MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - A Butterfly's Secret (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: June 17, 2024On a January afternoon in 2015, a medical examiner stood over a dead woman’s body in the county morgue. He’d already opened up the woman’s abdomen, and he was using his scalpel to cut t...he tissues around her stomach. The woman had been murdered, and the medical examiner had already determined her cause of death — but now, he was searching for something specific. He placed the stomach on a metal tray and sliced it open, revealing everything she’d eaten before her death. To his surprise, there was almost nothing there, which meant the woman hadn’t eaten for several hours. This struck the medical examiner as very odd, because detectives had told him that the woman bought Mexican food less than half an hour before her death, and they found the empty wrapper at the crime scene. But if the murder victim didn’t eat it, that left only one other possibility: her killer did. The medical examiner put his scalpel down and looked at the woman on his autopsy table. He tried to imagine what sort of person would want to murder her and then eat her lunch, while standing right beside her body.For 100s more stories like these, check out our main YouTube channel just called "MrBallen" -- https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallenIf you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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On a January afternoon in 2015, a medical examiner stood over a dead woman's body in
the county morgue.
He had already opened up the woman's abdomen and he was now using his scalpel to cut the
tissues around her stomach.
The woman had been murdered, and the medical examiner had already determined her cause of death, but now he was searching for something specific.
After cutting away the tissue, he removed her stomach and placed it on a metal tray
and cut it open, revealing everything she'd eaten before her death. To his surprise, there
was almost nothing there, which meant the woman had not eaten for several hours. This
struck the medical examiner as being very odd, because detectives had told him that this woman bought Mexican food less than half an hour before her
death and they found the empty wrapper at the crime scene. But if the murder victim didn't eat the
food, that left only one other possibility. Her killer did. The medical examiner put his scalpel
down and stared down at the woman on his table. He tried to imagine what sort of monster would
murder this woman and then eat her lunch while standing right beside her body.
But before we get into that story, if you're a fan of the Strange, Dark, and Mysterious, delivered in story format,
then you've come to the right podcast because that's all we do and we upload twice a week, once on Monday and once on Thursday.
So if that's of interest to you, kindly advise the follow button that you have the perfect
money investment opportunity and it pays out 10% in a month.
And so once the month is over and the follow button asks for their money, only give them
10% back.
Okay, let's get into today's story. From Wandery, I'm Ra's Al Jafri, and this is The Spy Who.
This series, we open the file on Eamon Dean, the spy who betrayed Bin Laden.
In 1994, 16-year-old Eamon wants to die.
He heads to war-torn Bosnia to join the Mujahideen and save his fellow Muslims.
He hopes to become a martyr so that he can be reunited with his dead parents in paradise.
Instead, he's about to be confronted by a cruel and bloody reality.
A reality that'll lead him to turn his back on terrorism and become the West's top spy inside Al-Qaeda.
Follow The Spy Who on the Wandery app or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Or you can binge the full season of the Spy Who betrayed Bin Laden early and ad free with Wandery Plus.
I'm Ellis James.
And I'm Colin Murray and we're the hosts of Everything to Play For, the podcast that tells the greatest sports stories of all time.
This season we're covering Wayne Rooney England man.
Remember the name, Wayne Rooney.
Yes, we're focusing in for three episodes on Wayne Rooney's career with the three lions
on his chest. From a teenager breaking into the England set up all the way through to
his international retirement.
Ticks in so much, Ellis.
What a way to burst onto the scene as well, Euro 2004,
where he was one of the absolute standout stars of that tournament.
However, if you look at his international career,
those tournaments ravaged by injury, disappointments,
crazy things happening on and off the field.
There's an awful lot to get stuck into.
Cannot wait. Follow everything to play for in the. There's an awful lot to get stuck into.
Cannot wait.
Follow everything to play for in the Wandery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge seasons early and ad free right now on Wandery+.
Around noon on January 13th, 2015, 43-year-old Ana Moses was sitting in her office at the
University of Texas at Dallas when she heard her cell phone ding inside of her purse.
Ana knew she was not supposed to use her cell phone during work, but she had a feeling she'd
just gotten a text from someone very special.
