Morbid - Veronica Gedeon & the Easter Sunday Murders (Part 1)
Episode Date: June 20, 2024On the afternoon of March 28, 1937, Easter Sunday, Joseph Gedeon and his daughter, Ethel, arrived at the home of Gedeon’s wife, Mary, for a planned Easter dinner. The Gedeon’s had been separated f...or some time but had agreed to have dinner together as a family, which included their other daughter, Veronica, a moderately successful pulp magazine model. When they entered the apartment, it appeared as though no one was home; however, upon checking the bedroom where his daughter slept, Joseph Gedeon found the nude body of his daughter lying lifeless on the bed and immediately called the police.During an initial search of the apartment, investigators found the body of Mary Gedeon stuffed under her bed; like her daughter, she had been strangled to death. In a third bedroom, police also found the body of Mary’s boarder, Frank Byrnes, who’d been stabbed several times in the head and neck with a long, thin implement. There was no sign of a forced entry, no sign of a struggle, and nothing appeared to be missing from the apartment. Given that Veronica had been found nude, and Mary was clothed but her underwear had been torn away, investigators assumed the murders were a sex crime.Still caught in the grip of the Great Depression, New Yorkers welcomed anything that could distract from the unpleasant realities of daily life and the salacious murder of a pulp magazine model—a sex crime, no less—was exactly what they were looking for. The story dominated the press, as reporters and tabloid journalists dug into Veronica’s personal life and dating history and published lurid photos from her past. But when the killer was finally caught and the motive revealed, the story was far stranger and tragic than anyone had imagined.Thank you to the wonderful David White of the Bring Me the Axe Podcast for research!ReferencesBrooklyn Daily Eagle. 1937. "Cops question ex-lodger in triple murder." Brooklyn Daily Eagle, March 29: 1.—. 1937. "Doubts student is killer." Brooklyn Daily Eagle, April 6: 1.—. 1938. "Irwin's guilty plea." Brooklyn Daily Eagle, November 15: 10.Buffalo Evening News. 1938. "Irwin, ruled insane, sent to Dannemora." Buffalo Evening News, December 10: 1.2015. A Crime to Remember. Directed by Jeremiah Crowell. Performed by Jeremiah Crowell.New York Daily News. 1937. "3 murdered in model's flat." New York Daily News, March 29: 1.—. 1937. "Gray hair in model's hand chief clue in triple murder." New York Daily News, March 30: 1.—. 1937. "Willful Ronnie 'made fools of men,' dad says." New York Daily News, March 30: 3.New York Times. 1938. "139-year sentence imposed on Irwin." New York Times, November 29: 48.—. 1937. "Fingerprint clues found at scene of triple murder." New York Times, March 31: 1.—. 1937. "Gedeon gets bail." New York Times, April 3: 1.—. 1937. "Gedeon questioned again in murders; solution held near." New York Times, April 1: 1.—. 1937. "Irwin flown here; boasts of killings." New York Times, June 28: 1.—. 1937. "Irwin, wild-eyed, meets reporters." New York Times, September 1: 20.—. 1937. "Women jam court to glimpse Irwin." New York Times, Jukly 1: 56.People v. Robert Irwin. 1938. 166 Misc. 751 (Court of General Sessions of the County of New York, March 24).Schechter, Harold. 2014. The Mad Sculptor: The Maniac, the Model, and the Murder That Shook the Nation. Boston, MA: New Harvest.United Press. 1937. "Sculptor hunted as triple killer in Gedeon cases." Buffalo Evening News, April 5: 1. 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)
Hey, weirdos, I'm Elena.
I'm Ash.
And this is morbid.
Whoop, woo.
Here we are.
Hello there, friends and pals across the nation.
All of you.
All you ghouls.
What's up?
What's good ghouls?
So before we jump into our case today, which is the second part of the Velisca X murders,
which could have been the second part of about 16, if I...
was allowed to keep going, but I just, I had to stop myself because...
I came over the other morning, and Alina just literally had, like, paper shuffled in front of her.
She's like, I could make this 10 parts if I wanted to.
I could keep going.
And her eyes just switching. I'm like, don't. Please, please don't.
Because you know what? Someday I do want to make this, like, its own podcast.
Well, that's why I said, don't. So you know what? Someday I'll do it. But for now, I'll give you
what I got. But before we get to that, there's some, like, pretty and crazy true crime news that came out that
blew my mind a little bit.
So I don't know.
We have not covered this case.
I don't know if we will cover this case because it involves a child, and you know how I feel about that.
But it's a very big case.
I'm sure most people in true crime have heard of it.
It's the case of the killer is Eric Smith.
He was 13 when he killed a four-year-old Derek Robbie.
He did this.
When was it?
What year was it?
It was in 1994.
It was horrific.
Derek was four.
He was sexually abused afterwards.
It was a horrific crime.
Yeah.
Horrific.
To say the least.
And obviously, Eric Smith has been in prison.
He's now 41 years old.
He's gone in front of the parole board, I think, 11 times and been denied each time.
He's being released.
Yikes.
He's going to be, he could be released on November 17th.
I wonder what changed their mind the 12th time.
Yeah, I'm curious.
I kind of want to know what everybody else thinks too, because I am very conflicted and apprehensive.
Of course, he was a child when that happened.
I would like to think that he is a different human being now at 41 years old.
He has a clear disciplinary record in prison.
Sometimes that can indicate that there's growth there.
But on the other side of that, this is.
a horrific crime and also
Derek's parents
are horrified.
Of course they are. And obviously have been fighting to keep
him in prison, which I am fully
on their side with. Yeah.
It's a tough one because it's going to, it brings
forth that whole child offender thing.
Right. Are you that same person? I am not
the same person at 13. It's a heavy debate.
But I also didn't murder someone at 13, which is a
totally different personality issue there.
Exactly. So it's like, it's a very,
strange subject. I've seen so many different takes on it and I'm just curious to see,
curious to see how everybody else feels about it. I'm very apprehensive and I'm very
conflicted. I can't. I can say I have five-year-olds and a two-year-old and I personally
would be like you should stay in there. Yeah, I don't really feel that conflicted about where I'm at
right now. I'm conflicted because there is that piece where do children deserve to be in prison
for the rest of their lives when they commit a crime when they're a minor.
That's a huge issue in true crime.
Of course it is.
I think it depends on a lot of factors.
It's not black and white.
No.
Well, yeah, exactly.
And I think you have to look at it case by case.
And I think if you're capable of murdering a four-year-old, no matter what age you are,
that's like a little scary.
Yeah.
I mean, to say the very least.
Well, it's like the Maddie Clifton case.
Joshua Phillips was super young when that happened.
And that was one of those things, too, that now he's trying to convince people that he's changed and the laws got changed saying that you couldn't be, you know, sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole when you're a minor.
And it's been a huge, like, bone of contention.
Like, nobody can agree on it.
But it's so weak because you'll read certain things and you research about it and you look at the psychology of it.
You look at the real basic scientific facts of the human brain at different points of development.
specifically the fact that like your frontal lobe is not developed so I can see that side of it.
And that's the part where you look at it and you say, yeah, like, children in prison for the rest of their lives does seem crazy.
But then when you look at the crime itself, you're like, I want you to be in prison for the rest of your life.
You know, it's like you cannot, at least me, I shouldn't say everybody.
Yeah.
I get very conflicted and very like, I don't know where to, because I can literally see both sides.
I can stand on both sides.
I can stand on the side of no children who are minors should not be in prison for the rest of their lives.
But then I can sit on the other side and go, but look at the James Bolger case.
I want them to be in prison forever.
And it's funny that you say that, but not funny.
But it's like interesting that you say that because that's one of the first things I thought about.
Yeah.
It's a very, it's one of those topics I don't think I will ever fully.
It's like the death penalty.
Yeah.
I mean, honestly, I think it's totally 100% worse of a confliction.
Yeah.
Because the death penalty, at least we're talking about adults, which becomes less.
No, I just mean in the way that it's not black and white, like you were saying.
But I think this is even more gray.
I think there's just so much involved in this because it involves children on 100 different levels.
It's like children as victims and children as offenders.
It's just a lot.
So when I saw that that was happening, first of all, my heart immediately thought of Derek's parents.
I know.
And like aches for them.
But then I also was like, wow, what do people think of this?
I just got to know.
Well, let us know what you think.
So let us know what you think of it.
I'm very interested.
Sad.
It is.
It is really, the whole thing is sad.
It's like there's no happy ending here at all.
Like there's no silver lining here at all.
Right, because no matter what, their child is gone.
Yeah.
And it's one of those things where now, you know, he gets out and he gets to live a life and Derek doesn't.
