Morbid - The Murder of Maddie Clifton "Mini" Morbid
Episode Date: July 13, 2019It's an Alaina Mini Morbid, which means it is longer than an average full length episode. Trust us, it is worth it because this case is a truly horrific but endlessly fascinating look into the mind of... a secretly troubled young boy who fooled absolutely everyone in his life. Unfortunately, it was young, precious, vivacious Maddie Clifton was on the receiving end of his break from reality. TRIGGER WARNING This case involves the death of a child and it is hard to hear. We warn ahead of time when it will be discussed, so you can skip accordingly if you feel like you need to! Sources: Kids who Kill: Joshua Phillips: True Crime Press Series 1, Book 1 by Kathryn McMaster https://www.jacksonville.com/news/20170810/19-years-later-narrative-behind-maddie-cliftons-demise-gets-even-worse https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/5573932/joshua-phillips-children-who-kill-maddie-clifton/ Cowritten by Alaina Urquhart, Ash Kelley & Dave White (Since 10/2022)Produced & Edited by Mikie Sirois (Since 2023)Research by Dave White (Since 10/2022), Alaina Urquhart & Ash KelleyListener Correspondence & Collaboration by Debra LallyListener Tale Video Edited by Aidan McElman (Since 6/2025) Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
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Hey, weirdos, I'm still Ash.
And I'm still Elena.
And this shit is still morbid as fuck.
And Minnie.
Mini, Minnie, mini, mini, mini, mini, mini, mini, mini, mini, mini.
Mini morbid, mini morbid, mini morbid, mini.
It's Minnie, and I always forget to say that.
You definitely do.
But you know what?
Here you are.
And the title says that it's mini.
And you know what?
It's actually not mini.
I was just going to say this is not a mini.
I don't lie to the people.
In fact, and I'll explain this at the end of the episode, this might have a little branch off of it that goes into my next mini.
Well, I love trees.
So, trees, they provide oxygen.
Correct.
Love them.
Yep.
Yep.
Let's keep those around.
So we're just two nerds who think we're funny.
That's my favorite negative review ever.
I don't even look at it as a negative review.
I am a nerd and I do think I'm funny.
Do your friends think I'm funny?
Yeah, we haven't really given a shit about any of our negative reviews lately because we're just like in that place now where we don't care about negative reviews.
We care much more about all the beautiful, lovely listeners who leave us beautiful, thoughtful, delightful, delightful, positive reviews because you guys are the best.
Sometimes when I'm sad, I read the positive reviews.
Yeah, because you guys are so thoughtful and just nice and you're articulate.
And I just, we love you.
We read literally every single one of them.
All of them.
And they touch our black little hearts.
And our somewhat souls.
But the one negative review that we also loved so much was somebody who literally just said,
they're just two nerds that think they're funny.
And I'm like, you know what?
You're not wrong.
Yeah, I was like, you know what?
Nailed it.
That's not false information, Sally.
That's correct.
So that's really all, that's not business.
but that's all the business we attend to on mini morbid.
So let's dive right into this.
What's your mini morbid about?
My mini morbid.
Let's just call it your fucking morbid.
My full ass morbid.
My full ass morbid.
I'm not going to tell you.
I'm just going to lead you into it.
Okay.
I'm going to see if you know this case.
This is kind of like a well-known case, I would think.
Don't say that because I probably won't know it.
That's okay.
Thank you.
So on November 3rd, 1998.
I was alive.
You were?
Barely.
But you were alive.
I was like two.
Yeah.
That's like barely.
Yeah.
Two years on the earth?
That's not a lot.
Eight-year-old Madeline Maddie Ray Clifton, who was born on June 17, 1990, arrived home from school
to her home on Fleetwood Road, Lakewood, Jacksonville, Florida.
I want to live on Fleetwood Road.
Yeah?
Fleetwood Road.
Oh, Fleetwood House.
I was like, what is the thing behind that?
I get it now.
Thank you.
That evening, she sat down and played the piano sometime around like five o'clock.
So after she did her piano practice, it was about 20 minutes later,
and she went off to chip some golf balls with a guy named Larry Grisham
who lives at the end of the street.
I love that.
Now, Maddie was like a little tomboy.
She loved sports.
She was like super tough.
Like they described her as tough as nails at one point.
But she could also be like a ballerina.
Right.
She was super well-rounded, just like this cool little chick.
Just like a badass eight-year-old.
Exactly. Like, Maddie was so cool.
Oh, no, I don't like where this is headed.
She came back home and she was like,
Mom, I need some more golf balls because we lost them all.
Oh, my God.
So this is the last time her mother saw her alive.
Oh.
Now, little warning ahead of time.
I'm going to give you a big warning when I discuss it,
but there is a child death, obviously, in this one.
But I will let you know when things get a little gnarly here.
because I personally hate children's death cases as well.
Like I have problems reading or listening to them,
but I think this one's just really important to tell.
So by 6.20 p.m. that night,
Maddie's mom, Sheila Clifton,
she called for her and her older sister,
who was, I believe, 11 years old, Jessica,
to come in.
She called her for dinner.
Okay.
And this is just what they did.
Like, this was, you know, the 90s.
They were in a call.
Zach, everybody knew each other.
So, and I mean, even when I used to play outside when I was little,
our parents just called us infant dinner like we were playing around the neighborhood.
Yeah.
It used to be a very normal thing.
Exactly. Like, it sounds crazy now, but it's like back then it really wasn't that big of a deal.
Now, when she calls them for dinner, Jessica comes in immediately.
Oh, no.
And Maddie's not with her.
So Jessica's like, oh, yeah, I haven't seen Maddie for a while.
I didn't even know she was out playing.
Uh-huh.
So of course her mom's like, uh, what, which I can't even fathom the amount of just like sick.
Like the gut-wrenching feeling.
I can like feel it for her.
So she immediately starts going to neighbor's houses because she knows them.
And she's saying, where's Maddie?
No one has seen Maddie.
No one has seen her.
So she's starting to literally panic and she's standing on her front lawn screaming Maddie's name.
Oh my God.
Which I totally get because it's like that's in like quick little side note.
my kids are three and a half years old, my twins.
They don't go anywhere without me seeing them.
Right.
I'm probably like too much, I suppose.
I don't think that you could ever be too much.
I just feel like you can't be.
No.
And we were out in our backyard the other day.
And one of them went in the house without telling me to go get something.
And I happened to turn around and see only one of them.
I screamed her name in.
in such a state of panic that she started to cry
and ran back out from the house
and I like ran to her and I was like
well I didn't know where you went
and I'm sorry I yelled but I didn't know where you went
I thought I lost you like I freaked out
I freaked out because it can happen
yeah like that it's like you
these things can happen in the matter of seconds
so it's like when they do when it happens
even for a split second it's like
every scenario must go through your head
absolutely so yeah
So I'm a crazy mom, just so you know.
So, unfortunately, so yeah, so her mother, Sheila was absolutely freaking out by this point.
And soon the entire neighborhood started searching around.
Well, and it's like, it's a cul-de-sac.
She couldn't have fucking gone far without someone seeing something.
And I'm sure everybody in that neighborhood is like, whoa, whoa, wait a second.
Like, we all know each other.
And we all know, you can see a car come in and go from a cul-de-sac.
So they're like, wait a second.
Now, her father, Steve, who was a supervisor.
at a metal shop, he said, quote,
it was like she shut the door and just poof,
vanished off the face of the earth.
Oh my God.
That makes my heart hurt.
Yeah.
So by 633 p.m. approximately,
Sheila Clifton had had enough, and she called 911.
She was like, I'm not fucking around here.
So that night, I mean, adults, children,
everybody in that neighborhood and around that neighborhood went on searches.
Like, people were volunteering everywhere.
Jessica, her older sister who was like 11, was riding her bike through the neighborhood
screaming Maddie's name.
This was a huge.
