Morbid - The Railroad Killer
Episode Date: October 4, 2021As promised, we are talking today about the serial killer from Episode 266. In that episode, we focused on the only survivor of his crimes, Holly Dunn. Today, we take a walk through all of his crimes.... Throughout the 80's and 90's, Angel Maturino Resendiz was one of the most brutal killers the United States had ever seen. Known by the media as the Railroad Killer, he stalked victims nears railroad tracks before brutally butchering them either next to the tracks or in their own homes. His mode of operation involved sexual assault and a gruesome amount of overkill. He moved freely between his home in Mexico and the States before finally being caught through fingerprints and SNA. After a reign of terror that was as prolific as it was terrorizing, he was fortunately coerced into turning himself into authorities in 1999. Sole Survivor by Holly Dunn As always, thank you to our beautiful sponsors! Hello Fresh: Get up to fourteen free meals—including free shipping! —when you use code morbid14 at HelloFresh.com/morbid14 Liquid IV: Grab your favorite Liquid I.V. flavors nationwide at Walmart or you can get 25% off when you go to LIQUIDIV.COM and use code MORBID at checkout! Everlane: Go to everlane.com/MORBID and sign up for 10% off your first order plus free shipping! Candid: Go to CandidCO.com/morbid and use code morbid Brooklinen: Go to Brooklinen.com and use promo code MORBID to get $20 off, with a minimum purchase of $100 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 Ash. And I'm Elena. And this is spooky season morbid. Hey yo, it's officially
spooky. It's always been spooky season. I mean, it's really been spooky. It's officially.
Like, we're in October. October is here. Elena went apple picking today. I went apple picking today.
I'm going to a harvest fair tomorrow. I'm ready to bake all the apple things. Uh, you got enough
apples so that I can also be ready to bake all of the apple things. I sure did. I walked into
in this kitchen today and what it how many apples did you get john said like i have like 40 pounds of apples i'm
pretty sure i was like can i can i have six i need to bake something well i figured everyone around us
bakes like loves apple things so we're like well anybody who comes through the house we can just feel like
you want some apples and that's just what happened when i walked in today and i was like yeah i'll take
some apples yeah you know what i do want some apples oh it's just this is this is the time i love it so
much it's the time it just feels good the air is crisp i wore a sweater some like every
Everybody's like, you know, like during the holidays and like usually they're referring to like Thanksgiving and like Christmas or Hanukkah, they're like, I feel so warm inside.
As soon as it turns October, I'm like, I am a bundle of happiness and joy.
That's literally out.
It turns something, it like just awakens something within me.
Yeah.
And I just like, I don't know.
I just like want to dress like a fucking witch all the time now.
Oh yeah.
And I just, I totally forgot.
And then I got reminded that Halloween wars on the food network is coming back.
I was here when she realized that.
I mean, that's like one of my favorite things.
The best.
And now the girls watch it with me, which is like, hello.
There was like another wicked cute show last year on the Food Network for Halloween
and it was like Kristen Trennaweth was in it.
Do you remember what that was?
Oh, I don't remember.
I know that there was, you know, they have all like the Halloween baking championships that I love.
I'm like a sucker.
I hope that show comes back.
I'm a sucker for Halloween and baking together.
Bring it to me.
The show was like Candy Land or something.
You're like, I'm not getting rid of this.
I'm just trying to remember what it was called.
But it was cute.
That is cute.
I love the Food Network.
I'm ready for all the Halloween things to come back.
Oh my God.
And then like when it's all over, which I'm not ready to talk about yet.
Yeah, don't talk about that.
But then I love like November Food Network and all that stuff.
Like this is the start of the holidays for me.
Oh, it certainly is.
And I don't know if you guys ever watch those shows that are like crazy outrageous Halloween decorations.
Yes.
You know, like they are like crazy haunted houses across the nation.
Yes.
I will watch the same one every single year and be like, wow.
Like, it'll shock me every time.
Oh, yeah.
Sometimes they have the same one from like 2006.
Yeah.
I remember that guy.
What's he up to?
And I'm like, it's the same episode.
It's the same one.
But like, what's he up to in this episode that I've seen a hundred times?
Yeah.
Tell me how long it takes to put that stuff up.
Tell me what your electric bill is.
I need to know.
I got to know.
But yeah, so we're excited.
I don't know if you can tell.
I also saw this TikTok just like really quickly.
This woman has like a son and he asked her if the giant.
pumpkin really exists. It's like from a book. It's from a book you just said. Yeah. The peanuts,
Charlie Brown. Yeah. The great. It's like from a book. I don't know. Whatever. It's the wholesomeness
is about what this woman did. She got this like massive freaking pumpkin. And then like she took like
this video of her and her family setting it up and then finally it blows up and her child's face.
I was like spooky season is like the wholesomest thing in the world. I love that. It was so beautiful.
She made the great pumpkin gum. She did. It was huge. Wow. Get it, girl. It was like bigger than her whole house.
I love, wow, that's a lot. Like, it's like taller. Yeah. Oh, so it was like a blow up.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Because when you first said, and then they blew it up, I was like, that sounds mean.
Like, I was literally looking at you like, this doesn't sound wholesome. That doesn't sound good at all.
No, like it was like a, like one of those like lawn things. Yeah, that makes sense. It was awesome. I also need to know where she got it.
So wholesome. Also, um, it is spooky season because my microphone is.
on me.
That just goes along with it.
It just was like, whoop.
It slowly just was like, and I'm done.
I keep thinking that it's doing it again, but it's not.
You know what?
It's probably, it just didn't again.
That was fucking weird.
I said it's not, and it was like, bitch, I might be.
I guess I'll just hold it.
Yeah, you probably need to.
Well, I think it was probably trying to end this whole thing because this case is a rough one.
Oh.
It's a really rough one.
I told you during the Holly Dunn episode, the Survivor episode, which was like really tough,
but also had that like good ending that Holly was the survivor, that she keeps Chris's memory
alive, that she's doing this amazing stuff with her story and like helping other people.
That was like uplifting.
But then I told you, I told you that we were going to talk about the asshole who did that to her.
Yes.
And here we are. This is the episode. This one's really rough. It's a really rough one. It's very, very brutal. There is sexual assault. There's rape. I don't even know if this is something like a specific thing, but like there's a lot of old people involved in this. Oh, that's kind of a bummer. Yeah. Like I know that bumps me out a lot. So just so you know it's coming. Oh. Yeah. It's this one's a rough one. So just, you know, strap in. Because here we are. So we're going to. So we're going to. So we're going to. So we're going to. So we're going to. So we're going to. So we're
to talk today about the railroad killer. His name is Angel, his actually his given name is Angel
Leonicio Reyes Resendez. Okay. But you probably know him better by now, now that we've mentioned
him, and he's known in like the press and all that as Angel Matarino Resendez. Yeah. Now, he was
born August 1st, 1959 in Isucar de Matamoros Pueblo, Mexico. Alio. And Alio, there you
go. Is that true? I was going to say, is that true or is that false? People like when I get it
wrong. Would you say? I love when you get it wrong. August 1st. I'm pretty sure it's a Leo.
I'm getting better at it. You are getting better at it, which I don't love. I kind of always,
I always want you to get it wrong. It just feels right. Well, I'm getting like way more into it.
Yeah. Watch me say that and be wrong. Oh, I'm not. Yeah, he was a Leo. But he's on a cusp.
Yeah, he's a Leo. I don't, there's not a ton about his childhood, which honestly at this point,
And it's like, that's probably about, like, who gives shit about him.
He sucks.
Yeah, he's the worst.