Right.
So it's like, it's tough.
It's tough to have any kind of.
of like feeling of like positivity in this case. Yeah, exactly. But, you know, all you can hope is
that he has been rehabilitated. Well, and I mean, that is supposed to be like the entire point of
the justice system. Of course. Yeah. So I guess we'll see. But let us know what you think,
because I'm very conflicted on the whole thing. So I love hearing other people's opinions about it.
Yeah. But now that we've talked about that, like, crazy thing, I don't think there's anything else I
really wanted to touch upon, but I think we're just going to dive right back into
Volusca.
Let's go.
And I've been having weird dreams about axe murders.
I bet.
Because this episode, we're going to talk about a few more axe murders.
So I feel like I've just, my whole life has just been enveloped in axe murder.
And it's been a trip.
Yeah.
I mean, I could see that absolutely being a trip.
Yeah, I've had some like sleep paralysis moments where I've woken up a couple of nights and been
like, is that an ex murder?
in my room or nah?
Or not.
And it's been nah.
Luckily, it's been nah and I'm here to tell you about it today.
Yeah, now I can talk to you about it.
But when we ended on part one, we were talking about the suspect that I immediately, like
when I first started researching this case, was like, oh, he did it.
Like, that's totally him.
And it was reverend or preacher.
He called himself Reverend George Jacqueline Kelly.
Yeah.
And that's the thing.
Like when we ended and you said all the stuff you did about him, I was like,
like, okay, so he did it.
Yeah.
So now convince me otherwise.
Well, and then when we ended, it came out that he recanted his confession and claimed police
brutality, which is 100% something that probably happened.
So does it say that it's a false confession?
Not necessarily, but it was definitely coerced.
And so it definitely could have been false because as we've seen in the first one that
pops into my mind is the West Memphis 3, people will admit to things that you think
you would never, ever admit to under duress.
Yeah, the Galveston 11.
Yeah, you will admit to it.
It's like if somebody's pushing your psychological and physical boundaries to the ends
of the earth.
Right.
And especially in cases where somebody is not completely, you know,
psychologically or intellectually on the same level as their interrogators.
Well, and it's funny that you say that because in the West Memphis,
Memphis 3 that happened and with the Galveston 11, it was like they really preyed upon.
Yeah, they played on the fact that they could.
kind of manipulate someone who wasn't exactly on their level. Which is really
shitty. Intellectually. And so this could have happened here because a lot of people said that,
you know, Kelly was mentally ill in some way, shape, or form. Yeah. We obviously don't have,
like, solid proof of that. He's never been diagnosed. This was 1912. So it's just people being like
he acted in a way that made me think that. So we'll see. But he was tried twice and acquitted twice.
I know. And that is crazy that like two juries couldn't decide. And you said,
And you said it was like one person.
First one was a hung jury.
There was only one person that wanted to charge, which is crazy.
And so it ended up hung.
They tried him again.
And it was a full acquittal.
Wow.
So that's why we're going to come to part two.
Okay.
Now, I would like to amend something quickly because I said in part one that it was believed by a lot of researchers that Joe Moore was the only one hit with the sharp side of the axe first.
Everybody else was hit with the blunt side of the axe with that first one and then chopped with the sharp side.
But no, I found a grand jury testimony later that was like hidden in the archive somewhere.
That said, Sarah Moore was actually the only one hit with the sharp side of the axe first.
Oh, okay.
Which to me suddenly brings this whole other like, whoa, whoa, wait a second.
Right.
Because it made it seem like Joe was the one getting the like hard one first.
Was someone mad at Sarah or were someone, which there's going to be a, like, what people have, like,
basically termed, you know, his mistress.
We're going to find out.
He was not exactly faithful.
I don't even think I knew that part of this case, actually.
Yeah, this is like a whole, we're going to get into it.
So don't worry, like, right now.
But it kind of brings, that's what brought people, like, really into that theory that, like,
a mistress was involved.
and maybe they were going after Sarah first.
And like she didn't do it, but maybe somebody was paid to do it.
You know, like there's so many theories involved.
I don't think that's the case, but it's very salacious and like people talk about it all the time.
And it is interesting that Sarah was hit with the sharp side because it really all it takes is a blunt side of an axe to the head to crack a skull open.
Yeah, you're saying that you're good with that.
So it's weird that she was hit sharply first.
But it looks like Joe was hit before her.
Yeah.
I don't know. I was just trying to think of like a reason that would happen.
Yeah.
I couldn't really think of like.
Every time like you come on, something comes out there, you're like,
wait a second then you're like, but what the fuck does that mean?
That doesn't mean anything.
I was actually going to say.
I was like, maybe she like woke up or something.
But then I was like, but the blunt side of the axe also would have worked as well.
It just doesn't make sense.
But yeah, I had to put that out there because that's very interesting that a grand jury testimony
did say that she was hit with the only one.
Now let's get into the rest of, we have one.
more really big suspect that remains a suspect to this day. Like people still think that he did it.
Okay.
Frank Jones. Now, he was definitely the biggest suspect aside from Reverend Kelly there,
like Creeper Kelly.
He was a local businessman and he was probably the most successful business guy in town.
Like he was it. He was a banker. He also owned a business in the same business as Josiah Moore,
selling farm equipment and like machinery and such. But he also had his own car dealership and was a
state senator. How did he manage all of this? Because you know what's, because when I saw a car
dealership, I was like, damn, look at you. But then I was like, wait a second. Cars were like,
there was like three in a town at that point. Like there were like three people had cars at that point.
So it's like it wasn't this massive thing. I know because I'm literally picturing like a Toyota
dealership. Exactly. And like that thing in front of it like dancing. The wacky inflatable arm man.
In 1912.
Honestly, at this point, I think maybe it was his like no good son, Albert, who was the wacky inflatable arm man outside of the thing.
Oh, man, the OG wacky inflatable arm man.
Pretty much, the organic one.
But what's crazy was he was in fact Joe Moore's employer for about seven years.
He was his like right hand man.
I know where we're going.
So Frank like relied on him, taught him everything he knew.
and Joe ended up leaving in 1907 leaving the business, which like happens.
You know, he's going to, he learned all he wanted to learn and he wanted to open up his own
shit.
Sure.
But when he left, he took some of the biggest accounts with him.
We talked about it in part one.
He took that John Deere account.
I wanted to say it so badly.
I wanted to be like, and he took that John Deere account, but I was like, I got to let her say it.
He took that John Deere account, and that is a big, the biggest account pretty much.
I'm sure even today if somebody took the John Deere account, people would be like,
damn it yeah it pretty much and according to the man from the train by bill james which i can't say it enough
go buy that book i'm kidding i'm not kidding you go about a book i'm gonna link it you gotta buy this book
it'll just you won't stop it's and it's like 400 something pages long to and you will not stop
you will just blow through those just keeps coming and it just keeps coming and it just keeps coming
yeah he so that john dear account that he took that was no good and in the book he talks about how you
know, this essentially made him his business nemesis at that point.
Because he opened up the same business.
And took one of the biggest account.
So everybody's starting to move to that one.
It was just a bad blood right away.
Yeah.
Because if he had left and maybe not taken that account, I don't know if it would have been
as bitter as it was.
But taking that account, I think, was like the nail in the coffin.
It's like Rich Hilton and Mauricio.
That's exactly what I was thinking.
Yeah.
When I read this, I was like, wow.
All I can think of is Mauricio.
Yeah.
Me too.
That's all I can convert.
Anything back to Bravo.
You sure can.
Anything.
You sure can.
In the book, The Man from the Train as well, they say that Frank Jones was a very
upstanding citizen.
He was especially by the standards of the time period.
He didn't drink.
He didn't swear.
He was a church-going man and the Methodist persuasion, if you will.
Persuasion.
According to the book of the book Velisca by,
I forgot to rant down the author and I wrote, who wrote that in big letter?
I always do that.
All right, I broke real quick and I checked and it's Roy Marshall and I am so remiss for forgetting
that because he's like a very big like he's the the person for this.
Like he's one of the people that are like huge experts on this case.
So Roy, I'm terribly sorry.
But I have so many books in my thing.
I'll do that when I like write my like quick outline.
and I'll be like, more on this.
And sometimes I'm like, oh, fuck.
You're like, oh, I didn't write more on this.
And then I go to say it and I'm like, no, nope, nope.
But either way, Valiska by Roy Marshall.
Again, I'll link all of these books so you'll be able to see where they get them.
But another great book on this case.
How many books did you read on this case?
At least four.
Iconic.
A literary icon in her own right.
Literally four.