This is hurting my soul.
Yeah.
So, I mean, and this was in the middle of the night.
People had flashlights out.
They went all through the night looking for her.
Jesus.
Couldn't find her anywhere.
Now, somebody who was with these searchers was a neighbor who lived very close to the Clifton's
house.
He was a 14-year-old.
He often played with Maddie.
and his name was Joshua Josh Phillips.
Okay.
Now, Maddie was apparently liked him a lot, like to play with him.
Yeah.
Even though he's 14 and she's eight.
Mm-hmm.
Later, we will see that that was a source of contention at one point.
They went for hours and hours all through the night.
Next morning, nowhere to be found.
Okay.
So the following day, a Jacksonville sheriff's office detective,
decided to go door to door and started talking.
to each neighbor trying to get stories,
finding out where people were that night.
Like, just we've got to figure out what happened here.
No one could give any useful information
because they all had alibis.
They were all friends with the Clifton's,
and they were all like, we never saw her.
Like, she wasn't here.
She wasn't playing with our kid.
Okay.
So there was one person that they kind of focused on at first.
His name was Larry Grisham,
the guy that she went to Chip Golf Ball.
Is this like an actual guy?
Well, that's the thing.
When I first read it, I was like, oh, Larry Grisham, she's going to play with.
Larry Grisham is a man.
He was a 45-year-old man who liked to play with children.
Okay.
And I don't mean he, like, I'm not suggesting that he liked to, like, quote-unquote, play with the children.
Yeah.
But he did have a criminal history that involved 29 arrests to his name.
I am sure people didn't know about this.
Now, the charges he had.
under his name were things like auto theft, DUIs, but there were two counts of sexual battery
five years apart from each other. Both of those counts were dropped, but they are on his record.
Okay. And they do not say that they're against a child. But still. Either way. So that's a little
stressful and troublesome. Exactly. So I'm not sure what's going on with that, but I'm, I just, I mean,
I'm not blaming anybody, but I probably wouldn't let my eight-year-old play with a 40-year-old man.
Yeah, I would think that might be a little weird.
But I guess if, you know, she's outside with him, they're hitting golf balls.
Yeah.
Maybe they could see the house from where she was.
Right, right, right, right.
I mean, personally, I wouldn't, but I can't speak for all parents.
I'd be like, no good 40-year-old has an eight-year-old friends that I know of.
It just doesn't feel right to me.
According to Larry, when they discussed with him, like, you were the last person to see that supposedly was with her.
Mm-hmm.
So what happened that night?
So he said that night, around 5.15 p.m., there was like a strip of land between his home and a neighbor's house.
And they were using that strip, which was really close to Maddie's house.
I guess it was like five doors down.
Okay.
They were using that strip to chip golf balls.
Sure.
So they were out in the open.
People could see them.
And he said Maddie went to get some more golf balls, but she didn't come back.
So he said, from what I figured,
her parents wanted her to stay home because it was getting a little late it was 5.15.
Dinner was ready.
I was ready something.
Like I wasn't really concerned about it.
Right.
And he said, that's it.
That's the last I saw over.
So police did take him in for more questioning and he did fail a polygraph.
Okay.
But we know how polygraphs can be like fucking as useful as like a fucking hot dog in a trench coat.
Like it's literally.
Is that a real thing?
I don't know where that just came from.
I didn't know.
I was like, is it a real experience?
It feels like that's not very useful.
A hot dog and a trench coat.
Right?
I want someone to draw that for us.
I just really want a hot dog.
So I think that's why that came to me.
And then I feel like you won't want it in a trench coat because you can't eat it.
Okay.
So, yeah, so he failed the polygraph, but you know.
Trench coats and hot dogs, you know.
And trench coats, hot dogs, all that mess.
So police did search Larry's house.
They searched it nine times.
That's a lot.
So I think they were really trying to.
nail this guy with it. What are you hiding?
Because they didn't have anything else. So I think
they're like, you've got to be it. You're the last
guy who's sorry, you're 45 years old playing
with an eight year old. You have to be it. You have
this extensive record too. They
questioned him 20 times.
He was able to provide a strong
alibi and he readily
gave them DNA samples.
Okay. So that kind of made a lot.
He's not our guy. Yeah. So now Steve and Sheila,
Maddie's parents are sitting here having to think
like quite possibly
somebody who's five doors down for me.
has Maddie. Because they still haven't found her. They don't even know if she's alive, dead, what?
Oh my God. Like, I can't imagine how crazy they must have felt? Well, then can you imagine how
worried you are about your other child too? Exactly. And how worried everybody in the neighborhood is
about their fucking kids. Exactly. And apparently they did station a police officer or a couple of them
at the Clifton home because they were worried about Jessica because they were like, we don't know
what this is about. Right. So maybe someone is going to come back. And Jessica was probably
fucking terrified. Oh, yeah. And again,
And hundreds of volunteers are still scouring the neighborhood.
They're scouring the nearby woods, swamps, anything.
And nothing's coming up.
They did a house-to-house search with cadaver dogs.
The U.S. Army Reserve even came in to go through manholes and shit.
Yeah, crazy.
So they had missing person posters printed.
Like they were posted everywhere.
And everyone was wearing yellow ribbons and were hanging them on trees for Maddie.
My heart.
So this was a huge search.
I mean, this was nothing to sneeze at.
Now, on Sunday of that week, even the Jaguars football coaches were wearing the ribbons.
Oh.
Yeah.
So this was huge.
Of course, nothing.
So this is when the Clifton's were like, we have to go to the press.
Like, we have to do something.
We have to do, like, we have to up our game here.
So they went on TV and they begged whoever had her to please let her go.
They offered $50,000 reward for any news to her whereabouts.
Damn, $50,000 is a lot of fucking money.
And they said there is a possibility of doubling it.
Holy shit.
So they were literally like, we will do anything to get her home.
My God.
And then they addressed her directly and they said, quote,
Maddie, if you are out there and you can hear us,
we are ready for you to come back home, please come home.
And her mom was like sobbing.
Oh, that really just hurt my soul.
They had T-shirts with her face on them.
There was more than 10 billboards throughout Jacksonville with her face on them.
This is giving me chills.
This went on for, and this was a whole week.
So seven days after Maddie went missing,
the Clifton's went on to Good Morning America.
And this is when they were just trying to, again,
plea for her captor to let her go if she was alive,
like, you know, just trying anything.
While they were wrapping up this segment on Good Morning America,
Maddie was found.
Okay.
So let's go to the Phillips house.
Okay.
Yeah, not a place you want to be.
So Melissa Missy Phillips is Josh Phillips' mom.
So this was seven days after Maddie went missing.
Missy Phillips is getting ready for work.
She just sent Josh off to school.
So she had a few, like I think she had a couple of hours before she had to go into work.
Yeah.
So she said it was just after 7 a.m.
And she said she was like, you know what?
I'd been asking Josh to clean his fucking room.
I know this case.
All week.
And he hadn't done it.
So she was like, I had this time.
And I was like, I'm going to start getting rid of shit.
Because she said, not only was it an absolute pig stye,
but she said there was this fucking disgusting odor coming from it.
Now she said, quote, I'd been nagging him about his room because it was in deplorable condition.
So I had a garbage bag and I was going to start putting stuff in that I knew was trash.
He had three birds that he kept in his room.
So oftentimes, if he didn't change the cage out.
Okay.
It would start smelling.
But she did say this smelled much worse.
I think he had two parakeets and a cockatiel.
And she said, she figured it was like a combo of the birds and he's 14 years old,
maybe he has some like rotting food in his ceremony.
Yeah.
So she was like, I'm going in there to find this.
And 14 year old boys just smell bad anyways.
Exactly.
So while she's cleaning, she says she noticed a damp spot on the floor.
This damp spot was on the corner of Josh's bed, which was a water bed.
Okay.
