December 31st, 1961. Most teenagers would have found it frustrating to have their birthday on New Year's
Eve, but it didn't matter much to Mark. As devout Jehovah Witnesses, his family didn't celebrate
birthdays or holidays in general. The Flemmons were one of very few black families in Speedway
at the time. Mr. and Mrs. Flemmons knew their children stood out in the community, both for their
race and their unusual faith. Because of that, they felt it was their duty to raise model citizens.
Mark and his six older siblings spent most of their time at home studying religious materials,
and when Mark wanted to get an after-school job, his father told him he'd need to bring his grades
up first. So Mark did just that. In August 1978, his dad finally gave him permission to work as a short-order
cook at burger chef. It was a huge deal for Mark. He wanted to prove to his parents and his
co-workers that they could rely on him. So when 17-year-old Ginger Haggard asked if anyone could
cover her shift on Friday night while she went on a date, Mark offered to help. At the last minute,
though, he changed his mind and asked the store manager if he could back out of the shift,
but it was too late to find someone else. And Mark agreed.
to stay.
So, on the night of November 17th, 1978, Mark was at Burger Chef with Jane, Ruth, and Daniel.
Daniel's shift ended a little earlier than the others, but another employee called in saying
his van had broken down, so Daniel got his parents' permission to stay late and help close.
Sadly, it was the last shift they would ever work.
Besides the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday,
the Burger Chef in Speedway, Indiana had another reason to schedule four people for the late shift that Friday night.
On November 17, 1978, CBS was broadcasting the Star Wars holiday special nationwide.
As part of a licensing deal, Burger Chef was offering the Star Wars Fun Meal.
The special aired from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. that left just one hour for Star Wars fans excited
by the special to get their fun meals before Burger Chef closed at 11. After that, the four young
employees on the closing shift plan to spend the next hour or so cleaning the kitchen and
getting the restaurant ready to reopen the next morning. As I mentioned, 16-year-old Daniel
Davis wasn't supposed to be one of those four. According to FBI files,
Another employee was originally scheduled to close, but this person had a history of performance issues, and his termination had already been finalized.
Investigators redacted the employee's name and age before his files were released, so all we know about him is that he was a white male, and he hadn't been notified yet that he was fired.
Friday night was set to be his last shift.
But he never showed up.
That's why at 9.45 p.m., Daniel called home and asked for permission to work until midnight.
His team needed the help, and Daniel wanted the extra hours so he could earn money to buy Christmas presents.
Daniel's parents said he could stay and that they'd wait up to make sure he'd got home safely.
Daniel told them not to worry about waiting.
up for him.
Fifteen minutes later, at 10 p.m., Jane's boyfriend stopped by to check on her.
Per the FBI's files, her boyfriend was extremely protective and liked to stop by every once in a while
to make sure she was okay.
So that night, he pulled his car around to the drive-thru window, and Jane told him that
everything was fine.
Her boyfriend drove off, reassured that Jane was safe.
That may have been because he saw that 16-year-old Mark Flemmons was also working.
Mark stood over six feet tall and studied karate.
After a recent murder at a fast food restaurant in Oklahoma,
Mark had told Jane that he'd protect her if anything bad ever happened at Burger Chef.
Jane knew that burger joints open late were a popular target for robbers.
She'd even rehearsed a plan with her parents in case her restaurant became a target.
as she told them every time the subject came up, she wouldn't try to be a hero.
She'd just give the robber whatever they wanted in order to protect herself in her team.
It was a smart plan, but whoever entered the burger chef between its closing at 11 and midnight
wasn't your typical fast food robber.
Meanwhile, a few blocks away, another burger chef employee had no idea his coworkers
were in mortal danger.
Around midnight,
17-year-old Brian Cring
took his date and co-worker,
17-year-old Ginger Haggard,
back to her parents' house.
After dropping Ginger off,
Brian drove to Burger Chef.
Mark had covered Ginger's shift that night
so she could keep her date.
Brian planned to show his appreciation
by helping Mark clean up after closing.
Brian parked in the back lot
near the rear entrance.
He spotted Daniel's car, a 1973 Ford Pinto park nearby.
He noticed all the lights were on inside the restaurant.
He figured his friends were still cleaning and headed in to join them.
Almost immediately, Brian knew something was wrong.
The back door was usually bolted shut.
But tonight, it was a jar.
And when he went inside,
He saw the safe was open, and the cash register drawers were pulled out with all the money missing.
Brian called his manager to ask what to do.
The boss told him to call the police.
That's when someone else showed up.
The unidentified white male employee who had called out, claiming car trouble,
he drove up in the van that had supposedly broken down earlier that night.
