Morbid - The Twilight Murders

Episode Date: August 15, 2020

You’re gonna want to securely hold onto your butt for this one. Alainas breaking down the twilight murders, yes you read that right. Kim Edwards and Lucas Markham planned out the murder of Kim’s o...wn Mother and sister and carried out the plan on the evening of April 13, 2016. The details of this case are brutal, gut wrenching and plain awful. Again, hold onto those bootys.  Sources: https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/11320586/kids-who-kill-twilight-kim-edwards-lucas-markham/ https://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/twilight-teen-killers-recall-double-murder-new-documentary-article-1.3281015 https://members.huntakiller.com/blog-articles/the-twilight-killers As always thanks to our sponsors Purple: Go to Purple.com/morbid10, and use promo code morbid10 For a limited time you’ll get 10% off any order of $200 or more! 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
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, weirdos, I'm Ash. And I'm Elena. And this is morbid. It's a whole ass morbid. You know why? It's Elena's morbid. It's Elena centric. And we know I can't do a mini.
Starting point is 00:00:38 You can't even do a regular main episode anymore without it being like 42 hours long. I know. She's insane. Ever since I up to my research game, you're like, same. I'm like, I'll do it too. But where will I go from here? Or double downing. That's what I'm doing. You are.
Starting point is 00:00:53 Or doubling down either way. I was like, that sounds not right. I'm here for either way. I'm here for it. Yeah, words. They're hard. Well, this one, I originally, I like got the bare bones of it together and like the outline. It was like five pages.
Starting point is 00:01:08 Which is like normally what my full case is. Well, and I was like five pages. It was going to be like nothing. Like I was actually like, oh shit, maybe I shouldn't even do this case. I hit five pages and I'm like, we got an hour. There it is. No, I was like, really upset about it. I was like, come on, there's got to be more. And then I found the court documents.
Starting point is 00:01:25 We love a good court document. Here we are. And I got so much more information. I was so excited. And now it's 10 and a half pages. So everybody's settling. Because it's going to be a long one. Wait, I need to ask how many was the, how many pages was the screen murder for you? Do you remember? That was like 11.5. I think. Okay. So we should prepare for like an hour and 45 minutes, I would say. I mean, it kind of depends on like discussions, I think, too. How often I interrupt you? How often you interrupt me, exactly.
Starting point is 00:01:58 So I think we don't really have any business to get to, but what we're going to be covering today is the case of Kim Edwards and Lucas Markham, aka the Twilight Killers. So Elena told me that it's called The Twilight Killers, but she won't tell me why. It's true. Because she wants a real reaction. I do. I was like, I can't tell you beforehand because it's, it's weird that they're called the Twilight Killers because it seems like a very small part of the case. Right. But it is, and it's small, but it's shocking. I think it's the part of the case that you're like, what? I just, for me, I'm just like,
Starting point is 00:02:36 do they think that they're vampires? It's like a Jeremy stanky where he thought it was a werewolf. That would make it easy. But, you know, I, it's funny because when I was reading, so they are both 14-year-olds and they are in a relationship together. or they were. You know, a 14-year-old relationship. Yeah. But it was a real intense one. And it reminds me of the Jasmine Richardson, Jeremy Stanky, relationship in the way that they were like, it's us against the world.
Starting point is 00:03:03 Right. They were weirdly obsessed with each other. They became way too connected. And then they started looking at people who were trying to keep them apart. And they were like, you got to go. All right. Well, let's dive in. Now, this one also, besides the Jeremy Stanky and Jasmine Richardson case,
Starting point is 00:03:19 this one really reminded me of the Myra Hindley and Ian Brady case. Which I don't know that much about. I know too much about that case. What else is new? Because before I had kids, I mean, I do it now, but much more before. I obsessively read cases. Like I know every case known to man at least a little bit. And so the, and I remember the Myra Hindley and Ian Brady case fascinated me.
Starting point is 00:03:49 I mean, I could not stop reading about it because it was just so unbelievable. And now I always said, I was like, I had trouble looking at it now because it has to go with kids. And it just changes. But a lot of people have asked to do it. It's a huge case. It is fascinating. It deserves to be told. So I'm going to take one for the team, guys, because after reading this case and it was compared to that one, and I'm going to mention it in here, I've decided that I'm going to cover the Ian Brady and Myron
Starting point is 00:04:19 Hesndley case next week. Whoa. And it's a big one. Next week is going to be a big week. We're going to have the completion. Yeah. That's a gross word. Of my case.
Starting point is 00:04:29 And then, or Moira Henley. And then, Moira Henry Henry. I was thinking about Moira Rose. You were. Because I just used that gift recently. But yeah, we'll, so yeah, we'll have part three of the Brenda Schaefer case from Ash. And then we'll start the Myra Hindley and Eden Brady, which I'm fairly positive. is going to be more than one part.
Starting point is 00:04:50 Yeah, I would think so. We'll try. But I think hopefully you guys will be psyched about that because a lot of people have asked for it and I've been like avoiding it a little. Well, we haven't done a heavy hitter in a while. We do. And that one's a big one. So I feel like it's important to do.
Starting point is 00:05:02 So we'll be doing that. You're definitely going to hear about it very briefly, not like really any details in this case, but it gets mentioned a lot, mainly because this one's part of is a UK case as well. So this is not an American case. So hello, international listeners. We're here. Hello. Way up for you.
Starting point is 00:05:21 So, Kim Edwards and Lucas Markham. This crime occurred in Spalding, Lincolnshire, New England. Okay. Nope, not in New England. I was going to say New England? Very used to saying New England because I live there. Or actual England. Old England.
Starting point is 00:05:37 The original, the OG England. Oh, we're off to a good start, guys. Good, good, good. So, Spalding, Lincolnshire. Not sure if it's Lincolnshire or Lincolnshire. But you guys will tell me, and you'll do it nicely. I was going to say, yeah, okay. I'm sure.
Starting point is 00:05:54 So the victim in this case is 49-year-old Elizabeth Edwards. She was a single mother of two daughters, 14-year-old Kim Edwards, and 13-year-old Katie Edwards. Big spoiler alert already. Yeah. So, yeah, exactly. It's like just throwing it in there. The murderer, her daughter. Kim is her child.
Starting point is 00:06:15 So on April 14th, 2016. Elizabeth was absent from work. Okay. And she wasn't just absent. She hadn't called in. She was a no-call-no show. Yeah, and she worked as a lunch lady. They call it a dinner lady in all the things I read about this and heard about this.
Starting point is 00:06:35 It's very English of them and I like it. Maybe is it like dinner's lunch and then like supper is our dinner? Probably. I don't know. Honestly, it's us who says everything weird. So like. Yeah, we're uncultured swines in America. You guys have it right.
Starting point is 00:06:48 We just, we just like mess it all up. Yeah. So, yeah, so that she was a dinner lady at the local primary school. She loved working there. She was always on time. She was early. She never would not show up and not call. Right.
Starting point is 00:07:03 So immediately, all of a sudden, ding, ding, ding, the radars are going on. Now, Kim and Katie were also absence from school that day. Which is weird. And nobody had called to say that they were going to be absent. So people were like, huh, why are all three of them not here? Yeah, that's cause for. concerned. Now, Elizabeth, the mother, did have a partner, Graham Green, and he was trying to get in touch with her, and he couldn't get in touch with her. And he said, he was very concerned by this because
Starting point is 00:07:29 she always answered the phone. I believe he was like a truck driver or a lorry driver. And so he was gone a lot, but when he was gone, he said they talked constantly. They were in constant communication, so he was like, this was very concerning to me. Yeah. Now, Katie and Elizabeth, the mother. Katie was the 13-year-old. They were very close. They just had one of those mother-daughter relationships where like Katie adored her mother. She would like hang outside of the school waiting for her to come out from work. They always hung out together. They were just very close. They just happened to have that relationship. Kim was not as close with her mom. Okay. And it just seemed like neither one of them really. They just didn't get each other. Yeah, they just didn't get each other. It wasn't,
Starting point is 00:08:13 They didn't get along. I think Kim seemed, and we're going to see this later, not the easiest child to get along with. But it also seems like her mother may not have been the easiest mother for her to get along with. That speaks to my soul. Yeah. It's like her mother, Elizabeth, seems like a wonderful person. She seems like, you know, but there was definitely some troubles that happened.
Starting point is 00:08:36 You know what my therapist always says. She says sometimes it's like not the right parent for the right kid. Like you don't always get matched up. it should have been. Oh, yeah. I remember you saying that. That makes sense. Well, unfortunately, so Kim's 14, Kim had a 14 year old boyfriend. Okay. Named, I don't know if anybody can guess. I don't know. Lucas Markham. Oh, yes. He was also not in school. Oh. Yeah. And was reported missing by his aunt who he lived with. Okay. So it's getting weird. Why are all these people out? Where are they?