Now she immediately is like, shit, the waterbed is leaking.
Oh, which sucks.
As someone who had a water bed when I was younger,
you're fucked.
That shit leaks all the time and it sucks.
So I understand why she immediately was like, oh, fuck, that's the waterbed.
I mean, yeah.
She said, quote, I was thinking, maybe it's mildew, you know, or mold.
Maybe that's what the odor is coming from the leaking water bed.
She's like, what the fuck is this smell?
Yeah.
So she said she touched the corner of the mattress and it was absolutely soaked.
So she said she looked in a little bit more.
because she, you know, water beds are bullshit,
and she was afraid she was going to have to literally drain the whole thing
because that's what you have to do when they leak.
Oh.
So they're like not, I don't even know if they're a thing anymore.
I don't think so.
They used to be huge.
I think it's like a gel mattress is like the new thing.
Probably, yeah.
Which makes a lot more sense.
Mm-hmm.
So after she looked at the bed frame and she said she noticed that there was black electrical
tape holding one of the corners together.
And she was like, huh, the fuck's that about.
So she said she all.
I also noticed that there was something that looked like a sock in there.
And she was like, oh, how do you get one of his socks in, like, in the bed frame?
Oh, God.
So she's like, my kid's gross as far.
Yeah, she's like, what is wrong with you, Josh?
So then she's like, this tape is weird because she's like, he's never taped his bed frame before.
So she peeled the tape apart and cracked open the corner panel.
And she said it was dark under that bed.
Like there's a little cavern between the waterbed mattress and, like, the box spring.
Okay.
And she said she went and had to go.
had a flashlight because she was like, I can't see anything.
So she said she lifted it up again and put the flashlight in there.
And she said she saw something absolutely horrific inside.
Okay.
She calls her husband, Steve, and she gets his voicemail.
And she just says, the voicemail says, please call home, please.
It's an emergency.
Oh, God.
Now, he didn't call back.
So she said, I knew I needed to get someone.
So she knew the neighborhood had a ton of police around.
Uh-huh.
So instead of calling 911, this was around 7.30 a.m., she ran outside and just ran up to the nearest police officer.
Oh, this poor woman.
Officer Donald F. Tutton, I think it is. He was part of the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office.
He was sitting in his marked police car, and he was on surveillance duty because they had someone constantly.
Right.
Now, he said he saw this woman run out of her house at 6139 Fleetwood Street, and she was running up to his vehicle.
So he can see that she's crying, like totally distraught.
So he gets out and he's like, can I help you?
Like what is going on?
Right.
So she can barely get out what she needs him to do.
And she's so hysterical.
Finally, she manages to tell him she's found something at her home and he needs to come see it.
Okay.
So he's like, oh, good.
Yeah, right?
I'd be like, can you just maybe give me a hint?
Yeah, he's like fun, a puzzle.
So, like, just what I love in my line of work.
So he said, what is it that you found?
Right.
And she's like, I can't say.
She's like, please, please, please just come in my house.
He's like, can you just fucking tell me what it is?
Because honestly, I'd be like, I don't want to.
I don't.
I can't imagine being this dude.
Like, I would have been like, oh, no.
I'm busy that day.
No, I don't want to.
So he's smartly radioed for two other detectives to come.
I was going to say, because I imagine she could just be like some crazy lady.
Exactly.
Like, I want you to see this bomb I made.
Exactly.
So I think he's like, yeah, I'm going to get to.
Call him Fabaca.
Now, so the three detectives ended up following her back to her house,
and she brings them to Josh's room, but she says, I can't, I can't go in.
And so she said, quote, I just pointed to where they needed to look.
I couldn't even go in.
Oh, this poor, poor woman.
So Officer Seulis, who was one of the detectives, opened the door, and he said he immediately
smelled death and decay.
And you know that as an officer.
We know what that smells like.
And he said, I immediately knew what that smelled like.
So he said, the bottom cavity of the waterbed was left open.
And he said, sticking out from the corner, we could clearly see two small feet clad in white socks.
Oh, that just like did something to me.
Yeah.
It's really bad.
Immediately Missy Phillips started sobbing and like screaming, just losing her mind.
Yeah.
Because now it's real.
So Officer Tutton took her away outside.
and he was like, you have to tell me how you found this, like what happened here.
So she said, quote, as I lifted the corner of the mattress, I noticed a white sock and figured it was one of Josh's.
So I started to pull on it, but it wouldn't budge.
Oh, my God.
I wondered how it got there in the first place and was puzzled as to why it would not pull free.
About that time, I noticed black electrical tape holding the black frame of the pedestal together and surmised the bed must have been leaking for quite some time.
and apparently Josh had attempted to hold it together with the tape so he wouldn't get into trouble,
which is a running theme with this case.
Josh didn't want to get in trouble.
How did she not feel the foot in the sock?
Well, she did.
The tape freely pulled away from the pedestal and the wood gave way just enough that I could at least see the sock better.
I grabbed it and this time felt something else.
Sorry.
So I went to another room and retrieved a flashlight.
As I pulled the pedestal slightly away, the sock fell down and I felt something
cold. At the same time, the beam of the flashlights showed me something I could never have been
prepared to see. It could not be what I thought it was, yet somehow I knew exactly what I had found,
the missing little girl from across the street. Oh, I just got goosebumps. Yeah. So, I mean,
and she was freaking out because she was like, I have, I just, I had to implicate my own son. Yeah,
that's like your baby. I had to do it. Like, this is someone else's baby, but that is my baby.
You know, like, what a fucking mind fuck.
So this is when Officer Tutton was like, okay, where is your son?
And she was like, he's on the school bus on his way to school right now.
My God.
So, and she also said, quote, I remember looking at the Clifton's house as I walked towards the patrol car thinking right now they still have hope.
In a few minutes, they'll know.
Oh, my God.
Right?
You're destroying me.
I know.
So by this time, Josh's father, Steve, had got the,
the voicemail so he was rushing home because all he knew was he doesn't even know it was an emergency
that's all right so he got there there's like a million police cars he isn't allowed inside his
house he's like what the fuck is going on as this is going on this is when detectives knocked on the
clifton's door and she led steve clifton said they knew immediately it wasn't good because they
were like their faces and after seeing all these police cars swarm a house near them they were like
yeah this can't be good which i just can't even imagine it's like
It gives me such a pit in my stomach.
They all sat down with them and they told them that they did find Maddie.
And she wasn't alive.
And her father's first question was, where did you find her?
And the officer said, across the street.
Oh, God.
Which must have destroyed them, knowing for the whole week.
The entire, that's seven full days.
Yeah.
Like the whole week she's been right over there.
Like yards away from you.
And you have no idea how long she's been alive.
You don't know what she's gone.
I mean, just the thoughts that must be running through your brain as a parent.
Unbelievable to me.
I can't even like bring myself to put me.
You know what I mean?
Like you can think about it, but you can't even place yourself in that.
But then you want to run as far away from it as possible.
You want to get on a train, a plane, an automobile and get the fuck out of there.
Yeah.
So, yes.
Your next note,
Who is Josh?
That's just how I read it.
Who is Josh?
My notes are so weird.
I like that I do.
Who's Josh?
There is nothing funny about this case,
but there are lots of funny things about my notes.
So who's Josh?
Let me know.
I'm going to let you know.
Hit me up.
So Joshua Earl Patrick Phillips was born March 17th, 1984.
I thought people with three names were weird, but maybe people with four names are like extra-fooked.
Yeah, but I think so.
I think this proves it.
You are extra fooked.
And he's the only child of Stephen Melissa Phillips.
Okay.
Now, he does have two older half-brothers that were already moved out of the house.
So he didn't really grow up with them.
So he was essentially an old job.
Yeah, fuck them.
Yeah.
Fuck them.
So when Josh was born,
He was a happy, healthy, very normal baby, nothing to report during the birth that like could have been like, oh shit.