And then I got so entranced into many books.
blogs, which let me tell you, a lot of people, like, we scoff at blogs a lot, but like, and like people do,
but these like historians and people who research these kind of things and make entire blogs
about them. Oh, yeah. And get like real information and have like expertise in an area. They can be
some of the best things to find. Because you look and they, they cite their sources. Yeah, they all have
their like little bibliography. They tell you when it's an opinion and when it's not. Like there's a
couple of blogs about this case that are truly amazingly done. Specifically, whenever I research haunted
cases, I run into like a lot of really great blogs. I mean, you got to be careful. You got to make
sure you're looking at like one that has is reputable in any way. Yeah. And you have to make sure like if
their sources are listed, you like go check the everything out. But the Velisca blogs that I found are
really great. I'll link whatever I can because they definitely deserve the views because they're awesome
and great wealths of information. But yeah. So speaking of Frank Jones,
Roy Marshall in Valiska wrote that he actually led quite an impressive life.
He wrote legislature for the insurance practices that are still used today.
Oh, that's crazy.
He helped form the Iowa Department of Transportation.
He was a schoolteacher at one point.
He also sat on the State Board of Education.
He also happened to be a huge advocate for prison reform in conservation methods
to produce less waste.
Huh?
So, like, that's pretty awesome.
Like, all of that is, like, and unfortunately, well, and unfortunately, no one really remembers him for this stuff, apparently, which if he's innocent, is really sad.
Well, it's like, yeah, because his name is tied up in this. His name got totally smeared after this. And you'll see, it really took him down. Now, you may be wondering, like, why is he such a huge suspect if he's such a great guy? Because just the business rivalry thing does not at all indicate that you should murder an entire family, including children. Like, no.
None of that makes sense.
No.
Like, you're not like, yeah, I see that.
Like, no.
But Joe Moore, so he started his computing business.
They immediately became rivals.
I mean, people said they would cross the street rather than even talk to each other.
Like, they hated each other that much.
Oh, wow.
And apparently back then it was like, they crossed the street.
They did not shake hands.
Well, and it's also, like, imagine how awkward that would be.
Like, if you were, like, walking past each other, like, I'd cross the street.
One of you just crosses the street.
Like, yeah, it's the easiest way to go about.
At least they weren't, like, fist fighting.
in public. Right. But is, again, is that cause to assume that he murdered or hired someone to
murder him and his entire family and two strangers' children? So far, no. In the dead of night.
And like sexually assaulted one of them, perhaps. Like, and I say no, it's not. It's objectively
not. Like, it is not. That does not. That's not a motive. It's just not. If it was just Joe Moore,
okay. Business can get crazy. Yeah. People get crazy. But if it, the fact that it's the whole family
family, the way it was done, the ritualistic manner in which it was done, the sexual assault
of a child and the clear attention paid to Lena Stillinger, none of that adds up.
No, yeah, absolutely not. But there was a little more that added to the hostility between the two.
On top of all this, Joe Moore, like I said, was supposedly not exactly faithful to Sarah at the moment.
he was apparently having a very torrid affair with Frank Jones's daughter-in-law.
Oh.
Her name was Donna Bentley at the time Donna Jones.
Yes, the woman who was married to his son, Albert.
Yeah.
Now, Donna, I got to say she sounds like kind of a hot shit.
I'm going to throw it out there.
I think she's rad.
Like, I don't love that, obviously, that's not cool that that was happening.
But like her herself, I'm like, wow, you were really like living for the time.
But she's super young too.
She was younger and she lived, she actually lived till 1984.
Oh, okay, sister.
And it would have been a trip to interview her because I would just want to know about her life and about this whole situation.
I'd be like, please just tell me everything.
You should have interviewed her at negative one.
At negative one, I should have done it.
So she was kind of known to have a lot of affairs.
She was married to Albert, but she was like, that's.
Was it, do you know if like it was like an arranged marriage situation?
It was not.
But she married Albert Jones, obviously.
That's Frank's son.
He was kind of like, like a gross pig, according to every single source that I read.
He was like just everybody literally describes him as like just useless in every way.
Like he was just, he was a rich kid.
He grew up a rich kid.
He didn't feel like he had to really do anything.
He was also apparently just like really just not attractive in any way, shape or form.
Donna was beautiful and was known for her beauty.
Why did she marry him?
But he was also going to inherit the family business and the family fortune right along with it.
So people think, you know, like maybe she was getting that paper and that was probably
Get the bag first.
It just seems that way.
But it kind of seems that way.
But she was also very flirtatious.
She just, she was sassy.
She was saucy.
She was throwing big social events at her home.
Like she was pretty like, you know, average like in the social.
social class things before she married Albert. But after she married Albert, she was in high society now.
So she's a social climber. Exactly. And so she was throwing lavish parties and she's flirting with men.
I would have fucking did the damn thing back then. I would have been such a social climber.
She's living. And she's hanging out with dudes that aren't her husband while her dude is out of town. It's just, that's not okay in 1912.
It's very, um, what's the girl's name in Gatsby? And Daisy. No, not Daisy. The other one. Oh, Myrtle.
Myrtle.
Yeah, she's murder.
Yeah, she's very much Myrtle.
But even just hanging out with dudes while you were married back then was like a Cardinals in.
It was just not okay.
You can't do that.
Straight to jail.
She was referred to as a high stepper, which is like being awesome back then.
I think it's just like you were sassy and just like going against everything.
But it was like, I think it was basically being like a woman of questionable morals.
You're like, I aspire to be a high step.
She just sounds funny.
But according to Smithsonian Magazine, she would arrange the meetings with her various forbidden lovahas over the phone.
This was important because at the time, you had to go through an operator to place a phone call.
So the operators, which were mostly young women, always knew what was up.
Like they were the holders of the tea at that point.
Sign me up.
Jugs.
They had growlers of tea at all times.
Do you know, like, could they, like, continue to listen in after they connected?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, see, boom.
I would have lived.
Oh, yeah.
That was, like, their Bravo back then.
They were living their own Bravo.
Like, it was, this, they got all the tea.
And the operators, of course, were gossiping about it.
And they were always saying that she was, she was always calling or receiving calls from various men.
And then the one that was most often heard was Josiah Moore.
And they were calls to arrange meetings.
And it would be something like she would call and say,
it's okay to come over now.
Yeah.
Scandalous.
That's crazy.
I think we're a low now.
And also, like, I got to put it out there.
Josiah Moore was hot.
It was like, I get it.
Like, I get it.
I understand.
You're like, so I just want to get something off my chest.
Josiah Moore, a daddy.
Like, I've seen like one picture of them.
But like, for the time period, I was like, I get it.
I need to look at this.
Like, I get it.
Like, I would have been into him.
I feel it.
I'm going to find out.
I'm going to fuck around and find out.
He's definitely, like, you're going to be like, yeah.
Like, that makes sense for you.
Josiah Moore.
But yeah, so, and she was very pretty.
It just, they made sense.
It worked.
They really did.
Now, obviously, this is bad, though.
As fun as it is to talk about, see.
Oh.
Oh.
See?
I'm telling you.
Yeah.
I was like, oh.
Yeah.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Sirea, okay.
But, like, married, so.
But married, yeah, but, like, very good looking man.
Moving on, moving on.
Moving on.
But, yeah, so obviously this whole thing is bad, like, morally, ethically, fiscally, emotionally,
like, metaphorically, I don't know, it's all bad.
Symbolically.
But it's really bad, too, because it makes the Jones family look bad.
Yeah.
Because if Josiah Moore is having an affair with his.
son's wife and his sons get like set to take over the family business.
There's supposed to be this powerful family.
It just doesn't look in.
Tarnishes the name.
Doesn't look good.
This is very like Rory marrying into the to Logan's family.
Exactly.
And it's like his and on top of it, they're bitter business rivals.
So now his arch nemesis and business is sleeping with his daughter-in-law.
Like that is a bad look.
Like so 1912 though.
Yeah, very 1912.
So this is where the motives that people dig up are starting to come in where people
can start to come up with more like fleshy motives, like forgive that choice of words, but
the motives that make more sense.
Sure, sure.
You're more, you know, robust.
But here's the rub, because it's like, okay, so Frank Jones, cool, okay, so he did it now.
But he was 57 in 1912.
Right.
So it was highly unlikely that he was going to swing an axe that hard and that many times
the way the killer did.
And I still don't think he would have assaulted Lena.
And I don't think he would kill all the children.
That doesn't make a lot of sense.
That whole part doesn't fit.
No.
That's a very specific part of that whole process.
And even what?
Like even Sarah, why would he kill Sarah?
Yeah.
None of it.
He would just go after Joe.
Right.
I would think.
And even then it's like, I don't know.
I don't know.