I was able to find a good amount about a lot of the victims, which I feel like in this
case, they're the most important.
It was great to be able to find out, like, who those people were.
So I'll give you a little overview, what I could find about his childhood, and then we'll
move on.
Now, he was born August 1st, 1959 in Mexico.
He was dropped on his head within minutes of being born.
Wow.
Knocked unconscious.
Within minutes of being born.
Any idea what happened there?
Oh, I have no idea.
Okay.
But his, but it's confirmed, like, his mother literally confirmed it.
Oh.
Yeah.
So, like, head trauma, immediately upon the arrival on this planet.
Head trauma before even getting a birth certificate, I'm pretty sure.
So.
Oh.
Yeah.
That's sad for younger him.
Oh, I can't fathom dropping an infant directly from birth.
No.
No.
I can't remember.
I can't fathom dropping an infant, but dropping.
I'm not really sure.
He also fell off of a building when he was three years old.
How does that even happen?
Sustained severe injuries.
I tried to find out how high it was, why he was on the top of a building at three years old.
I tried to find all of this.
There's no real information, but it's just something that's in a lot of sources that his mother did mention.
It is so interesting.
I mean, obviously it's like very duh that when you fall on your head it causes trauma
and then like your brain can turn into like a really scary person.
But it's so interesting how a lot of serial killers do have head trauma.
Yeah, I mean, it's just, hey, yo, there it is.
Let's figure out how to treat that.
Yeah, I don't know.
The brain is a very delicate organ.
It's very hardy, but it's also very delicate at the same time.
So it's like he mess it up.
It's tough.
Fickle bitch.
It is a fickle bitch.
Now, at six years old, he unexpectedly went to live with his aunt and uncle because his mother got
remarried.
And I don't know what happened there.
I don't know why he was just at six years old sent to live with his aunt and uncle.
A lot of people said he was, like, spoiled there and he had a great time.
Okay.
But then there's also these, and a lot of sources I found said that he could have possibly been sexually abused in this house.
Oh.
But again, no real confirmation.
It's just heavily reported in a lot of sources.
It sounds like his child.
I was just, like, ridiculously chaotic from day one.
He actually ran away at 11 years old and lived on the streets.
At 11 years old, living on the streets, he was attacked by a gang of kids with bricks,
and he was hurt so badly that he was found bleeding from his ears and nose.
So we have another very traumatic brain injury for bleeding from ears and nose to happen.
And at this point, he would come back and forth home.
And he would leave for long period of time, just show back up.
And every time he would show up, his family members said they were like kind of freaked out
because he was getting like very, like, he was talking about, like, scary things, like, the apocalypse,
and he was, like, getting very preachy and very aggressively religious, and they weren't even
sure what kind of religion he was preaching. He was just, like, talking about the end of days and all that.
Like, it was just, and people were like, where is this coming from, like, what, what's happening?
Yeah.
And later they said that.
They were like, he, but we'll also see, everyone said he was never really aggressive.
But then they were like, he was really.
aggressive. Well, they, no, like aggressive, like physically or angry. Oh, okay. He just was aggressively
religious. Like he would literally like shove it down your throat. Right, right, right. You need to
listen to what I'm saying. Oh, okay. You're not, you're not a believer. And, but when it came to his,
like, manner and his way of being, they said he was gentle and calm. Weird. So it's very strange.
Because then obviously, as we know, he was not at all. Literally the farthest thing from that.
Right. He is the epitome of evil. In fact, somebody, I think,
actually described him as that one of the investigators said he is the epitome. I mean, yeah,
going into this, we already know like what he did to Chris and Holly. Oh, yeah. And wait until you find out
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So about, you know, later in his like early teens, he ran away again.
And this time he crossed the border into Texas and to the United States.
He was finding work on farms and other places where people would hire, you know,
undocumented workers at that time.
Yeah.
And he apparently crossed back and forth, like over the border a lot.
It is very impressive.
just all the time. He came and went as he pleased. That's like one of the most dangerous things.
Have you ever, who's the guy that you love? And he had the show on Netflix, David Ferrier.
Yes, David Farrier. Remember the episode that he did where it showed like what a terrifying
track that can be? Oh yeah. Wow. The fact that he just like did that multiple times. And he did it all the time,
apparently. Because at age 16, he was apprehended trying to cross into Brownsville, Texas. That was
1976. Or he was sent back to Mexico, but I think he also like voluntarily went. Okay. And so now,
obviously at this point, he's on the radar a little bit. Right. So he realizes, you know,
I got to make sure that I can fly under this radar. Yeah. So aliases are obviously a thing you're
going to do because otherwise you're just going to keep getting caught. Right. So this is when that
begins. He starts using trains to get around because at the time you could just like sneakily hop aboard a freight
train and ride it wherever you wanted to, like Carl Pansram.
Like, if you're doing it in like a wholesome way, how fun does that sound?
Oh, it sounds adorable.
It does.
Somebody jumping on a train and being like, just take me wherever you will and I'll jump off.
But it also is super dangerous.
Well, when you think about like these horrible demons that do this just to get wherever they
can go and then get right back out as quick as they can.
It's horrifying.
It's Carl Panseram.
That's all I think of.
And you said he had like more than like 30 aliases, right?
He had over 30 aliases and he had five different birth dates that he used.
Wow.
Yeah.
Now, in 1979, he came back into the United States and he was convicted of Grand Theft Auto in Tampa, Florida.
You would think that if you were like going to go back and forth, you'd be quiet about it while you were in either place.
That's what nobody understands.
Nobody understands what this method of this madness was.
Are you trying to get caught?
And some people think that it was like because he kept getting caught with what he was doing, that he was going to.
angry and thinking that like something was against him. So he decided to like punish people.
And I don't, none of it makes sense. He's come up with about a million different reasons.
None of them makes sense. Well, it also just sounds like his brain was just like completely
kaput at this point. The reason is he's an evil person. Right. He really is. When you hear what he's
done, it's truly evil. So in June 1979 that year, he broke into a Florida home. An 88 year old
man was in there. The 88 year old man tried to fend him off, but he
beat him unconscious and fled in his stolen car. He did live. Okay, okay. But he passed away, I think,
like shortly after that. And there's nothing that says it was directly related to this, but obviously
it didn't help. I'm sure he had some, some like complications. Now, in April 1980, he was caught and
sentenced to 20 years in prison. Whoa. In 1980. So what happened there?
1985. That summer. The year of Elena. The year of me. After only five years into.
that 20-year sentence, he was released on parole. Was the prison overcrowded? Or like, what the,
I have no idea. You're like, eh, five's pretty close. Five seems about right. Like,
you beat an 88-year-old man unconscious. And we're just going to let you back out into,
and not only that, you have a rap sheet that's like a mile long at this point. That's like a CVS
receipt. Like, what is going on right now? Here's your extra bucks. So he was deported back to
Mexico. Oh, man. 1986 the next year.
I mean, obviously.
He's right back into Texas.
Duh.
He was starting at this point to get super, super religious and not the good kind.
I have to stress that.
He was talking about how certain people don't deserve to live.
It was very, like, hateful speech.
Yeah.
Very judgy.
Very like, I'm above all.
And he also had this thing where he believed that he was, like, sent here to, like, rid the world of, like,
just people who didn't belong.
But he was doing crimes at the same time.
Okay.
Exactly.
Got it.
Makes sense.
Now, this is when the first victim happens.
This victim is unnamed to this day.
They met at a homeless shelter.
They went on a motorcycle ride together and they decided to go to an abandoned farmhouse to do some target practice together.
This was a young woman.
Everything was going fine according to him and his confession later.
