Morbid - Episode 200: The Weepy Voiced Killer

Episode Date: January 10, 2021

This week Alaina covers the weepy voiced killer for our 209th episode! In 1980 on New Year’s Eve Paul Michael Stephani brutally attacked Karen Potack after abducting her from outside of a b...ar. She sustained some of the worst injuries seen by investigators,  but she lived. This would be the first in a string of bizarre an gruesome attacks on women that potentially would lead to murder. The strangest piece of this case is that the killer called the police himself to report the attack....an he did it while weeping hysterically.  As always, thank you so much to our sponsors: HelloFresh: Go to HelloFresh.com/10morbid and use code10morbid for 10 free meals, including free shipping! Betterhelp: Special offer for Morbid listeners get 10% off your first month at betterhelp.com/Morbid Firstleaf: :Join today and you’ll get 6 bottles of wine for $29.95 and free shipping! Just go to TRYFirstleaf.com/MORBID.  Upstart: Find out how Upstart can lower your monthly payments today, go to UPSTART.com/MORBID.  Athena Club: Sign up today and you’ll get 20% off your first order! Just go to AthenaClub.com and use promo code mtc See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:01:23 of your home. Download the free Angie mobile app today or visit Angie.com. That's ANGI.com. Hey weirdos, I'm Elena. My name is Ash. And this is Morpeth. And a lot of you were sad that I didn't see. So I broke my intro, New Year's resolution. You went so far with that. I know, huh?
Starting point is 00:02:06 No, everybody was like sad, so you got to give the people what they want. You do. And you know what? I think everyone was sad because they could feel it that you didn't really want to stop. I didn't. I did not.
Starting point is 00:02:16 You thought you wanted to, but like deep down inside. I didn't. I don't want to. You know what, DJ Lady, we are one. Yeah, you know, it's cool, because you're different. It's fine. I'm different, yeah, I'm different. And you know what, welcome to our 200th episode.
Starting point is 00:02:32 Oh shit, this is 200, huh? Yeah, technically 200. We have more than 200, but like, this is the official 200, I guess we could call it. I've had it, officially. Officially, I hope you guys get that. You know, we were gonna do something, like we were like, oh, what should we do
Starting point is 00:02:47 for our 200th episode, then we're like, that's boring though. Why don't we make our 201st episode the most exciting? So that we could say this is our 201 episode. So this episode, sure, every episode is special. Yeah, because we're here and we're here and we're bonding. So this is gonna be a great episode. So this episode sure every episode is special. Yeah, because it's all here and we're here and we're bonding. So this is gonna be a great episode. I'm just saying like this. Let me see if I do see so myself. Let me just pass on the back. But the two hundred and first episode. I mean that's that's gonna be something. We made some plans and also I would just like to point out we posted on Twitter that we're really excited about something. We're really fucking
Starting point is 00:03:27 excited about this but that's not even the thing. Yeah like even more stuff but this this is gonna blow your mind. Very exciting. We're just you know we're gonna take it in a little bit of a different direction but it's one we wanted to do for a while. Yes. And we just got something added into it. That's gonna make it even better. Yup. We're gonna be talking about ghosts, honey. Oh my god, it's gonna be like the paranormal sweetness
Starting point is 00:03:52 that you just didn't even know you needed. It sure is. I'm self-woven excited. I just wanna like tell you exactly what it is, but I'm really excited. You know, just make it come a tea and watch a show and live your life. It's gonna be fun.
Starting point is 00:04:06 Okay. It's gonna be a lot of fun. So we'll see you then. We'll see you in a few days for that one. So get ready because we're really excited. I can't wait. Oh, switching gears really quickly. If you go to shop.morebidpodcast.com and you want to get the annual congregation of the
Starting point is 00:04:20 Covins t-shirt, those are on pre-sale right now. Woohoo. Yay. Really cool, really cool shirt. Yeah, it's all fun. I'm really good at transitions. Yeah, shirts. Get that. Uh, yeah, I don't think we really have, um, oh, you know what?
Starting point is 00:04:36 We want to do a shout out to somebody who did us the most solid. The solid. The solidest solid of 2021 thus far, cause let me tell you the really awesome ones. So we have been, like I think we mentioned a couple of episodes before, like people have found out that Ash has a TikTok now. We wanted to make one for the podcast,
Starting point is 00:04:58 just to kinda like maybe do, I think it's an easier way for us to do, like I'm not a big Instagram person, it didn't I didn't really want to do it there So I got in the TikTok cuz Ash got me into it. Hell yeah, so we figured doing a TikTok for the podcast Where we can give you guys some like behind the scenes looks and such yeah and the pod lab and just fun stuff Whatever like just make fun of things and be funny. So we figure we were gonna do that. Yeah, we hadn't made one yet And I'm also gonna make one but I have no how, and I don't know what I'm gonna do. So I got you. I'll let you know. But we hadn't made the podcast one yet. And then we get a message from this beautiful angel, Carter. Carter, they went on TikTok, they saved, they made the name, like morbid podcast, a TikTok
Starting point is 00:05:47 account for it. Yup. Then saved it for us, gave us the login information, and was like, here you go, now you can change the passwords, and it's yours. I just wanted to save it for you, so no one else took it. That was the most kind and thoughtful thing. Literally. It made my heart sore.
Starting point is 00:06:04 Also, it came at the perfect time because the past two days, Elena knows, I've had a rough past two days. And that little act of kindness, just I feel like people don't realize how much little things like that can really like just change somebody's day. It is and like with everything going on
Starting point is 00:06:19 and everybody's got so much crap going on. Oh, it's for real. And for this person to take even with everything going on, which I'm sure they have stuff going on too. Of course. Because everybody does right now. God yeah. To take time to do something, just just be thoughtful like that.
Starting point is 00:06:33 Like very selfless and thoughtful like that. It was just like really nice to see. I know. I was like, wow, what a nice thing that you did. So people. Thank you so much Carter. So we now have morbid podcast TikTok. We haven't done anything with it. But follow at morbid podcast on TikTok. You can see sweet Carter
Starting point is 00:06:50 making the announcement that they saved the Instagram name for us. That's our first video. So we just wanted to say thank you so much because that was really, really appreciated for sure. And without further ado, I think we will jump right into And without further ado, I think we will jump right into the weepy voice killer. Oh, you're so excited! This case is crazy. It's shocking because there's not a lot of like details about his life or about the victims really, which was a bummer because I was trying, I was digging to try to find. But man, you can't, it is hard. If I end up, because you know, I'm not going to stop. If I end up
Starting point is 00:07:29 finding something, I will do like, we'll do like a little update episode on a few cases, I think, just to kind of, because things happen over time, obviously. But I'll definitely update because if I can find anything, I really want to. But no one's looked into the psychology of this guy. There's no books on him. It's nuts. It's crazy. It's crazy. So what he's known for the reason he was called the Weepy Voiced Killer was because he had a penchant for calling the police after he would kill someone or harm someone and he would cry. And he would tell them where they could find the person, what he had done, he would apologize, he would often make declarations like he wanted to kill himself
Starting point is 00:08:12 for doing it. It was very strange, very creepy, very unnerving, very uncomfortable and his voice is very weepy and this one's a tough one because no one really knows what he was never diagnosed with anything. He wasn't put in a mental institution. He wasn't looked after by mental health, you know, doctors or experts or anything. So this, nothing that can point to it, but there is a lot of sources that say he did have mental illness in his family, although we don't, I don't have any concrete sources that say that. Right.
Starting point is 00:08:50 I mean, what he's doing here certainly could be looked at as a mentally ill person who snaps, does something and then immediately regrets it and doesn't know how to handle it. It can also go the complete other way. And he, I mean, he's a monster. Yeah, no matter what. I couldn't go the other way of him being completely sane and doing these things and then getting joy out of reporting them and acting remorseful.
Starting point is 00:09:16 And some of them almost, I mean, like you said, I could totally go both ways, but some of the calls are so over the top. And I would very over the top. I could see like some asshole killer being like, oh, this is going to be kind of hilarious if I do this. That's the thing. And when you listen to it, I will play the recording. So just letting you know up front, there will be the recordings of him crying into the phone.