So what people came up was, was they think Albert and Frank hired someone to kill Joe Moore in his family.
Okay.
It's like a punishment.
Your whole family dies because of your indiscretions kind of thing.
Okay.
Which has happened before.
Like, if you're going to kill someone or hire someone to kill someone for you, you're pretty
fucked up in the head.
So it's like you're not going to, you would think that way.
Well, and then I suppose they would still probably get some kind of inheritance if they
were still alive.
That would make them angry.
That's true.
So, and at first I was like, but like really why?
I mean, to me, it's still not a great motive, but honestly, like, what is really?
Like, for real.
But people have killed over stupid or shit.
So.
Accurate.
So this is when shit got even crazier.
So a man named James Wilkerson enters the picture.
He was a private detective who worked with the Burns Detective Agency.
Now, at the time, they were in need of more detectives outside of Iowa to deal with this
because they weren't equipped to handle this kind of large massacre.
So when stuff like this happened at this time period, private detective agencies and security
agencies would be ascending onto the scene because they would try to be the ones to crack the case.
They could make money off of it.
It's like a lot of times it was like a lot of con men coming in trying to just feed off of this horrible tragedy that happened.
Right.
But it was kind of shady at times.
So James Wilkerson was with the Burns Detective Agency and he showed up.
And he immediately floats the theory that Frank Jones was the guy and that Jones had paid someone else to do it for him.
He was like, I know this is it.
And people were already kind of talking about that.
It was a rumor.
And he went with his nose to the grindstone building the cave.
for two years. Wow.
Yeah. And then it took another two years for it even to come into fruition.
So in 1916, during the Republican election, which Frank Jones was going to be going for
re-election, he dropped the bomb of who he thought did the deed at Jones's direction.
Do you think it was like a political?
Well, it definitely was part of it because he, they sent around flyers to potential voters
with the guys, like the potential, the hitman's face on it.
He was like a prisoner at the time.
And I'll talk about him in a minute.
Sure.
And they were saying, like, do you want to reelect someone who would hire this man to kill an entire family?
So, of course, people are like, well, when you put it that way, no, I don't.
Like, that's not something I want to do.
But he had a name for the hitman.
So first, it caused, like, just putting this out of the way, it did cause him to lose the
reelection.
Yeah.
Like, that's not.
It's a pretty serious thing.
to an allegation to throw at someone.
Right, if he didn't do it.
But Wilkerson said the guy who actually did it at Jones's, you know, push, was a man
named William Mansfield.
And Mansfield was a known cocaine addict.
Everything says that he was like, all of the things I read were like, cocaine.
He was big into cocaine.
And I'm like, well, you probably would be to do that.
I was going to say, I mean, like, that aggression.
I was going to say aggression and like just.
like having like the amount of energy and like strength and like all that that it would take to
pull that massacre off.
I mean like, yeah, I get why they keep saying cocaine was part of this.
He was also just a very unpredictable and violent person anyways.
So cocaine probably didn't help that.
He was also the prime suspect in the 1914 murders of his wife, her parents and his child in Illinois.
So another mass murder.
Oh, and they were murdered by an axe.
Oh, okay.
Now, let me, because that sounds like, but at the time, axes were just laying about.
So I feel like it was just like one of the like axe murders were a thing at this time because that's the closest, like everyone had an axe.
Like a lot though?
Well, if you read the man from the train, you will learn that there's many axe murders that happened during this time period.
And I encourage you to read it.
I will talk about more.
And by the end of it, you should have a handlebar mustache.
I feel like at the end of that sentence.
I'm just, you should read about it.
Or just, like, put that in your pipe and smoke it.
I should, I'm saying.
And after we go through this, you're going to be like, oh, that's a lot of axe murdering that
happened at that point.
All right.
But, you know, it's something to think about.
That's all I'm saying.
I'm thinking about it.
I'm thinking about it.
Not axe murdering.
No.
Wilkerson also believed that Mansfield was responsible for more killings that were similar to
the Velasca murders at the time.
Those are the ones we're going to talk about.
Spoiler alert.
no. He did not, in my opinion, do any of the other ones. I think he's probably responsible for his family, for sure. I think that happened.
Okay. I don't think he's a serial killer in the sense of the other ones. Okay. So Wilkerson actually convinced a grand jury to investigate these claims finally. And it was in 1916 that he finally convinced them to. And they did. And they did it for like a week. They convened. They looked over everything. They talked to Mansfield. After that week, he was freed. Wow. They were not convinced. They discussed.
that on the evening of the more murders, he was working in Illinois, and there were payroll
records to prove this. So he had an alibi. So, manseville had an alibi. But to be honest, if I'm
going to play both sides here, kind of a flimsy one, because those records probably weren't
like airtight. They probably weren't that hard to fake at the time. Yeah. It's probably literally
just like a card that says like a date in like you were at work. Like it's just like Illinois.
Clocked in. But who knows? Again, it could go either way. Sure.
It's an alibi. He has proof, whether it's right or not.
So Wilkerson obviously was pissed and not convinced that he was innocent or Frank Jones was innocent.
He held rallies to get people to start pressuring the grand jury to start to look at the case again.
He talked a lot of shit about Frank Jones and Mansfield.
Basically just kept accusing them publicly of the murders, like would not let up.
That'll do it.
And he also kept claiming that Frank Jones had used his political influence and persuasions to get Mansfield freed by that jury.
Like he was saying like, he's a politician.
He has tons of connects.
He got that jury to let him off.
Like, this wasn't real.
And he was saying he's going to keep buying people off to get out of this and like, are you really going to let him get away with this?
Which like if, I mean, that's really not that farfetched.
It's not.
It's not.
And but while Jones and Mansfield didn't love this, obviously.
Yeah.
And in September of 1916.
Jones launched a suit to get Wilkerson on charges of slander.
He was like, if you're going to keep talking shit,
you'll find out.
So this trial, basically, you know,
what it turned into was Wilkerson trying to prove that it's not slander
because I'm telling the truth.
Right.
So the only way that he could do that was to basically prove murder.
So it turned into kind of a murder trial against Frank Jones and Mansfield.
But like not.
It was like still a slander trial.
It was weird.
So suddenly a lot of witnesses and shit are being.
called to try to prove that Wilkerson was saying the truth and not slander.
So they brought in Alice Willard, who was the witness we all would want to see on court TV.
I mean, she was just like, she came in with a mug and she was ready to just spill it all over
everybody.
Everybody's got tea.
So much tea.
So she lives like a block away from the Moors.
And she said two days before the murders, she saw strange men walking around their home.
And then late that same evening, she was walking with.
someone and saw five men meet up and as and she like hid in the bushes with this person she
doesn't exactly explain why she hid from these five men and didn't just keep walking well maybe she was
scared of them you know here we are so she said one of those men she was sure was frank jones
uh-huh and she knows that she heard frank jones say quote get joe first and the rest will be easy
oh she was kind of wild though like sounds like it and the person
Since she said she was with that day, so she claimed she was with this, like, salesman named Ed something.
And Ed was like, nah?
No.
Well, she was like, Ed died last year.
And they were like, oh, okay, we'll look up the records.
Ed never existed.
So that's not a real person.
So the whole story of like, I saw these five men and then I like ran into the book.
That's like a lot.
I think she might just be a woman of questionable morals herself.
Yeah, she's a high stepper.
Yeah, she's a high stepper in like a totally different way.
She's a medium stepper.
But you know, like, thanks for playing, Alice.
Like, thanks for playing.
Thanks for the vibes.
He was found not guilty and just had to pay a fine.
So boom, done.
Okay.
But a lot of people were not convinced that he was innocent of this whole thing yet, Frank.
He was, nobody thought, you know, in the court of law, no one thought he was a murderer.
Right.
I mean, once you plant the seed of, like, this guy might be a murderer.
Exactly.
You can't put the toothpaste back in the tube.
Exactly.
It's just like Lizzie Borden.
Like, some people don't think she did it.
But, like, she spent the rest of her whole life after she was proven innocent being, like, torment.
She was never going to shake that.
Right.
You're never going to shake it.
It's just there.
Or even Marion Stembridge.
Exactly.
It's like the...
I just pulled that one.
That was...
Thank you.
Wow.
Yeah.
Like, whoosh.
Get it.
I was going to say...
I said I just pulled that one right out of my...
It made a motion of me pulling it out of my ear.
Yep.
She sure did.
So she pulled it from her ear, everybody.
I just pulled that one right out of my ear.
I'm glad it was living there because I was like, wow.
Good job.
Thank you.
No.
But people still are not convinced of his innocence, even today, which is kind of crazy to me because
according to the man from the train, read it again.