Starting point is 00:09:08 Sketchy, sketchy. And nobody can find them. It's not like they're just at home like and they're like, yeah, we're out. And they're PJs. watching the price is right because they're not feeling well today. Or are they? I don't know. I don't know. I don't know. Do you know? I mean, I do that because you said this is a morbid case. It is. So relatives came over to the Edwards home at different times during the day and we're like knocking on the door, just calling out for them because no one's answering the phone. So now they're like, what the fuck's going on? Like, do we go there? So I mean, relatives, I mean, I think Lucas's aunt had come over a couple of times and then knocked on the door because she was like maybe he's there. People are freaking out. They came over at 5.10 p.m., 9 p.m. and 9.46 p.m. And nothing. No one answered the door, but they did hear the dog barking inside. Uh-oh. So they're like, what is going on? Right. But of course, nobody's banging down the door yet because it's been a few hours. So 36 hours later, from when they first went missing, around noon time, the police have now been called by various people. And they come to the home. They knock on the door.
Starting point is 00:10:12 same thing, don't hear anything except of dog barking inside. So they open the door. Right. Because they're like, this is a wellness check now. We can come in. We need to go in there. We're concerned. So in the home, Lucas and Kim, the two 14-year-olds that are dating.
Starting point is 00:10:28 They were there. Just sitting there in the living room. They've been there the entire time people have been knocking. Are they just like watching TV? They're sitting on a mattress that they had brought into the living room. They're cuddled under a blanket together, watching television. And like nothing is happening around them. They're straight up chilling.
Starting point is 00:10:44 They're Netflix and chilling. Just hanging out with some ice cream. There were alcohol bottles around. They're just hanging out. What? What? And the police are like, oh, hey, people have been knocking for days. Did you hear them?
Starting point is 00:10:57 Hello. And they were just like, oh, hey. Real weird that they did. I mean, obviously we know what they did, like at least a little bit. Real weird that they just stayed there. Oh, it gets weirder. Okay. So police were like, hey, where is Elizabeth and Katie, your mom and your sister?
Starting point is 00:11:11 And Kim says, upstairs. Uh-huh. And they asked, what happened to your mother and sister? Are they sick? Why are they upstairs? And Lucas looked them dead in the eye. And they said, with zero emotion, said, why don't you go upstairs and see? Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:27 Are you shitting me? A 14-year-old. And what did they see? They went upstairs and they found a bloodbath upstairs. And they just looked at the police and said, why don't you go upstairs and see? and see. What a bunch of shits. Elizabeth and Katie were both dead in their beds where they were sleeping. Yeah. They were killed while they were sleeping. Blood was on the ceilings, the walls on the victims, on their beds. Both had been slashed at the throat and both had been there for almost two days. And they're just downstairs eating ice cream watching TV. Gets better. So the murder weapon, an eight-inch butcher knife, was still in Katie's room, just left there after they had done it and not cleaned or anything just like thrown on.
Starting point is 00:12:19 a table after they had murdered her. They immediately were arrested. Yeah, obviously. And Lucas said, fuck life to the cops as he was detained. They're like, I bet you feel that way now that we're detaining you. They were like, fuck your life, bro. Because you're going to go away for a long time. Fuck you, right? And they, as they were leading Kim outside, Graham, the partner shows up. Oh, no, poor Graham. And they're leading her outside. He said he looked her dead in the eye and was like, what the fuck is going on? Like, he just looked at it. her because he was like in shock like what's happening she immediately put her head down and wouldn't look him in the eye and he said he was just devastated oh no he said he was the one who had to identify elizabeth
Starting point is 00:12:59 and he said quote it's something i would never wish on my worst enemy to identify someone you love i can't even imagine yeah so obviously again they were arrested immediately and it was determined that they had never left the home after the murders 36 hours prior they had been in there the entire time with Kim's dead mother and dead little sister, just right upstairs. Right. The bathroom was upstairs. So they had to go upstairs where the dead bodies were to use the bathroom. I don't even like going to my own bathroom, which is like off of everything in my house when I'm home alone.
Starting point is 00:13:35 Like it freaks me out. Like what? They were literally walking up there with her mother and her sister lying dead for two days, just going to pee and stuff. What? Now. This is the, this is very. bizarre. Well, we're going to find out in a little bit exactly what they did during those 36 hours, and who boy. I don't know if, you know. But before we do that, let's talk about Elizabeth Edwards.
Starting point is 00:13:59 Okay. Elizabeth Edwards was a single mother, like I said, raising Kim and Katie alone. She was well-liked. She sang in the church choir. She did, she was known to help out with the church. She did a lot of charity work. She was described as bubbly and always happy, always smiling. So a great person. Some of the documentaries I saw on this. I think there's like, um, there's one that. It's like Britain's killer kids or something like that. Yeah. There's home video that Graham has on his phone or his iPad of her. And she's like dancing in like different outfits in the kitchen and stuff.
Starting point is 00:14:31 And she just seemed like a bubbly happy mom. People said she did a lot of actor school programs with children because she loved children. Yeah, I mean she works at an elementary school. Yeah. And she has two children. She focused around children a lot. Like I said, she worked at the lunch lady and she worked at St. Paul's Community Primary School. Katie, the 13-year-old daughter, the second victim, was super popular, super outgoing.
Starting point is 00:14:56 People loved her. She was the exact opposite of Kim. Okay. Kim is not that. Okay. So she was, I think they talked to Kim and, Kim and Lucas's friend or former friend, Adam, who plays another part in this. Oh.
Starting point is 00:15:14 He doesn't do anything, but he's part of it. So he was giving an interview, and he was like, yeah, like Katie was really popular. Like people really liked Katie when they found out that she was dead. It was like devastation. Oh, no. It hit everyone hard. So Graham, the Elizabeth's partner, said that he and Elizabeth were planning to get married.
Starting point is 00:15:34 Like that was the new thing. They were planning to do it. He had bought the family a dog. That was the dog that you heard. Stop. So this is, oh. It's really sad. And he and Katie would take walks with it. He said he like really loved the kids.
Starting point is 00:15:46 Yeah. But he did say Kim was. tough. Yeah. Like Kim was tough to get like to crack. She wasn't. She was, she was, she had an attitude a lot of the time. And he said that he was like, you know what? Elizabeth and Kim didn't have like the super close relationship. But Kim, but he didn't see anything that would make it seem like she, one was being favored over the other or anything like that. It was just, they had different relationships. And he was like, and honestly, it had to do. When you have different kids, it's like. Yeah. And he was like, it had more to do with how Katie and Kim interacted with their mother than anything. Right. Just Katie. interacted with her chip. And Kim didn't. So it's just the way it is. Now, he also said, Lucas and Kim have destroyed my life. And the family lived in a kind of tough part of town at the time. There was a lot of gangs and drug abuse and violence happening.
Starting point is 00:16:36 So it wasn't like a great area. So Kim Rose Edwards is what she was born. Kay. She was born June 13th, 2001, which really hammers in how fucking you. young they are. Yeah. She was born in 2001. Wow. Yeah. She was very troubled, not attached to her mother from a very young age. Oh, really? Her father left her family when she was a baby. Her mother raised her and her younger sister, Katie, alone, like we said. There was a time, now this is the point where I'm like, huh, this is an odd little blip in their history. There was a time when social services was called
Starting point is 00:17:16 Uh-huh. Because there was a fight in the home, and Elizabeth the mother slapped Kim in the face. Okay. There's also reports that she punched Kim in the face. I've seen both. So that's the thing, though. That's very different. Here's the thing, though. Kim was six. Oh, okay. So literally not okay at all. Not a teenager. Yeah, no. Like, no, that's okay to punch a teenager in the face, but slapping. I think I would. I would. I would, like you said, yeah. I don't, I don't, I would not slap my child. I don't, I don't, I don't have any. I definitely was slapped, like, when I was being a bitchy teenager.
Starting point is 00:17:50 I could see slapping a teenager in the face. 100%. That I could understand. Like, that I understand totally. Right. And I think other people have probably, that's happened to them. There's not one thing on this planet Earth that a six-year-old does that they deserve to be slapped in the face. No, not enough.
Starting point is 00:18:04 So that's strange. Now, from what I saw in all, in every outlet I got this information from, Elizabeth called social services on herself. Oh. Yes. Okay. And said this happened. Okay. Which I'm like, that's weird.
Starting point is 00:18:20 Wowzers. Maybe she just like. Maybe she just immediately was like, I need to get my shit together. Yeah. You need to do something. That's very strange. Well, Kim and Katie were taken away for a small time. That's sad.
Starting point is 00:18:32 While they were like investigating this and doing the reporting and stuff, it was six months that they were taken away. That's a pretty long time. Yeah. And they were returned afterwards. But in that time, they spent, you know, time in foster care for six months. So, I mean, they returned after the six months. Graham said that this was pretty much the point when, like, Kim and Elizabeth's relationship just shattered. That makes sense.
Starting point is 00:18:59 Which makes sense. But then you're wondering, like, well, what happened before this because she slapped her in the face? So it's like they were obviously not. I know. I want to know why. They were obviously not a close mother-daughter to begin with. No. But I can't find anything about that.
Starting point is 00:19:13 When it's like, you have to wonder, obviously, can't. him as like a sociopath. So and like I'm not like we said it's not okay to hit a six year old, but I wonder what happened to like, you know what? Not to make her get slapped, but do you know what I'm saying? But like what led to that kind of like reaction of just normal behavior from a mother? And I feel like the fact that she called on herself is even more telling because yeah, it's almost like she broke for a second and then was like, oh fuck what did I do. Exactly. That's what it seems to me. And I couldn't find any information about like before this. So we're all just, I mean, I mean, we're just here to speculate about it, but either way, that's obviously a very worrisome thing.