And then he said, she disrespected me.
so he ended up killing her, shooting her four times with a 38 caliber gun.
And he left her body in that farmhouse.
Oh my gosh.
He then found her boyfriend and killed her boyfriend.
And he has never been found.
What?
Resendez said he dumped his body in a creek somewhere between Uvalde and San Antonio.
He also said his motive was that they were just bad people and he thought they practiced black magic.
I know.
You just like whipped that out of your ass.
Well, he even says, several times he says, I just think they did this.
Like, I have no basis.
He just said, like, yeah, I just think that.
Okay, good.
So he jumps on a freight train right out of town.
He ended up going back to Mexico because he got caught for another offense involving, like, falsifying documentation.
Now, in 1988, he's back in the States, just floating around, kind of getting any work he can at this point, just trying to make money, just trying to, like, keep it.
For a little bit, he tried to fly under the States.
radar. Are you sure? By a little bit, I mean like months. So in November of that same year,
he tried to apply for a social security card with falsified documents and boom, prison again and then
deport it again. And also it's like, okay, he's in prison again after they let him out for five years
and they see that he's still doing these things. So it's like, why are you just letting him
and out? That's what nobody understands. No, I don't want it. How he was able. But make it make sense.
He used tons of aliases and he was able to fly through that. And that's the other thing.
If he was falsifying that, then I guess maybe he wasn't in prison under the same name before.
I guess it was hard to trace him.
So July 19, 1991, in San Antonio, this is when he met 33-year-old Michael White.
I don't know a ton about this victim.
I could not find anything about him.
All I know is that somehow, because this is only from Resendez's confession, he ended up in an abandoned house with Michael White again.
And he beat Michael White to death with a brick and then left him there.
And did he say why?
In his confession, he said he killed White because he thought he was gay.
Yep.
I literally like, yeah.
He later drew a map to the, he thought.
I think, I think he was gay.
Either way, like, even if you know versus thinking.
Yeah.
I don't even have words for that.
I really don't.
Yeah.
It's outrageous.
Like, how does that affect your fucking life in any way?
Answer.
It doesn't.
So there you go.
He later drew a map to the crime scene during his confession, and that's how they were
able to find Michael White.
He went back to Mexico.
He started teaching English classes at a local, like he was like tutoring.
Because at his time in the United States, he was picking up, he was like fluent in English
by this point.
Yeah.
So he was able to use that.
In Mexico, he could, he was teaching.
He was settling down a bit in Mexico.
In the early 1990s, he met Julietta, Dominguez.
by 1994 that he met her. He still spent time in the U.S. He would still come back and forth,
but he would also send money back to her when he worked in the U.S. So for a while, it seemed like
he was actually settling down. Right. Like he was actually like doing a thing with a family.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And she said, like, there was no indication that he was this like violent,
horrible person. Like she said he was very like calm and kind and like chill. But that happens all
the time. It happens all the time. Even like a like Bundy in court when you see him like he's totally
fine. That snap. And then that exactly that snap right there. You can see the flash in the eyes and you see
the second that they turn into the monster that they really are that the like veil falls. Yeah. You can see it.
And that's what happens with these guys. Wild. That like there can just be like two people inside of one person.
And that's exactly what it is. There's there's a curtain hanging over and once that curtain drops,
you can catch it. And it's like, ooh. That because that one, we've talked about it like a few times before
That one video just is so chilling to me when he just snaps and you're like, that's what everybody saw.
And a lot of people that, like, that's one of the quotes is like I realized like what those girls saw.
Yeah, exactly.
So he she also said, though, that he was starting to preach to her as well.
And it was starting to come off very hateful.
Like she was like he, she said she was worried that he was part of a hate group.
Oh.
Like in the United States.
So she was saying like some of the stuff he was saying she was like, I just kind of tried to like just ignore it and like move on.
on, like, not engaged with it, but, like, I don't know.
She even said it was starting to bother her.
And probably scare her out of the same.
Yeah, of course, because you're like, what is that?
Right.
Like, those are your views? Cool.
Yeah.
So March 21st, 1997 in Baldwin, Florida, near a railroad track.
He saw a young, newly engaged couple, 19-year-old Jesse Howell and 16-year-old
Wendy von Hoobin.
They were runaways from Woodstock, Illinois.
And he noticed them because he said they were holding a book related to the
cult.
Which take it with, take it with what you will because who knows if they were.
Who knows if they were?
And why the fuck does it matter?
Yeah, it doesn't matter.
It's not your business.
Like they're not saying any or doing anything to you.
So keep fucking walking because they, that's what they believe.
And you're not allowed to believe anything.
That isn't what I believe apparently.
So it's like, cool.
What makes the world go around?
So he talked to them like pals.
Like he was like, hey, what's going on?
Are you traveling to?
And he told them, you know, they were, they were kind of.
mentioned to him like they had run away from home they were looking to get some work so they could
kind of stay away from having to go home they didn't want to like go back to their old lives so he was
like hey if you're looking for work i'm going to get a job um and he said you know like in another
place in florida and they were like oh that sounds great that's what we're looking for like that sounds
way too good to be true so they got on a train with him they just hopped on the train the train
The train made a stop in Bellevue.
And Jesse and Resendez got off, not sure why.
So he walked with Jesse chatting with him a little bit behind him, and then he walked up behind him and beat him over the head suddenly with the air hose coupling on a piece of railway equipment.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
Then he got back on the train without Jesse, probably covered in blood.
Yeah.
But the next stop was Sumter County, Florida.
Resendez tied her up, raped her, and strangled her before suffocating her to death with duct tape around her face.
Oh, my God.
Then he covered her with a blanket and left her beside the tracks in a shallow grave.
And then just jump back on the train.
Wow.
Yep.
Now, July 1997, these happened quick.
They happened like boom, boom, boom.
He was like one after the other.
July 1997 in Colton, California, a man named Robert Kemp.
Castro was at a railway yard and he was alone.
And Resendez arrived that night on the train.
He saw him.
They met.
They talked.
According to Resendez, he waited for Castro to turn around and then he beat him to death
out of nowhere with a piece of wood he found on the ground.
Jesus.
Are you seeing that he has a pattern of weapons of convenience, just whatever is lying around
and violent attacks near railways?
Yes, I am seeing that.
That's his thing.
That's also just so scary because,
He's capable of anything.
Anything.
He literally is.
Like you said, like, just uses anything around in nature.
Well, and it gets scarier because he starts entering homes near railways.
What?
And he just uses whatever is around him in the house.
So he's fucking scary.
That's even scarier because it means he doesn't give a shit.
Well, that's like you've always said if somebody breaks into your house, they literally don't
give a fuck.
Yeah, you don't want to mess with that person because anyone who can enter a house without
knowing what the fuck is inside of it.
I have no idea who lives there. They are bonkers and you don't want to go anywhere near that. You lock
yourself somewhere and you call the police because don't fuck with that person. You fucking hit your
simply safe button that is louder than Led Zeppelin and alert your neighbors. You alert, you press that
siren and you call your, call the police. You hit the panic button next to your bed. Yeah. Because
people, cat burglars and people in the middle of the night, no, no, no, no. You don't want to deal with
it. Then on August 29th, 1997, I don't know if that date sounds familiar, Lexington, Kentucky.
This is the death we talked about in Holly Dunn's episode.
We talked about it in episode 266.
I'm not going to rehash it completely because I would love for you to listen to that episode.
It's really great episode.
It's about Holly.
And I think about Chris and I think like it can do a lot better than me just quickly going over it here.
But this is when Christopher Meyer, 21 years old, was killed.