So Ana kind of discreetly slid her phone out of her purse, and when she looked at the screen,
she smiled.
Like she'd thought, her boyfriend, Michael Stodnik, had texted her to confirm that they
were still on for dinner that night.
Just looking at this message gave Anna butterflies.
Michael was a business professor at the university where Anna worked, and he was the first man
she had seriously dated since her divorce about two years earlier.
Anna and Michael had been an item now for the last six months, but for Anna,
who'd previously been married for 15 years, you know dating still felt very new. She and Michael
were both single parents in their early 40s, but this new relationship made Anna feel young again.
Anna quickly texted Michael to let him know she was definitely still on for dinner,
then she quietly slid her phone back into her purse and got back to work.
Anna was the Assistant Director of Strategic Planning and Analysis at UT Dallas, but that
was not her only job.
She was also a graduate student pursuing a master's degree in data analytics, so Ana
was very busy.
But as soon as the clock hit 2pm, Ana stood up from her desk and headed upstairs.
She knocked on an office door before opening it, but really the knocking was just a formality. The person sitting at the desk inside, University Vice Provost John Warkowski, always
expected Anna for afternoon tea. When Anna walked in, the 71-year-old administrator greeted her with
a smile and called her by a special nickname, Babochka. It meant butterfly in Russian, and
hearing it made Anna feel nostalgic for the country where she grew up.
Anna sat down across from Dr. Wachowski, and right away he handed her a steaming cup of
tea.
Dr. Wachowski had wild gray hair, big glasses, and he always smelled like cigarettes.
Anna was not particularly fond of the smell in his office, but she still felt very comfortable
with him because over the past two years she'd spent hours in this office confiding to him about her personal life. Dr. Wachowski knew things about Anna that most
people simply didn't, like that she'd immigrated to the United States in 1998 just to marry her
now ex-husband, Bob Moses. He and Anna had met in Russia when Bob was visiting as a tourist,
then they kept in touch through email for months until he finally asked her to marry him.
Bob had been Anna's anchor in America, which made their divorce that much more painful
for her.
Anna and her ex Bob were still on very friendly terms, but at this point Dr. Wachowski had
really taken over the role of being Anna's rock now.
That day, Anna and Dr. Wachowski's conversation centered around Anna's 20-year-old son,
Igor, who was a student right there at UT Dallas.
Ana said she was worried that she and her son might be growing apart.
The previous weekend, Igor had driven the 15 miles from his dorm to her home in Frisco,
Texas as he usually did, but Igor had seemed quiet and distant all weekend.
It made Ana worry that he had some problem that he didn't want to talk about.
Dr. Wachowski sipped his tea, then told Anna she was a great mother and not to worry.
Sometimes children, especially adult children, just need some space.
He assured her that whatever was going on with him, you know, Igor would eventually tell her when he was ready.
Anna sighed and said, you know, you're probably right.
Then she finished her tea, gave the doctor a hug, and headed back downstairs to her office.
gave the doctor a hug, and headed back downstairs to her office.
A couple hours later, at around 5pm, Anna turned off her computer and grabbed her purse. It was cold outside in the 30s, so near freezing, so Anna put on her coat and two scarves before
waving goodbye to her co-workers and walking outside to the parking garage.
She got inside of her blue Hyundai sedan and then headed into rush hour traffic.
Part of the way home, Ana's stomach began to growl. She was hungry. Ana looked at the
clock and saw that it was 5.30, which meant her boyfriend Michael would not be picking
her up for dinner for another two hours. So she decided to pull off the highway right
then and go to a fast food restaurant, a Taco
Bell that served Mexican food, and she went through the drive-thru and she bought a chicken
quesadilla.
Ana was really hungry, but after receiving the food, she didn't eat it in the car,
instead she just set it on her passenger seat.
Ana generally preferred to keep her surroundings really tidy and so she never ate in her car,
it was just too messy.
About 15 minutes later, Ana turned into her neighborhood.
As she approached her two-story brick house, she stopped beside her mailbox and rolled the window down to grab her mail.