Starting point is 00:19:50 Yeah. Like, that's not good. Right. Doesn't equal you should murder your mother when you're 14. Or ever. That's just something. No, or ever. But so, yeah, so this is, that was definitely a tipping point, I would say, probably within their relationship.
Starting point is 00:20:06 But after the whole social services thing, Elizabeth had moved to them into a new home on Dawson Avenue. And it was like a housing unit, like, you know, kind of like almost like duplexes kind of thing, like big apartment buildings or condo kind of things. Kim definitely still did not have a good relationship with her mom. They were fighting a lot. She was very jealous of her sister Katie. I had a feeling. Very jealous. They fought all the time.
Starting point is 00:20:34 And Katie and her didn't fight all the time. She took it out on her mom that they were close and she wasn't. So she didn't take it out too much on Katie for more. what I could see. And Katie was her younger sister only by a year. They were essentially like Irish twins, you know. So, and at the time, though, and this is from Kim, nobody else says this. Kim says that her mother would often tell her, you're just like your father, who had abandoned
Starting point is 00:20:59 them when she was young. And who had, like, abused drugs and was violent. Like, it was bad. And so, and Kim and Katie, for that matter, but mostly Kim had seen violence. when she was younger between her father. Yeah. Her father did abuse her mother. Well, and I'm sure she harbored a lot of resentment toward her father and to be told that
Starting point is 00:21:21 you're like the parent that you resent sucks. Yeah, that's got to be hugely triggering. Yeah. But that's also from Kim, who is a lying sociopath. And we'll see she's very unemotional and very disconnected from Rio. Most likely trying to justify her actions. Yeah. And, you know, Kim said she felt like the, you know, the black sheep.
Starting point is 00:21:40 She said Katie got all the attention. And she said, in one of the interviews later, Kim does say, you know, we just didn't get along me and my mom from when I was younger. And she says, you know, she clearly loved my sister more, favored it my sister more. And they're like, okay, did she tell you that? And she was like, no, she never came out and said it, but I just knew it. Okay. So it's like, you know, it seems like a sibling rivalry thing. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:06 She's just being like, yeah, of course she didn't say it. But like, I just know it. Well, you do know who the parents. favorite is. So, of course, the partner Graham says there was never any favoritism. Between them, again, he just says they had different relationships. And Kim just didn't like hers with her mother. She just wasn't happy with it and she didn't know how to change it. So Lucas Markham, the boyfriend, was actually born Stan Lucas Markham. He was born August 1st, 2001. This is really triggering. And was born in Peterborough. Peterborough. Peterborough. That's it. Peterborough. I did it.
Starting point is 00:22:40 Me to a bottle. High fives to all my UK listeners. High fives. All right. I did it. Watch, I probably got it wrong. And they're going to be like, honey. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:46 Put your hand down. Peterborough. So he grew up also in an abusive home. Well, you said he had lived with his aunt, so I wondered what the story was. Yeah. Yeah. So when he was four years old, his mother died of leukemia. Oh, that's horrific.
Starting point is 00:23:00 So that's huge. I mean, and four, my kids are four. That's a big blow. Like, you know your mom at that point. You know your mom at that point. Very connected at that. point. His father was abusive and alcoholic. He wasn't a good guy. So he immediately was in and out of foster care. Like his dad just didn't want to take care of it. His aunt finally took him in for good,
Starting point is 00:23:22 became his guardian. So he had a lot of troubled stuff. And we're going to talk a little bit more about him and his way of, like we're going to talk about how Kim and him were as teenagers soon. But we want to know how these two met. How did they come together? Like a history, class. Yeah, almost. One day in eighth grade, Lucas threw a chair across the room in English class in a fit of rage. And Kim was in that class and she was like, that's my man. Oh, normally I was like, let's not sit near that guy at lunch. No, she was like, fuck me up. That's him. That's my guy. Wow. Okay. Different strokes for different folks. He was a known asshole. He was known to be very aggressive, just very unpredictable. Some people are really into that. She was into it. Okay. He's,
Starting point is 00:24:15 he was angry. He was detached. And the only thing that made him like attached to anything was Kim. Kim showed that she was interested and he was like, whoa, you're mine too. So they immediately, it's like all her, create her issues that she's bringing to the table and all his issues that he's bring into the table, they just met each other and were like, whoosh, and just formed this. They found what they thought they were missing in each other. Exactly. This fucked up bond that they are just going to become way too attached to each other. It's never good to only have your partner.
Starting point is 00:24:50 And it becomes a Bonnie and Clyde, also against the world, you know, ending in a blaze of glory kind of thing. Yeah, it's just, it's never good. And they think they get each other because of their, like, traumatized. And like nobody else does. Yeah, no one gets us. Now, according to court documents, they were also obsessed with talking about suicide. And it mentions that they did this often with one other girl, but she isn't named in the court documents.
Starting point is 00:25:14 Interesting. They had a super obviously toxic and very codependent relationship with each other right off the bat. Again, they're only 14. Right. So already having two attached of a relationship is not a good thing at that age because you're like, okay, calm down. Yeah. But having the kind of toxic, co-decent. dependent, just like us against the world kind of relationship at 14, just is no good.
Starting point is 00:25:39 No. And obviously, no one was happy with that around them. They were often later compared to Myra Hensley and Ian Brady. Okay. Because apart, sure, they were, you know, they had some fucked up shit going on. They both came from kind of like crazy upbringings. But it was together that they became lethal. Okay. Like Myra Hensley and Ian Brady. It's just like. A part, they were fucked up. And sure, they probably weren't people you wanted to, like, be in a dark alley with. But when they found each other as when it, like, it was like the explosion or the spark. Everyone I saw said that apart, if they had never got together, they don't think this would have happened. They don't think that the mother would have been murdered. They do not think that the sister
Starting point is 00:26:22 would have been murdered. This could have been avoided if they weren't together. Okay. So that's not good. No. Now, Lucas was, he had a tough go, I mean, all around. Right off the best. bat and then we're all the way through. That's sad. He was bullied constantly. Oh, I don't, that's never okay. Yeah. And then she started getting bullied because she was dating him. Okay. So it further cemented there us against the world. No one gets us there. I just don't understand bullying. No, I don't get it. I'll never get it. I really won't. But friends said they, that they were creeped out with how attached and close they were. Like they were like, well, when you're 14 too, you're like, oh, like, what? Like, calm down. Want to come over for a sleepover and like not
Starting point is 00:27:01 hang out with your boyfriend? Yeah, like, please. And Lucas was always at the Edwards house, but it wasn't like he was this welcome presence at the Edwards house. Right. Graham said he immediately didn't like Lucas as soon as he met him. Well, you get a vibe. He said he had a super attitude, like way too like full of himself. He was quiet and arrogant and like just shitty to everybody. I'd be like, get out of my house, you 14 year old fuckface. Well, and Graham also said he wore the same clothes all the time and never washed. That's disgusting. So he was like, yeah, you're gross.
Starting point is 00:27:34 Please leave. Now, according to court documents, he was also violent and aggressive, like, all the time. Like, I don't know if you could tell by him throwing a chair across the other than English class. It's a good indicator. He would punch and headbutt walls and doors at home. That's sad. Like headbutting? Yeah, he had a lot of, like, outbursts.
Starting point is 00:27:53 That sounds like something hasn't been diagnosed. Do you know what I mean? But they did do a psychological, you know, assessment of him later. And he's fine? Yeah. Wow. There were also a ton of physical fights between him and his younger brother. And his poor aunt was, like, trying to get help for him.
Starting point is 00:28:14 And she was like, I have no idea what to do. She would call the police and be like, help me. She just didn't know what to do. That poor woman. He would also self-harm a lot. Kim also was known to self-harm. It seems to me like there's just so. much going on. Yeah. I think there was a lot that was that was happening when they were born. And then I think
Starting point is 00:28:33 nurture took over from there. Yeah, this is a very sad. This is a nature and nurture case for sure. So Lucas also definitely had an abandonment issue. Like that was clear that he, because his mother had died when he was four. His father had abandoned him and he was shoved into foster care. And foster care, you get attached, then you have to go and then you get attached and you have to go. Exactly. So he already has this crazy control issue. Yeah. And he was known to become most violent and physically and verbally aggressive. If that was like threatened. When he loses any self sense of control or when he was criticized at all. And especially if he was criticized by an adult or someone in authority. That is, that stems from all of that. Yeah. It's a total abandonment issue. Right.