Hey, do you like that book?
Love that book.
I just love to, like, I love to promote authors.
Like, you know, I know, but I always beat people over the head of it.
But I'll just continue to do that because I love authors.
And they did so much work for it.
I'm like, yeah.
Writing a book is really difficult.
And especially as I've been told.
As I've been told.
But especially one like this where he came up.
when you read it, and we'll only talk about a few of the cases he went over, but he comes, I mean, dozens of cases.
Well, and nonfiction, like, writing, like, about factual events. Like, I can't even imagine.
You got to be really on point with it. But according to the man from the train, Wilkerson was caught doing some shady shit later.
So Wilkerson, this did private detective from that agency, I don't think so with him.
Well, you said that there was, like, money involved in stuff. So obviously it's like financially motivated.
also proved to be like a bullshitting asshole later. So in 1915, so a year before all this like went to
trial and everything, a school teacher named Nellie Byers was unfortunately raped and murdered in
Kansas. Everyone knew at the time that it was definitely a guy named Archibald Sweet. He was known as an
asshole, a convicted felon, those two are not mutually, like it's not the same thing. He was both of
those things a convicted felon and an asshole. And he was someone who had already developed
a history of violence against women.
So he was all of those things.
He was staying in a home very near to her and near to the scene.
And he was alone that night that it happened.
He was staying with someone, but no one was in the house.
Now, Nellie also had told people she was scared of this guy and had avoided him on many
occasions.
There was physical evidence to tie him to the crime.
He did it.
Period.
It was just like everybody knew.
They really wanted to get this guy and they didn't want to make any slip-ups.
They do this. We see this in cases now, too. So the county attorney asked the Burns detective agency to help gather some more evidence just to really lock that case up so he couldn't wiggle out of their grasp. So they put Wilkerson on it. And they put him on there to gather more evidence. We got to convict this guy easily. He was obsessed with whether there was a reward or not when he came into town. And they were like, no, there's not a reward because we know the guy who did it. Like he's already a, he's already. He's already.
like we're following him. And maybe you could just do this out of the fucking kindness of your heart.
And like maybe just to honor this victim that would be like, you asshole. Right. So then he went on a
when they were like, no, there's no reward because he definitely did it. We just want to make sure we have
all the evidence we need to convict. Right. That's all. So then Wilkerson went on a crusade to free him
and was acting convinced that he didn't do it. He said there was another man who did it. They named him
and they said they needed to pursue this guy.
So they were like, let's pursue this guy and let's set up a reward fund.
So he's in it for the mullah.
And Burns Agency actually was fired off of this case because of Wilkerson.
Of course. I don't.
Like, I would do the same thing.
And Sweet, Archibald Sweet, was convicted of rape and murder.
Yeah.
And it had evidence.
Well, and it gets worse.
In 1917, after Wilkerson went through that whole slander trial with Jones and Mansfield,
Sweet actually testified that Wilkerson actually approached him, Archibald Sweet, the man who was convicted.
He said Wilkerson actually approached him and asked him to work together to frame someone else for the murder.
What the fuck?
Just for money.
Yeah.
He signed an affidavit to this effect, saying that this happened.
Wow.
Obviously, he's a rapist and a murderer.
I don't know if we can take his total way.
But what does he even have to gain from that?
That's the thing.
He has nothing to gain and nothing to profit from that.
Right.
That's so fucked.
So like, to Wilkerson there, James Wilkerson, I don't exactly trust his shenanigans.
I don't at all.
That's so shitty.
I hate that people like that exist.
It's horrific.
You're just a con artist.
And you're just like.
And you're a con artist in a way where it's like life or death and murder.
Because you're trying to free like literal, like you're not trying to free innocent
people and trying to make the world a better place by not having innocent people in jail.
You're trying to free people just so you get money out of it.
And put innocent people in jail.
Exactly.
Like, what the fuck?
Like, that's the worst you can be.
That's like a crime in and of itself.
So unfortunately, even despite all of this, even knowing James Wilkerson is no one to be trusting with this case, Frank Jones is still known as a chief suspect in this case.
But the other suspect that I think is just like interesting because we mentioned him briefly in the first part.
I don't think I mentioned his name.
but he was the one who took the piece of skull from the crime scene.
Remember I told you he?
His name is Bert McCall.
He happens to also be one of those five men that Alice said she saw that day.
She said Bert McCall was one of those five men.
He was an unsavory character.
He was a drinker, a gambler, you know, kind of like aggressive.
Kind of like an outcast in the town.
Yeah, and he was just like aggressive.
He just like wasn't like super friendly.
He managed a pool hall, which at the time I think you were also like,
saucy if you managed to pool hall. And they had like a car service. So he was attempting to get into
business with Frank Jones and Albert Jones because remember they own a car dealership. He was out of
town the morning of the murders and when they were discovered, I mean. And when he heard of them,
he came like flying back into Velisca and that's when he tried immediately to get into the crime scene.
So he was like one of the first people to be like, what am I mean there? Weird. Bert was turned away
several times and finally got belligerent and threatening.
and used a connection to this national.
They had like a National Guard kind of service in Iowa.
It's like the very like, you know, infantile National Guard.
Sure.
The commander of this was a guy named Commander Casey.
He was friends with Bert McCall.
So Bert went right to Commander Casey, used that connection
because he also happened to be his drinking buddy.
Boom.
And Commander Casey let him in to see the Casey.
What the fuck, Commander Casey.
Later, only a few months.
Months after the murders, he put a chunk of skull on display in his pool hall.
It still had hair and flesh attached to it.
And he said it was Josiah Mores that he took from the scene that day.
And they do believe it was authentic.
Why would you do that?
Now, I read, so he, of course, became one of the people, because it's weird, talked about as a suspect,
there's really nothing else to connect.
In what motive?
I think he's just gross.
And he's just like a not kind of an asshole guy.
That's all. And I think Alice might have just put him in that grouping of five men because he was
known to associate with Frank Jones and Albert Jones through business with all that. So putting them
together would make sense. They were probably, you know, he seems like he was kind of just like a,
like I said, a drinker, a gambler, a fighter. Like, people just didn't like him. It makes sense to put him there.
So get rid of Burt McCall. He's just a D-Bet. He's just Bert.
Now, I read a brilliant paper, which again, I will link.
It's like a thesis paper by a woman named Beth Klingensmith, and she wrote the 1910s Axe Murders, an overview of the crimes and the McClory theory.
So it dives into the theory that one man was behind all of the ax or most of the axe murders of this time period in the Midwest especially.
Department of Justice Special Agent M.W. McClory floated the idea that at least six crimes,
at least six crimes and 15 murders in total were linked. Oh, wow. So yes, there were a lot of
acts murders back then. There were. And in The Man from the Train, he adds another 20 into that,
I think. So it's intense. So I want to go over some of these and talk about why they may be
connected, especially from Beth's point of view and also from Bill James from that book.
Yeah.
His eyes, both are really compelling and both are well worth the read.
I'm going to link Beth's paper to.
It's like 30 plus pages, I think.
It's like fascinating.
The theory states that a man named Henry Lee Moore was actually the serial killer.
And no, he was not related to the Veliscopores, just a weird coincidence and a pretty
common last name.
I was going to say.
Now, I don't think he is the serial killer who committed all the axe murders or Velisca,
but I think he killed, he was definitely part of one of these axe murders.
I think the rest were possibly someone else.
So I'm going to go over his crime and then I'll go with, you know, what Bill James
from the man from the train things, like his ideas of what those are.
And we'll talk about like how they're connected and everything.
And you'll see, like why it makes sense that this Henry Lee Moore,
definitely killed, so he killed his own family. That seemed to happen a lot. I was going to say
this is a different guy. This is a different guy who killed his own family. In this one, he killed his
mother and his grandmother. And I think he did that for sure. But these other ones, I think, were the
same person that was the killer in Velisca. Okay. So I think they're different from Henry Lee Moore,
but I'll talk about his. Now, Henry Lee Moore was convicted of murdering Mary J. Wilson
and her daughter, Georgia Moore, in Columbia, Columbia, Missouri, December 17th, 1912.
Mary was his grandmother and Georgia was his mother.
He had told police that on December 17th, he arrived in town from Moberly, where he lived,
to visit his mom and grandmother, something about like, you know, they were going to go over,
like, money or something.
Uh-oh.
He said when he got to the home, it was dark and quiet.
He opened the back door, and he found them both dead.
They had both been hit by an axe, and that axe was found nearby.
police pretty quickly decided Henry was the guy. He was already super violent historically. His story was
kind of bullshit. He had arrived the evening before. He had not arrived that morning. And he had stayed in a
hotel under a fake name in the area. There you go. He had blood on his clothing as well. Yeah.