Point to that.
Oh, there it is.
Now, they said he was always smiling as a baby and a child.
He was a, his parents described him as a pleasure when he was little.
The family did move several times over the years, but Josh remained like a happy, talkative kid, super friendly with everyone, didn't seem to bother him.
He made friends easily.
He was super active and he was like a really curious child.
Okay.
Like you know those kids that are like,
I need to know why the sky is blue.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
It's like,
which is a good thing, you know.
Yeah, you want your kids to ask like questions.
Exactly.
And I mean, by all accounts, he seems like he's like a very like, you know,
average child.
A very good, like, you know, healthy child.
Yeah.
He's like doing everything you want kids to do.
He like going to zoos.
He loved animals.
He loved going to museums.
He loved science from like an early age.
He was a member of the Cub Scouts, and he rose all the way to Wolf Cub, which means absolutely nothing to me.
But I'm sure.
I was going to say, I don't know what that even means.
I'm sure someone listening knows what that means.
I mean, it's the Cub Scouts, so Wolf Cubb sounds pretty diesel.
I feel like Eagle Cub is like the best you can get.
I don't think Eagles have cubs, but you're really pretty.
I'm gonna go now
I didn't put into
like my thoughts that like you had like the animal
before the thing had to have a cub
no I know a cub is a baby
I think they have eaglets
I think that's what they're called actually which is cute
I actually already left
the more you know
so again we're not laughing at this case
no no I just want to always clarify that
Sometimes people are like, they are laughing and they're a death.
It's a Christmas backfall.
Sometimes people get really mad.
Listen to Susan.
But Susan chill.
Calm down, all right?
Because we're just laughing at our own dumb.
We love you, Sue.
Just deal with it.
To his father, his parents were, you know, they loved him.
They took care of him.
They didn't physically abuse him by all accounts, by his own account.
Okay.
But his dad was like a really big and posing dude.
Okay.
He also had a really bad temper.
Oh.
That temper was fueled by alcohol.
Okay, so not good.
Not good.
Yeah.
And basically he was super strict, very strict disciplinarian, which is not always great.
Right.
Especially when it's fueled by alcohol.
Was it like borderline emotionally abusive?
Exactly.
It teetered into emotional and verbal abuse with him.
We don't stand.
Josh was very scared of his dad and didn't want to do things to incite his
temper, which is important later.
At 14 years old, Josh was this like tall, skinny, like brown curly-haired, brown-haired little
boy.
He actually looks super baby.
Yeah, he has a very baby face.
Very baby face, which is even worse when you look at his picture and you know, like,
what happened.
Yeah.
You're like that you have such a baby fate.
Like, how did you do this adult thing?
That's really upsetting.
Because humans are gross.
Yeah, they really are.
So at this point when he was 14, people described him as a normal, happy kid.
He had tons of friends, love to make people laugh, not a loner at all.
Okay.
Not rebellious.
Nothing that would point to like something's going on with that kid.
Right.
He attended school at A. Philip Randolph Academy of Technology.
He was in ninth grade at this point, and he had a C average.
Same.
He was also a bit of, you know, he was kind of like the clobliners.
class clown, but not in like trouble.
You know, like he didn't go to the principal's office or anything.
Yeah, he was just funny, a jokester.
He was just like a goofy kid.
You're a goofball.
So again, he never, nothing would have pointed to this kid having any issues whatsoever.
Yeah, so far he seems very typical.
Yeah, like this wasn't one of those things with the neighbors are like, yeah, oh my God, we're shocked.
But you know what?
There was that one time he kicked my dog.
Nothing.
Like, nothing.
Except for this.
I was going to say there has to be something.
Except for this.
There's never nothing.
And this is,
this is a big thing.
Should we,
is this going to be like a,
well no,
this is just more like,
so this kid was all of those things.
Okay.
But he had this whole other like part of him
that I think he hid from like his family and stuff a lot
that came out later.
Okay.
That we're going to see.
So he had been in trouble
with Maddie's parents before.
Maddie's parents had already not taken a shine to him.
Why?
So at one point they had forbid him from entering their house.
Tell me why.
Because one time they came home and they found him in Jessica's bedroom upstairs,
the older daughter, the 11-year-old.
Was Jessica there?
No.
Uh-huh.
And he was uninvited.
Uh-huh.
And this was just one month prior to Maddie's murder.
Okay, what happened?
He apparently stole a photo out of a frame of Jessica in a gymnastics leotard doing like a backbend.
Okay.
So what ended up happening is they found out in, this was discussed a lot in trial, he was weirdly obsessed with Jessica.
Oh.
Like weirdly obsessed.
And she was 11?
She was 11 and he was 14.
He also discussed sex in front of the two girls.
Oh, yeah.
And Florence Clifton, who was their grandmother, was like,
you don't come around my granddaughters anymore.
Like, she found out about this and was like, no.
Oh, shit.
Now, at this point, and Maddie and Jessica's parents were like, yeah,
we don't want you playing with our kids anymore.
Like, you're too old, too.
Yeah, why is a 14-year-old hanging out with an 11- and 8-year-old?
You don't need to be around them,
and you're not doing yourself any favor here by acting.
really gross around them.
Right.
No.
Now, as time went by, this started to loosen up a little bit and they started to be a little more of like,
okay, you guys play together.
But they still weren't like super psyched.
And Josh's parents also found out about all this and were like, you're not playing with
Maddie.
Yeah.
We're not getting into the shit.
Right.
Now, what came out later too when police searched his computer is that they found out that
he was really into violent sexual images in graphic.
pornography, some of which involved children.
Ew.
So he had this weird whole other...
Okay, so he was not a normal kid.
But it didn't leak out.
That's the weirdest part of this dude is it never leaked out until this happened.
It's like there was no like tiny little leaks happening of this part of his
personality and then it exploded.
It was a one explosion.
It just fucking exploded in the worst way it possibly could.
It's like really fascinating that that's.
how it happened. And horrific.
Oh, so horrific.
He also allegedly, I'll say allegedly, because I don't know if they ever,
this has been totally, I mean, it was in the trial, they did allege this in trial,
that he had broken into the Clifton's home at times to steal little things, like a picture here
and just like, oh, and they said they found holes in Jessica's walls that were covered by
posters where like crawl spaces were in the back. No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Like Danny LaPlante type shit.
Yes.
And they couldn't confirm that he was the one who did this,
but they alleged that he had something to do with this to like spy on her.
Okay, that's fucked up.
But again, these are not things that they like totally confirmed.
So, but it's something that was brought up.
Oh, my God.
And either way, he definitely stole the photo because the photo was missing.
They discovered him in the room.
and then when the police logged everything in his bedroom,
that photo was taped to his headboard.
Why did his parents never notice that that picture was taped to his headboard?
Maybe he might have maybe covered it with pillows or something.
Because they didn't say where it was taped.
Right, right, right, right.
That's true.
That's really fucked up.
Creepy.
So speaking of the crime scene,
let's talk about what the police found in his room.
Does your notes say, the crime scene?
It says crime scene.
Her notes are amazing.
Who's Josh? Who's Josh? Josh had a ton of air fresheners and incense in his room. Wonder why.
Yeah. I mean, me too, actually, minus the air fresheners.
Yeah, but he kind of explains later that he just kept adding fresheners to his room throughout the week
because it just kept getting worse and worse and he didn't know what else to do.
So there was a can of Fabrize Fabric Fresh. There was odor eaters, air fresheners, there were two Glade plug-ins.
Wow.
several rolls of tape, a baseball bat hidden behind a dresser, which comes back later, a leatherman
knife, which was thrown behind the TV.
Okay.
They found a pair of tennis shoes that were stained in Maddie's blood.
And they also found a flyer that was literally the missing person's flyer that was hanging
from a bookshelf.
Okay, that's fucked up.
hanging up in his room as she decomposed under her.