And his girlfriend at the time Holly Dunn was sexually assaulted and beaten almost to death.
Savagely.
Yeah, when Resendez attacked them while they were walking outside of a party on the railroad tracks,
he tied them both up and dropped an over 50 pound rock on Christopher's head to kill them.
Every time you say that instantly, my eyes just like shut.
And it's horrific.
But like I said, Holly has done amazing things since this.
She wrote a book.
You should buy.
She wrote a book.
I'll link it again because why not?
Oh, she also emailed us and she's going to provide us with a signed copy of her book to give away.
Yeah.
So we'll let you guys know what we're going to.
to do for that and like when that'll happen. But yeah, she's, she's amazing. Like such a nice
person. We love Holly. She's, she was great. And that's why I want you to listen to episode 266 about
her, because I think her story is really important here. She's the only survivor of this entire thing.
Can you imagine? Yeah, I can't. Her book is called sole survivor. Yeah, it's called sole survivor.
So that was on August 29th, 1997. After this murder and attack, he jumped right back on a freight train,
just like Holly had said in her book, she didn't know what happened because she blacked out
after he beat her with what she thinks is a piece of plywood. She was totally blacked out,
and when she woke up, he was gone. So she said, I assumed he just maybe jumped on a train.
And that's exactly what he did. Yeah. He thought Holly was dead. So he jumped on a train and out
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Now, people think at this point that maybe he had been bothered by this one a little bit
because he waited a while for the next one.
Do you think that is the case?
I wonder, so here's my thing.
I think these were two college kids and were going to be like big news.
Well, that's the thing.
and that Holly did become big news.
Yeah, I think he realized that he hadn't,
he wasn't sticking with his like typical victim MO,
which is just anyone he could find at a railway track
that was like seemingly drifting through town, you know?
So there's that.
But there's also the fact that Holly did a great job humanizing herself
during that ordeal to him.
I don't think he's a human, so I don't think he has a conscience.
something in me though is like did it maybe I don't know I don't know I for me I would think that it would be
because that case obviously got a lot of coverage and the fact that Holly survived obviously he must have
seen that yeah and then wanted to I think probably just wanted to lay low for a while so that he didn't
get caught that's more what I think but maybe because like you said she did do such a good job
she did a great job of humanizing her like very quick thinking and very like smart thinking with how she
was able to do it. But he's so evil. But he's so evil. But then it's like what we find out too is he had a
baby with Julietta and a baby girl and he was apparently like smitten with her. And that was after
yeah and very like gentle with her. Interesting. It's the duality of that kind of behavior. Yeah.
I can't wrap my brain around. I try to figure I can't figure it out. I think it's probably good that
you can't. It's probably good. But I just need to know how that's how these how they compartmentalize
these parts of themselves. Some people just can. Yeah, because I mean, you look at like BTK. Right. He had a
full-ass family that he was just like doing things with. Some people's brains too are just like,
like more equipped than others to compartmentalize. Yeah. And I think it's easy looking on the outside to be
like, how did his family not know? You know, like in any of these cases? But then you look at it and you're like,
no, they didn't because he wasn't that person with them. Right. And like I constantly
think of like Carrie Rosson, like BTK's daughter. She didn't fucking know. Like she's no idea.
Like she was as victimized by everything as like anybody else was. And it's like,
but it's so easy for all of us on the outside to sit there and think like, oh, like, how do you
had, how wouldn't you know? But I'm telling you like there's there's these kind of cases where
you're like, they were a completely different human being with their family than they were on
the outside. It's so many of the cases that it must. That's the thing. That's the thing.
thing. Like, I wish there was some way to just, like, figure out how the fuck that happens.
That's the thing. I just need to know. It's got to be some connection in the brain.
It's a fascinating part of the human condition, especially the criminal human condition, that
people are able to do that. It's just, like, wild to me. But either way, he did take some time off
here. And he went back to Mexico and spent time with his family, and he worked there for a while.
Now, remember, that was in 1997. It wasn't until October 2nd, 1998.
that he struck again. Wow.
It was in Hughes Springs, Texas, and he stepped off the train that evening and just stalked
the neighborhood waiting to strike at random.
Oh, man.
Because there was a neighborhood right next to the railway.
Okay.
He found a red brick.
This one's tough, by the way.
They're all tough, but like this one, old people just really bum me out.
He found a red brick home and chose it at random, saying later that he just felt it radiated
evil.
He snuck through...
Like, that's the dumbest fucking shit.
Shut up.
It's also just bullshit.
He also, he says about a hundred different reasons for it.
So it's like, okay, that was the one you landed on.
The home radiated evil, so I had to kill the person inside.
Yeah.
He snuck through an open window in the back of the home.
And inside was Leafy Mason, who was 87 years old.
87 years old.
You live 87 years on this earth.
And that's what happens to you.
And some asshole like this is the reason you're gone.
She was a son.
sleep in her bed alone. Leafy apparently was a character to her neighbors. Like everyone's like she was a
freaking character. Those who knew her said she was feisty. She was not one to back down. She was also
described as strong-willed but very thoughtful. She would share her pies with the neighbors.
Her father was a sheriff's deputy who was killed in 1919 in a train accident. Oh wow. And her mother
died soon after. So she had her like fair share of like and she was left with.
with her sisters.
Like, she was at her fair share of shit she had to, like, get through.
Yeah, troubles.
She very likely confronted her attacker that night.
Everybody said they were like, I think she woke up and, like, fought him.
Because, like, she was that kind of woman.
Right.
She would not have just a coward or anything.
And she was found, unfortunately, beaten to death on the floor of her bedroom.
Oh, my God.
She had been killed with her own antique iron that he found.
I.
Yep.
Can't even fathom that.
Literally just the closest thing he could find to him.
He then, after he had killed her, the 87-year-old woman that he killed, he then ate food from her fridge, went through her stuff and then just left.
Very nightstocker-esque.
Yep.
And then a neighbor who was supposed to give Leifie a ride to visit her sister in a nursing home that next day.
Oh, my God.
Was the one who reported it when she didn't answer the door.
She knew something was wrong as soon as she didn't answer the door because she told police chief.
for Randy Kennedy that Leafy was very timely. She was not one of those people that would have
kept you waiting. And she said she was annoyed when people didn't respect punctuality. So I was like,
I don't know anybody like that. I get it leafy. So time that so when this neighbor came to pick
her up and bring her to the nursing home to see her sister, she said each time that I came to pick her
up to do that, she was up ready and waiting. Like she would literally be like, I've been waiting.
go. Right. Like all business. And this worried her. So Chief Kennedy showed up that day on October 2nd to
check things out when he was called. And her poor sister. Like she just never arrived again. And he later
told the Houston Press close, excuse me, the Houston Press quote, she was always very nice to me.
She would bring me a glass of iced tea or lemonade when I was working because he apparently
would mow her lawn when he was younger. So this was like a very close, like he was like shit.
Yeah.
And he said she had a reputation for being pretty demanding and outspoken, but I really liked her.
I love that.
Yeah.
And in the same article, a source from the nursing home where her sister stayed said her sister was her life.
Every day, promptly at two in the afternoon, she came here to visit Birdie, which I love that name.
That's my favorite name.
Leafy and Birdie.
Tell me those aren't the cutest sisters you've ever heard.
Their parents must have been the coolest people ever.
Leafy and Birdie.
Obsessed.
So she said.
She'd always cook something for her and would sit and talk with her and sing her songs that were popular back in the 40s.
And she would always stop by my office to leave a recipe or bring a copy of the latest poem she had written.
She just sounds like an amazing human being.
Leafy.
Now, unfortunately, this case went kind of colds because there was really no leads.