He also lied. Check, check. Yeah. He lied about literally everything else in his life. Like, that seemed to be
his thing. He was like a pathological liar. During his trial, they found that he was also pen pals with a lot of women and
young girls. He was like a very big womanizer. And he mentioned to several of them that he would
be inheriting his mother's home soon. How'd you know that? Yeah. He got life in prison and later
admitted to the crimes. He said he did it because he wanted the house and the property.
Wow. So that's a pretty solid like here I did it. There's the murder of. Now it makes sense he did
these murders. But like I said, I don't think he's the guy that did the rest. There isn't any
similarity aside from the axe here, really. And there's just like, again, just a sign of the times
at this point. Also just like a very different motive. Yeah, it's like farmers, axes, crimes of
convenience. But yeah, it's a total, it has motive, like a pretty clear motive. Yeah. Good or bad,
it's a motive. But like what would the Velisca motive be? There's no motive in any of these other ones,
you'll see. So again, I'm with Bill James on this one. I think it's an unknown serial killer who
use the railway system to do these murders because we are going to see that near all of these
homes, including Velisca, there is a railroad. Oh, weird how you just brought that back. Isn't that
weird? And I didn't even mean to. So the other incidents included in this theory are going to start
with Colorado Springs, Colorado in September 1911, so a year before the Velasca murders.
May Alice Burnham, who was 25 years old, and her two children, Nellie Emma, who was six, and John, who was three.
Oh, my goodness.
They lived at 3-2-1 Westdale Street in Colorado.
This home was less than 100 yards from the railroad tracks.
Wow.
So May, Alice and her sister, Nettie Ruth, were, like, very close.
They had dinner every Sunday night together, like a family dinner.
I think her husband was...
consumptive. So he was oftentimes in the hospital and he was staying in a hospital where they were
trying to like get rid of the tuberculosis basically. So he was not home this night and he did
have like an alibi and they thought it was him at first but he was able to prove it wasn't.
Okay. Now they his May Alice and her sister, Nettie Ruth had made plans to get together on Wednesday,
September 20th to get to like get together and sew together because they like did projects together.
Right.
She arrived at the home, but all the shades were drawn, and it was eerily still.
She knocked, couldn't get an answer.
So she thought, oh, May Alice must be at their friend Anna Merritt's home.
She's a neighbor, like a couple doors down.
So she walked there, and May Alice wasn't there.
And in fact, Anna was like, I haven't talked to her in dates, actually, and that's a little concerning.
So together, they walked back and used a skeleton key to open the back door, which is literally what happened in the Velasca.
Yeah, and how you said like eerie still, the whole, the curtains drawn.
Now we have a skeleton key.
Now they immediately noticed that the Sunday dinner was still on the table.
Like, had not been cleaned up, was still sitting there.
And Nettie had been there Sunday the three days before.
Right.
She knew something bad had happened immediately.
When they went into the rear bedroom, they found the bodies of the mother and her two children on the bed.
It appeared both mother and John three didn't wake up.
They were hit in their sleep.
But little Emma had tried to escape it appeared before being hit by the axe.
The scene had all the curtains and blind drawn, and it was pitch black in there.
The doors were locked upon the killer leaving, and there was a bowl filled with water that was bloody where he had washed his hands.
That's weird.
I don't know if you remember this.
Same in Velisca.
Yeah.
The killer had hung around, washed their hands, also covered some of the bodies with sheets.
Okay.
Now, policing corners were immediately called to the scene.
And when they arrived to survey the scene, there's neighbors everywhere.
They're all coming out because as soon as police cars show up, I mean, it's the same now.
None of us ever change.
We're all going to run out and see what the fuck's going on.
So all the neighbors are like, what is happening?
And suddenly some of the neighbors are like, that's weird.
They're next door neighbors, which is the Wayne family.
They were like, they're not coming out.
And then some of the neighbors were like, huh, I haven't heard from them in a couple of days, actually.
Oh, no.
So they were like, okay.
So they enter the home next door and found another axe murdered family inside.
Are you serious?
Right next door.
Right next door.
Wow.
The victims were Henry F. Wayne, who was 30 years old, his wife, Blanche McGinnis Wayne,
she was 26, and their baby daughter, Lula, who was two.
Lula.
They were all found in the same bed.
They had all been killed with blunt axe blows to the head.
Wow.
A metal basin was found with bloody water in it where he had washed his hands afterwards
and all the shades and curtains were drawn.
Dude.
The axe was found nearby for both of the scenes.
It was one axe and it had been borrowed by Henry from a neighbor.
And they found it like just abandoned nearby like in Valiska.
Again on scene too.
It wasn't like this person was bringing their own tool.
And just like Valiska, no robbery.
They were found with rings on bracelets that could have been stolen.
Nothing was stolen from the house.
Clearly, they had been done the same night by the same person.
That's too coincidental to even consider they weren't.
Both scenes had windows where the killer had clearly entered and left through.
In the Burnham home, there was ink that was on the window sill, like a thing of a little jarving,
that the killer had spilled and tried to clean up when they left.
So that's how they knew they went in and out of the window.
The police were like, nope, they're not connected.
And they're probably not a stranger.
I think it's like probably the husband of Mrs. Burnham.
What?
Like right.
Okay.
What?
They're killing it, guys.
They're not connected.
They're literally feet away.
Next door where they literally like all the curtains are drawn.
There's a bowl with bloody water.
They were like, eh, it's just crazy.
Guys, what do you do?
They're like, ah, it's 1911.
It's nuts.
Yeah.
The newspapers at the time, so one of them said six slings.
with axe as they lie asleep in bed. Two women, a man and three children, ghastly evidence of a baffling
crime. Motive includes lack to assist police in Colorado Springs. Then it says murdered in their own
homes by some unidentified person who used an axe. The bodies of six persons, three in each of two
neighboring houses, which I was like, wow, that's a weird way of saying that. That's very convoluted,
but thank you. What did they say? Three in each of two neighboring houses. Yeah, I was like,
you could have said that better, I feel. We're found here this afternoon. The head
of all the victims had been crushed, and the appearance of the bodies indicated that they
have been dead several days and that death had come while they slept. Wow. Now, the next murders
were in October 1911, so only a couple months later, or a couple months, a couple weeks later,
excuse me. The first was in Monmouth, Illinois. So this was Sunday, October 1st,
literally like two weeks after this one. Jeez. William Dawson didn't show up to his job at the
first Presbyterian church. So the church dudes were worried.
and they were probably just pissed that he didn't show up to work.
The church dudes.
The church dudes.
So they sent deacons, I know that.
They sent deacons to his home to check on him.
William Dawson and his wife Charity
and their 13-year-old daughter, Georgia,
were found dead in their home.
This home was about a quarter mile away from the railroad.
Georgia was found in a position that indicated she woke up
and tried to escape,
or she was placed in a different way.
As we are seeing in Velisca,
in the Colorado Springs one, and in this one, we have young girls who are placed a different way.
Right.
Either seem like they woke up or they were moved after.
Right.
Strange.
Connected.
Yeah.
And so Bill James says that often this particular serial killer would kill everyone in their sleep
and they would be found where they left, where they lay, just like in Velisca, just in the other ones.
They were found in bed.
But like I just said, that young girl or some girl in this or woman in these situations is just in a different way.
Right.
Just like Lena.
Right.
That can't be ignored.
That's not a huge thing.
A coincidence.
Like, that's not just like, oh, weird that that happened.
It's a huge detail in the case.
It's a big deal.
All the blinds were drawn.
The doors were locked.
The bodies were covered partially with sheets.
There were reports that a lead gas pipe was found nearby, and they thought that was the murder
weapon. It had like blood on it. But as Bill James points out, he thinks, sure, it could have been. And it may be
that they just didn't have an axe on the scene. Yeah, because this guy comes, like we said, with nothing.
He comes with nothing hoping there's an axe. Because usually there is. He might have assumed there would be
an axe. There wasn't. He used a lead pipe. Murder is his intent. Not robbery, not anything else.
All he cares about is killing people. Right. And bludgeoning them. If a gas pipe works, that works.
Right. So October 15th, only.
a week later, or two weeks later, excuse me, Elsworth, Kansas, William Showman does not come to work.
Another William. He is working at a garage, helping out the mechanic and also acting as like a taxi for riders of the train.
A neighbor of the showman family who lives very close to the railroad track, by the way, sees that their dog is wandering the neighborhood all day.
Also interesting that he worked as a taxi driver for people on the train.
Mm-hmm. Very interesting. So she tries to contact the showmen's to be like,
hey, your dog's wandering around, like, you might want to get them. She doesn't get a response.