Starting point is 00:29:16 Now, by summer 2015, Lucas was getting at a ton of trouble at school because again, he threw a chair across an English class. God only knows what else he was doing. in all the other classes. He ended up being put in this like special pod for like troubled teams. Oh shit. And it was like they would all just be in this one class. Elizabeth was not into Lucas either. She did not like him dating her daughter. She was very worried. Well, she's like, Kim already has an attitude problem. Like this is the last thing she needs, I bet. Yeah. And she was like, he's a really bad influence on her. And then she could see how close they were and how obsessive they were. And they were already in a sexual relationship and she found that out and she was freaking out. She's 14 years old. Of course,
Starting point is 00:30:00 any parents going to be like, ah, help. So Elizabeth finally in 2015 banned him from coming over. He could not come to the house. Now, Kim and Lucas, in response to this, ran away together. And they lived in a tent in the woods for six days. Wow. I mean, impressive. No one knew where they were. Like they just, they took clothes and food and all that stuff and they just took off. And they just took on. lived in this tent in the woods for six days and apparently they were finally found after the six days by people recognize them when they went into town okay you have to go home and they brought them home apparently at school everybody found out about this and they thought it was hilarious like because they were just a joke that's really sad they were sent back to their homes um and elizabeth referred to them at this time as a ticking time bomb waiting to go off like so she knew she was like something bad is happening out of Right. Because if my 14-year-old ran away with her fucking crazy boyfriend and they were both already showing these signs, ran away and lived in a tent in the woods for six days, I'd be like, oh, yeah. Well, imagine is it? Because what are you supposed to do? Like, what do you do?
Starting point is 00:31:10 What are your options? Right. Like, she's already showed you that you can't really do anything. No. It's like you ban this kid from your house and they run away together. So, right. Like, what option is there? Like, honestly, at this point, I'd be like, well, I guess I just put you in prison in my own house. you don't get to leave. Like, I don't even know what you would do. But even, um, Jasmine Richardson's parents did that, remember? Yeah. And he would like sneak in.
Starting point is 00:31:32 Yeah. Same thing happened. That's why these cases scare the shit out of you. I was going to say. Because the helplessness that comes along with this and I just, I was looking at this case. And then this morning I woke up and like the girls came like bouncing down the stairs. And I was like, please love me forever. Ah!
Starting point is 00:31:47 Like, I was like, please don't bring home a Lucas or Jeremy, please. No. Like, I swear. No offense to any Lucas or. Jeremy listening, but I swear if one of them brings home one names of that, I'm going to be like, nope, no, not okay. Sorry. Sorry.
Starting point is 00:32:00 We have a strict policy in this house. And I will have a bone saw at home and I'll be like, and this is what will happen to you, buddy. I'm going to be a scary-ass mom. Oh, man. So, yeah. So now it's ticking time bomb. Shit's going down. Right.
Starting point is 00:32:16 So after this is when Kim really amped up the self-harming, which she was sad. It's all sad. This whole thing is very sad. Do you know if she was put in therapy or anything like that? They definitely tried. She was assessed by different psychologists. A lot of different psychologists said she's just an angry kid. And they were like, and this does stem from, you know, her father left when you were young.
Starting point is 00:32:38 There was an abuse in the house. You know, she was part of the abuse in the house at a time. Right. This is all just pretty par for the course. Like she's not being. And I think they were also, I think part of the problem here was she was she was, she wasn't, I don't think she was, it's hard to explain, like, because this is no one's fault, you know what I mean? Like, it's just all a culmination of shit. Yeah. And it's obviously
Starting point is 00:33:01 Kim and Lucas's fault at the end of the day. But I mean, like, creating this is a different thing. But I think she just wasn't, she needed a, she needed a little more than she was getting. It's again, the parent and the child are not always the right fit for each other. Exactly. And I don't think she was just not getting. And I hope nobody thinks I'm saying that in a way where it's like, it's the mom's fault or I mean it is her fault that she killed her mom but in like it's not her fault before that. Yeah. It's hard to explain.
Starting point is 00:33:29 It's hard to put into words. At the end of the day, Kim is to blame here. She's a fucking murderer. So is Lucas. Right. Bada boop. But we all, we like to look at how these things form. You know, like how, especially when it has to do with a child and a mother.
Starting point is 00:33:43 Your parent and kid relationships are always interesting to me. Yeah, you have to look at it deeper. And I think what was happening was Kim obviously had all those background things. and she needed something that she wasn't getting psychologically, I think. I think she needed some deeper, some deeper look at her psyche a little bit. Maybe she didn't even know what she needed. And to be honest, with the way you hear talk about it later, it might not help to be quite honest because she's very detached, like from this whole and from emotions.
Starting point is 00:34:12 Sometimes they're just born that way. Sometimes you are just a sociopath and that's the way it is. But put that on a shirt. Sometimes you're just a sociopath and that's the way it is. T.M. Small, small ratings. Small font. Yeah, you know.
Starting point is 00:34:26 So after this, in 2016, Kim did confide in a teacher that she felt close to. She wrote this teacher a letter. And it said, I have tried to remain strong, but I can't fight anymore. Now I feel that death is the only way. Oh, can you imagine being the poor teacher that gets that? Yes.
Starting point is 00:34:45 Well, and this teacher did the right thing. They referred her to a mental health service for youths at the time. She was seen and she was released. They did not think anything was concerning. Okay. So in March 2016, Lucas was expelled from school finally. And was sent to another school, which was an hour and a half away. So Kim and he could not see each other at school during the day anymore.
Starting point is 00:35:11 So that was not good. Obviously, she became depressed. He was upset. They could only see each other at night and they couldn't see each other at Kim's house. So it was becoming, the world is pulling us apart. Right. What do we do? How do we fight against this? We break up. We go our separate ways at the end. Nope. So she did attempt suicide by taking an overdose of pills. Oh, that's sad.
Starting point is 00:35:31 People at the school, according to some of the people that were interviewed, kids at the school, like, we're joking about this. Yeah, because kids are fucking horrible. Kids are dick. I remember, like, things like this happen. Not completely like the same, but I remember like things like that happened. And kids are just like, oh, like that girl's a weirdo. Like, she tried to kill herself. Yeah. It's like, yeah, that's fucked up. They don't understand the gravity of what it is. Because your frontal lobe hasn't developed in your shit head. Especially eighth grade, ninth, your children.
Starting point is 00:35:59 And that's when I feel like that's when a lot of people have these problems. It's like eighth grade. Because it's a hard age, man. That's a really hard time to, I mean, I'm sure everybody can agree. Unless you're one of those like magical uniforms that were like, junior high was the best for me. Yeah. Like, it's a tough time. It is.
Starting point is 00:36:20 There's a lot going on. because it's like puberty's happening. Lots of like coming of age things are happening. It's just too much. It's a lot to deal with. Yeah. Obviously that is. And everybody has a different home life.
Starting point is 00:36:30 It's like. Yeah. So I feel like a lot of that stuff happens and kids never know how to deal with it. So they just like make a joke. So kids are fucked. Moral of that story. So once she was released from the hospital, they again, everybody's trying to break these two up. They're trying to keep them apart.
Starting point is 00:36:55 But they are just refusing to. Artways. April 3rd, she, this is interesting. She posted on Facebook, April 3rd. And it was like this moody, angsty photo. It's like black and white. And it's her just like looking moodily at the camera with no smile. And it did it on Picnic app?
Starting point is 00:37:13 Yeah, and she has glasses on. It's in black and white. And her mother, Elizabeth, commented on the photo. I used to fucking hate when my mom would comment on my fucking Facebook things. Wow. Okay. I get so mad. Hello.
Starting point is 00:37:26 I'm 430 years old. so I didn't have to deal with that and I'm very happy about it. It's the worst. I'm like, whoa. Now, this is April 3rd. This is days before these murders happen, like a couple weeks. What does she comment? So she comments, where's your beautiful smile?
Starting point is 00:37:43 Oh. And Kim responds, it disappeared. And her mother says, why, hon? And she responds, I don't know. And then she follows it by emojis of a panda, a bear, a unicorn, a cookie, a smiley face with glasses. another smiley face and then an upside down smiley face. Okay. And I was like, I'm trying to decide for that.
Starting point is 00:38:03 So like all her recent emojis probably, I guess. Well, and her mother says, I think it's under your bed, L.O.L. Oh, she's like, I'm trying to get you and I don't. Well, and then Kim responds with like this cute little picture of like a cartoon dog sleeping in bed. Like a little gif. And this is like a few days before she brutally murders her mother. And then her mom responds with like another cartoon in bed. Like they had a funny little exchange.
Starting point is 00:38:27 obviously didn't have like... So it seems like... I don't know. It seems like her mother was trying. And I think it just was too... It was far gone. So April 9th, she stayed at Lucas's house. Uh-oh.
Starting point is 00:38:40 Against her, her mother had told her no. And she stayed there anyway. Uh-huh. So she came home the next day and found that her mother had put all her stuff into bags and given it to her younger sister, Katie. That's a weird punishment. And had gotten rid of, like, put other stuff in bags as like a punishment. like I'm emptying out your room.
Starting point is 00:38:58 Okay. So from the court documents directly, it says doubtless, um, dealtless because of their unhappiness together, the two had previously run away from home. They were found some miles away and then returned to their families. This is talking about the 10th thing. Yep, yeah. Over the weekend before the killings, they barricaded themselves in Lucas Markham's room before leaving through a window, returning to Kim Edwards's home to, in order to collect her
Starting point is 00:39:24 contraceptives. When they returned, Lucas Markham was rugby tackled and restrained by his family, and Kim Edwards was returned to her home where she found her mother had moved her belongings from the room she shared with her younger sister. Lucas Markham's room had been cleared out by his family as well. Okay. So I think what had happened here. And again, I'm not saying anybody is right or wrong here, like, in the sense of parenting.