Okay, no, this kid is not fucking normal.
So they also found, and they like named this, which I was like, whoa, whoa, whoa,
step back.
What?
They named that he had a card game entitled Magic the Gathering on his bookshelf, and I was like,
wait a second, I used to collect those cards.
I was just about to say, didn't you have those cards?
I was like, well, fuck.
I mean, that's just a card game, whatever.
I know, but I was like, don't name that in the crime scene, man.
Yeah, that's like, that's just...
That makes me feel some type of way.
That's like being like, also, he owned cards against humanity.
Which likely led to it.
It's like, come on.
Like, all right.
Don't play Magic the Gathering.
It's like Dungeons and Dragons Drive game, basically.
Also, basically.
Right.
So they also found...
Also, he was a wizard.
Also, he was totally trying to be a wizard.
Just a side note.
It's like same, but I'm not going to people, so...
They also found a piece of carpet.
They took a piece of carpet that had...
blood on it. Oh, no. Can you imagine being a parent, his parents and being like, wow, I had no
idea that this was all in his room. That a dead body was in his room. In my house.
Bonkers. I'd be so pissed at him. Oh, I would, I would question a lot. Yeah. They also found that
photograph of Jessica that was, if she was dressed in a leotard and she was doing like some gymnastics
position where she was like bent over. Okay. They took a pillowcase from his bed and some of the
clothing that they believed he was wearing the day of.
Okay. They took a hairbrush and they found a pair of panties.
They bagged those for DNA analysis.
What a fucking skis this kid is.
Yeah. And there was a ceiling fan on his ceiling and it was like a wooden kind of
ceiling fan. Yeah. So they found a fine spray of blood on that ceiling fan.
Oh, so this happened in the room.
Yeah. It later proved to be Maddie's blood. And they said that it was
eight feet off the floor that that spray went.
Okay.
Which later when we discuss his confession, you will find out why.
Okay.
Speaking of the confession.
Okay.
Big, big trigger warning, because we are going to discuss, I mean, Josh admitted everything
right away, and he explains what happened, and it is gruesome.
So Detective William Taylor was the one who picked Josh up from school the day that Maddie's body was found.
Did they let him, like, finish school that time?
No, they went and picked him up and got him out of class.
Okay.
I think he was in, like, geography class or something.
Stupid.
Took him back to the police station, and they started questioning him.
Basically, what they said to him was, hey, Josh, your mom found Maddie's body in your room.
Oh, like, you want to tell us what happened?
So his father was that his parents were present with him when they questioned him.
Because they probably had to be.
Yeah, they have to be, but that doesn't always happen.
So his father was the one I guess.
who encouraged him, like, tell the truth throughout Josh.
Yeah, you have to.
Tell them what happened.
And they said later, they asked, like, was he, like, being forceful?
Like, was he scaring him into it?
Because they were trying to figure out the dynamic here.
Yeah.
And they did say, no, he was not forceful.
He was just telling him, like, you have to tell the truth.
And he decided to make a full confession.
Okay.
So he said that day, Maddie had come over to his house and wanted to play with him.
But he said, no, I'm busy.
I have a lot of chores to do.
Mm-hmm.
Now, he said he had a shit ton of chores.
He said something like 22 chores that were on his list for that afternoon after school.
And his parents were like, yeah, we do assign him a ton of chores.
But they were like, that sounds crazy.
But it's things like, you know, change the bird cage.
Like little things.
Feed the dog.
Do this.
You know, like little things.
And they said the reason that they gave him all these chores was to keep him
busy between the time he got home from school and they got home so that he wasn't getting himself
into trouble.
Just bored and sitting on the computer.
And hiding in someone's cross-based.
But they also still kind of seem like they were like a little much.
That's a little much.
Like I think that goes along with the strict disciplinary and like-22 chores is fucking ridiculous.
We're going to give you 22 chores when you get home from school.
I can't imagine assigning I don't have kids obviously, but I want to, mom someday I'd feel like
an asshole.
That's a lot of chores.
And they also said that once a week he had to cook dinner for the family.
That's weird.
Which I think is crazy because, to be honest, I don't want a 14-year-old cooking for me.
So, yeah, so they said, yep, he did have a ton of chores to do.
But then Josh said, well, I decided I didn't want to do those chores.
And he said he just wanted to sit on the computer and, like, surf the web.
Watch gross porn.
Well, computer records showed that from 422 to 457, he was on porn sites,
many of them involving images of children and torture.
So that's really bad.
I don't know what to say about that.
Josh said around 515, so he was off the computer at this point, he said Maddie came back to the house when he was in the yard raking leaves, because that was one of his doors and he decided to go back to them.
And she came to the fence that was around their house and said, do you want to play baseball?
No.
And he was like, you know what, she's not going to stop.
So, yeah, this is according to him.
Okay.
So he said, okay, you can come in the yard, but only for a little while, because he said, you know, if my dad finds out that you're here, he's going to be mad.
And I don't want him to be mad at me.
Okay.
So his dad.
I wish he had just done that to begin with.
Well, and his dad said, quote, he testified to this.
He said, quote, when we're not at home, he's not allowed to go out and play.
He's not allowed to let anyone in.
Which is understandable, 100%.
So he was like, yeah, I would have been pissed.
He's not supposed to be outplaying.
So they did start, you know, they took turns.
They were pitching and hitting the ball with each other.
The space they were in, Josh said, was only, like,
there was only going to be, like, four feet between them.
I mean, they were pitching and hitting a baseball to each other.
Yeah, that's a little too close.
So he said he had one really strong swing
because he really wanted to hit the ball,
and he said he accidentally hit her near her left eye with the baseball.
Okay.
She got a huge gash in her forehead,
and she fell down, started crying, and, like, screaming loudly.
So he got super scared because he was like,
she's not supposed to be here, and now I just gashed open her head.
Right.
So he said he tried to clean the blood, which I love the first thing he says
is he tries to clean the blood off the ball as best you can.
That's nice, you doche bag.
I'm like, yes, definitely do that.
And then he put it inside the house.
I just left her on the lawn?
Like, dude.
He said she was still yelling and screaming because she ate and that hurt.
and he said he didn't know what to do.
So he said she started to quiet down.
So he dragged her into the house and into his room.
And he said he was so scared that his father was going to be mad at him for playing with her,
that he panicked.
And he said she was bleeding like a ton from the gash.
Wow.
Still crying really loudly.
So he said he tried to stop her by putting his hand over her mouth and like telling her stop crying.
Which probably terrified.
her even more. Exactly. So he, she kept screaming, she's crying, she's making a ton of noise. So he said he just
had to shut her up. So he said he took the baseball bat and he hit her in the head with it with a strong
overhand swing. Overhand. So he said she kept going. So he hit her a second time. Oh no, no, no, no.
And he said, quote, jamming the end of the bat on her head. And then he hit her a third time.
Now, he said this was a full strength bat swing to the head.
Was this like a metal baseball bat?
I believe it was wooden.
Now, the coroner later said that these head injuries would have eventually killed her anyway.
Yeah.
If that was just it, that would have killed her.
That wasn't just it.
So, Maddie was apparently whimpering and moaning still slightly.
So he said she was still making noise.
I'm going to start crying.
So I took my knife that was on the bookshelf, and he stabbed her twice in the neck.
He said the whole time Maddie was basically not, this is according to him and nobody believes this.
He's saying she wasn't fighting back or trying to escape, which I don't believe.
No.
He's still panicking.
And now he said he opened the side of the waterbed and the side of the waterbed and the side of
wooden panel underneath the waterbed and he put Maddie under there.
Now he has blood all over him.
So he said he went into the bathroom, he cleaned up.
He basically like showered.
Yeah.
And he said while he was cleaning up, he walked by his bedroom and he heard Maddie still
moaning under the bed.
Oh my God.
So he reopened the bed.
No.