Then she pulled her Hyundai into the garage.
Ana shut the garage door behind her.
She gathered up her purse, her mail and her quadilla, and she got out of the car. She walked towards the door that led into her home,
thinking about how excited she was for her date that night with Michael.
But as she reached for the doorknob,
Ana heard the sound of rustling behind her, followed by a loud clap.
Just after 7.30 pm on the same day, Michael pulled up to Ana's house, and he noticed all the lights were off as if Ana was not home.
Michael was confused, but he got out of his car and knocked on Ana's front door.
When she didn't answer, he called her, but she didn't pick up. Michael thought
about going inside. Ana had actually recently given him a house key, but he knew Ana always
turned on her alarm system when she left the house, and he didn't know the code to disable it,
and he didn't want to set it off and cause a scene in such a quiet neighborhood.
Michael began to feel cold just standing outside, so he turned around, went back to his car,
and tried calling Ana again. But Anna's phone
again went to voicemail. Anna had never missed a date with Michael before, but Michael told himself,
you know, Anna was very busy, she was a grad student and a mother, she could have easily gotten
sidetracked with any number of things. So even though he was very disappointed, Michael decided
to go home and wait for Anna to call him back. He was sure she would explain everything as soon as she could.
The next morning at 9am, Michael once again pulled into Anna's driveway.
He had continued calling and texting her until 11pm the previous night, but she never responded.
Michael even contacted Anna's friends to ask about her, but they too had not heard from her.
And so when Michael woke up on this morning with no text or no calls from Ana, the first
thing he did was drive to her house.
Michael knocked on the front door, and when there was no response, instead of going in,
he instead called the Frisco Police Department.
He told the dispatcher that he hadn't heard from his girlfriend since the previous afternoon
when she was working at UT Dallas, and now he was at her house knocking on her door and she wasn't answering and she wasn't answering phone calls or text messages,
and so he asked if somebody could come out to her house to make sure she was okay.
The dispatcher was obviously empathetic, but they told Michael that for this type of thing,
protocol was he would need to call the university's campus police first, and then if for some
reason they couldn't handle it, then they would ratchet this up to the Frisco Police Department. And so Michael hung up and then looked up the number
for the university campus police and called them, and they promised him they would look into the
situation right away. Michael thanked them and hung up, and even though he still felt very uneasy
about this, he had to get to work. So he got into his car and drove away.
So he got into his car and drove away.
Less than an hour later, Frisco Police Sergeant J. Reem received a call from the University of Texas Dallas Campus Police. They told Sergeant Reem they were looking for a university employee
named Anna Moses. Her boyfriend had just called to request a welfare check, and the campus police
had quickly learned that Anna did not show up for work that day, which her co-workers said was highly unusual.
Because Anna was not actually living on campus, the university officer asked Reem if he could
go check her home in Frisco.
Reem said he was on it, and a few minutes later he was out the door, headed towards
Anna's address.
Reem got there at 10.50am.m. and knocked on the door.
When nobody answered, Sergeant Ream tried the doorknob, but it was locked.
Ream knew he could knock down Ana's door, but that seemed extreme.
Instead, he called the campus police back and asked if they knew anyone who could let
him inside.
Over an hour later, at 12.05 p.m., two cars pulled up outside of Ana's house.
A campus police officer stepped out of one, and Ana's son, Igor, got out of the other.
The university police had been able to find Igor on campus, and he told them he had a
key and knew the alarm code to his mother's house.
Igor nodded curtly at Sergeant Reem, then unlocked his mother's front door and walked
inside and disabled the alarm.
As Reem entered Ana's home, Igor walked past him and back outside.
He did not seem concerned at all about his mother, he just said he'd be out in the car waiting for
whenever they were done. Sergeant Reem thought Igor's behavior was strange, but he couldn't
worry about that right now. Instead, he and the university police officer walked into Ana's foyer.
The house was totally silent except for the officer's footsteps on the tile.
They searched the first floor but they didn't find any sign of Anna, and they were about
to head upstairs when the sergeant remembered they should scope out the garage.
Reem made his way to the door that led to the garage and he opened it.