Starting point is 00:39:50 We're just assessing the situation. Right in this situation. Lucas's aunt and family were like We're done We're done Like you I'm sure you reach a point where you're like I don't know what to fucking do with this kid
Starting point is 00:40:03 I don't know what to do That's like when I wouldn't clean my room And Papa would put all my stuff in trash bags And leave it in my room And be like Oh yeah Clean it up My parents, my dad was always like
Starting point is 00:40:12 I will give you a couple of shots To clean that room And he always gave like I always got a lot of shots He gave a lot of shots But he would tell me You have a day I will throw all of your stuff in this room Into the backyard
Starting point is 00:40:23 Yeah. And you will have to pick it all up. He never threw my stuff in the backyard, but I came home from school one day and all my stuff was in trash bags. And I was livid. But I bet you kept it clean. Oh, yeah. I kept it real clean. And he actually did, actually he did it to my older sister. My mom. He, and I remember one day, because they were horrible.
Starting point is 00:40:41 They were like keeping their room clean. They were filthy pigs. And my dad literally took everything in her room and threw it out the back window onto the back lot. And it was like, and he was like, well, I'm like. I guess you'll keep it clean from there because my parents were not like screamers or no hit hitters or anything like that. They did shit like that. Then you were like, oh, shit.
Starting point is 00:41:02 I feel like that's better. I think you learn more from it. Yeah, because it doesn't hurt anybody. It's just like. It just pisses you off and it pisses you off, but you still have to, you got to get your stuff back out of the bags. It's a big inconvenience to me. That's what it is.
Starting point is 00:41:13 So you won't do it again. So I think Lucas's aunt and his family were like, let's just empty out his fucking room because if they're going to hole up in there and barricade themselves in his room, like, fuck you, man, this isn't my house. This isn't your room. Right. Like, I'm going to empty it out. Now you can have an empty cell. And I think her mom was doing the same thing. She was like, you know what? There goes all your stuff. If you're not going to listen to me and you two are just going to continue this shit. So it's like, you understand. But I wonder if they talk to each other, like the aunt and the mom. They might have. I wonder. Yeah. They might have. Like made a plan.
Starting point is 00:41:44 Yeah, they might have. Well, this was the moment that they both were like, we're going to kill Elizabeth and Katie now. Yeah. Why did they? Why did Katie? And also, it's weird to me that they didn't, like, I'm happy. They didn't kill the aunt, but like, why is it her family? Because the aunt was not, what they felt was that Elizabeth was more involved with trying to keep them apart than the aunt was. And was Katie just like collateral? Well, we'll find that out. But one of the other things on top of it was that Kim uses the, my sister is the favorite. Okay, okay. And that's the other thing. So she wants to kill her. mom for not giving her the attention she gives Katie and then Katie's got to go because she's the
Starting point is 00:42:26 object of the attention. So in the days leading up to the murder now, they were planning it thoroughly. They cannot use this whole like, we just decided to do it. No, they sat and planned this. Oh, God. They sat in a McDonald's and, you know, ate happy meals and talked about it. Stop ruining fast food restaurants for me. They took romantic walks and talked about it.
Starting point is 00:42:48 They had it totally planned. So initially, they planned for him to do. take four knives out of his aunt's home. Jesus. Walk to the Edwards home, which is about three quarters of a mile away. Oh, not far at all. It was going to be in the middle of the night. Kim was going to let him in through a window.
Starting point is 00:43:04 He was going to tap three times, and that's how she would know. That's cute. And then they were, and what they initially planned was that Lucas was going to kill Elizabeth and Kim was going to kill Katie. Okay. That was their plan. Now, they tried this two times on April 11th and April 12th. But each time he would come and knock and Kim had fallen asleep.
Starting point is 00:43:27 Now, wow. I'm glad. Everybody hear this again. They had planned to kill her mother and her sister. And on the nights they had this planned. She fell asleep twice. She fell asleep. Would you fall asleep knowing that you were about to kill your mother and your sister with butcher knives in your home with your boyfriend?
Starting point is 00:43:51 No. That to me is like disconnected out of reality. Bitch is on a different planet. Like a different wavelength completely. She's not even here with us. Like this is, this is so evil. It's like. Well, she was in Kim's world. She wasn't like, you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:44:08 Well, that's one of the things that is a really like strong thread through this is that Kim is very egotistical and very entitled. Yeah. You can tell. She wants to be in a relationship with Lucas. She wants it how she wants it. She wants to have sex with him and no one tell her anything about it. She wants to do this.
Starting point is 00:44:25 She wants her mother to treat her this way. She wants all the attention. She's entitled. She's not getting it. And she's pissed about it. Right. And that's what this is about. Because she's 14.
Starting point is 00:44:34 So already you're pretty entitled when you're 14. And then obviously there's a lot more that goes into it with her. She's so fucking relaxed on those two nights that she just dozes into Dreamland. That's bananas. So finally on April 13th, they try for the third and final time. She like got a coffee that day. Apparently. So Lucas took four knives from his aunt's house, walked that three quarters of a mile to their house.
Starting point is 00:44:54 He had a long time to think about it. They've had three different tries to reconsider this. He took a, he went under like in the darkest paths he could go so no one would see him. He hopped a back wall in the back garden. And then he went to the window and he tapped on the window three times. Okay. Now, Kim let him in through the window. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:17 And the way Lucas described it later was she looks out the window. She sees me there. She waves. I put my thumbs up and she goes to the bathroom window. She opens the bathroom window. I pass my bag through and then I go through. And then she opens my bag. I take a knife out and pass her a knife.
Starting point is 00:45:35 She holded the knife. She holded the knife. Sure did. She folded that knife. So she folded the knife but never used the knife. then I went into her mom's room and stabbed her in the neck while she was asleep on her side and then smothered her face with a pillow. Oh, God.
Starting point is 00:45:51 And he says this, like, he is telling you a grocery list. He was like, and then I went on the potato aisle and I got potatoes because, you know, there's a potato aisle. Obviously, a potato aisle. And then domesticity. He's like, yeah, I just, you know, and then I went and they didn't have my favorite chips. So I went and got different chips. It's literally that chill.
Starting point is 00:46:09 And I decided I needed some ginger ale. And he's like, so she was a. sleep on her side and I smothered her face with a pillow. The end. I hope at least that she didn't suffer like the two of them. Yeah, they both did. Oh, thanks for that. You're welcome. He used an eight-inch butcher knife to do it.
Starting point is 00:46:26 Elizabeth was stabbed eight times, including five times in her hands as she tried to defend herself. Oh, no. One of the two blows to her neck almost completely cut through her windpipe. Oh, God. They intentionally cut the throats to stop them from crying out. they later said. They had planned that. That is dark. They both said, well, the voice box is there.
Starting point is 00:46:48 So we figured we would cut that off right away, so they couldn't cry. That's your mother and your sister. Yeah. Like, they are super... They're talking about them, like, less than, like, animals. Yeah, less than, I mean, like, an aunt you would step on on the sidewalk. Oh, my God. And when Kim was asked about it, she said she heard gurgling and struggling. Oh.
Starting point is 00:47:09 And so she went into the room to check to see. if Lucas was okay. That's how she puts it. She says, quote, he was on top of her with a pillow over her head. I thought I heard her say, get off me. After about 10 minutes of Lucas putting her weight on her, she was dead. Now, she says 10 minutes. She's a fucking idiot because it wasn't 10 minutes.
Starting point is 00:47:31 It doesn't take 10 minutes to smother someone. And Lucas says it was barely three minutes. I was going to say. But she's like 10 full minutes. I'm like, do you know what time is, Kim? Maybe time is different in Kim World. Everything's different in Kim World. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:45 But she says, and she says she heard these noises and went in there desperately to check on Lucas. That's fucked up. Because she worried about her mother at all, obviously. But like for her to say, like I wanted to check on him. Like what? That's insane. As he murders your mother, like you're hearing noises and you're like, I hope he's okay. Right.
Starting point is 00:48:06 So she says, and this is, this is tough. She says. So Kim says, all I could see was her shoulder and arms. She was struggling. She reached out her hand, so I grabbed it and kind of held it. As I realized it was her hand, I instantly pulled my hand back. Oh my God. So she meant to grab Lucas's hand, but her poor mother, as she was dying, reached out to her to hold her hand and she grabbed it unknowingly. When she realized she grabbed it, she pulled away and discussed. So her mother is dying and being murdered brutally by this little fucking asshole. And she pulls her hand away.
Starting point is 00:48:51 And it's like, oh, I thought that was Lucas's. What, like, what happened in your fucking brain? Like, what happened to your brain? There is just nothing there. That is, like, darker than darker. And they say later, I mean, they've come to the conclusion where they, like, they don't think she can be rehabilitated. They're like she's, she's far gone. This is not one of those things where it's like when you...
Starting point is 00:49:14 Maybe she'll learn the era of her ways. Like how they let Jasmine Richardson out. I don't think they shouldn't have even done that. No, they absolutely shouldn't have. That made me. That part really hurt my heart. But Lucas checked her pulse and confirmed she was dead. So next in their minds.
Starting point is 00:49:30 Oh, and then Katie. Now originally, like I said, she was supposed to kill Katie. Right. But she said she couldn't do it. She couldn't mentally get herself to do it. So Lucas was like, well, I'll do it. Okay. He says, I went into Katie's room, which is the same as Kim's.