For convenience, I'll call this employee,
X. And Brian found X's behavior strange. Why would someone who had just claimed he couldn't get to work
show up at the restaurant uninvited after it had already closed? As soon as Brian mentioned he'd
called the police, X took off. He was long gone by the time the cops showed up a few minutes
later. The cops missed their chance to talk to X that night, but they did notice a few suspicious
pieces of evidence when they arrived.
Ruth's jacket was tossed in the floor, like she dropped it and never picked it up.
Jane's jacket was also found inside.
Both of their purses were still in the restaurant.
Everything seemed like it happened in a rush.
About $100 in coins had been left in the registers, as if the robbers left too quickly to
bother carrying change.
A few of the responding officers.
assumed that the employees had taken the money themselves and gone out together,
although nobody could explain why four stellar employees would hatch such a half-hearted
robbery plan, then take off without the girl's purses.
So operating on the assumption that something was wrong, the officers stayed up all night
working the scene. One of those officers was Lieutenant William Crafton. He was a husky man with
big sideburns and known as one of the department's top investigators. He worried that the local
community would fall apart if something happened to these kids. He began marshalling his resources
preparing for a full-scale search. But before they could tear the town apart looking for the missing
burger chef crew, one more thing had to happen. Their parents had to be notified. Around 1 a.m.,
police placed four different calls to four shocked families who had no idea if their children were alive or dead.
Then at 4.30 a.m., the case took a.m. Jane's abandoned car was discovered a couple of blocks from the Speedway Police Station.
There was no sign of Jane or her car keys.
Police theorized the robbers had forced Jane to drive them somewhere,
then abandoned her car and gotten into a different vehicle.
Around 11 a.m. on Saturday, November 18th, 1978,
11 hours after the victims were first discovered missing,
the FBI was brought onto the case.
But it was too late for them to find any new forensic evidence.
When the Speedway police had arrived at the burger chef the night before,
they didn't dust for fingerprints,
call in crime scene investigation technicians,
or even take photographs of the scene.
Then, the next morning,
the cops let employees clean the crime scene and open the restaurant.
While police protocol has come a long way since then,
even in 1978, this was not proper protocol.
Later, the officers handling the case returned to the restaurant
and set the crime scene back up as best they could and took photos.
They didn't immediately tell,
the lead investigators that the pictures they handed in were taken after the crime scene had been
dismantled, cleaned, and restaged from memory. Officer Buddy Elwanger, who worked on the case,
would later admit, quote, we screwed it up from the beginning. By the time the FBI arrived,
the town was in an all-out panic. Search parties fanned out on foot, helicopters soared overhead,
Everyone hoped they were still looking for kidnappers and living victims and not dead bodies.
Those hopes were soon dashed.
Saturday dragged on without any sightings.
Then on Sunday afternoon, November 19th, some hikers made a horrific discovery in the woods,
about a half-hour's drive south from the restaurant.
They saw Ruth's and Daniel's bodies lying near a trail and called the police.
when detectives arrived they soon located jane and mark's bodies too the investigators were able to determine that seventeen year old ruth and sixteen year old daniel were shot with a thirty-eight caliber handgun their bodies were found close together and the bullets that killed them came from the same gun about thirty or forty yards away twenty-year-old jane had been stabbed to death with a hunting knife so
violently that the four-and-a-half-inch blade broke off and was left in her body.
The knife's handle was never found.
Mark came the closest to escaping.
He was the tallest of the group.
Stride length alone would have made him the fastest runner, but about 150 feet from
Jane's body, he died of asphyxiation.
Yet there was no sign he was strangled, although there was evidence he'd been severely
beaten. The police theorized that Mark managed to get free and ran into the dark woods where he
collided with a tree. Then they thought he fell backwards, likely unconscious, and choked to death
on his own blood from the injuries he sustained from the collision. Mark's body became another
piece of perplexing evidence in a case that seemed to make no sense. Why would a small-time crook
murder for people. How did the robber or robbers force four strong, smart young people to leave
the restaurant with them seemingly without a struggle? And where was the killer now?
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When the four missing Burger Chef employees were found murdered on November 18, 1978, police had very little evidence to go on.
Still, detectives had a sinking suspicion that this wasn't the killer's first.
first high-profile crime.
Because even before these four horrific murders, 1978 was by far the scariest year anyone
in Speedway, Indiana, could remember.
It started about four months earlier on July 29th, with a killing of 65-year-old Julia
Seifers.
She was a grandmother, a Girl Scout troop leader, and a loyal wife.
exactly the type of person to have violent enemies. And yet, someone had killed her in cold
blood. A man Julia didn't know had visited a garage sale she held some weeks earlier. Then he made
an appointment to return and look at some unsold items. He missed that appointment, but showed up
unexpectedly at her door on a different day. Julia agreed to go into the garage with him and show
him the items. As soon as they were alone, the stranger shot Julia dead, jumped into his
vehicle and fled the scene. Speedway police suspected the murder was a professional job.