He took her out and he stabbed her in the chest nine times until she stopped breathing.
Then he said he put her back under the bed with his feet.
He closed the panel and he heard nothing else.
5.35 p.m., his dad came home from work and made dinner.
What the police asked him next were they said,
okay, this is all well and fine.
Like, it makes sense what you're saying.
It's not, though.
Like, it makes sense what you're saying?
It's adding up.
And they said, what about how she was dressed?
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
So when she was found, she was naked.
from the waist down. Oh no. Now Josh says her shorts and underwear came off when he dragged her
into the room. Doesn't make any sense. Were there like buttons? And it's like that doesn't make it.
It just doesn't make sense. They didn't come all the way off. No. Both of those things. Maybe they'd be a
little awry, but they would not be off. All the way off. And he said her shoes came off when he shoved
her under the bed the second time.
Her shoes just came off.
Yeah.
No.
So it's like her underwear and her, in her shorts came off her while you were dragging her
with her shoes on over her shoes.
Right.
No.
And he said, he remembers the shorts being down when he got into the room, but he said he
wasn't sure of her underwear.
Also, her shirt was, and this came out in trial, her shirt was pulled up on her chest.
And they said she was stabbed nine times.
in the chest and there were no stab wounds to the fabric.
Okay.
So, yeah.
Also, her shorts and underwear that he says fell off when he was dragging her were placed beneath
the mattress on the like wall side, which means they were put in there first and then she was put
in there.
Okay.
Which if you put her in there after they had already fallen off, you'd probably just throw them in
after her.
Right.
Unless you had already taken them off.
Right.
And then you'd put them in first.
Right.
So it's like, gotcha.
That's not true.
Yeah.
Oh, this is really fucked up.
Now, he said that night that this all happened, he said there was a knock on the door
right after this all happened.
And it was Mrs. Clifton.
And she was knocking on the door, yelling for Maddie.
And Josh's father said, I didn't even know who really who Maddie was at first.
So, like, I was like, wait, what?
Like, you know what I mean?
I think I know who she is.
Like, I think he plays with her.
So this is when his father called Josh and was like,
you need to go out and help, look for her.
And he was like, okay.
So he did.
He left and he went out helping looking for her.
It's psychotic.
Yeah.
So Josh said to the police,
I slept all week on the bed.
That's fucked up.
Yeah.
He said on Wednesday he put the tape on it because he could start smelling her.
And he said during the week he would burn incense.
He would use the plug-ins,
the aerosols, like anything to mask the odor.
And he just didn't know what he was going to do.
This kid's a fucking weirdo, dude.
And he said he used transparent tape to go over the corners of the partition first,
but then he used black tape on top of that to, like, reinforce it.
Uh-huh.
And when they asked him, like, what did you think you were going to do?
Like, what was your end game here?
He was like, I have no idea.
Like, I have no idea.
And they were like, were you literally just going to let her decomposed a dust under your bed?
And he was like, yeah.
And he was literally like, yeah, I don't know.
Like, I don't know what my end game was.
Eventually, you're going to get maggots under your bed, bra.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm surprised no bugs were there to begin with.
Ew, ew, ew, ew.
But they did ask the sheriff, they asked him, like, you know,
what was it like finding that?
Because that must have been awful.
Yeah.
And he said, he said at that point, you know, decomposition has started.
And he was like, it's the worst thing I've ever seen in my life and will ever see.
Like, he was like, I can't imagine sleeping on top of that.
which is that's the part that just boggles the mind.
You know, this is going to sound so stupid,
but you know, like, when your foot comes out of the cover
and, like, you think a fucking ghost is going to come get you,
like, I didn't kill anybody and I think that.
Yeah, there's a corpse under the bed.
You're sleeping on top of a corpse and you're not freaked out.
Yeah.
It's like crazy.
Now, four days after she was found, her funeral was held.
It was on Saturday, November 14th at the San Jose Catholic Church
in Jacksonville.
1,200 people came.
Wow.
And hundreds more outside the door.
At the funeral, because I just want to put this out there,
because people should know more about Maddie.
Yeah.
Not just about Josh.
I feel like it's going to make me cry, though.
They said she loved to giggle, but they described her as tough as nails.
They said she was very vibrant.
She liked to play hockey, football, basketball,
but she also loved to dance and play piano.
So again, she's like the most well-rounded, just like cool chick.
Yeah.
Oh, a neighbor said she was an amazing little girl.
She could be a little ballerina at one time and a tough football fullback at another time.
And when she talked, she made sure you listened.
She was a very sweet little girl.
Oh.
And then another neighbor said everybody loved her.
And when they asked later, Josh, when they asked him, they were like, why did you kill her?
Like, why did you go through all of that?
Like, just because you were scared of your dad?
Like, that I don't understand this.
answer was, I don't know. I don't think I have the answer. Maybe I should get some kind of
counseling or something to find out what's wrong with me. Yeah. So it's like this like super
goofy, normal, friendly kid just all of a sudden turns into like, yeah, I don't know. Maybe
I should get some counseling. And it's like, what? So none of your dark passenger shit like leaked out
at all until this one moment. Which it seems as though it didn't. Like, it's like, what? It's like,
What are you?
Like he's an anomaly.
He's an anomaly of nature.
He truly is.
Because none of this is
precedented.
You know what I mean?
It's just very weird.
So on to the trial.
I'm just going to give you a couple things about this.
It's Wednesday, November 11th
was like the first, you know, hearing.
He was held in Duval County
Juvenile Detention Center
and he was held in isolation.
He was held there until the trial
in August 1999.
and it was because they were scared of his safety, basically,
that they had to put him in isolation.
On November 16th, the state attorney Harry L. Schorstein
went on record and said the state planned to try him as an adult.
Wow. Good.
Which is crazy.
Like, I don't mean crazy like they shouldn't have.
It's just that doesn't happen a lot.
And he wanted the grand jury to indict him on a first-degree murder charge.
On Thursday, November 19th, 1998,
he was indicted for the murder of Madeline Ray Clifton in the first degree,
and Florida usually gives the death penalty for that.
But because of his age, he could only get life in prison,
which is without the possibility of parole.
Okay.
He entered a not guilty plea.
Why?
That always is like, at first you're always like, fuck you, you admitted it.
You know what I mean?
Right, I never understand not.
There's always legal mumbo-jumbo that goes along with that, you know what I mean?
I think it's so stupid.
Yeah, it is.
It really is. So the trial was scheduled for April 5th, 1999, and Judge Charles Arnold was presiding over the charge.
Do you know what I just thought of like not guilty because of insanity?
Yeah.
Yeah. I think that's kind of what it is. It like leaves you open.
Right. To do these things.
Because as soon as you say guilty, you're fucked. That's it.
This just says medical examiner. So the medical examiner was Dr. Floro and he gave his testimony about what he saw happening.
So again, trigger warning, we're going to talk about, like, the medical examiner's findings, which can get a little gruesome.
He said there were three separate attacks on Maddie, like Josh had admitted.
The three blows.
Yeah, like the blows with the bat, the stab to the neck, and then the stabs to the chest.
So he said it was consistent that the lacerations on her head were caused by a baseball or some similar object.
He said that he agreed there were two stabs.
dabbing's to the throat, nine to the chest, and the abdomen area.
Uh-huh.
He said he was unsure, he wasn't able to tell for sure whether the throat injury happened
first or whether she was hit over the head first.
Okay.
Like Josh was saying she was hit over the head first, then he cut her.
Yeah.
He said he wasn't, he didn't feel comfortable saying that that was absolutely true,
but he said either way, both of them happened.
He just didn't, he didn't want to totally agree with Josh's version.
He said the blood spatter on the ceiling fan does indicate that she was obviously struck in the head in his bedroom.
And that it was an overhead swing and pull back.
So that's where that spad.
Like he came down, he pulled the weapon back and it sprays into the ceiling.