So she was close with the family. So she called the garage where William worked to be like,
hey, your dog's walking around. And I don't know why your family isn't answering the phone.
And she gets the information from his employer, hey, he's not here. He didn't show up today.
So she goes to the house and she's like, I had a check on them.
It's like, Mary. It is. And she finds them all in their beds with their heads,
demolished by an axe. William who was 27, his wife who was Pauline, who was 27 as well.
They had young kids, Lester, who was six, Fern, who was four, and Fenton, who was two.
Fenton was hit with such ferocity that the head was severed. Oh my goodness. Now, Pauline,
the wife, was posed. And everybody else was found where they slept. Right. The axe was taken from a
neighbor's yard and it was left at the scene. The blind,
were drawn, some of the bodies were covered with sheets. A sheet was actually put over the phone as well.
That's interesting. This is interesting. And some think that this was to stop the noise if it rang,
which is like, okay, it could seem like a thing that this killer would do if you really think about it.
It seems like he doesn't like external stimuli while he's doing this. He blocks out all the windows.
He gets rid of any mirrors, so movement isn't going to like fuck with his peripheral or anything.
I think he just wants to be solely focused on what he's doing.
So that definitely could be it, that he didn't want the phone to ring.
It would muffle the sound of the ring.
But then some researchers think, and I agree, that he covered this phone
because phones at the time had those bells on top that look like eyes.
Reflective.
No, they look like eyes.
My grandfather, Pa, had one because he worked for the phone company for a long time.
I was always obsessed with it.
It was this really cool old phone they had in their house.
And to me, it always looked like a big face that looked at you.
Oh.
It has the nose where the receiver is.
It looks like a honk nose.
Okay.
And it's got like things on the bottom that look like a mouth and big eyes on the top.
Oh.
And he may have been covering the eyes on the phone like he covered the mirrors.
So no one was looking at him.
That's weird.
This is also why he demolishes their faces.
And Joe Moore, who was specifically said to be Sand's eyes when he was found.
Yeah.
I think he doesn't want humans to be looking at him or anything that looked like it could be looking at him.
A mirror, anything.
Huh.
I mean, it definitely could be it.
I think both are really good.
Regardless.
Now, there was an oil lamp with the chimney removed, and that chimney was placed under the chair, and the wick was split.
Dude, come on.
And that was found in a couple of other cases, too.
A washing bowl was left with bloody water in it where the killer washed his hands.
Like, hello.
Now, June 1912, there was like a big break, at Paola, Kansas, Roland and Anna Hudson, her maiden name was Axe, by the way.
Oh, Axe, A, X, X, E.
I just thought that was interesting.
On June 2nd, 1912, Roland did not show up for his shift at work.
Neighbors were concerned because the evening before there had been a failed break-in at another home on the street.
In that home, it was a husband, wife, and an eight-year-old.
daughter. They had been awakened by the sound of glass shattering, found that someone had broken in,
but had went out through the window. They had tried to use the oil lamp but broke the glass chimney.
And when they broke the glass chimney, they fled. Oh my goodness. They had bent the wick.
Dude. Now, they go to the Hudson home, the neighbors, which was very close to the railroad, by the way,
to check on them because it was unlike them to be so still all day. They flagged down a deputy city
Marshall, who just happened to be like walking by, and they had him enter the home.
The Miami Republican reported a ghastly sight, turning back a cover lid and sheet that covered
their heads.
They found Mr. and Mrs. Hudson dead.
Mr. Hudson was lying on his right side with the left side of his head and face crushed.
He was evidently murdered while he slept without having made much of a struggle.
Mrs. Hudson was apparently awakened when her husband was killed and raised her head when
she was struck on the back of the head and of her face with some partially sharp instrument
an inch or an inch and a half wide.
So she moved.
Right.
The shades and curtains were drawn.
Some of the bodies were covered in sheets.
And there was an oil lamp without a chimney in the room.
Nothing was stolen.
Yeah, dude.
Hello.
Hello.
Hello.
Four days later was Valiska, Iowa.
You know it.
You know it well.
We do.
We do.
You know what happened then.
Cereal killer.
Yeah.
This is a serial killer.
How is that not?
Yes.
1911, 1912 acts murders, serial killer.
Absolutely.
All near the railroad.
Four of those cases had victims heads covered with clothing and fabric.
Three had killers who washed after the murders.
Five had cases that they hung out for way too long afterwards.
Three of those cases used an oil lamp and removed the chimney and placed it aside and bent the wick.
Yeah, dude.
Come on.
So in Bill James in his book says he thinks this is like a serial killer that was maturing at this
point. So had already killed way before this and he lists out a ton of cases that it makes sense.
So read the book. For every single case he ties to this killer, it's going to blow your mind.
It really is because I was like, you solved it, yo. That's insane.
But yeah, so those are the cases that I think, and I think it is a serial killer.
I mean, everything that you said leads me to believe the same.
But I'll leave you to do your own research with that and maybe someday I'll make a podcast that's
like solely dedicated to this and I can go absolutely crazy and just live an axe murdering existence
because because I want to dive so far into this. But I will get away from like the suspects and
the murders right now and we'll end on the haunting. Okay. Because you know in Veliska there's
going to be some residual energy. You can still stay there, yeah? You sure can. The home actually had seven
owners after the murders and then it was bought in 1994 by Darwin and Mark.
It's a beautiful whole. It is beautiful. They restored it beautifully. Their plans were to make it
into a historical museum and just kind of restore it back to 1912. They did just that. They had no idea
like how popular the house was going to be as like a tourist attraction. And you can stay there now for
$428 bucks a night. And it's like the Lizzie Borden in where they hand you the key and they're like
Godspeed, brother. And then they just leave you on the property. Is there somebody on the property?
though? I don't think. I think laws vary state by state, but in Massachusetts, they have to be. They have to be
on the property. Somebody might be on like somewhere, but they, they hope so. They leave you. They do that in
the Lizzie Borden, but they're like somewhere in the property. They're like on like the,
like in the store, I think. So Martha Lynn has said she's experienced a lot of things there, but she
refuses to go into specific details because she said she doesn't want to color the guests' experience
with her own. So she wants people to go in, feel what they feel or don't feel what they feel. All right. I don't
want to tell you what to feel. She said, quote, I don't know if the murderer are still there,
but things have happened that aren't exactly calming. Now, obviously every single paranormal
investigator and television show has been here. Zach Began's? Oh, you better believe he's been there.
Of course. I think I mentioned, like, he had a real theatrical time when he went. But there are
stories about people feeling like a real sense of dread there. And I honestly believe that now.
Like, if you had asked me this a year ago, I'd be like, well, yeah, everybody was
murdered in there. Like, that's, you're just going to walk in and be like, of course, I feel like bummed at
this. But after going to the Lizzie Borden house, it's inexplicable. It's not the anticipatory
dread that you know you're going to feel upon entering a house where a horrible crime has occurred.
Yeah, that happens. You can smell it. It's a different feeling. When we walked, when we were in
Abby Borden's bedroom, I was like, I feel sick. Like, I don't feel right here. I thought I was going to
pass out. And my legs, just my legs, were freezing. Yeah, and I feel like Velisca must be even worse.
I mean, like the energy in there must be even more parter. And children. Now, they have toys set up in the
kids' rooms, like balls and such, because it's set up how it was at the time. And they put these
things in there because a lot of people think that they can contact the kids and the kids will play
with them with the kids with the toys. Now, a lot of times people will roll a ball and it will roll back.
or you won't touch the ball and it will just start rolling at you.
And people have tried to debunk it.
They can't.
They can't figure it out.
There are tons of videos of this and they've done it on like a ton of paranormal shows.
Yeah, I've seen it before.
Like I said, Zach Baggins or Zach Baggins has been like all up in here.
Yeah.
I think he's like stood in front of it and like the beginning of his thing and he was like
holding an axe.
Like it was very intense.
It's a little distasteful.
Often people will hear kids giggling and playing or they're hearing.
entire conversations upstairs.
Really?
People will also say that sometimes they hear things whispered in their ear.
I hate that.
And they've heard things like, do it and like, or like get out of here or something like that.
But a lot of times they'll hear like a very menacing voice saying like, do it and like urging them to do something.
That's scary.
They also, a lot of people say they report feeling their pant legs tugged.
No.
Like from a kid.
Oh.
I think all that is well and fine.
but the feelings are what everybody really describes the same way.
People say if they lie in the beds, especially the beds of the children, they feel like
overwhelming sadness, not sadness of like, oh, I'm laying in a bed and a kid was murdered
here.