Starting point is 00:49:45 I thought I stabbed her, but I'm not 100% sure if it was like her or the mattress. Oh, my God. And then I smothered her face with a pillow too. Then Kim asked him, did she struggle? And he said, no. And he said, is she dead? And he said, then she sort of said, take off your clothes because they're covered in blood. So I did.
Starting point is 00:50:07 And then we ran a bath and had a bath together. because we were both kind of dirty because she helped take the blood off my face and shirt. So they had a bath like basically across the hall from her dead mother and sister? Mm-hmm. Just had a nice romantic baths together. Okay. Yeah. They actually had a blood bath.
Starting point is 00:50:25 They literally had a blood bath. That's fucked. He also said he was kind of bummed because he said he was planning to wear that shirt again. That, you know, he didn't wash. But he was pissed that it had blood on it. Like, that's what he was thinking of. Like I was surprised he didn't just wear it anyway. planning to wear that shirt again.
Starting point is 00:50:41 Right. He was like, you know, I'd like to wear this and just go to school in the shirt. Like what? So one of the other grisly details of this is that Lucas said when he slashed Katie's throat, she said, I can't and then couldn't finish saying breathe. And Kim said she heard this. Yeah. She said she described it as, quote, a scary voice, which was, quote, all croaky.
Starting point is 00:51:07 Oh. And she just says it like it was weird and scary and croaky as your little sister is being murdered by your boyfriend. She doesn't think of these people as like her mother and her little sister. Like she just thinks of them as like in the way of her and Lucas. So like we said, they took the bath together. And then Kim dragged the mattress from her sister's room, her own mattress. I was going to say the one that she just killed her sister on.
Starting point is 00:51:31 No, but it was from the same room. Right, right. So she grabbed the mattress right next to her where her sister lay brutally butchered right next to her. Blood everywhere. I was going to say, you don't just easily take a mattress out of a room. Like, they were in there for a bit. She dragged it out of the room. She brought it downstairs to the living room. They had sex. I knew that was coming. Then they watched TV together while eating ice cream snuggled under a blanket on the mattress. For three days. drank alcohol from the cabinet. And right after this happened, so they had sex, they got some ice cream. Then they watched
Starting point is 00:52:00 all four twilights. That's why this is called the Twilight Murder. This is why this is called the Twilight murder and honestly I get it because that is so shocking. Like what? You watched all four twilights? First of all, you just murdered two people, your mother and your sister and two. You watched all four twilights? Actually, wait, isn't there five twilights? I don't know. They watched four of them. Wow. Like, fuck. Because there's the regular one, then there's New Moon, then there's a close and then, yeah, there's five, because there's Breaking Dawn Part One and Two. Well, I guess they only watched. Maybe they watched part one and two as one. I'm glad that they didn't get to watch part five.
Starting point is 00:52:38 There you go. Or maybe they watched Breaking Dawn one and two together. Maybe. Whatever. I'm pissed. Either way, they sat and watched their Twilight movies, which I'm sure they considered themselves like Edward and Bella. You know that.
Starting point is 00:52:51 Except that they didn't kill their parents. No, but they were, you know. What? Like, we just love each other. Noah wants us to be together and we have to do what we have to do. That's a lot. Yeah. So Twilight murders.
Starting point is 00:53:02 A lot to unpack there. So they had plans. initially to complete suicide together after this, but they didn't do it, obviously. They wrote a suicide note entitled, Fuck You World. And it said, fuck you world. How angsty. And it also said, I want to be cremated and I want mine and Lucas's ashes scattered at a special place. You think?
Starting point is 00:53:24 Oh, you caught me. I'm so, I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry. I just got so mad. I'm sorry. It says, I want to be cremated and I want mine and Lucas's ashes scattered. at our special place. We don't give a fuck anymore. Okay. Can I go now? You think that we're going to just scatter your ashes in a special fucking place?
Starting point is 00:53:45 Yeah, because you know what? Ted Bundy's ashes were scattered where he put his victims. What? You didn't know that? No. I thought I said that in the episode. I don't think so. I'm pretty sure I did. I mean, it was a long time ago. We all know how my memory works. As his final fuck you to his victims where he used to put all like his little garden of like skulls that he would come up there and put makeup and shit they have to the law I'd lie I'd break the law for that somebody he was scattered up there she's a mostly law-abiding citizen but she'd break the law for that she says about herself well and don't worry because they weren't actually
Starting point is 00:54:22 planning on killing themselves they did that as a you know I think that was like their their contingency plan basically so like I said when police showed up they're sitting together They're under a blanket on that mattress, eating ice cream, super nonchalant. And they said, why don't you go upstairs and see? That's the scariest part to me of this whole thing. Oh, yeah. It's terrifying. So let's hammer in what they had done and what they were sitting with in the house for 36 hours.
Starting point is 00:54:53 So the pathologist. Okay. The pathologist said that Elizabeth, again, was stabbed eight times, five in the hands when she tried to fight him off. There was one located to her right. shoulder, two to her neck. The stab wounds to the neck had resulted in severing her internal jugular veins. One had almost completely severed her windpipe. And the cause of death was stab wounds to the neck. And the injuries were not instantly fatal. Oh, no. There was evidence that she survived for at least a short time as they were being inflicted in a little bit after. Oh, my God. The degree of
Starting point is 00:55:27 force used was, they said, pretty moderate because the tracks of the wounds had not passed through any bone tissue. Okay. So to the body of 13-year-old Katie, he said there were two stab wounds to the neck. One had entered the left side, resulting in a small defect within the right vertical artery. This caused a moderate amount of bleeding, but not enough volume of bleeding to have really like messed with her cerebral blood flow to really be like the absolute cause of death. her body was found with a pillow over her face and they examined her lungs and they said that she'd
Starting point is 00:56:06 probably died from a hemorrhage from a stab wound to the neck and also smothering. Oh my God. There was an injury to one of her vertebra which suggests that there was severe force with the stab to go all the way through. To go all the way through to her vertebrae. Initially, Lucas would not speak to this police when he was arrested. He was like, nope, not saying the thing. But Kim was just like, sit down and let me tell you what happened from the beginning.
Starting point is 00:56:33 Because she probably thought that she was like, cool. Well, she just didn't care. Right. It wasn't even I'm cool. It's like, I literally just don't care. So here's the story. That's insane. They said she had zero remorse, like, none.
Starting point is 00:56:44 And when they even asked her, she was like, no, I don't care. I always am like, imagine. But imagine being the investigator that had to talk to her. No. I'd be like, I don't want to be in the same room as you. Can we do this through a double-sided mirror? Yeah, I don't want to do this. Well, because they were both 14, the media couldn't name them.
Starting point is 00:56:59 initially when they arrested, you know, because of age. It was seven months until the trial happened. The town was freaking out. There were rumors starting about who the hell it could have been. Obviously, people were already being like, it was probably her daughter in the boyfriend. They were finally named in June 2017 when the reporting restriction was lifted. This is when people start remembering all these red flags that they're like, huh. Duh.
Starting point is 00:57:23 So people said Lucas was obsessed with this case that had happened. 10 months earlier than the murders of Elizabeth and Katie. And it had happened very close by. And it was a 42-year-old man, Warren Free, who was their friend Adam's father. Oh. And he had been attacked by local teens and killed at his home. What's up with the teenagers in this place? Yes.
Starting point is 00:57:48 It was 3 a.m. And some teens were destroying his fence. So he came out holding a metal pipe and was like what the fuck stop. They attacked him and. beat him with the pipe, killing him on his front porch. Jesus. These kids got away with it. How?
Starting point is 00:58:04 They just couldn't be identified? Yeah. Was that really loud? Yeah. Sorry. How? My bad. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:14 Sorry if I just bursted your car speakers. Yeah. I don't know how they got away with it. They just couldn't be identified, I guess. Well, they were. They went to trial. I don't know how they got off somehow. But Lucas was very intrigued by this.
Starting point is 00:58:28 Yeah. And Adam said Lucas was initially trying to be, like, supportive of him and be like, oh, I'm really sorry that your dad got murdered on your porch. But he was more concerned, it seemed, with how they got away with it and what had actually happened, like the grisly details he wanted. He was already probably thinking about killing Elizabeth. He was already in that, like, weird place. So when police asked, how did you come up with this plan to Lucas and Kim, Kim? Kim told police, we just went on general knowledge, really, because the voice box, the stabbing in the throat and the bath because of the dog. so she wouldn't smell the blood.
Starting point is 00:59:00 What? Like, you left the room a bloody fucking mess. What do you mean you took a bath because the dog would smell the blood? It doesn't even make any sense. You left two fucking rooms full of blood, you dumbass. Right. What? And she said, also, Lucas doesn't like the smell of blood.
Starting point is 00:59:14 How do you know? What? How do you know that? Like, what? How have you smelled that much blood that you know you don't like the smell? Like, you, I don't think anybody wants to smell blood, really. I'm sure some people do. But, like, I don't think that's something many of us think about.