Hopped on a fucking train, I'm sure.
He was in and out, left nothing.
Initially, they believed they were like, this has to be someone who knows her because it was so brutal that they were like,
this must be someone angry.
Like, it has to be that, but no.
And do you think maybe they assumed because, like, they said she was so like,
that she was like a character and maybe it pissed someone off, they thought.
And like, I don't know.
So they, but there was an open window.
So I don't know why they didn't, he snuck through an open window.
And that's how we.
So.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
Freaks me the fuck out.
Her house was also less than 50 yards away from the Kansas City Southern Rail line.
Oh, wow.
So she was just the first house.
I can imagine that.
He left on the train again and off to Mexico.
he went. So on October 11th, he was trying to get to Florida again, and he got on the wrong train.
So he ended up in Carl, Georgia. And when he ended up there, he was like, all right, I'll just go with this.
He stalked the neighborhoods again. While he was creeping, he saw Fannie Byers, who was 81 years old in her front yard.
While all of a sudden, did he just like totally want to, like, switch up and murder elderly people?
Yeah. Did he ever say anything about that? He just, because it changes.
too. He has no victim profile at all. And one of her neighbors, Patty Nocera later said that she was
often outside in the yard with Fannie and that Fannie was never really alone. She was like there was always
people around her, people would visit her. And she said, this just happened to be a time where she was
in her yard outside. Somehow he ended up sneaking into her home without her knowing it. And when
she came back into the house from being outside, he killed her with a single blow to the head.
Oh my gosh. And was this during the daytime? This was a little late afternoon into evening.
Okay. She was found bludgeon to death in the house. It was the neighbor who called because she was scared when she didn't answer the door, just like leafy.
Again, she was never alone. She just happened to walk into her home alone for a minute. And he jumped out and beat an 81 year old woman to death for literally no given reason. Which there never is a reason.
No, but no given reason either.
Right.
No evidence left here.
So charges were actually put against another man at this point.
Oh, wow.
But they were dropped later when Resendez provided, like, information that was not released to the media about this.
And he was like, no, I did it.
Why did they think that it was the other person?
I'm not sure exactly because I didn't want to name this guy because the charges were dropped.
I don't want to like bring it up.
No.
But they must have had some kind of reason for this guy.
I don't know.
But all I know is that Resendez was that.
as later was like, here's some information that wasn't in the media about the case that only I would
know. And they were like, oh, you're telling the truth. Wow. Now, he traveled southwest for a few
weeks at this point, right back on the train. Right. And he ended up in West University Place, Texas.
This was on December 17th, 1998, that the next murder occurred. Down the street from the railroad tracks,
very close to them. That's also literally six days later. Yeah.
And this is where a doctor named Claudia Benton was home alone.
Her husband and two twin daughters were out of town in Arizona.
Oh my God.
Yep.
She was a pediatric neurologist at Baylor College of Medicine.
And that night she was preparing for a big presentation the following day.
Her home was near the Union Pacific Railroad.
All we know is he latched on to her.
And that night he prowled around watching her through the windows until about 10,
10 p.m. and then she went to bed. Now that's when he snuck in. He found statues that he later said
he believed were demonic. They were not. And also saw medical publications because she's a doctor.
Right. And he assumed from these medical publications that she performed experiments on fetuses
and performed illegal abortions. He's just like making shit up. He's just an asshole. Right.
And he just makes shit up. It's like just admit that you're a fucking monster that you wanted to kill
this woman. Not that you're so holier than now. These people who are like bright lights in society.
That's what you just want to fuck with people who are like good people. That's the thing. It's like,
just fucking say what you are. Yeah. So Claudia, he attacked her while she slept in bed.
She fought back. Like fought. I guess investigators said like she must have gone in a few good licks because
they were like she could have. She almost got away. And how incredible is that that she was asleep and then
wakes up and is able to just fight back like that. Well, he ended up raping her. He stabbed her several
times with a kitchen knife in her hands and back. Oh, my God. And then beat her with one of the statues.
It was a bronze statue that was two feet tall. Holy. He hit her 19 times with it. Oh, my God.
The other thing is, like, you're so religious and, like, clean and you think you're amazing. He's not of
that. No, I know he's not, but he's claiming to be. And you're raping people? Yeah. Well, it's so
Many of them do that. Like what fucking sense does that make? It doesn't make any sense. So many of them do that. They just claim this religious thing. And it's like, but that literally goes against, isn't that supposed to go against everything? I don't understand. I don't understand. He also. You sit there and say that, though. I don't even understand. Because they're idiots. He also left her head partially in a plastic bag. She had a broken arm from the attack and several bones in her face were completely shattered. Oh, my God. He then ransacked her home. He stole a guitar, a bag. A bag. He had a broken arm. A bag. He had a broken arm. A bag. He had a broken. A bag. He had a bag. He had a
Anjo, a stereo, jewelry, pieces of ivory she had in a collection.
And he was just on foot?
Yeah, he was just on foot.
And then he, well, he was on foot getting there, but you'll see.
He also broke all of, like, her art and statues, like just what-nots.
He then made some snacks with her food, ate it in her house, and then stole her red Jeep Cherokee.
That's how he got out.
Oh.
Now, police came to the home, and they found fingerprints everywhere.
Good.
Those fingerprints were then matched to those on her Jeep when it was discovered abandoned in a San Antonio Motel parking lot on December 18.
I'm so glad he was that fucking stupid.
That parking area was right next to train tracks.
So he just left it there and jumped on a train.
Now, Debbie Benningfield, who is the deputy administrator of the latent prints section of the Houston Police Department.
That is a long title.
She certainly is.
She took those prints on the steering wheel of Claudius Jeep.
and she put them into the Texas Department of Public Safety's automated fingerprint
identification system, which is Texas Aphus.
Just that.
I don't know.
Most of you have probably heard of like Aphus.
Yeah.
This is just Texas's specific Aphus.
Office.
So on December 26th, 1998, they got a match.
A.
It was apparently matching Carlos Cluthier Rodriguez, who had been arrested in Carson County, Texas
in 1993. I also like love the dedicate, well I don't love it, the dedication though of like even the
middle name. Oh yeah. He just changed all of them. And he got really like unique with it. He did.
Yeah, which is boo to you. So this is obviously a known alias of Resendez. So now they got the Carson County
Sheriff's Department on this too. And they got the original fingerprints they had taken from Resendez
when he was arrested in 1993 at Carlos as Carlos. As Carlos,
Clothier-Rodigas. Now that they had these original prints that were taken when he was arrested
in 1993, they figured they should check to see if that was really his name or if he was connected
to other crimes. Right. So on December 28th, yeah, my birthday, 1998, they had the Texas Department
of Public Safety put the prints into the Western Identification Network, win, to search for any
other matches. So while this is happening, the California Department of Justice's A-Fist
database, which is connected to win, was like, oh, hey, we have a match for those. I love it. Just like,
in my head while I was reading this, it's like, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. Like, I was just
picturing the United States and it's just like, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. It's like,
everything's right. It's just all matching up. So they're like, yeah, we have a match for those. He had been
arrested August 15th, 1995 in San Bernardino for trespassing on the railroad property and having a loaded
gun on him and then something related to theft. Just all kinds of
a bad shit.
Yeah.
December 19th, the original prints that they took the first time were sent to the FBI's
Criminal Justice Information Services Division to see if they came up in the NCIC database.
And on January 5th, 1999, they were a hit.
And they finally saw his long CVS receipt of a criminal record.
Yeah.