It's like a, they said they feel like a heavy feeling of dread on them.
I don't know if I would want to lay in the beds.
Yeah, I couldn't do that.
I don't think.
There are motion detectors in the home upstairs as well.
And a lot of times when someone's alone or they're downstairs, the motion detectors go off upstairs.
Interesting.
It happens a lot.
That also happens in your house, so that's fun.
I know.
That happens a lot in my house.
Now, luminal.
Luminal and UV lights detect an outrageous amount of blood splash and spatter on the wall,
ceilings, and floors in the home.
Still?
It's like super unsettling.
It's obviously they cleaned it initially when it happened.
But back then in 1912, you just wiped it visually clean.
Right.
And blood stays.
And even when you paint over it, you can find it again.
You can bring it through.
I didn't realize that it could last that long.
Blood can still be seen.
And there's like pictures where you can see like the ceilings are just the splash marks on the ceiling.
I don't know if I could go.
No, I definitely could, but it's like really upsetting.
So November 7th, something crazy happened.
November 7th, 2014, a 37-year-old man named Buck was staying in the home with his mother and stepmother,
doing what they referred to as a recreational paranormal investigation.
People do it all the time.
Yeah.
They were in different places around the home, and his mom and stepfather were outside.
They were communicating with walkie-talkies and things like that.
Suddenly around 12.45 a.m., which is when they think the Moors were being killed,
the mother and stepfather get a call through the walkie-talkie for help from Buck.
He's like screaming for help.
He was in the downstairs bedroom where Lena and I know were killed.
They found him laying on the bed with a stab wound in his chest.
He was legitimately brutally stabbed in the chest with a knife.
There was a knife in his chest.
They had to call 911 from the Valiska Axe Murder House,
and he was airlifted eventually to a hospital in Omaha, Nebraska.
He was in intensive care but released,
and it was determined the stab wound was self-inflicted.
But no one can figure out why or where the knife came from.
like they don't think you just like carried it in with him well they think he doesn't remember doing
any of this and he said he doesn't so in a nightmare like i i know it sounds weird but like he legitimately
stabbed himself in the chest like this wasn't like oh i felt something poke me yeah he stabbed his
own lung like he collapsed a lung yeah that's commitment to a cause if you're really just trying
to fuck with people like that's really committed no it is i i don't think sack back
is that committed. So I feel like, yeah, I don't think anybody should be that committed.
No, in a book called In a Nightmare, a Nightmare in Veliska by Richard E. Step, they talk about in
2019, the show Kindred Spirits interviewed Buck. They talked to him because he did recover.
And he explained, yeah, and he explained that he had tried to recreate the crime scene a bit,
which a lot of these paranormal investigators will do that. I don't agree with that kind of shit.
I feel like that's asking for trouble.
But they like will kind of try to, you know, annoy the spirits and aggravate them and get them to do something.
Let's not do that.
So he said, he admitted, I did try to provoke them.
And he said I was, you know, saying like some vulgar things and just trying to get some kind of reaction.
And he said, obviously he never thought that something like that would happen.
But he said he saw the biggest like orb or shadowy kind of thing he had ever seen in his life.
and then suddenly he was lying on the bed with a knife in his chest.
And he remembers waking up with a breathing tube in the hospital.
He doesn't remember anything between that.
And did he say, like, I didn't bring a knife with me?
He maintains that he didn't do this to himself.
I don't know what his stances on, like, why he would bring the knife or whether he
remembers bringing the knife.
Right.
But he said he maintains he did not do this to himself.
That he was like, it happened.
Like, I physically did it, but I did not intend to do.
do this.
Okay.
Like I didn't go in there thinking I was going to do this.
I just don't understand why he would have had a knife in the first place.
No, none of it makes any sense, but it's still a very strange thing.
Of course.
That happened in that house, whether it's, I'm not saying it's the house that made him do it.
No, of course not.
But it's a very, it's another strange thing that happened in that house where somebody
stabbed themselves in the chest and like collapsed a lung.
And he said there was a, now, and he also says there's a lot of creepy EVPs from that
night and like that were saying menacing things and his parents have those and whatever but that's a
really strange thing that happened in 2014 it's something that people are still like what the fuck was
that because even if it's again even if it's not like the house made him do it it's still a very
dark thing that happened in that house yeah of course like why would someone add why would it's just
very strange um so that is the last thing that i'll talk about that happened there but the last
thing I just want to touch up on is that you can go to this house still. You can see the original
axe displayed. Wow. They had it in the house. Yeah, not in the house. It's at the historical
society and it's behind glass and all that. It was acquired by Dr. Edgar Epperly, who is an expert
on the case and the history. He actually got the axe from someone else. And it was this whole
thing where I read that no one wanted to like receive money for this axe. Like they didn't
want to sell it between each other. Of course not.
So he gave him like a box of chocolates for it.
So they say like the axe was sold for a box of chocolates.
It's like this weird story.
Now he had it.
He had it at his home for a long time.
And he would bring it out for events.
Ash is so horrified by this whole thing.
I just,
I like shook my head, Noah.
She keeps just going, no.
Like the whole.
I would not want that axe at my house or in my presence.
Yeah, he had it at his house.
I am a big believer in energy.
Yeah.
I know this is not your.
I don't, I'm not judging anybody.
It freaks me the fuck out.
Yeah.
Apparently, Dr. Epperly was okay though.
Yeah, I'm glad.
Yeah.
And he would bring it out for like documentaries and yeah.
They would have like historical festivals in the town where he would bring it out and put it on display.
And then finally he decided he wanted to donate it officially to the historical society because he said, and they all say, even though this is huge tragedy, it's something the town is known to have in its past.
And it's such a huge piece of history.
Yeah, you can't just forget it.
You can't just forget that it happened.
Of course not.
And technically, it's unsolved.
So it's like, yeah, it's got to say.
And it's no longer considered a piece of evidence at this point because it's been that long.
Yeah.
But, yeah, he donated it in October 2006, so you can see it if you would like to.
I believe the cemetery is also only like a 10-minute walk from the house where the whole family is buried.
So it's the same kind of thing as the Lizzie Borden house.
you can go see the graves of the people were lost there, and then you can try to stay in the house.
I don't know.
I don't know.
After Lizzie Borden house, I feel like this would be intense.
I do want to see this house really bad.
I think this one is one that I would go see.
I don't know if I could spend the night in that house because I didn't, I literally did not go to sleep in Lizzie Borden's house.
No, and she did not allow me to go to sleep.
Why the fuck would I let you go to sleep?
I know.
I'm going to sit up there alone and talk to the spirit?
There were several times I tried to fall asleep on that couch and you would not let me.
No, I'm not.
No.
No.
Elena wants to go back and I'm like, yeah, we can go back.
But like, again, I'm literally not going to sleep.
And I was like, damn it.
It was fun.
It is interesting.
Yeah.
And it's like a fun, you know, they make it into an experience.
Exactly.
You know, we're far enough removed from the actual crimes that now we can talk about it in a historical way.
Yeah.
And somebody asked where our room.
was actually in the Lizzie Borden house. We were in the attic. We sure were. But we literally went
there on the tour, left our bags there, got them the next morning, and that was about the amount of
time we spent there. The entire night, we were in the parlor. We were in the living room where
Andrew Borden was killed and we were sitting on the couch the entire night. And there's a
fucking mail slot in that house and you could hear anything during the recording. And the wind camp
whistling through the mail slot. Because not only did we go to the Lizzie Borden house in October,
we went to the Lizzie Borden house in October on a dark and stormy night.
Yeah, like a monsoon was happening.
It was not just raining.
It was a fucking monsoon.
Oh, we were, they left us lanterns because they were like, when they left, they were like,
power might go out.
Here's some lanterns.
I was like, are you fucking kidding me?
It hadn't started storming yet.
And I was like, wow, like, that's cute.
And then it started storming.
And it was like, co-ch-ch-ch-ch-l.
And you were like, oh, we might need those.
I'm going to pee my pants.
Yeah, it's a trip.
So that is the Velisca axe murders.
in my discussion of them. That was incredibly. As abridged as I could get it. I applaud you because that was
a really interesting case to sit here and listen to. It's fascinating. Thanks for your research skills. Thanks.
Hopefully I gave you something different because I know this case has talked about a lot. So hopefully you got a
little bit of different perspective or information out of it. But I will list all of these books. I'm going to
list the paper. I'll list the blogs. I'll give you everywhere.
you can go look for your own stuff. So, uh, enjoy and stay safe. We hope you keep listening.
And we hope you keep it weird. But that's the way that you go to the little sacks house and
like bad things happen to you because I don't want anything bad to happen to you. No. Bye. Love you.