Starting point is 00:09:37 I showed John the recordings and I was like, what do you think? Like what would be your first? And he was like, oh, that guy's faking. And he was like, that's not a real cry. He is enjoying that. No, that's the thing. I think, because we went through them, like literally right before we started,
Starting point is 00:09:50 the last call is the one that, and you said it makes you kind of question it. Like, yeah. Maybe he's not. Do I think he was in a healthy mental state? Absolutely not, but I don't think you really can be when you're murdering people. Let's just say, I wouldn't say most killers are. Do I think he's remorseful? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:10:08 I don't really think so. I also think he knew this was gonna make it a big case and probably put it in media outlets and I think he enjoyed that. I think there was definitely some enjoyment because as we'll see this guy Paul Michael Stefani, his name, his name is not, his given name was not the Weebie Boyz killer. No? No, weirdly enough. Although it should have been. Yeah. He just, I don't, he always says in the recordings,
Starting point is 00:10:35 like, you know, come and find me. Why can't you catch me, like, make me stop? I want to stop. And he's like, but he doesn't turn himself in. Well, that's the thing. And it's like, if you wanted to stop, you would turn yourself in. And that's just taunting.
Starting point is 00:10:47 Like, why can't you find me? And it's like, if you really wanted them to find you, you'd be like, I'm standing at the pay phone on this street, please come get me before I leave. And at one point, he does do that, right? And then he vacates the premises. And then he leaves. To me, it's like, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:11:01 Yeah, I don't know. I don't know. A whole bunch of bullshit. And he's a monster. No, I don't know. Yeah, I don't know. I don't know. I'll punch a bullshit. And he's a monster. No, a true-ass monster. When you find out an ass monster had seen flexion on that was all wrong. But you know what I mean. Wait, could somebody draw us an ass monster, please?
Starting point is 00:11:19 A true ass monster. Not a false one. But, so yeah, he's terrible. These crimes are horrific. They are very gruesome. He's an evil evil son of a bitch. Mm-hmm. Hi, I'm Lindsay Graham, the host of Wondery's podcast American
Starting point is 00:11:40 scandal. We bring to life some of the biggest controversies in US history. Presidential lies, environmental disasters, corporate fraud. In our newest series, we look at the Kids for Cash scandal, a story about corruption inside America's system of juvenile justice. In Northeastern Pennsylvania, residents had begun noticing an alarming trend. Children were being sent away to jail in high numbers, and often for committing only minor offenses.
Starting point is 00:12:05 The FBI began looking at two local judges, and when the full picture emerged, it made national headlines. The judges were earning a fortune, carrying out a brazen criminal scheme, one that would shatter the lives of countless children, and force a heated debate about punishment, an America's criminal justice system. Follow American scandal wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen ad-free on the Amazon Music or Wonder App. So let's start with what we do know about him. What we do know about him was that he was born September 8, 1944 in Austin, Minnesota.
Starting point is 00:12:44 I think that makes him a Virgo, but I'm a double check. I think you're right. I think I am. Yeah, because yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, he definitely is. He a Virgo. He was the second oldest of 10 children. When he was three years old, his mother, his original father, nobody really knows what the biological father was doing, His original father, nobody really knows what the biological father was doing, but his mother did remarry when he was three. To a man who, again, we don't know a lot about, but he claims that he was slightly abusive. Nothing crazy, but then he, so he begins it with like, nothing crazy, it wasn't that abusive. When we got in his way, he would like smack us over the the head and send us flying down a flight of stairs.
Starting point is 00:13:25 And you're like, oh, nothing crazy, good. Pretty intense. I'm glad it was nothing to be alarmed about. It's actually such a thing, though, if you've experienced childhood trauma to underplay it. It's so true that you're like, oh, nothing crazy. Yeah. And then you're like, oh, wait, actually.
Starting point is 00:13:40 Because he's probably like, this is what other kids experience, right? Right, because your parents do. You don't know anything else. But one thing that we do know about that family and that household is that it was termed a million different times and a million different sources as deeply religious, religion dominated that household, which can have effects on kids. As we've seen many, many, many, many, many, many, many, many, many times, almost in every case.
Starting point is 00:14:06 You know, it's like, I forgot what I was going to say. It's like too much of a good thing. Yeah, too much of anything is not good. Yeah, you know, so it's, and when it's deeply religious, you're like, oh boy, yeah, that's not good. So it was not good in this situation. Um, he, I've not, again, not a lot is known about his high school years are really how he was as a kid. Yeah. Which sucks. I would love to like do a full deep dive on this.
Starting point is 00:14:35 And also like, who decided to not, to not look into anyone. What happened? Like, what else going on? We have so much information about so many random people, but this guy we don't you know what I will say I think maybe you know This was during the time that I believe Otis tool was working There was a couple of other ones going around. I see working. I'm like working you know clocking in to mind a So I do believe he got over shadowed by a lot and I think this just wasn't and also the fact that this these murders and assaults went cold a lot of times
Starting point is 00:15:07 because they didn't have a lot of information on him until the end. Right. So maybe this just it just got looked over and it's crazy that it did. It's sad. But he did after high school, he moved to Minneapolis. He worked as a shipping clerk. He also worked as a janitor at a hospital. He got married at one point to a woman named Beverly Linder. Not much is known about it, but he did have a daughter. They divorced and he just don't straight up abandoned his daughter. Like never saw her again, never talked to her again. So already it's like awesome. It seems like a good guy. For sure. He only went about his weepy voice killing spree between 1980 and 1982. So that's very short period. Pretty brief. He worked, he worked as killing nasty ways in the Minneapolis
Starting point is 00:15:57 St. Paul area. Yeah. So let's go to New Year's Eve 1980. Okay. This is when 20-year-old Karen Poltack. She was a student at Stevens Point University and she was going to be out in the Twin City area, celebrating with her sister and her friends, you know, New Year's Eve. Yeah. They were going to be going to a bar. I believe off of University Avenue. They spent the night there, they were dancing, having fun, drinking champagne, they hit midnight in the bar, but then just after midnight, somehow, she wandered off. Without her friends and her sister
Starting point is 00:16:37 knowing that she had left the bar, she actually walked out of the club alone. She wasn't wearing a coat. She was still holding a glass of champagne when she walked out. She was just feeling real good. The temperatures were below freezing that night and there was snow on the ground. Oh, jeez. And she was very, very drunk. I was gonna say she had her drunk blinking on. Yeah, she was, yeah, exactly. So she wandered out there. She's just walking down the street, stumbling down University Avenue. Lots of people around because it's New Year's Eve.
Starting point is 00:17:06 So again, it's not like abandoned or anything like that. And she happened to walk through an alleyway. Oh, God. Yeah, and she stumbles into this alleyway and when she does this, a man in a car pulls up. Now this man in the car is in this nice warm car. He's got his heat blasting. He sees her without a coat and he rolls down the window and he says, do you want me to take you wherever you're trying to go?
Starting point is 00:17:31 It's freezing out. I have heat in the car wherever you're trying to. Do you want me to bring you home? I'm so helpful. Now she is drunk and freezing and she's of course gonna be like, you have heat. heat cool I'm gonna get in the car yeah like let's get it so she gets in the car no that's the last time she's seen and then 3 a.m. that night so only a couple of hours later yeah police receive a phone call and I'm gonna play it for you right now So what the fuck did he say? You got a transcript over there? I do. So I'm gonna let you know what he said because I know it's hard to hear like I literally heard the mom bone a cop in machine. I was like what? So he called and he said yes, please. This is an emergency.
Starting point is 00:18:45 Please send a squad to Pierce Butler Road, Momberg Manufacturing Company Machine Shop. See, Mombo machine. Please send an ambulance to. There's a girl here. And the person says, can you tell me what happened to her? And he says, just hurry. She's lying on the ground in the back by the railroad tracks by the engine room. Hurry! And they say, what's the address? And he says, I, she's lying on the ground in the back by the railroad tracks by the engine room, hurry. And they say, what's the address?