Now, on January 5th, 1995, the Harris County District of...
attorney's office, they told police that instead of going directly after murder charges for
Claudia Benton, they should get him on burglary at home, at her home, because they could definitely
get him on that, but they wanted to make sure they had concrete evidence of murder. Okay. Because they wanted
to make sure once they had him, they had him. He wasn't going anywhere. So a warrant for burglary was
issued on January 5th, and it was entered into NCIC. It made sense because there was overkill in all of
these cases. They were all weapons of convenience. They were all near a railroad thing. So like,
yeah, they make sense that they were connecting all the red dots are connecting. Now, already back in
Mexico after this, this is when Julietta became pregnant with their first child. Oh, my goodness.
And it was in March 1999 the same year that he had his daughter, Liria. That's a pretty name.
I know. It's really pretty. I also believe Liria is the name of the lady in the craft.
It is. You're right.
The shop lady.
The shop owner.
He was apparently a very present and very loving father, like I said, according to Julietta.
To be like a father and like welcome a new baby.
And I would just think that you would just have images of like all the people that you murdered.
Yeah.
While a new life came in.
Who were somebody's baby at some point.
Right.
Like I would think that you would think of that.
No, of course not.
Now two months after her birth, he went back to the United States.
Uh-huh.
He was just like, bye.
He arrived in Weimar, I'm going to look that up.
I looked it up.
It's Weimer.
Not Weimar.
Weimer.
Weimer.
Well, I was going to say that I liked your subtle accent, and then you were like,
Wommer, Womber.
It's Wommer, Texas.
That's like very convincing.
Thank you.
For a second, I was like, ma'am.
You were like, have we transported?
It was like, what?
Womber, Texas is apparently like a very small town.
It's people feel safe there.
The residents said it was one, those places where you just like hear about that no one locks their doors.
I was just going to say you don't lock your doors.
No one's afraid to walk at night.
You know, everyone knows each other.
Everyone looks out for each other.
It's a cool little place, it sounds like.
I don't know anything else about it.
I hope it's still a cool place.
Me too.
But on May 2nd, 1999, it became a very scary place.
So Resendez got off the train, of course, and he immediately noticed the United States.
Church of Christ on Main Street.
Uh-huh.
And he was intrigued by that.
Now, Weimer has 13 churches, and it worked out to one for every 150 residents.
So this, yeah.
So I was like, wow, that's really interesting.
So this is a very close-knit, very religious place.
When Resendez rolled in, he saw this church, but it was closed.
But inside of the parsonage, I believe it's called, it's like near the church.
church. That's where
46-year-old Norman Skip Sernick was and his wife, Karen Sernick, who was 47.
Norman was the reverend at the church, but he never wanted to be called reverend.
He insisted on being called Skip.
Iconic.
I guess when he first started there, he was like very unconventional, but people
immediately soon fell in love with it.
Like at first they were like, who is this guy?
He said his own way of doing shit.
Yeah, he would like joke and sing during sermon.
He would bring kids up to the front of the church to take, like, part in the whole thing with him.
And, like, I guess he was, like, amazing with kids.
I was going to say that's awesome, though, because then, like, if you're in religion is important to you,
it's a good way to get them into it.
Yeah.
He made it an event.
Like, he made it of, like, a fun thing to do.
Instead of, like, you know, some people, like, I remember my friends going to church being, like,
I have to get ready.
Like, these kids probably looked forward to it.
Exactly.
And according to a great article about their life in Texas Monthly, I'll link it,
Skip told his father about Weimer and the church when he got settled into town and he said he loved
that town and he loved that church in its people. He was like, this is where I'm supposed to be.
Yeah. He said, and his father said that he said, quote, Skip said that in other towns they had put him
up on a pedestal. But in Weimer, he could go to picnics, chase the kids, play volleyball,
and have a beer if he wanted. Kelly loved that. Yeah. Now church member Kelly said he was just family.
And he also said, at picnic, Skip was the one who slipped the ice cubes with plastic bugs into someone's tea and filled the balloons with water.
A gifted Thespian in high school and college, he was the ham who organized church plays, usually playing the villain.
He sounds awesome.
He and his wife, Karen, who was a biochemist when they met.
Yeah, yeah, Karen.
We're also called compassionate above all else.
Apparently they started a group called caregivers for the church that made sure everyone.
Every single person who was in need of it had someone in the congregation who would check up on them regularly and help them out.
Skip was also a marriage counselor and neighbors said literally everyone went to him for advice.
And they went to him for counseling because they said he felt like he made you feel like he actually cared about what you were saying.
Sounds like he did.
And they said he didn't just give you blanket answers.
He didn't give you generic answers.
They were like tailored to you.
I bet he also had all the tea.
I'm saying. So residents said that Karen was his light. They said they ruined me. Yeah, they said when they
came to town, Karen immediately began planting flowers everywhere around town. Stop it.
Around buildings and public areas when they arrived in their own garden behind the church,
had vegetables and roses, and they were constantly working on it together. Wow. They lived behind
the church and that's where Resendez came across them. That's where a fucking demon walked in.
Yeah, that's Sunday. They didn't show up for Sunday service and people were immediately worried.
So the entire congregation showed up on Sunday to the church and we're waiting.
And then I guess his assistant reverend started doing the sermon because they were like,
oh, maybe he's just like caught somewhere.
Imagine having to do that to you while you're just sitting there like, where is he?
Yeah, they're like, I don't know.
But President Ted Neely, president of like the congregation, Ted Neely was like, you know what,
I'm going to go check on them in their house.
So he went there during the service because he said something to.
didn't feel right. He found them dead in their home. He came back to the church and announced to the
entire congregation that something terrible had happened and they called the police. Oh my goodness.
So when police arrived, they saw that the home had been ransacked. Next, they found Skip and Karen.
Their heads were crushed with a sledgehammer while they slept. Oh my. The sledgehammer was
still leaning against the wall covered in blood. Karen was also sexually assaulted after she was murdered.
Oh.
The bodies were then covered with blankets, and the couple's truck was not in the garage,
but it soon turned up in San Antonio three weeks later.
Before Resendez had left their home, he stole their VCR and a video camera, and obviously
stole their truck.
This got lots of attention, this double murder.
Suddenly, it became linked to Claudia Benton's murder after the truck was found in San Antonio.
And did they find prints?
They were able to.
So DNA found was tested and compared to the Benton case.
and it matched.
Ding, ding.
This is when they're starting to try to link it to other crimes,
and this is when Chris Myers' crime, his murder, and Holly's attack came up,
and that's when they started connecting all this.
And that's when the officer must have gone and said, we've got the guy.
Exactly.
And that's in episode 266.
I tell you the story of, this is going to be interesting, actually,
because you're hearing this side right now.
If you go to 266 and listen to it from Holly's side,
this is when the police officer came and said, we got the guy.
Yeah.
Holly's rape kit was tested against the DNA they had for Resendez and it matched.
And now it's a manhunt.
Hell yeah, let's go.
So June 1st, 1999, he was arrested, but not for these crimes.
He was arrested in New Mexico.
And immigration authorities came up with nothing when they ran his name that he gave him.
Yeah, because I'm sure it was like just one knee made up that day.
This was also apparently when it wasn't linked to any other law enforcement agency systems.
So he was just released and brought back to Mexico and like sent back to Mexico.
They were like literally this close.
Yep. And that didn't stop him.
So June 4th, 1999, three days later.
No.
In Schulenberg, Texas, right back to Texas where he just terrorized them.
He killed Josephine Convica, who was 73 years old.
and a widowed grandmother of six.
Wow.
He killed her in her home where she had lived her entire life
and her home that it was 3.5 miles from the Cernax home
and only a mile from the railroad tracks.