Starting point is 00:59:28 No. But like you've had enough around you that you've just sniffed enough that you don't even actually like think of like I have an opinion about that. Much of us like I don't think I've been around enough blood to smell to know what it smells like. It definitely does and it's not like I don't want to smell blood. But like to have an opinion about it to the fact that like she's like well Lucas I know, I know for a fact that's one of his qualms. It's not. It's one of his weird neuroses that he doesn't like the smell of blood. Yeah. She's strange. Okay. Well, you know. She later told a psychiatrist, I wanted to get revenge for the way that my. mother treated me. She would, she then said, I did not feel anything for my mother. She deserved it. And I'm glad she's dead. And then Lucas described that he said when him and Kim first got together, he said he felt wanted, he felt needed. And he said, then I felt like I had to protect her from any perceived threat. Okay. So when he committed the murders, he said he was very calm. He felt very happy because he said he was protecting Kim. Right. From the threat. Yeah, because her mom was so threatening. Yeah. So Kim says after, you know, about the, about the whole thing, she says, we felt laid back about what it happened.
Starting point is 01:00:38 Neither one of us felt bad about it. Like, she's just like, I don't give a shit. That's insane to me. And the detective chief inspector, Martin Holvey, said, quote, the fact of what happened in those 36 hours after and how they carried on as normal, watching TV, watching a film, going upstairs to use the toilet while people are lying dead upstairs, it defies belief. It does. And he said he didn't even have a precedent for this. He was like, I've never seen anything like this. Wow. They also, they also considered it, more Kim considered it that she was doing a favor to her mother. She said, quote, my mom doesn't have to deal with me anymore being like suicidal. And she doesn't have to wake up worrying every morning to see if I'm still alive. And then she said about Katie that she said she saved her
Starting point is 01:01:26 from growing through, quote, the heartbreak and just all the emotions and stuff. What a hero you are, girl. So she thinks she is, she's doing everybody in favor. Like even now, she's like, no, I did the right thing. It's like, okay, but you just get to live the rest of your life? Obviously, she's in jail, but it's like... Yeah, it's like that makes sense a lot. Okay, Kim.
Starting point is 01:01:45 So they were both initially charged with murder. And in the UK, anyone over the age of 10, you are criminally responsible for your actions. Oh, wow. It's not like a minor thing where, like, you don't get murder. because you're not 18 kind of thing. Ten is very young. Well, the defense tried to use mental instability, obviously. They were going to go for the insanity defense.
Starting point is 01:02:06 So they were looking to get manslaughter by way of diminished responsibility. So a psychiatric report by Dr. Oliver White on August 15, 2016, this is from the court documents, said that Lucas Markham was not then suffering either from a severe or enduring mental illness or from a depressive episode, although his mood instability was an important feature of his emerging personality structure. He recounted the history of his experiences of domestic violence between his parents and the multiple different foster care placements which flowed from the breakdown of their relationship, culminating in his living with his aunt from the age of four or five, which was around the time his mother died of cancer. He had a longstanding difficult relationship with his father, which appeared to have been highly influenced. by his father's drinking, resulting in a lack of care, supervision, and nurturing to the children.
Starting point is 01:03:01 A consequence of his experiences during his childhood was that he had lacked the opportunity to develop skills and self-regulation of his own emotions. It was assessed that his specific emerging personality traits were in the domains of emotionally unstable and dissocial personality disorder, but due to his age, he fell short of a formal diagnosis of personality disorder. Okay. The doctor also said that Lucas Markham had a high risk of continuing his trajectory with regards to his personality development, such as that formal diagnosis of personality disorder, it was probably going to happen when he was an adult. He was like, if we had let this go and this
Starting point is 01:03:44 had never happened, he would definitely have been formally. Because he's like crossing off all the things on the way. There was also another report on September 5th, 2016, and this was Dr. Tracy King, who's a psychologist, they said there were no concerns regarding his intellectual functioning, his intellectual functioning, such that might have led to a greater tendency to be influenced by others or to not understand the consequences of his actions. Okay. So they were like, he knows what he did. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:14 He also had a history of early childhood trauma. They said the domestic violence, the father's drinking, that was an issue. They said these definitely, these experiences. had shown to have organic neurochemical correlates in the brain. There could be a gross alteration in the amygdala, the emotional center in your brain. Oh, okay. These would be evident in adulthood and would lead to emotional regulation difficulties. Like they're saying he just does not know how to regulate his emotions.
Starting point is 01:04:45 His exposure to domestic violence and the fear that this would instill in a young child activated his primitive brain on a consistent fight or flight pathway. So they were like, because he was exposed to this violence and fear when he was younger of people he was supposed to trust around him, it immediately activated that fight or flight. Yeah. And he was just constantly in a state of fight or flight. Right. Which brings you into this light. And he leaned a lot more towards fight.
Starting point is 01:05:13 Exactly. Because he kind of had to from young age, I guess. He just kind of like is always in the state of like, somebody's going to hurt me, so I'm going to hurt people first kind of thing. And it says for him, this meant that minor threat. and challenges could feel like a real threat to his existence. Like he took everything as primitive, like, I got to protect myself. And they said, so he's going to act disproportionately to these things. Right.
Starting point is 01:05:37 Obviously. That's really interesting. I liked that you went into that. Yeah. And they said he's also, when threatened, he's also very likely to experience a much higher degree of dissociative symptoms than what would be normal. Huh. So he will, like, just disassociate from like he's doing here.
Starting point is 01:05:53 he's just telling it like yeah this is what I did that's really interesting it just associates from it completely right yeah so in the end even though they found all these things where they're saying you know the fight or flight response is constantly activated and you know when he's an adult he's probably going to be diagnosed with a personality disorder they said right now he doesn't actually have one he does not have an insanity defense he is not insane right he knows what he did he's very aware he's intellectually functioning well and even if you do have a personality disorder that doesn't technically mean you're insane right because it's technically not, you know, it doesn't, certain ones, I'm sure, can go with it, but what they're talking about doesn't seem to go with.
Starting point is 01:06:32 And typically insanity is just a break in your sanity. Yeah. Or like, you know, just some mental disorder that makes it so you can't understand the consequences of your actions. Right. They said he definitely does. So in the end, they found that he was not going to get that defense. They had to give it up. I think it was like the day before his trial was set.
Starting point is 01:06:51 They were like, yeah, you can't use that defense now. Oh, shit. Imagine having, again, imagine having to scramble to, what are we going to say now? Exactly. So he was first going to plead guilty to manslaughter, but now they had to change it to pleading guilty to murder because he couldn't get manslaughter now. Now, Kim was also going to use that insanity defense, and she was going to plead guilty to manslaughter. Did it work for her? No. Wow. The fact that she's not technically insane is terrifying. No, well, because she understands the consequences. That's so crazy. Like, I fully believe she understands.
Starting point is 01:07:23 understand. Oh, I do too. I'm just saying like, wow. Because you don't want to give it to people who just seem insane. You want to give it to somebody who literally is like, I don't understand what happened. What I did, right? Like, wait, what? It's like a black. Yeah. But she's like, I don't want to give it to her. I'm just saying it's so crazy. It is. That she did all of this and was like, yep, I did that. Yeah, it's insane. It truly is. Exactly. But it's, but it's not. So Lucas forfeited his trial when he did his guilty plea. So he was just guilty. Now it's on to. Kim. So Kim went to trial in October at Nottingham Crown Court and she pled not guilty to murder and she claimed a mental illness. Now she said that it was the mixture of her mental health and Lucas being
Starting point is 01:08:05 controlling and controlling her every move that made her doing it. Turning on each other right away. Exactly. So now. Turning on him. Because he didn't turn on her at all. And in fact it was released that she was very detached from Lucas almost immediately. Well, because she like probably has no actual attachment skill. He did what she needed him to do. And now she's done. Because she's only, again, it's Kim's world. Yeah. She used him for what she needed him for. And he's gone now, out of sight, out of mind. Yeah. And now he can deal with whatever he needs to do with. Wow. And it's like they were literally obsessed with each other to the point of murder. But after he did it, she was just unconcerned. She said, you know, whatever he gets, he gets. I don't care.
Starting point is 01:08:44 That's insane. Like did not care. And all of a sudden, she's sitting there saying he was controlling and shit. It's like, what? Yeah. And she said she's moving on. And she said, like, you wanted to like run away with him and start your life together, but okay. Yeah. She had no emotional response to his sentencing at all. She didn't care. So she was assessed and a consultant forensic psychiatrist named Philip Joseph was the one to get some crazy shit out of her. So he said, I don't miss, she said, I don't miss my mom and I'm glad she's dead, even though I'm in a sticky situation now. Oh, it's just a sticky situation. Yeah. She also said she deserved it. I'm glad she's dead. We felt laid back about what we had done. Neither one of us felt bad about it. And she said, just the fact that it happened so quickly,
Starting point is 01:09:28 that gave me peace of mind because, you know, it wasn't like torture or anything. Oh, okay. Yeah, so that's good. At least it wasn't torture. In your mind. Yeah. She also said about her sister, she said she felt a bit sad about that. A bit. Yeah, a bit. So his conclusion in his report, which was September 22nd, 2016. So this girl is wild in. He said she was not suffering from an abnormality of mental functioning caused by a recognized medical condition. And therefore, she did not have a defense to murder or manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility. He said, the family dynamics were explored.