Starting point is 00:19:07 And he says, I don't know. And then they say, who are you? He says, click. He says, click. So he says, click. He says, absolutely not. You know what it is for me, like the young and say, for me, it's that, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:19:21 Yeah, it's like, come on, bra. And also, it's the, who are you, click. Like, it's like, oh,'t know. Yeah. Yeah. It's like, come on, brah. And also it's the, who are you? Click. Oh, no, too many questions. Yeah. And it's like, all right, if he's really having a breakdown, is he really going to take that? Who are you? And be like, Oh, click. No, like he'd say something. I feel like he would at least, I don't know. Again, I don't know. I've never been in that state of mind. So they obviously got that call, and immediately we're like, okay, so we gotta just send someone out there because what the fuck, we don't know who the person is,
Starting point is 00:19:54 who the victim is, what's going on. They just say she's hurt. We can't just ignore that. So police and ambulance go to the Maulberg manufacturing company machine shop, which is completely deserted at night. She would not have been found if they, if he did not call.
Starting point is 00:20:09 Wow, that's crazy. Yeah. And they find Karen Poltack. She is laying in the snow by the railroad tracks. She's completely naked. And she has been beaten extensively with a tire iron. Oh man.
Starting point is 00:20:25 Her skull has been split open and her brain was exposed. Jesus. She was still alive. What? She was still alive when they found her. Officers said it was the worst scene they had ever come across. They said her brain was literally exposed. Her skull is split into two and they can see her brain and she's alive.
Starting point is 00:20:48 She was rushed to the hospital. She had emergency life-saving surgery and she lived. What the fuck? Yes, she lived. She lived? No, she obviously had a great amount of brain damage after that. Oh, people wait, bad bitch alert. She lived.
Starting point is 00:21:06 Wow. She lived. And I couldn't find anything on like what she's doing today. Being a bad bitch. Just being a bad bitch. Unfortunately, she also didn't remember a damn thing. So, I mean, that is both unfortunate and also very fortunate. Honestly, I was thinking that I was like,
Starting point is 00:21:25 it's, you know, it obviously sucks because you'd love her to be like, here's what he looked like, here's what is. I'd rather not remember. You don't want her to remember. No. I don't want her to have that memory. I'm glad that she's like, yeah, I went to a New Year's Eve party and that was the end of that.
Starting point is 00:21:39 It's like good, good, yep. Happy memories for you. Yeah, so don't listen to this because you don't need to know what happened. No. There was no clues. No evidence, no clues. They had nothing to go on except that phone call and that's it.
Starting point is 00:21:52 That's wild. And the fact that he didn't leave, I mean, also, this is the A.D.s. But he didn't leave anything behind to give any kind of clue. Says to me, this is not him just snapping. Yeah, because it's like he didn't leave anything for them to pick up. Because he's also, I mean, it sounds to me, like he was driving around looking for people. It really does.
Starting point is 00:22:10 You know, like, I mean, there's definitely a couple of times where you're like, he just got lucky. Right. Finding someone, but it seems like he, I don't know, he always has something to do with. Right. But that's, so yeah, so then unfortunately, no evidence, no nothing.
Starting point is 00:22:23 She can't really tell you anything. There's no witness statements to say anything about this guy picking her up. That's it. So it kind of just, that's it. They can't do a lot about it. So come June 3rd, 1981. So once later, 18-year-olds, Kimberly Compton, had just graduated high school. She was from a very small town in Wisconsin.
Starting point is 00:22:44 I think I saw that it was less than a thousand people lived in this town. So a village, literally a village, a little hamlet, if you will. And she was looking, she had just graduated, small town girl, looking to get the hell out of there. Yeah, she wants to go to the big city, she wants to move on, she wants to start a job, she wants to start a job, she wants to meet new people, like she's ready. She graduated. Here, here I come, world. All right. Now she moved to St. Paul hours before she came across Paul Michael Stefani. No. Now she had literally got on a Greyhound bus. Pactor bags got on a Greyhound bus, was going to St. Paul, dropped at the St. Paul bus station,
Starting point is 00:23:28 the Greyhound station. She puts her bags in locker 750 at the bus station, and she's like, I'm hungry. So she walks across the street where there's this diner, Mickey's diner. She gets the special, and she sits down and starts eating, and she's eating alone and a few booths away from her.
Starting point is 00:23:47 There's a man enjoying a cup of coffee alone. He takes a notice of her and he walks over and starts talking to her. And she's like, why don't she sit down and join me? Because she's like, I'm already making new friends. She's nice. Sorry, how old was he? At this time, he was in his 30s. I believe he was 38. Oh, okay. Okay. So he and, you know, what your brand new to a town. No, whatever. He,
Starting point is 00:24:11 I could see him coming across it. It's that Minnesota accent is very friendly. So I can definitely see that. Uh, so he sits down. They start talking. She mentions that she is brand new from Wink Wisconsin. Can't wait to start things. And he's like, oh my God, I can take you around and show you the sights. No, thank you. And she's like, that's awesome. So she's like, absolutely. So they finish their meals, they keep talking.
Starting point is 00:24:34 And they leave together. And witnesses at the scene, staff, and people in the restaurant said they saw this entire interaction. They watched them leave together. Yeah. This is when, and that's no one saw her after that. Of course. Now, this is also when a group of teen boys come across a body a few hours later.
Starting point is 00:24:54 Oh, no. Really quickly. Just a few hours later. Really quickly. It was next to a freeway construction area, and it was in like a wooded area secluded. This woman was laying face down and had been stabbed in the chest quite a few times with what police believed to be an ice pick. Oh yeah. This is important because this is a very odd choice and rare weapon to use. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:17 Not many people are just besides you know like the guy from I know what you did last summer really running around with an ice pick. No. Uh and, there's another movie that they use an ice pick. Basic instinct, I think it was. But yeah, it's not a weapon that's used often. Where she was found was a place with a very scenic view of the Mississippi River. He had obviously brought her there under the guise of seeing the sights and then brutally massacred her there. At the time, they didn't know who this woman was because she didn't have idea on her.
Starting point is 00:26:00 Oh, no. Because it's a little locker. Exactly. When she had left the bus station, she was just running over to get some food She was not she was planning to go right back and get her stuff right and be on her way But she had just gone directly with him to go sightseeing So the first at first she was just like a Jane Doe They were like we don't know who she is
Starting point is 00:26:19 Then they get the ice pick call. Oh God And here we're gonna play it. So this one's a little scarier to me. Yeah. It's I'm gonna read you the quick transcript of it because again, I know it's hard to hear. Yeah, he says, will you goddamn find me? Will you find me? I just stabbed somebody with a nice pick. I can't stop myself. I keep killing somebody. And the police says, hello. Are you there? I know the guy that says hello, are you there? Sounds like a famous newscast. He really does. Hello on the 10 o'clock news. On the 10 o'clock news. Hello. Are you there? Uh, yeah. So he is very upset that he just stabbed someone with an ice pick. He wants you to believe at least.
Starting point is 00:27:12 Oscar Saga is he though. He's at least showing you that he wants to be very upset. So when they get this phone call, that's weird because correct. A nice pick is a weird weapon It's not I stab someone with a knife. It's not I stab someone with anything else It's very specifically. I just stabbed someone with a nice pick and they're like oh wait We have a body that was just stabbed with a nice pick We did not release any of that information right the only person who would know that is the person who stabbed her with an ice fix. Right.
Starting point is 00:27:47 They're like, okay. So now they're like, all right, this is the guy. We have a real thing here. So now they're sitting there being like, oh, so that other Karen Polteck one was the same guy. Right. That seems. So now, he had said that they had figured out that he had called from a pay phone nearby.
Starting point is 00:28:03 During, when they got there, he was gone. That sucks. During all this, they were autopsying their Jane Doe, who they are going to find out, is Kimberly Compton. They were all doing the autopsy and they found a key to the locker in her pocket. They traced it back to the Greyhound bus station, locker number 750, that's where they found her ID, and finally they knew they had Kimberly Compton. What they also found during the autopsy,
Starting point is 00:28:31 and this is interesting, because in order to trace her back to this man, they were able to look at the undigested food in her stomach. And if it's undigested, it means it was eaten fairly recently. Right. They saw that she had eaten barbecue beef and fries within hours. Now, this helped them trace it back to the diner, Mickey's diner, because it happened to be the special. Right. You said she ordered the special. So they were like, there it is. She was at the diner. So of course, to the diner, they go. They talked to the staff and the staff says like,
Starting point is 00:29:05 yeah, and that's the staff who relayed that whole entire story of like the guy sitting on the car eating this guy was eating coffee. He came over and talked to her. They sat down. We could hear their conversation and we saw them leave together. We saw them leave together and then luckily they were like, we can at least tell you a little bit about what he looks like. Of course, it didn't really help them at first, but the staff could all identify her too. And they did say, you know, he was a tall guy, he was like bigger. I think they were able to say something about his hair, but not a lot else. Like, they were like, we weren't really paying attention that much, because it's a tiny art.