The killer planned his crime for weeks, yet didn't steal anything. He openly showed his face
to the victim and her husband. Then he executed the crime quickly and efficiently, followed by an
Equally quick and efficient escape, impossible as it might seem,
there may have been a hitman in Speedway, and for some reason he'd killed Julius Seifers.
But before the cops could get their hands around one unprecedented case, another one arose.
On September 1, 1978, bombs exploded at three different locations in town.
One of them went off across the street from the speed.
burger chef, not long after Jane Freight transferred to that location. Nobody was hurt,
and two of the three bombs were deposited in trash containers, so police hoped they were just
dealing with a prankster. That's until the fourth bomb went off, the very next day, followed by
the 5th and the 6th. On September 3rd, the 7th bomb exploded outside a local bowling alley.
Then on September 5th, the bomber blew up a police cruiser.
The final bomb detonated on September 6, 1978,
was the only one to hurt a human being.
It was concealed in a gym bag in the parking lot of Speedway High School,
where Mark Fleming studied and played in the band.
As a football game was letting out,
39-year-old Carl DeLong,
a Vietnam veteran with a son on the football team,
spotted the gym bag.
He thought one of the players must have forgotten it.
The bomb inside was on a timer.
It went off as Carl was bending over to pick the bag up.
He lost his right leg in the explosion.
As the tragedies compounded, police didn't know if they were looking for one person or two.
It was possible that the hitman and the terrorists were the same person, but detectives couldn't be sure.
While police were busy searching for answers, the people of Speedway were grappling with a harsh
reality. It wasn't safe in their city. A local businessman, Brett Kimberlin, was identified as a person
of interest in the killing of grandmother Julia Cifers. He had a grudge against Julia, who
suspected he had an inappropriate relationship with one of her grandchildren. She would have
recognized him, though, so he wasn't the gunman, but he might have hired someone to kill her.
Brett Kimberlin soon became a suspect in the bombings, too. At least one person told detectives
that he had bought bomb parts from them. Traces of explosives were found in Kimberlin's car,
along with the same kind of timers used in the bombs. Police were confident Kimberlin was guilty,
although it wasn't enough evidence to arrest him.
But the longer they looked into him, the more potential crimes came to light.
They came to believe that he was selling marijuana out of his natural food store
and that he had connections to drug cartels.
Based on all this, when Jane, Ruth, Daniel, and Mark were found murdered,
some detectives immediately thought of Brett Kimberlin.
He was the closest thing Speedway had to a moment.
mob boss. Even if he didn't pull the trigger himself, he could have hired someone to do it,
like they believed he had with Julius Seifers. But why would Kimberlin want to kill four
young Burger Chef employees? He didn't need the $500 or so dollars missing from the cash
registers. Detectives wondered if the murders were a last-minute change of plans. Maybe it was
meant to be just a robbery, but something went wrong. But nailing down forensic evidence
proved difficult, especially because after the bodies were found, the investigators once
again inadvertently contaminated the crime scene. As officers arrived, they drove through areas that
should have been preserved. They may have even moved at least one of the bodies. So, as
as Sunday the 19th drew to a close, the police had four bodies, almost no physical evidence
and no strong leads, although they did have some theories. They believed Brett Kimberlin was
capable of murder, but they weren't sure if he was unhinged enough to kill four people
while already under investigation for murder and terrorism. They wondered if the young man who
called out of work Friday night was involved. Why did he show up at the
Burger Chef just after midnight.
Was he returning to the scene of the crime?
Through the FBI, yet another possibility surfaced.
Three inmates had escaped from an Ohio prison on the day of the robbery and murders.
They'd taken hostages before.
It was possible they made it all the way to Indiana, kidnapped the Burger Chef crew,
then killed them when they tried to escape.
But there was a final theory that made the most sense to some of the detective.
working the case.
There had been a string of fast food robberies in the Indianapolis area,
including one at another Burger Chef franchise.
Those robbers had never hurt anyone before,
but they might if they were facing arrest.
Maybe one or more of the kids on the closing shift
recognize someone among the robbers,
and all four employees were killed as a result.
Like all the other theories,
it certainly seemed viable, but there was no proof.
If the cops wanted to pin charges on any of their suspects, they'd need hard evidence,
or at least a confession.
Eventually, they would get a confession, but instead of solving their case, it was about to derail it,
and an already mind-boggling investigation was about to get that much more difficult to solve.
Thanks so much for listening.
I'm Carter Roy, and this is Scams, Money, and Murder.
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Hi, it's Vanessa Richardson,
and I have exciting news.
Conspiracy theories, cults, and crimes is leveling up.
Starting the week of January 12th,
you'll be getting two episodes every week.
Wednesdays, we unravel the conspiracy or the cult,
And on Fridays, we look at a corresponding crime.
Follow conspiracy theories, cults, and crimes now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, or wherever you listen.