That must have been so scary for that community.
Oh, they said it, they went into just panic mode.
Yeah.
He killed her while she was sleeping.
He beat her in her head with a grubbing hoe.
Apparently it's like a pickax kind of thing.
The grubbing hoe was a grubbing hoe.
left embedded in her head when they found her. Okay. Yep. In a back room of her house, police found two
items they thought must have been left by the killer. And it was clear that they were leaving,
like he was leaving a calling card kind of. Oh. What an asshole? Yeah. A Schulenberg newspaper
article that they wrote about these crimes said it was a toy train that he had found in her closet
and likely belonged to her grandchildren. A toy train. And it was a toy train. And it was.
is also an article about the crimes.
That just sent shivers up and down my body to think of like a little kid playing with that
train.
And then the horrible monster that murdered his grandma used it as a calling card.
And how bold of him to leave the train to be like, yep, this is how I'm doing it?
Yeah.
Like they're not going to take that.
Like they haven't already thought of that too.
They're already, they know these people are all around train tracks.
They already know that's how he's getting wrong.
But at that point, he realizes that.
Yeah.
He's just so brazen, he doesn't give a fuck.
He thinks he's untouchable.
He's just dumb.
So, it's just so frustrating.
People who knew her said she was the sweetest, dearest little old lady, her neighbor said,
and she said she would not have her to fly.
My goodness.
Yes.
Also, 73 is like not even old.
Now, within 36 hours of killing Josephine, he crossed back into Houston, and he killed again.
The same night?
The same night on June 4th.
With 1999, he broke into a duplex near the rail line in Houston, and he found Nomi Dominguez,
who was 26 years old and asleep in her bed.
So that is, like, the way that he just doesn't give up, heck who it is.
Nomi was a teacher for the Houston Independent School District's Benjamin Franklin Elementary School,
and she was pursuing a master's degree in education.
He raped her and killed her with a pickaxe in her bed.
He then covered her with a blanket and left stealing her car.
and driving it two hours west.
Now, quick side note about Nomi Dominguez,
when the new elementary school was built in the town,
recently they named it Nomi Dominguez Elementary after her.
I love that.
It was the first local school to be named after a Mexican-American.
That's amazing.
Very, like, poignant.
But it's so sad that it took her being murdered for that to happen.
Her being brutally murdered for that to happen.
He then went back to Mexico.
He just jumped on a train and see you later.
Six days after that, he got a couple of,
According to Julietta, he got a phone call at home and he was very stressed out and clearly upset.
Someone must have called him and tipped him off.
We still don't know who that is.
I wonder if he, because remember with Holly's attack, he was like, I have a friend over there.
I didn't believe that at the time, but now I'm like, I still don't believe it.
Who called him?
Yeah.
Who would have known he was doing this?
I think it's just maybe someone that knew about what he was doing, but I don't think anyone helped him.
you know what he was doing and call him and be like people are terrible like i hate elderly murder
guy well his his like photo was being put up in certain towns in texas and stuff somebody might have
known him and been like hey they're looking for you in texas like let's not do that and remember
he's not being put up as like a murder suspect quite yet so but still like if somebody's like
wanted let's not tip them off well yeah that's that goes without saying but like i bet it was
somebody who knew him, saw his photo and was like, hey, they're looking for you in Texas.
Because he wouldn't tell Julietta, who it was or what they had said. He just said, I have a problem.
I would say so. And then he went back to the U.S.
Which you'd think if they called him and were like, hey, they want you here? He'd be like,
yeah, I should stay out of there. Nope. I just wonder what he was like telling her why he had to, like, leave so often.
He kept saying he was going to do work. He was getting jobs. Is he coming back with money?
On June 15th, 1999, June 15th, this is only doing.
days later. Yeah. He arrived in Gorham, Illinois, and he broke into the home, which was only 100 yards away from a railroad track, of George Morber, who was 80 years old.
According to an article in The Eagle, he was, George was a retired prison guard and was an army vet. He loved to fish, and he did so frequently in the pond next to his trailer.
He was happy, and he lived only a few houses away from his daughter, Carolyn Frederick, who was 51.
one.
George was known to give food to anybody who hopped off the train near his home if they
wandered through his property.
My goodness.
He would just come out and give them like a sandwich.
Wow.
Because he was like, well, they were passing through so they probably needed to eat.
Yeah.
Like he was just that person.
Just like a kind soul.
When Resindez came upon his home at the end of the long driveway, he climbed through
an open window and waited because George had just driven away and he had watched George drive away.
And then he entered the home.
Right.
George came back with the morning paper and he was immediately ambushed by Resendez.
He attacked and tied George to a chair and then shot him in the back of the head with his own shotgun.
Oh my God.
His daughter Carolyn came by to help her father clean as she often did and he attacked her as well.
He struck her over the head with the shotgun, sexually assaulted her and then beat her to death with the shotgun so brutally that the shotgun broke into.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
He then ate some of their food in the fridge, and he left in Carolyn's truck.
He also abandoned that truck and then went back into Mexico, and it was Carolyn's husband
who came across the scene to call police.
I can't imagine.
Yeah.
Now, Texas Ranger officer Drew Carter, who comes back importantly in a moment, he said, quote,
What makes this so scary is that these victims were in their own beds behind locked doors.
Every one of these victims was like the average citizen, and therefore the average citizens could view themselves as victims.
This guy was the boogeyman.
Yeah.
Now, at this point, they had discovered partially, thanks to his need to leave that toy train, that he was using the railroad to get around undetected.
Yeah.
So investigators started stopping trains and searching them.
Oh, wow.
It was like a multi-agency situation, and they named it Operation Train Stop, which I was like, that's not very creative.
but cool. So June 21st, he was put on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted list.
Yeah. Yeah. This is when they found a half-sister that he has.
What? She was in New Mexico. I didn't know you're going to hit me with that.
Her name was Manuela Matarino Karkowitz, I believe. She was contacted in New Mexico,
and Officer Drew Carter of the Texas Rangers talked to her, and she was not cooperating at first.
She was like, nope, I don't know anything about that.
But he was like, listen, like we can we can strike a deal here.
We can make this worth everybody's while.
Like there's people's lives in the balance.
Like maybe I don't know, help me out here.
So she ended up talking finally.
She didn't know anything.
Well, the thing is she must have been like really scared.
She was just she was basically just being like, no, I'm not going to talk about my brother.
She didn't know anything though.
Right.
But they struck a deal with her.
And she, he agreed to him getting humane treatment.
when he was captured in that he would get psych treatment.
Okay.
That's what she wanted.
She said, I want him treated humanely and I want him to get psychologically evaluated and treated.
And he said, if you can promise me that in writing, she said, I will get him to turn himself in.
But why should he be treated that way when he literally brutalized people's grandparents?
Exactly.
I understand.
It's her brother, though, and I would feel exactly the same if it was my brother, I'm sure.
And they were also like, sure.
So on July 13th,
after she had convinced him, he drove across a bridge and he surrendered to police.
Wow.
Thanks to her, like, she convinced him to do it.
Wow.
Now, he was immediately charged with capital murder for Claudia Benton.
Yeah.
Then he was immediately linked to others as well.
There was a palm print left at Leafy Mason scene that matched to him.
There were nine in total that they had on him now.
They were also able to find DNA and stolen items from victims in his home in Mexico.
Oh, my God.
His family was apparently stunned.
They said, like I said before, he was a, quote, very loving, calm man, especially with children.
That's so, I know, we've already said.
It's just so scary and crazy.
Now, it was on May 7, 2000, that he took the stand in the Benton trial.