Starting point is 00:29:40 What a star. Yeah, like, who would think that he was going to kill her after that? No. What they found out was that he had gonna kill her after that? No. What they found out was that he had stabbed her with that ice pick 61 times. Oh my. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:51 Sergeant Joe Corcoran said he saw an extreme amount of rage with that one. He was like, this was rage. Right. This wasn't like just somebody going blank and snapping it was pure rage. I wonder what it is that makes him tick. I have an idea.
Starting point is 00:30:08 So she was also strangled with a shoelace. That wasn't what killed her. It was the stab wounds that killed her. So she was strangled before with a shoelace, which to me is like torturous. Yeah, it is. Now, to me, I'm going to go back to him being it being very evident that he was raised
Starting point is 00:30:23 in a deeply religious household. That brings about a certain amount of guilt. And it brings about a certain amount of like, I need to repent for my sins. And I also need to make other people repent for their sins. He might have looked at her and said, Oh, you got in a car with a man. And later, he does say that it seems like they were a little flirty together. And that he, at one point point said he unhooked her bra While they were out there. So I'm assuming something was going on according to him. Yeah, and
Starting point is 00:30:58 He makes it seem like it was like something they were both consenting to Of course, we don't know but Either way he might be looking at her and being like, you are asking for it because you are, you're engaging in this risky behavior with me. You know what I mean? So to me, it might be him like freaking out on her and like stabbing her to death because he's like, you're a young girl who just went off with me and is acting inappropriately.
Starting point is 00:31:21 Well, you know what, that's my fucking prerogative, dude. Because you know how many of these dudes have that mindset of like, I had to kill her because she was a dirty woman. It's like the Irish Bible John. Yeah, Bible John, exactly. And that's the thing. It's like, this could be part of that. That should make me so mad.
Starting point is 00:31:38 It's ridiculous. It's so annoying. But it's also, it's like when they're being raised in that like extreme of a household. Yeah. It puts those ideas in their brain and who knows what kind of relationship he had with his mother because no one fucking looked into this and I'm trying to find it, I swear. But I, you should see him as like this.
Starting point is 00:31:56 Oh, I'm trying, I'm trying. But it looks, it seems to me, he did love his mother because we will find out later that it does come back in a small way. But you know who else loves their mom? Well, that's, this is the thing. I'm wondering if it was a, if it was a love of your mother that is an edginy kind of love. Edipissy. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:20 And then it's like, and then you bring the religious aspect into it. Maybe she was teaching him that women are unclean. Yeah. That comes back. She's got all carry with it. It comes back in a lot of these cases that you find out the mother has been teaching them. Women are unclean. And like, you need to stay away from that.
Starting point is 00:32:38 Never make sense to me because I'm like, No, my home girl, you are a woman. Well, that's and I'm like, and you fucked to make him. Right, like you are. You are. You are shaming other women for it. Or so unclean. I think according to your standards.
Starting point is 00:32:51 Especially these older ones where I'm like, this is definitely before like fertility treatments. So you are definitely committing the original sin to have him. Yeah. So it's like stop shaming everyone else. Like you can get it on the low low. It's fine. Go ahead. Let people live. God damn it. When I heard that it was like a lotaming everyone else like you can get it on the low low. It's fine
Starting point is 00:33:09 Go ahead let people live god damn when I heard that it was like a lot of rage in this one And she was a young girl and I the whole story of them meeting at the diner and her going off with him Which is totally her prerogative again not a good idea. I don't recommend it Yeah, definitely don't do that not you know something to kill someone over and but I do think that maybe that played into it, it could have. No, that's a really good assessment. If we knew more about his shit. My good assessment. My good assessment, I did. You did?
Starting point is 00:33:32 So two days later, he called again. And he's apologizing, he's admitting to killing Kimberly Compton, he mentions her by name. He's crying, he's saying how sudden he is about it it and he's saying that he just can't go to jail. So yeah, an interesting one. Yeah, he's a little more controlled because he's not right in the moment. And he's still weeping. He's still upset.
Starting point is 00:34:33 Kinda. He's still at least trying to imitate someone weeping. And he's still upset, but he's not as like, I just did it. Right, is it so? It was a little bit later. Out of control. But what he says there in case you couldn't understand
Starting point is 00:34:47 all of it was in the first part, if I was a 911 operator and I got, don't talk, just listen. I would be like, like, yeah, that's jinx, which is why we are not dispatchers. Because holy, so he says, don't talk, just listen. I'm sorry what I did to Compton. I couldn't help it.
Starting point is 00:35:10 Don't know why I had to stab her. I'm so upset about it. I keep getting drunk every night. I can't believe it. I did it. It's like a big dream. I can't think of being locked up. If I get locked up, I'll kill myself.
Starting point is 00:35:23 I'd rather kill myself than get locked up. I'll try not to kill anybody else. Okay. First and foremost, by the way, that he does not do that. Yes, by the way. First and foremost, though, the, the use of the word dream versus the use of the word nightmare. Yes. Weird. This, it's all a big nightmare is what you think. This is all a big dream. Like, yeah, a big dream of yours
Starting point is 00:35:45 that you've been thinking about for a while because you've always wanted to kill people. It really feels like a dream to you? Are you sure about that? Or a choice of words, but I feel like that was intentional. Now, this one was done eight days later, and he also made another call
Starting point is 00:35:58 where he was correcting something that the media got wrong about the case. Oh, I remember that. I don't have that recording, but see, that's another thing. It's like, yeah. If you're so distraught and upset, why the fuck are you reading about the cases in the media? Exactly.
Starting point is 00:36:13 And that's the thing. If you're correcting information, come on. And clearly you want it out there in the quote unquote, correct way. Exactly. And at this point, they're definitely connecting the two cases because they're hearing these voices, and it's the same exact thing.
Starting point is 00:36:26 This is weird. It doesn't happen all the time. So they're like, Oh, I do remember that. So they really, they decided, you know what, we're going to release a portion of this to the media. So people can hear the voice and tell us if they recognize it. Now the media immediately, he was deemed the weepy voice killer because why? I don't know. So weird. I don't really know. But you should have called him the cry baby. That would have been so much better. The cry baby. I do love the weepy voice killer though, because that's just like me.
Starting point is 00:36:51 Yeah. I like the cry baby. So people heard this on the news and a staggering amount of people were like, I know that voice. Yeah, that's so weird. And then like, they got like 100. I think they got 100 different people that said they knew who this voice was.
Starting point is 00:37:07 They looked into every single one of them and none of them banded up. They were like, so. I saw this movie one time. It's got a scarecrow. Yeah. And a girl with red shoes and this lion. And he sounds just like the fucking lion.
Starting point is 00:37:20 He's like, you guys know that guy? So crazy. Doesn't he sound just like that? He really does. Look, look, that? He really does He just needs a the noise. That's what he needs. It's my own little Don't you know don't you know so yeah, so none of them panned out So apparently everybody thinks they know somebody who would kill a lot of people
Starting point is 00:37:43 Also cry about it to the police. So that's something new we learned in this case. So that's fun. That should teach you something about yourselves. That really should. So two months later after this, a guy named Alan Lopez, he is, he gets in trouble because he is holding his entire family hostage in their home. Oh, he had killed his parents and his sister.
Starting point is 00:38:07 Apparently in a very brutal way, I looked into it, could not find a lot about it, but there is a news story about it. Police had arrived at the home and they were basically negotiating a hostage situation. So they were stationed outside his home trying to talk to him. And at one point, during, I, I believe like a couple of hours they were out there. At one point, he said he was the one who killed Kimberly Compton.