Right.
He said there was an injury near her eye that could have been caused by the baseball like he was saying.
Yeah.
Because it was, he said it was like different than the other ones.
It wasn't like he didn't crack her skull like the baseball bat did.
But he said the baseball, that could have been him telling the truth that she was hit with the baseball.
Okay.
This part's a little rough, just like emotionally, I think.
Well, this whole case is.
Yeah, this one part just kind of like gave me the hebes.
The hebes, yeah.
So when she came for her autopsy, they noted that each of her hands were encased in a bag that was tied at the wrist.
That was done by the crime scene technicians.
That's what they do.
They encase your hands in a bag.
So that...
So nothing gets on your hands.
Well, and also if you have any DNA under your fingernails or anything,
they need to protect that.
So they do that.
So he did indicate that that had happened.
And then he said when he opened the bag, there was a bracket that was in the bag.
This bracket was part of the bed, but only three were accounted for when they starts the crime scene.
So what they thought was, he said, it wasn't in her hand, but it was in the bag with her hand.
So he said what he thinks is that at one point she was holding that bracket.
So he said,
And she was trying to get out.
What that seems to be is that she was still alive after she was pushed under the bed the first time.
So his version of events where he says he could still hear her.
Yeah.
She seems to be true.
And not only was she alive, but she was trying to get out of there.
Oh my God.
He did say that all nine injuries to the stomach and lung area
were inflicted post-mortem.
So what he heard after that, like whatever time he's,
because again, his version of events might not line up with what actually happened.
Because what you're saying is that he said she was still moaning,
so he pulled her back out and stabbed her.
But in all reality, he stabbed her after she had, like,
there's no way she had already expired.
Yeah.
And what could have happened was she could have made a noise.
Because you do sometimes.
Because it can happen.
But it's like he could have, or it could have been a.
totally, you know.
He just wanted to stab her more.
Yeah, it could have been any kind.
So that's what he's saying.
He's like, I don't know exactly.
If what he's saying is true.
What he's saying, the injuries are consistent with what he's saying,
it just might not be how he's saying it happened or why he's saying these injuries
happened.
Because he keeps saying it's just to keep her quiet.
Well, and he's watching all these violent torture things.
Yeah.
So the jury deliberated for no, I think just under two hours.
and they convicted him Josh Phillips, who was 15 years old at the time of first degree murder.
Yeah.
Which was pretty unheard of for his age.
Now, they did have a doctor.
Dr. Oshah, I believe his name was.
He was not super established as a doctor.
He was like just at a medical school.
Okay.
He did find a bifrontal lesion or a couple of them on Joshua's frontal lobes.
So what does that mean?
It can basically be linked to unexplained.
violent outbursts in teenagers because your frontal lobes are not fully developed.
So if they have lesions on them, that's going to cause issues.
They wanted to use this in court, but they didn't end up using it because one, I think
they were a little concerned with like his credibility, the doctor.
Not that he wasn't a good doctor, but he didn't have a lot behind him.
And then also he was far away and they needed him to come to testify and he wasn't willing to
do that.
Okay.
So scratch that.
That's something at least.
Like, there is an abnormality on his frontal lobe.
Okay.
Nothing is really conclusive about what that means anymore.
So August 20th, 1999, he was up for sentencing.
This is when his parents and Maddie's parents could get up and, like, give statements.
Oh, God.
His, Maddie's mom gave a statement that just, like, hurts your entire being.
She said, quote, no one or nothing can look up at me with those big brown eyes.
pictures and memories that's all I've got I will never see Maddie play again I will never see
her fulfill her dreams I will never kiss her tell her I love her and send her out to play again
right like that's I just I just almost like I got that lump I got that lump in my throat
he was luckily sentenced to life in prison without parole and judge Arnold said in his final
statement to him he spoke right to him and he said quote I do not perceive you to be
a child. Your monstrous act
made you an adult. Yeah.
And that's how I feel. I agree.
You do an adult crime. You do the adult time.
Yeah. He also
went on to say, quote, I'm certain that
on your judgment day, you, Joshua,
Earl Patrick Phillips, will be given
a harsher sentence than I could ever
impose. I love
when judges say. When they get like
sassy as fuck.
They just like lay it down. I love it.
I feel like that's a part of judge
school. I feel like you have to take
a class on that.
Because they're all so good at it.
Yeah, they are.
Like, so good.
Like that?
I was like, yeah.
That gave me a little chill.
Yeah.
He did have a couple of appeals because there were like laws that came about that the
Supreme Court handed down and such about, you know, underage people being sentenced to.
So in 2002, they appealed his life sentence based on the Eighth Amendment of the Bill
of Rights that says excessive bail shall not be required.
nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishment inflicted.
And they were claiming sentencing a 14-year-old to life in prison with no parole is cruel and unusual.
So is murdering a child.
So the appeal court said, quote, we find no harmful error occurred at trial and affirm his conviction.
Thank you. Good night.
As for his sentence, Mr. Phillips' primary contention is that his chronological age renders his punishment cruel and unusual.
We do not feel that way.
And his sentence was upheld.
He went back in 2017 along with 79 other cases like his.
Because this is when they went back to appeal based on the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in 2012
that it was unlawful to automatically send youthful offenders away for life.
And this law came in, this whole ruling came into effect.
Because they said science shows that the brain is not fully developed until you're in your mid-20s.
Okay.
So they said an underdeveloped adolescent brain can't make logical and rational decisions all the time.
And we can't put someone away for that when they haven't fully become a human yet.
But it's scary to think that like, yes, the frontal lobe is your decision-making department.
Yeah.
But also.
But there's other things that go into it.
Right.
And those remain the same.
Exactly.
And what if we let you out and then another kid gets murdered because your brain is fucked up?
Exactly.
And that's like there's so many.
layers to this. This is another evil-running situation. This is not just a case of frontal lobe issues.
This is not just a frontal lobe here. You can't blame it on the frontal lobe. No. Blame it on the rain.
Blame it on the booze. Yeah. So now the court was, the court says that he was, he's a model inmate.
He's now a Buddhist. He has. Yeah, cool. That's fine. You know who else is a model inmate?
Catherine Knight.
She skinned her husband a lot.
Exactly.
You know who else is a Buddhist?
I don't know, but...
But people are.
Yeah.
But they use this to try to get his appeal in 2017.
You know what he is?
Opposer.
They said his IQ is above average.
Don't care.
He's in the top 85th percentile.
He's received his high school diploma in prison.
Cool.
In 2003, the Department of Corrections certified him as a law clerk,
and he got a diploma to work as a legal assistant.
law clerk. And you know who didn't get to do all that? Maddie because he killed her. Exactly. And it says
he's using these things to help other inmates with their appeals. So he also teaches GED science and math to other
inmates for them to get their high school degrees. Big wood. So they basically used all this as like,
look, he's using his time well. That's what that was all about. I'm not saying that like look at how
good he is. Oh, I know. They're using that as like he's using his time well and see he's a different
person. He's not that 14 year old.
I get the argument. It's just like, this crime is so gruesome.
Exactly. And so what I think I'm going to do with my next mini morbid is I want to dive
further into that about minors being sentenced to life in prison and whether or not it makes
sense. I want to go further into the science of that. I feel like it's a case-by-case situation.
It is. Because the thing is, if he had just, like if she had gotten hit by the baseball and like
that incapacitated her and then, like, he, somehow she died after that because, like,
the ball hit her too hard or something like that.
Yeah. And he was scared. Like, that's one thing. Yeah. But, like, he didn't want to say anything.
You know what I mean? Like, if that was a thing. But also, like, that's, that's not the only thing
that happened. It went way further than that. It was overkill.
Way further than that. And what he says now about it, because he didn't, he didn't say a word when
he was, like, 14. You know, he was just sitting and looking at the floor. And,
This is what he said directly to Maddie's parents.