Oh, wow.
He pledged not guilty by reason of insanity.
and he claimed he was half man and half angel and was sent here to cleanse the world of those those that God deemed lesser.
The defense was claiming he was also schizophrenic, but psychologists testified that he was not insane, not schizophrenic, and definitely had personality disorders, for sure.
Right.
And they said likely caused by severe trauma in his childhood and head trauma, but they rejected his insanity plea.
At various times, he claimed he killed.
because God told him to, because the devil took him over, because the homes of the victims
radiated evil, because he saw that they were medical professionals and figured they must,
you know, examine and I don't even know, experiment on fetuses because atrocities in Serbia
upset him.
What?
And because he was upset over what happened with the Branch Davidians in Waco.
What?
All of it.
At various times.
So none of those are true.
All of it and none of it.
same time.
FBI crime analyst
Alan Brantley testified
that the killer's attacks were
quote, eroticized violence
intended to punish his victims.
Yeah. And Drew Carter,
the Texas Ranger, who helped arrange
the surrender, he said
he was, quote, a walking,
breathing form of evil.
Yes. Yeah. West University,
West University, Texas, where
Claudia Benson was killed.
the sergeant Ken Macha there, who was actually one of the first investigators to go on to the Benton scene, said, quote, it was terrible overkill.
It was out of this world, very much out of this world.
I have been to suicides, gunshot suicides are gruesome, but never anything like this.
I never imagined what human beings could do.
It really is terrifying.
Yeah.
If anything, like I'm just realizing throughout having this podcast, what human beings
can do is just earth-shattering.
Wild.
It's really, really like eye-opening what people can do to each other.
Now, George Benton, Claudia's husband, said it perfectly when he said about Resendez, quote,
he had a kind of gift of really taking some of the best people from society.
Yeah.
And it's so true.
Like, all of the victim descriptions, like Chris, Claudia, Leafy, the Cernax.
All of them just sounded like the most amazing people.
Now, on May 18, 2000, he was found guilty of all counts.
Yeah, I think so.
In May 2003, his conviction and sentence was upheld in a court of appeals and all other appeals failed.
Good.
He told the judge he wanted to be executed, which to me should be automatic life in prison.
Yeah.
Oh, you want to be executed?
Now you're going to prison forever.
Honey.
He was sentenced to death by lethal injection.
He did confess to more murders, and he's linked to 15 so far that they can,
confirm. He confessed to more, though. In addition to the above crimes, San Antonio Police
Detective George Sederler said that he was told by Resendez himself that there are two murders
that he did that he will never talk about. And he took them with him. Why even say that?
Because he's an evil asshole. Exactly. And he wanted to do, which, who knows if there are even two more
murders? Or he just wanted to fuck you. Or he just wanted to fuck with everyone. Now, they also think,
that he could be connected to murders in Mexico because he's spending time there too. Why are we
not even thinking about that? And particularly in Ciudad Juarez where he lived, there was a time where
bodies were found by railroad tracks and they think he could be connected to this. Yeah, I mean,
it's not like unthinkable. But they haven't, nothing's happened with that so far. Now in June,
on June 27th, 2006 is the day he was executed. It was actually delayed two hours though because there were
like last minute appeals and shit.
And you tried to claim insanity again, but he was not.
When he walked in, they said he chanted, forgive me, Lord, over and over again.
No.
And his last words were, I want to ask, and he spoke to the, there were many family members
of victims present.
And he said, I want to ask if it is in your heart to forgive me.
No.
You don't have to.
I know I allowed the devil to rule my life.
Such an excuse.
That's the thing.
It's like, no, you made choices.
You had free will.
I just ask you to forgive me and ask the Lord to forgive me for allowing the devil to deceive me.
I thank God for having patience with me.
I don't deserve to cause you pain.
You did not deserve this.
I deserve what I'm getting.
We know.
So, yeah, he was pronounced dead at 8.05 p.m.
He was 46 years old, which he seems like he should be a lot older.
I know when you just said that, I was like, come again?
It's like Carl Panzran.
It is.
Weird, weird.
Yeah.
When you get to the point where you're like, yeah, and he was this.
this much years old. You're like, no, no, he's a hundred thousand years old with all he's done.
Seriously. Now, again, Claudia Benton's husband, George, was there for the execution, and he said he was
there to make the statement that people have to understand what evil really is. Yeah. And he said,
what was executed today may have looked like a man, walked and talked like a man, but what was contained
inside that skin was not a human being. This is not human behavior, but something I can only say is
evil contained in human form, a creature without a soul, no conscience, no sense of remorse,
no regard for the sanctity of human life. I really think that is like what it comes down to
is just some people are soulless. Not human. He didn't, he, but this is just such a wild. I,
the brutality of his crimes and a lot of people had not heard about this case. Yeah.
So like, because when I mentioned it in the first episode about Holly, everybody was like,
A lot of people were like, wow, I didn't know about that one.
I don't think to hear about it.
I definitely didn't.
And it's like, how did we not hear about this more?
It's so intense.
He's one of the worst by far.
Yeah.
Like, by far.
Very prolific.
So prolific.
So brutal.
See you later.
Goodbye.
Yeah.
I hope that all those family members of the victims have some kind of peace.
I don't know.
How could you ever, though?
I just.
Yeah.
I mean, I think it was Holly who said like,
after he was executed, like, at least he's not, he can't, like, torment people anymore.
And at least he's gone. Like, at least we don't have to think about him just existing.
Or, like, worry that he's even, because that's the thing, like, again, with the death penalty,
we talk about being so, like, in the middle and it's not black and white. The thing with that
is, I can't imagine the families of his victims sitting there worrying what happens if he escapes.
Yeah, if he gets, like, parole hearings and stuff, you just don't know. That's why it's kind of like,
okay, in this case, I can understand it.
Yeah, he's just, to me, he just doesn't seem like he has a soul.
No, not at all.
Like, he was so angry and so just brutal and so over, like, all of it was overkill.
I think the thing is, he destroyed these people even after he had killed them.
Right.
I think, unfortunately, the thing here, too, is that he had so many instances of head trauma
that there was something wrong.
something just went like some kind of switch either turned off that's what it seems like to me is just like
some kind of empathy switch in his brain just got destroyed down and you wonder like I wish they could
have looked at his brain I know you know like this is one of those situations I would love to know what
his brain looks like that's a thing but here we are he's gone hopefully in the future too because like
we've talked about that before it's like something must happen in the brains of these people yeah
That's different than like people who don't do these things.
Yeah, and they'll find like lesions or like, you know, they'll find different things or like that one part isn't as active as the others or as height or is like more active.
Right.
But there seems to be no like consistent.
That's the thing.
That we can trace back to all of them.
And I think it's because we can't look at all of them.
Right.
So I feel like we need to look at more of them.
Which we could.
But the only way to really look at a brain is to hold it in your hand.
Yeah.
And you got to kill the person for that.
or yeah, I'd wait until they die.
Yeah.
So it becomes hairy.
Maybe we could do like a case study when these people do die of like their brains,
just wind them out.
Wait them out.
Yikes.
But yeah, so that was that.
And I'm glad it's over.
And again, go read Holly's book because she's the real.
She's the real one here.
She really is.
But, well, we hope you keep listening because it's been a tough few weeks.
It has been.
We hope you.
Keep it.
Weird.
But not so weird that you have a bunch of aliases and you're like, I'm just going to go and kill everybody in the world and blame it on the devil.
Yeah, don't do that. Don't hop on trains and do that either.
I just like, take trains for transport.
Yeah. Take trains to nice places to do nice things. Thank you. Goodbye.