Starting point is 00:38:32 Weird. So they were like, oh shit. So he was arrested and he was found guilty for the family annihilation. But he was placed in the mental facility. Mm-hmm. Mental health facility, excuse me. And he was going, they
Starting point is 00:38:46 were like, we got a question this guy, he admitted to it. Let's talk to him. Well, before they could question him, he killed himself. Oh, no. Yeah. He was never questioned. So that sucks. So on March 19th, 1982, retired detective Earl Mills actually returned to the force for one day out of retirement to release the case files for the Weepy Boy Sciller because he said that he wanted to connect Alan Lopez to these crimes. But so they still think this might be the guy, because we didn't get to talk to him. We haven't ruled him out.
Starting point is 00:39:19 He admitted to it. Let's see what we can look. So they see that on the day that Kimberly Compton was murdered, he was actually checked into a mental health facility for treatment for a while. So they're like, oh no. Like he was in there that means he can't do it. That's a bummer. Not our guy. But the reason that Mills came out of retirement was to try to nail this guy. So they look further into it and they see it suddenly see that, wait a second, he was given a day pass out of the facility and he had left to that building on that day. Oh shit. Yeah. So now they're like, oh shit. So then they look into Karen's attack.
Starting point is 00:39:55 Right, right. To look back on it. He was in jail on the night of Karen's attack. He could not have committed that attack. Yeah, I love that. I also was like, oh shit. When I know who did it. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. No way. But still it's creating. So on her attempted murder on New receive, he couldn't have done it. Uh-huh. They know that these are clearly linked. Like, it's the same voice and the same guy. Right.
Starting point is 00:40:16 Right. He knew things that no one else would know. So it ruled him out because he just couldn't have attacked Karen. Yeah. It just didn't match up. So that was that. Now in August 6, 1982, a 40-year-old nurse named Barbara Simon's was out at the hexagon bar in Minneapolis on that evening. Bar staff and witnesses said they saw her dancing and talking to a man that night. She got, she went up to get a drink at one point
Starting point is 00:40:51 and she said to the bartender, something along the lines is a couple of versions of this. He's cute, I hope this guy's okay because I just need a ride home. She said something along those lines of like, hope this guy's okay because he's driving me home. It was almost like she was like, here we go. Please know that, like in case something happens,
Starting point is 00:41:11 it was almost like her putting that out there. Oh, if you feel that way, don't get in the car. When the bartender thought, you know, that's creepy. So she took a good look at him, which good on her. I feel like just wait and I'll drive you home. She was like, I'm just gonna take a look at him. So she and some other waitresses from the bar that evening said that they all got a good look at him.
Starting point is 00:41:29 They said he appeared to be around 40 years old, around 200 pounds and six feet tall. Okay. They said he had black hair that was receding, he was balding. They said, and he also had a mustache. Okay. They were seen leaving together that evening.
Starting point is 00:41:43 Okay. And she's gone. Uh huh. There's another call. Okay. They were seen leaving together that evening. Okay. And she's gone. Uh-huh. There's another call. Weird! I love that the time when one operator is like, dude, like it's been a long night. Like, chill. I can't understand what you're saying right now. So this one is certainly more frantic. Yeah. Because this was done right after he had done it.
Starting point is 00:42:29 So I think he's in that high or low, so what he was going through. But he's in that crazy, you fork, and like crazy nut bag state that you're in after you brutally murder someone, I imagine. Oh, that one. I said you fork. Well,. I said you foric. Well, I mean, it's probably for him.
Starting point is 00:42:47 It's foric. Yeah, but what he said in that, because it does get a little muffly and hard to hear, because he's just crying. He's just wild and healthy. So the operator says fire emergency, and he says, please don't talk, just listen. Which, okay, don't tell me what to do. Shut up.
Starting point is 00:43:02 Let me do my job. You shut up. And he says, I'm sorry I killed that girl. I stabbed her 40 times. Kimberly Compton was the first one over in St. Paul. I don't know what's the matter with me. I'm sick. I'm going to kill myself, I think.
Starting point is 00:43:16 And they say, where are you? And he says, I'm just going to, if somebody dies with a red shirt on, it's me. I've killed more people. I'll never make it to heaven. And she says, calm down. Shh. Calm down.
Starting point is 00:43:28 God. She's like, God, you're really fucking annoying. So yes, so they get that phone call. Yeah, he's. And they're like, what what? So he doesn't say where. He says, I've killed more people. And he doesn't say where.
Starting point is 00:43:41 Because he doesn't want to get caught. But what happens was the next day, the very next day, the body of Barbara Simon's 40 years old, a nurse, was found beaten and stabbed over a hundred times. Jesus. With what police said with either an ice pick or a screwdriver. I wouldn't know why he had an ice pick.
Starting point is 00:44:00 I have no idea. She was thrown into the Mississippi River, but she had become ensnared in some like weeds on the side, so she had washed up. Oh. But they had tried to get rid of her, right? Right. Which to me is another thing that's like, hmm, did you really want to get caught?
Starting point is 00:44:15 You thought she was going to float off to sea. Right. Like, let's get out of here. So, now police went back to the bar. She was at scene last at and spoke to the staff who relayed the whole story of that evening to them. The waitress who really took a good look at the guy after she told her she was going to go home with him. She was shown a bunch of mug shots, a whole lineup, and they said it was like over a hundred
Starting point is 00:44:35 pictures. Wow. And suddenly she stops them and is like, that's him. That's definitely the dude. Definitely know that's him. It was a photo of 38-year-old Paul Michael Stefani. He had a mug shot because he had been arrested and convicted of aggravated assaults before. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:44:54 Now, like I said, it's said that he had a little bit of history with mental illness, but nothing it proves that. There's no sources that people say it, but I have not seen anything to confirm that like an actual Yeah, so I just want to say that right there like we have no idea. He was never diagnosed with anything I have no idea he did work at the manufacturing company that Karen was found in a couple of years before he had committed these crimes Wow, he was fired from there So he's looking pretty good for these crimes now. Yeah. Now they get, so they immediately get an order
Starting point is 00:45:27 for 24 hour police surveillance on him. They're gonna go after him. They're gonna John Wayne Gates see this. They're gonna tag him. So on August 21st, 1982, one day later, he got in his car, so they're following him, like trying to be, oh my God, don't raise suspensions. Don't raise suspensions.
Starting point is 00:45:44 Don't raise suspensions. Don't be so special. I would love to do that. Well, unfortunately, so I have no idea whether he caught on or not, like no one really knows this, but I don't think he did because of what he does next. So he lost them somehow. And he went into Minneapolis. He went into, you know, where you can find sex
Starting point is 00:46:08 workers. And he picked up 19-year-old sex worker Denise Williams. They lost him and then he does this. Wow. Exactly. That's why I don't think he knew that they were following him because I don't think he would do Yeah. So they negotiated $100 for whatever act was going to occur. He brought her back to his apartment. They engaged in a sexual act. And he offered to bring her back to the place where he had picked her up. So she was like, cool. So they start driving.
Starting point is 00:46:38 And she immediately starts getting freaked out because he was not going the right way. She also said he began talking about his sexual fantasies with her and it was creeping him out. Like she was like, all right, like it's done. Like we're like, yeah, like they had the sexual fantasy vibe. And I get over it. She said she was just getting uncomfortable. And then he drives into a pitch black road with like no street lights.
Starting point is 00:46:59 Oh my God. This poor girl. Yeah. And she starts freaking out and she's like, where are you taking me? And he's like, everything's fine. I'm just taking a shortcut, which they are never taking a shortcut. No. Never.
Starting point is 00:47:11 There are no shortcuts. Everything is long. It's a long cut. Everything in the world takes forever to get to. To get to. There's no shortcuts in the world. None. So if anybody tells you, I'm just saying a shortcut,
Starting point is 00:47:22 tell them, no, you're gonna fucking murder me. I know it. Hop out of the car. Alaina told me, skirt. Alaina told me there's I'm just saying a shortcut, tell them, no, you're gonna fucking murder me. I know it. Hop out of the car. Alaina told me. Skirt. Alaina told me there's no such thing as a shortcut. There's no such thing as a shortcut. They all say that.