He's never apologized to them until now.
In 20, this is when he healed it.
This is in like 2017 when he was like, I feel like I can say something to them.
Okay.
He said to them, quote, I had no clue what life meant, what death meant, the depths of suffering that would follow one act.
I had no inkling of how long suffering could last.
I have lived long enough to understand what real suffering was.
I did something horrible and I'm so sorry.
I'm so sorry.
Even now, after all these years, it is just so unfathomable that this all could have occurred.
It tears my mind to know that I stole such a precious life from you, from the world.
I wish I could take away your pain.
I pray every day that you are able to live your life in spite of the injury I have caused you.
I'm supremely grateful to have an opportunity for physical freedom.
If any joy arises in my heart, it's immediately tempered by knowing that these proceedings bring all of it up again, face to face,
the horror that occurred in 1998.
When I walk the wreckyard of hearing chains,
I look to the skies through mesh wiring
and thank God repeatedly for giving me hope.
But my next breath is always devoted to wishing peace
and healing to you all.
Now, to me, this seems like, yes,
I think he is a different person than when he was 14,
but I also think that this is a guy who's very smart
and knows what he needs to say.
Yeah.
maybe he is sorry but sorry doesn't make it go away and it certainly doesn't mean that you should go
walking the streets like you know what I mean just because you're saying you're sorry you know what the
other thing is too it's like before he killed Maddie there was no inkling that like he said like
there was no inkling and right now it's like oh he's changed it's like we have no reason to believe
that he would do this again unless you just explode again right like you did the first time
it's exactly what we were saying before,
how none of this leaked out even slightly,
and then it exploded in the most horrific nightmarish way.
How do we know that won't happen again?
And it's like all his teachers and his friend's parents were like,
we never would have expected this.
So it's like, what if it happened again?
And the prison system is like, we never would have expected that.
And all the corrections officers and everybody in there is like,
no, he was a model in me.
He's great.
He's a wonderful person.
I would never see him doing anything.
And then boom,
something triggers him.
So November 17th, 2007, Judge Waddell Wallace made his ruling.
He says, I'm just going to read you a couple of little quotes.
I'm not going to read the whole thing because it's a very long thing that he read.
He said, so he went through a whole thing that said, you know, do I think that you're a different person than you were when you were 14?
Yes, I do.
Do I think that like, you know, it could be considered unfair to think that you should have all the answers at 14 and act accordingly?
yes I do. Right. But he said, quote, but I think if you looked at the evidence as it was developed,
and some of this was developed more after the trial than actually used at trial,
I think there's substantial evidence to believe that the young woman, Maddie, the girl,
was lured over to Phillips home with intent by Mr. Phillips to get her over there.
She was not supposed to be in there and had no particular reason in the evidence here
to want to go to interact with Mr. Phillips or go to his house. So it looks as if this was a sexually
motivated case in which the defendant lured Maddie with a sexual motive involved,
and that the killing itself was brutal enough and perhaps was motivated or arose from a
concern about not being caught or keeping the young victim from running next door and reporting
what had just happened. So he's saying, I think you molested her and then you killed her to
shut her up. That's what I think happened. Because they also, this wasn't, um,
Because of decomposition, I think they couldn't tell if she was molested.
But they did find semen.
Oh.
So either way they are.
On her?
They think that, I think it was maybe on her clothing.
Oh, God.
Or it was at least in his, which indicates that he was aroused at some point during this.
I mean, that's not good.
No.
So, and all of that was kind of like a little confuddled,
because I think the DNA was a little tough.
And not to argue that he had just watched.
Right.
Yeah.
So I think that's,
that's the other reason I think they couldn't really determine
because they were like, we can't tell whether it was during that.
Or if it, because she came over right after.
So it's like, you don't know when it happened.
God, that's really a lot.
I know, it really is.
Wow, I feel like I'm going to think about this case.
Like, I feel like this really left an impact on me.
So then the judge went into, you know,
the overkill and that you kept going back, you kept hurting her.
And he said, quote,
so you have at least three stages of blows or stabbings to the child in order to affect
the killing.
Is this impetuosity, like impetuous?
Like, were you just spontaneously doing this?
Like, no, you were making concerted efforts to shut her up.
To continue, right.
Yeah.
Is this the split second decision of young people with the bravado of a peer group around in a
school fight or a neighborhood fight?
No.
It's something that was done.
calculatedly, carefully, coldly with a plan in mind, a plan that goes bad.
And then with time to think about what you're doing or do something different,
the blows necessarily bring about the death were done in stages,
rather than one terrible split-second bad decision to pull a handgun out,
and then in the affray of combat, the handgun goes off and kill somebody.
Right. That was my whole point.
It's very different in that sense. Exactly.
So after all that, he said,
So when you take into these individual characteristics here, for all the circumstances is outlined,
I think this justifies the sentence of life.
And again, it is a sad day because I'm not unmindful about the fact that he was 14 years of age
and that to lose your freedom of something you did at 14 is extraordinary.
And that's why we've gone to this effort to have this hearing while the Supreme Court ruled the way it did,
why the Florida legislator acted and passed the sentencing scheme that we did,
and why I think this is rare.
The jury verdict stands.
The jury found the defendant guilty of first-degree murder,
and so the court then again adjudicates the defendant guilty of that crime
as charged in count one of the indictment.
So it was upheld, and he is still going to stay there.
That's good.
I'm glad.
Now, I think in 2023 he has another appeal.
Do you know how many he has left?
I don't know.
I don't know how all this works because it's different from, like, parole.
And it's different from, like, every state and all that stuff.
he's eventually going to run out of appeals.
I just don't know how many you get.
That is the case of
Maddie Clifton and Joshua Phillips.
That really did something to my
heart, soul, brain, and stomach.
Yeah, and only a couple years from now,
he's going to be up and appeal again.
I don't think he'll get one.
I don't think he will.
Because I think it's going to be the same situation.
Yeah.
No matter what he says.
Because that's my whole point is like, it's not,
it wasn't one thing that happened, that you were like,
this one thing happened and now I need to hide her.
Yeah.
It was like continuous things.
Because that's the thing.
It's like certain things where you're like, okay, he was scared.
Like if he hit her, she went unconscious.
He thought she was dead.
I mean, I don't know.
Because I can't wrap my own brain around it.
The situation just would have had to go completely differently.
It would have had to have more accident written all over it.
You know what I mean?
The only accident that happened was he hit her in the face.
And I would just wish that she like ran away to her mom.
Yeah, just ran away.
Or somebody heard her.
I don't understand.
running.
Well, and the other thing is it's like, this was whatever time, like a little after 530 or something.
It's interesting to me that nobody heard her screaming on the front lawn.
But you know what?
Then I think about it.
And I'm like, okay.
So at night, when we're out taking walks and stuff, I hear kids screaming all the time, playing.
But no, I'm saying.
It is hard to distinguish between a scream for help and what kids, because kids scream bloody murder.
Right.
Because they think it's funny.
But I'm saying, like, the police and stuff,
around and said, like, did you hear anything? Did you see anything? And I, I just feel like you
would be like, oh, I heard a, I did hear kids screaming or like something. But maybe they said that.
Maybe they said I heard kids screaming and they were like, do you know if it was Maddie? And they
were like, I don't know. Right. I just heard kids screaming. I'm just saying that could be like a loophole
in the story. Like maybe she never. Yeah. I know she got hit in the face, but yeah. I mean,
it could. So yeah. Wow. So, uh, this was a very long mini morbid, but I hope you guys are okay.
And we're listening.
Yeah.
So in the meantime of you putting your soul back together, you can follow us on Instagram at
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We didn't make any sense.
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We hope you keep listening.
And we hope you keep it weird.
No.
I was going to say.
Nope.
Just no.
No.
Just nope it right out of there.
Nope, nope, nope, nope, nope.
Bye.