Starting point is 01:10:05 She had attachment difficulties with her mother. She explained the circumstances leading up to the killings of her mother and sister and said, yes, it was jointly planned and she was not forced to go along with it. She said, he did not force me to do it. I wanted to. I wanted to do it. Like, she was very forthcoming about that. Because she just doesn't give a shit.
Starting point is 01:10:26 She just doesn't give a shit. And she said her mother was the main problem in her life. And she said she felt excited about the thought of killing her. And she remained glad after the fact that her mother was dead. She felt nothing, not a stitch of remorse. And she said she did kind of feel a little bad about Katie. Right. So she said she missed her a little bit.
Starting point is 01:10:45 Yeah. The doctor also said she did not accept, or Dr. Philip Joseph's. said he did not accept the loss of her belongings in that one situation where like everything was moving out. Yeah, everything was taken out of the tipping point. He did not accept that as like a trigger. He was like, no, that's that happens to normal children and we just said it happened to us. They get through it. They they get mad. They move on. Like we cannot cause call this the tipping point because that shouldn't be a tipping point. And a lot worse happens to people that don't kill their parents. Exactly. He was like,
Starting point is 01:11:18 nope. And he was like, she has an adjustment disorder for sure. like this is not cause for what she did. And they said, um, and they said, right, if she was suffering from full blown adjustment disorder, he said that she would not now continue to express satisfaction that her mother was dead. He was like, this would change if she was suffering from that. Okay. It's not. That's interesting. She's still sticking with this. I did it. I'm happy I did it and she's dead and that's fine. I feel nothing. So, so scary. Yeah. And yeah, it's insane. And then, Then they had Dr. Liz Yardley is a criminologist, and she really specializes in child killers. She said the sibling rivalry thing that she was using that, like, you know, Katie got more attention, all that.
Starting point is 01:12:03 That's why I killed my mom. She said, that's bullshit. That's not a motive. She was like, no. Plenty of people have sibling rivalry and they don't kill people. Yep. And she said it was just Kim's entitlement to do whatever she wanted, whenever she wanted. And it's part of her psychopathy, essentially.
Starting point is 01:12:20 he was she was like people think it's really in Kim's head the whole like my mom the rivalry. The rivalry. Because friends and family were like, no, she didn't favorite one of them. Well, and just to, I mean, it's a very small thing, but take that Facebook post. It's not like she didn't give a fuck about her. Exactly. She didn't ignore her.
Starting point is 01:12:38 And then she was like, and even in Graham said there was no favoritism. I did not see it. Not that, you know, of course he's going to say something nice, but it's like. Well, and if, I mean, even take the fact that they shared a room together. Yeah. It's not like Katie lived in this, like, beautiful. bedroom that Kim didn't have and Kim slept in the basement. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:12:53 It's like, so both doctors were like, no, that is not, no. This is a bullshit motive that she's using to try to look like this, like, oh, poor me. And it's like the real thing here is that she saw her mother as stopping her and Lucas from being together. She was threatened. And it wasn't that she loved Lucas because I don't think she has the capacity to love anything. It's just what she wanted right then.
Starting point is 01:13:15 She wanted it. She wasn't getting it. And someone was telling her she couldn't have it. And Lucas was the person that was treating her like a princess and trying and holding her on a pedestal. And she wanted that. So she was like, don't take that away from me. And then they later say, I mean, the police ask Lucas straight up because again, Kim is claiming, you know, Katie died because she was the cause of my, my mom not paying attention to me. And what did Lucas says?
Starting point is 01:13:41 Lucas says to the police. They were like, why did Katie die? And he was like, well, she would have called the police. And they're like, is that it? And he goes pretty much. Oh. So that proves that that motive of sibling rivalry is bullshit. Right.
Starting point is 01:13:54 It has nothing to do with it. Right. They killed Katie because she was a liability. She was just in the house and they had to get rid of her. But Kim is sitting here trying to turn it into something so she can be seen as a sympathetic character. Right. When in reality, she wanted her mom dead. That was the end of it.
Starting point is 01:14:11 She wanted to kill her mom because she stood in her way. Katie just happened to be there. Katie happened to be there. I wish that Katie had been asleep over that night. I know, I really do. And that Elizabeth was, too. I know. Seriously, I wish everybody was out of the house.
Starting point is 01:14:23 So two expert witnesses, those two ones were called to talk about Kim's mental state. And they, again, said, no. They said, yeah, she definitely has some kind of adjustment disorder. And she definitely has a severe attachment disorder. And that obviously stems from. She's like not attached to anything. Yeah, and they were like, and this can stem from what happened in childhood. I mean, her father abandoned.
Starting point is 01:14:47 She was in foster care. the thing with her mom. It's a lot. Yeah. So they were like for sure, but they were like, it's, it's not cause to give her the insanity defense. So they also said, quote, she seemed to enjoy the attention that she was receiving from a number of professionals and had suggested in the future writing a book about her life. Okay, Kim. This suggested that she had an inappropriate level of self-esteem and self-importance and also felt a sense of justification in the harm that she caused to her mother and sister who she felt had wronged her. So this proves too. Yeah. It had nothing to do with that shit. She's in love with herself. She is an entitled piece of shit. She's probably a narcissist.
Starting point is 01:15:27 She's for sure a narcissist. Right. So the jury took two hours of- They are. So the jury took two hours of deliberation and agreed that just because she had a shitty childhood does not mean you get diminished responsibility. So a unanimous answer of guilty of murder. Good. So they were together in court for their dual sentencing. And the judge is a fucking legend with what he said. Oh, yes. Hand it to me.
Starting point is 01:15:56 I love good judges. He said, quote, you were in my view in a hermetically sealed pathetic world of your own, of deep, deep selfishness and immaturity, where only your feelings and desires matter and no one else's. And then he said, I sentence you as children, which you are. I sentence based on hope for you and for society rather than an expanse.
Starting point is 01:16:16 of your failure. Shit. But he's literally like, so you were in this pathetic little world that you made for yourself. You guys are fucking gross. And you know how like 14 year olds obviously like hate being called children. And he's like, yeah, you're children. You're fucking children. So they were both sentenced to life in prison with a minimum of 20 years.
Starting point is 01:16:35 Good. May 2017, they both appealed saying that their age should be considered in sentencing. No. And it was reduced to life. Well, they still were life. but they had a minimum now of 17 and a half years. What a reduction. That's not a lot.
Starting point is 01:16:52 And this was when their identities were officially made public in 2017. Elizabeth Edwards' partner, Graham, said that he saw Edwards, Kim and Lucas as, quote, another Myra Henley and Ian Brady. Wow. And especially Kim, he said, is Myra Henley. That's scary. But if you think about it, that is scary that they reduced it to 17 in such years because she would be in her early 30s. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:16 It should be young as fuck. Oh, absolutely. And able to do this again. Yeah, it's not good at all. But again, they could serve life. Again, yes. But, and he also said, quote, she should never, ever be let out. No.
Starting point is 01:17:27 And that is the end. That is where we stand. I hope that they're never let out. They're in prison, hopefully for life. But at a very minimum of 17 and a half years, they were sentenced in 2017. Hopefully they run out of appeals. I hope so. I hope they don't get out, to be honest.
Starting point is 01:17:45 That's really scary. And that was the whole part about the hand was really sad. It was so brutal. It was so brutal. And then like just the callousness of them laying downstairs, having sex, watching twilight, eating ice cream and just snuggling. Going to sleep at night on those mattresses with them dead upstairs. For two nights, right? For two days.
Starting point is 01:18:06 It's like, what the fuck is inside of you? Nothing. It's brutal. And they deserve what they got. That is bleak. That is bleak. Works and a mean girls reference. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:18:18 I am. Well, if that's so bleak, now I'm really nervous, because I don't know a lot about the Ian Brady and Myra Henley case. Yeah, that's going to be a dozy, just letting everybody know that is a who boy. Am I going to, is it going to be like toolbox murders-esque or toy box murder? Like where I want you to stop. In a different way. Yeah, I don't like that.
Starting point is 01:18:40 It has to do with children because we haven't done a lot of children. Yeah, I hate it. but it's a very important case. Right, that's the thing. And it's one that I know a lot of people have been dying here. And I get it because before I had kids, I was obsessed with reading about that case. I didn't like love that they killed children. Yeah, but it's the psyche.
Starting point is 01:18:58 Yeah, it was a little easier to stomach when I didn't have them of my own. See, like I consider your kids like my practice kids. So they're like a portion of my kids. So a kid shit just fucks me up no matter what. Yeah, it's when you can relate a child you love to. Uh-huh. You're like, oh. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:19:13 Okay. Wow. All right. Yeah. Well, that's next week. Stay tuned. In the meantime, hit us with a follow on Instagram. At Morbid Podcast.
Starting point is 01:19:22 I forgot the next part. Twitter. I know. You can always tweet on us at a Morbid podcast. Send us to Gmail. Morbid Podcast at gmail.com. We hope you keep listening. And we hope you keep it weird.
Starting point is 01:19:36 But not somewhere that you throw a chair across the classroom and meet your soul partner. That's probably really not your soul partner. You guys shouldn't have met each other at all. Don't meet that person. that and don't carry out these actions because they're not good. I don't know. That wasn't my best, but bye. Don't kill people.
Starting point is 01:19:51 Don't do it. Bye. Bye.

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