Starting point is 00:47:31 Don't worry about me taking you into this weird wooded area. It's a fucking shortcut. Do you know what's really funny about driving with me, though? I think I know all these shortcuts. I know you do. I know you do. This is fucking longer. I do.
Starting point is 00:47:43 And then Annie, the other night was like, It's always long. Annie was like, I'm taking like a different way because you take the then Annie the other night was like, it's always long. Annie was like, I'm taking like a different way because you take the longest way. And I was like, no, I don't. I know a shortcut. You don't. And then she got home before me.
Starting point is 00:47:51 Exactly. Because there's no shortcut. So I am evidence that there's no fucking shortcut. And you know what, it's fine. Everything takes forever to get to. And that's fine. Let's all just accept it. Never accept a shortcut.
Starting point is 00:48:02 No, just let's remember. And we're a bit podcast on your deep long cut. Yeah, that's what we're here for. We're here for your long. Never accept a shortcut. No, just let's remember. A bit podcast on your deep long cut. Yeah, that's what we're here for. We're here for your long commute. Not your shortcut. Duh. So don't take one. Either way, Denise also knew that there's no shortcuts.
Starting point is 00:48:15 Just put off. Because she's very street smart. She has been, which this like hurts my heart, she has been a sex worker since the age of 13. Oh my gosh. So she had been on the streets for quite some time. She knew this area. She knows how to get back to where she was.
Starting point is 00:48:28 She knows the shortcuts. She's like, dude, no. And she also knows dudes like this who are going to try to hurt you and try to scam your ass. So she was like, I know what's going on here. So she immediately starts looking around. She sees a glass bottle on the floor. And she's like, and she just looks at it.
Starting point is 00:48:44 And she's like, all right, that's there. That's good to know. So he pulls into a dead end street that is pitch black. Fuck that. And he turns the car off. Why? And she notices, so she's like, okay, you need to turn that car back on right now because I'm going to get the fuck out of the car right now. And he tells her some grass, ass or gas, no one rides for free. And she was like, yep, like that we, what? That already happened. That already happened.
Starting point is 00:49:12 The ass already happened. Like you know, it was paid for, like we don't need to, like this doesn't need to be a thing. No, like you're not getting something for free either. Like, like, you made our transaction happen. Fuck off. So he immediately tries to grab her hand, but she attempts to get out of the car. And this really makes him angry. So he turns and grabs a Philip head screwdriver and stabs
Starting point is 00:49:36 her in the stomach. Oh, I'll. So she immediately snatches that bottle off the floor and smashes it right over his head. Incredible. He is bleeding profusely. She's not bleeding a lot because even though he's stabbing there, it's a, like, um, to puncture. Yeah. So it's not bleeding a ton. He is bleeding everywhere. Right.
Starting point is 00:49:57 Because she has managed to gash open his face and head. Hell yeah. And he is bleeding every, like, all over the car. So it is it is mayhem and he I guess he said in a high pitched voice. Oh no shut up. You're just like the rest of those brawns Ew, I'd be like no, I'm not. I'm gonna kill you. My to me is the evidence you need to say He has something against women and this is something he does Yeah, because he's saying you're just like those other brats because she slept with him women and this is something he does. Yeah. Because he's saying you're just like those other brats because she slept with him.
Starting point is 00:50:28 Right. And he is shaming her. Right. I think that this is what it is. I swear I should, I'm gonna, I'm gonna fucking do the psychology on this dude. I'm gonna write a, I mean, you have a psychology degree. I'm gonna write a book on him
Starting point is 00:50:38 because I really do feel this has something to do with it. It seems like he is shaming them immediately after getting what he wants. Yeah. So he says, you're just like some of those other brats. And then blood is everywhere. It's mayhem. She can't see anything. She said all she could see was blood. She couldn't get out of the car, but she eventually she opens, she gets the handle and pulls it and just falls out of the car. He falls right on top of her. Shut up. And is continually
Starting point is 00:51:06 stabbing her still. Oh my gosh. And she's screaming at the top of her lungs, thinking she's alone because they're in the pitch black. There's nothing around, but he chose the wrong street because there was houses that were hidden on the street and were just dark. He had no idea. Oh shit, like just like back a little.
Starting point is 00:51:23 So yeah, and she says suddenly that she decided to play dead. And she was like, I'm just gonna try to pretend I'm dead. So he'll stop because he kept stabbing her. And she said, I'm dying. I'm dying. And then she just laid there, but he kept going. Yeah, because he's like wild. I'm maniac. So somewhere nearby, there was someone with their window open. Oh, sure. And heard these screams. This man was Doug panning. Sometimes fresh air is for dead people, other times it's for saving almost a couple. Other times it's for heroes, that's all. So Doug panning runs out of his house,
Starting point is 00:51:51 sees this man on top of Denise stabbing her, and he runs over to the scene. Wow. And it says, so I found in the trial notes for this, in like a very small court transcript of this case. I hate, when you can only get like one page. A little snippet. Right.
Starting point is 00:52:06 That's all I could find at all. It said, panning observes Stefani on top of Williams, stabbing her with the screwdriver at least five or six times. Panning heard the screwdriver make a thud when it hit bone. Oh! So he said he could literally hear it hitting her bone. Oh, jeez. He saw Williams had the neck of a broken bottle in her hand.
Starting point is 00:52:25 He's kind of old. So she still had that broken bottle and was still trying to get him. Good. Now he grabs Stefani and turned him around to try to make him stop. And Stefani starts lashing out at him, of course. With the screwdriver. So Doug got away from him and ran back to his house and called 911. Now Stefani knew the police were likely coming and figured he had probably killed Denise, so he got in the car and sped away. Wow. This is when Doug, being the God that we all need
Starting point is 00:52:51 at this moment, ran back out and to help Denise and held on to her while they waited for police. Yeah. Which, like, what a bad ass he is. Like, he was attacked too, so he could have stayed in his house and been like, they'll take care of it. Right.
Starting point is 00:53:04 Right. And he ran back out to comfort her. Good for him. Just like, I want to give Doug props. Me too. So according to the court papers, her wounds were to the lower right chest, upper right abdomen, and right side of her head. One wound punctured her lung, another punctured her liver. Since she had punctured type wounds, like they said, there was a minimal amount of external bleeding. She was stabbed at least 15 times. Wow. Yeah, she had emergency surgery, and she survived.
Starting point is 00:53:32 Yes. Now, this is when the fourth call of this whole thing came. Mm-hmm. Came that night very soon after this. And it's not exactly what you think So yes, he called the ambulance for himself. Okay. So, yeah, he's like, and he literally is like, I got beat up. And he sounds exactly like how he sounds, and the other call just lack for him.
Starting point is 00:54:20 And it's like, yeah, you did get beat up. Denise beat the shit out of you. I'm glad that you had to call an ambulance for it. It's also interesting because you do think that if you were beat in the way that she beat him, you would be frantic then. Yeah, right. And I, but honestly, I think he had lost a lot of blood. So he was probably like on the verge of passing out.
Starting point is 00:54:35 That's true. But I'm also just like, it makes me even feel more like that was so put on before. Exactly, exactly. And so he was bleeding profusely, again, several huge lacerations that she had and put it on him, which good on her. So police hear this call and they're like,
Starting point is 00:54:51 oh, that's that weepy dick. Like, that's definitely him. Good ol' weepy dick. The weepy dick killer. Like, that's heros. So they were like, oh, that's definitely the same voice. So they're like, all right, let's bring him into the hospital.
Starting point is 00:55:02 And Denise, at the same time, is explaining what she had done in self the hospital. And Denise at the same time is explaining what she had done in self-defense, and these injuries are matching up. Because she was like, oh, I took a bottle and I slammed it on his head, gashed his side of his face open and his head and they're like, oh, that matches.
Starting point is 00:55:15 Right. Hey there, fellow podcast listener, it's Elena. And Ash! And we're taking you back to the days before streaming services. Whoa! You know when you would come home from high school, and it was only a few hours until that TV show,
Starting point is 00:55:29 everyone was watching was about to come on. Well, in 1999, that show was Buffy the Vampire Slayer. In our podcast with Wondery, the re-watcher Buffy the Vampire Slayer, we take it back to 1999. So get out your knee high boots and paste that poster of Angel on the wall. It's time to enter the Buffyverse. Some of you avid morbid listeners already know
Starting point is 00:55:53 what we've gotten store. Hey, my nose. Join us as we sway our way through Buffy's drama, action and romance, episode by episode. Lacey, follow the rewatcher of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen early and add free on the Amazon Music or Wondery app. Dar-nar-nararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararararar Now, they're also like, oh wait, this is also the guy that we were following and we lost him. Jesus. So they're like, wait a second. And then this woman is attack and she shows up with the same injuries that he that she's talking about the same injuries. She just inflicted on this man.
Starting point is 00:56:39 Right. It's all adding up now. Right. Right. Right. Right. So and again, he's claiming he got he was beaten and robbed. And that's where he got his injuries. Okay, but they were like, yeah, no half of that. Let's not lie. Denise was showing a photo line up immediately. She picked Stefania out with, she was like, boom, that's him. Easy. Matches all up, he's arrested and charged with attempted murder. Good.
Starting point is 00:56:57 Because they were like, this is definitely attempted murder. Because he also left her to die. Exactly. So they bring him in for questioning, and they bring out the case file of the Weepy Boyce killer while they're questioning. they were like, this is definitely attempted murder. Because he also left her to die. Exactly. So they bring them in for questioning and they bring out the case file of the Weepy Boys killer while they're questioning him. Because they're like, we want you to take a look
Starting point is 00:57:11 and they show him photos of his victims. So they're like, we want you to take a look at these because we think you're involved. Immediately, he gets pissed and aggravate, like turns on a guy. Like, oh, I don't know, I just got that. And then they're like, look at these, like we think you're him and he's like, oh, fuck a diet. Like, oh, I don't know, I just got that. And then they'll like look at these things. And like we think you're him and he's like,
Starting point is 00:57:27 oh, fuck right off. Like gets right. Which again to me says, I'm with it. I just piss that you're onto it. Right. In fact, the first thing he does is he gets up from his chair and says, you're not gonna pin those on me. Oh, so you know about them.
Starting point is 00:57:41 And it's like, okay. So police officers in the room though though, said his voice changed, and it suddenly sounded exactly like the weepy voice recordings. So he was doing it like on purpose. They were like, he changes it when he needs to. What the fuck? So they charged him with, they were also going to, they charged him with Barbara because they were able to pin him
Starting point is 00:58:01 to that one, two Barbara Simons. The other two murders, or the other murder Kimberly, and then the attempted murder on Karen were in St. Paul. So they were gonna need St. Paul to stop, collaborate, and listen with them. And you know how that can be hard. I know, obviously, St. Paul wanted to, but they were like, we don't know if we have a lot of evidence.
Starting point is 00:58:25 We have the calls, but we don't know. So at first, they were like, we don't know. And they were like, we're going to charge them for these two, and we're going to get them behind bars. Yeah. So, they brought in a voice expert to listen to the calls and to listen to Stefani's interview voice. And these two, I think it was two voice experts.
Starting point is 00:58:43 And they said they were remarkably similar similar because it's the same voice. But they said they couldn't say definitively, it was the same, which I'm like, so what good are you? Well, I was just going to say, okay, cool. So why did we bring you in today? Because it's like, wait, how much money an hour did you just make to come in here and say the exact same thing that we just said, which is my, my, my, these two voices sound very similar. They just sit there and they listen to everything and they're like,
Starting point is 00:59:09 sounds so maybe. That'll be $3,000 per hour, thank you, but. Sounds pretty similar. Uh, perhaps, but that'll be $1,000. Thank you very much. It's like, what the fuck? Why did you even come in? They're like, I'm not want to make that. Yes, that was annoying to me. I was like, okay, thanks so much. Yeah, right. Like, please, to fucking tell you it sounds similar.
Starting point is 00:59:31 So they were like cool, cool. So the trial was in February of 1985 for the attempted murder. And it lasted six weeks. He pled guilty. Her people had not guilty to the attempted murder of Denise and the murder of Barbara. His ex-wife, his sister and a woman he had once lived with as a roommate came on the stand to listen to the calls And they were asked to listen to them and then tell us who they thought that was. His sister most notably was listening to it and afterwards just like took the thing thing off and put her head down and started crying. And said, that is without a doubt, my brother. Wow. Like, she was without a doubt.
Starting point is 01:00:10 To have to do that to your sub-layer. And so she was devastated. I feel like thanks a lot for putting me in that fucking position. He was found guilty of attempted murder and second degree murder. Good. And he got 58 years in prison.
Starting point is 01:00:22 18 years for the attack on Denise and 40 years for the attack on Denise and 40 years for the murder of Barbara. Wow. Now, Saint Paul, they were like, all right, Saint Paul, you're up. Yeah, like let's get it. And they were like, we don't have enough.
Starting point is 01:00:34 So they were like, we're not gonna try. Why not? Which I was like, what the fuck, Saint Paul? Also, I know he's going away, but like, Karen and Kimberly's family's deserve justice. What is this? If you think of it, Kimberly was killed with an ice pick. Okay, cool.
Starting point is 01:00:46 Where's the fucking ice pick? It's probably in his possession somewhere. It's somewhere. You can test it. Yeah. They didn't even look. Yeah. They just basically were like, we don't have a lot of physical evidence.
Starting point is 01:00:54 We just have the phone calls. Can you try to get some physical evidence? And the fact that he had information that only the killer would have. Right. And they're recorded. That's why it's trading. I'd be pissed. Yeah. So it left them unsolved, which that's up. But they're not. Like those four families, they know he did it, but they didn't get their justice. Well, technically he didn't get time for it.
Starting point is 01:01:13 So yeah. So he went away to prison. And in 1997, 12 years after he was put in prison, he was diagnosed with terminal skim cancer. He was he was given a, basically, a death sentence. They said, you probably have less than a year. Mm-hmm. So he immediately was like, oh, well shit. So he asked to speak to the St. Paul police. And they were like, what? And he was like, well, I have some information
Starting point is 01:01:39 that you might want. And the only thing that I would like in return is a photo of my mother's gravestone. That's really fucking weird. Which to me, I'm like, there it is. There's your mommy issues. Yeah, that's disgusting. And there it is. It's in there. It's in there somewhere. I swear I will find it. I want to talk to the police and all I need is a picture. Like, why couldn't you get that from your sister? I just want a picture of my mother's head stone. That's really what I want. That's just very bizarre. So they were like, okay. So they just brought it to. I also want that he doesn't just want a picture of her.
Starting point is 01:02:07 Yeah, just her headstone. I want to see her headstone. Okay, sorry, go ahead. And it's like, okay, sure she. There's a lot behind there. There is. There is. There is. I have many thoughts. I got to know. So they met with him and he just confesses to everything. He pours open tea. He said he attacked Karen. He was like, yes, I sure did and he said he hit her a good 20 times and They and he says it very casually. Yeah, like whatever. He says when I picked her up she had no jacket And I thought I'd take her for a cup of coffee Stefani confessed
Starting point is 01:02:38 I just wanted to warm her up in my mind snapped or something so they say in the they say, do you remember where you hit her with the iron paw? Did you hit her maybe one time, two times? And he says, oh god no, most have been about 30 times. A good 20 times, I think it was. And then they said, were you swinging it this way? Or did you poke her with it? Like were you trying to stab her with it? And he says, no, I don't think I poked her at all. I remember hitting her mainly on the forehead and on the cheek, the jaw, the mouth, and on poked her at all. I remember hitting her mainly on the forehead and on the cheek, the jaw, the mouth, and on the top of the head. I think it was only about 10 times in,
Starting point is 01:03:10 but I then noticed that she really must be hurting a steel bar like that. Oh, okay. And it's like, Paul, oh, I realized she must be hurting. And then he said 10 times in, so you kept going after that. But then I went another at least 10 more times. And also, you're saying that you had the wear with all to know that she was hurting. To sit there and be like, oh, she must be hurting.
Starting point is 01:03:29 This is a steel bar that I'm hitting her with. So you recognized that. So you didn't snap. Exactly. So you were totally with it. And that's why that mental illness thing, it's like, it can creep in there while you're reading this. And then I'll send you like, wait a second.
Starting point is 01:03:42 Yeah, I don't know. I don't know. So then he did say that he confirmed what the waitresses said about how he met Kimberly Compton. He said, quote, we started talking and I told her I'd show her around town. I thought I'd drive her by the river and maybe we see the Delta Queen or have a picnic, but in 15 minutes she was dead. Why though?
Starting point is 01:04:03 Yeah, like why though? Yeah. Like, why though? And he says, um, he says, I said, yeah, I want to show you something. There's really a nice view over here. And he said, you can see the nice river, I think I mentioned. And then he said, I think I mentioned you'll have something to tell your parents about. What? And then you decided to kill her? As I walked out of the car, I carried my knife with me.
Starting point is 01:04:24 I had every intention of hurting her. Okay, that's not snapping. We laid down in the grass, and I remember opening up her bra, just feeling her tits and stuff. Yeah, grap. And I just start stabbing her. And then he says, I was even hurting. When I went back to the car, I was like,
Starting point is 01:04:42 I was like, I mean, and that's what made me go to the police and use the phone. I mean, I really wanted to help her. My mind started clearing up. I mean, I really wanted, and then he says, my mind started clearing up. What are you doing? I said, I said, you had a chance to make another friend. I kept yelling at myself. You like to make friends? No. I think that's him trying to come off like I just wanted to make a friend and it's like no, no, you didn't. No, because the fact that you carried the knife with you to the cut like no, like from the car, it just doesn't make any sense. And then I feel like he said like you'll have something to tell your parents about to be an asshole.
Starting point is 01:05:22 Yeah, like you're gonna have something to tell your parents about before I'm gonna take you from them in five seconds. Right. So fuck right off. No. So then during this interview, so they're already like, okay, thank you for all this. It's very great. Then he's like, oh yeah.
Starting point is 01:05:35 I also killed someone that you didn't mention. And he's like, they're like, what, what now? Like, huh? Yeah. Besides those four people that we're talking about, and he says, yeah, one happened before Kimberly, Kimberly or between Kimberly and Barbara so it was his second murder Okay, okay, and he didn't have any information about who she was like couldn't give a name Was just like yeah, I drowned her in a bathtub in her own apartment
Starting point is 01:05:58 And they were like oh so they check with Ramsey County Medical Examiner Office and ask because he knew that's where it was. Yeah, and they ask about any like drownings like that in the last couple of years and it matches the case of 33-year-old Kathleen Greening. Uh-huh. Initially, they had looked at this, the police had looked at this as suspicious when she was found. In her strange husband was actually heavily looked on as a suspect, but nothing ever panned out so it was labeled an accident. It was July 21st 1982. She and her friend Carol Kellogg were planning a trip together. Carol showed up that morning to pick up Kathleen, no one came to the
Starting point is 01:06:38 door. So she pushed the door open because it was unlocked, which she already was like that's weird. She said she went through the house, found her in the bathroom. She was in a full bath face-up and dead Wow, I wonder did he say that he knew her? Is this like a part? He didn't give a lot of he said he was able to give details about her and about her apartment that made them know that this is it was her was That's a strange because it's so different than the other ones. It's totally, no call and a totally different M.O. Yeah. But what's weird about this is they had, when they were looking at this, like it was a
Starting point is 01:07:13 foul play, they had obviously collected stuff from her apartment for evidence. Yeah. They had an address book of hers, and when they looked in it, there was an entry for Paul S, and it was his phone number. So maybe they did know each other in some capacity. Right. In some capacity, they had met an exchange of phone number. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:07:33 So maybe it was like a date or something. So that was like their boom, there he is. Like he's telling this one. That's so strange. And when they showed him, he was like, yeah, that's her. Like I did that. And he just wouldn't give anymore. He said, and then when they asked her how he did it,
Starting point is 01:07:47 they were like, did you like hold her head down? Like what happened here? And he was like, oh no, I held both her shoulders down and drowned her in the bathtub. What the fuck? Yeah. So weird. So he said when the murders occurred
Starting point is 01:07:59 that there would be a voice in the back of his head that would say, Paul, it's time to kill. Which to me says, I'm going to try to pretend to be an insane person, right? And he said he would always go to church after the kills and he would sit in the back and cry. And then he said, and I'm, here we come with the mama. He always said, I'm sorry if you call your mom mother. But if you, if anybody refers to their mom as mother, they are a serial killer.
Starting point is 01:08:32 Whitney from Southern China, I'm looking at you. I know that you're a serial killer. Whitney, you listening? If you call your mom mother, it's weird. It does, it gets in especially're a serial killer. Whitney, you listening? If you call your mom, mother, it's weird. It does. It gets in especially after a certain age. It's like, it's weird. It's what's happening. As an adult, if you're like, mother. Hi, mother. Hello, mother. Mother always says, like, shut the fuck up. Yeah, it's weird, man.
Starting point is 01:09:02 And so he also was quoted as saying, killing was seem to me the thing you were supposed to do that was part of life. Driving a car was part of life. Eating food was part of life to me. It seemed like killing was part of life until I did it. Okay, so again, like you're just somebody that is a murder. It's a part of it.
Starting point is 01:09:22 It's part of you. It's your 10, you's your Ted Bundy. And maybe you're saying that afterwards, you didn't like it afterwards, but that doesn't change the fact that you weren't insane when you did it. You just didn't really afterwards, you were like, I don't know if I liked that.
Starting point is 01:09:35 I'll try it again though. Well, that's the thing because I'm sitting here saying, you're saying that you didn't like it, but then you did it four more times. Yeah, it doesn't really make a whole lot of you liked it. He did die at the age of 53 of skin cancer on June 12, 1998, in Oak Park Heights, maximum security prison. I wish that he had lived longer
Starting point is 01:09:53 so that he could suffer in jail. Yeah, it's, I just, this one is a strain and the mom is a big part of this pathology. I'm telling you, I need to know what about this upbringing in this dynamic in this house. I don't know, maybe I swear there needs to be like a full investigative thing into this. It's also interesting that he was like abused
Starting point is 01:10:12 by a stepdad and she would tell him if something hurts you go to God. Yes, so those two things are related. Yeah, there was. He, I think he's one of those that had a weird fixation. The year of session and fixation was mother but also hated her. I think he's one of those that had a weird fixation with mother, but also hated her. I think he's one of those. I think he's one of those that is like, I fucking hate her, but I love her and I'm obsessed with her.
Starting point is 01:10:34 Like, you know, those weird, it's like a dichotomy. I feel like he's one of those. That is a wild case, man. The Weepy Voiced Killer. I feel like next time I cry, I'm gonna like think about this. I know, right? Yeah, I'm gonna. Don't stop crying. Just listen. I know and I know he shouldn't laugh at that, but that's like really funny. That's fucked. Like it's it's not fucked. Yeah, it's not funny. But the way he says it is funny. Okay, thanks. It's objectively funny. That's the way he says that.
Starting point is 01:11:07 Funny that's the way she says that is objectively funny. I love I don't love but like the way he goes Like okay, okay, okay, all righty. What's the address? Like we'll fucking bring out your Google Did he get goddamn it? Yeah, why don't you have one? Oh, man? Oh, so yeah the weepyy Voice killer, everybody. Well, if you want to see what this Boso looked like, head on over to Instagram. Morbid Podcast. Send us up on Twitter. A morbid podcast.
Starting point is 01:11:31 And us, the GMIL. morbidpodcast.gmail.com. We hope you're listening. And we hope you keep it. We're weird. But as a result, you go out and kill people and then you're like, wow, wow, wow, I didn't mean to, but then I got to think I did,
Starting point is 01:11:42 but I really did like it. Oh my God, the copy machine on Mama Avenue. Ah, I don't mean to, but then I got a second death and I really didn't like it. Oh my god, the copy machine on Mama Avenue! Oh, I don't know! Get ready for the 201st episode! 200 and 1! Woo! Hey, Prime Members! You can listen to Morvid, Early, and Add Free on Amazon Music. Download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen Add Free with Wondery Plus and Apple podcasts. Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondery.com slash survey.
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