And right away, even in the darkness, he could tell Anna's car was not parked inside, making
the garage feel very empty.
Then he flipped on the overhead light and he gasped.
Ana was lying on her back on the garage floor with blood coming out of her mouth, and there
were bullet casings all around her. It was obvious just from looking at her that she
was deceased.
The university officer came over and looked into the garage too and instantly brought
a hand up to his mouth in shock. Neither of the officers had ever seen anything like this before.
Frisco was an extremely safe community with very few violent crimes.
It actually had been called one of the safest cities in the entire United States.
But that only made Anna's apparent murder that much more shocking.
Her quiet suburban home was now a crime scene.
Even though he rarely worked homicide cases, Sergeant Ream knew the protocol.
First, he and the university officer backed out of the garage and closed the door so they
would not disturb any evidence.
Then they checked the rest of Ana's home to make sure nobody else was there.
Once they confirmed the house was empty, Ream called the Frisco Police Department for assistance.
Ream then slowly walked outside towards Igor's car parked by the curb.
As he got closer, Igor rolled down the window and looked at the sergeant without saying
anything.
Once he reached the car, Reem took a deep breath and told Igor that he had terrible
news.
His mother was dead, and it looked like she'd been murdered.
The sergeant watched Igor for a reaction, but the young man's face was blank.
Then Igor just furrowed his eyebrows and asked if his mother was in one piece.
Sergeant Reem was so surprised by this question that he just said, well, yeah.
Igor nodded and then said he had to go because he had class.
Reem had no idea what to make of Igor's very bizarre reaction.
It was so odd, but Igor had just received this life-shattering news, and Reem knew,
you know, shock can make people behave in totally inexplicable ways.
So for now, Reem decided to give Igor a pass, and he just figured, you know, they would
do everything they could to find out what happened to his mother.
Then the sergeant heard a siren blaring, and he looked up to see a Frisco PD cruiser heading
his way. Hello, I'm Hannah.
And I'm Saruti.
And we are the hosts of Red-Handed, a weekly true crime podcast.
Every week on Red-Handed, we get stuck into the most talked about cases.
From Idaho student killings, the Delphi murders and our recent rundown of the Murdock
Saga.
Last year, we also started a second weekly show, Shorthand, which is just an excuse for
us to talk about anything we find interesting because it's our show and we can do what
we like.
We've covered the death of Princess Diana, an unholy Quran written in Saddam Hussein's
blood, the gruesome history of European witch hunting and the very uncomfortable phenomenon
of genetic sexual attraction.
Whatever the case, we want to know what pushes people
to the extremes of human behavior.
Like, can someone give consent to be cannibalized?
What drives a child to kill?
And what's the psychology of a terrorist?
Listen to Red Handed wherever you get your podcasts
and access our bonus shorthand episodes
exclusively on Amazon Music
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Plus in Apple Podcasts or the Wondry app.
When the matriarch of a prominent Princeton family is found stabbed to death in her locked
basement, investigators look from a serial attacker to her family, to Princeton University
students. One hot-blooded investigator sees a conspiracy. Is he way off base or does privilege let you
get away with murder? You can listen to In the Shadow of Princeton exclusively and ad-free
with Wondery+. Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or Apple podcasts.
A few minutes later, Frisco detective Brian Schutte and Texas ranger Ruben Manken stood
inside of Ana's garage.
The two men were from different agencies, but they'd both been assigned to lead the
case together.
The crime scene made Schutte feel totally sick.
He was a very young detective, and this wasn't just the first time he'd be leading a murder
investigation, this was his first murder case that he'd ever worked on.
Detective Schutte squatted next to Ana's body.
She was still wearing a heavy coat and two scarves, but he could see a bullet wound
in her neck.
And scattered on the floor around her were a few unopened envelopes, an empty Taco Bell
wrapper and a black purse.
There were also a handful of bullet casings, which the detective identified as coming from
a.22 caliber gun.
Detective Schuttey told Menken that it seemed like Anna had been outside, which is why she
was wearing warm clothes, and she had come in and was carrying her mail, purse, and fast
food trash when somebody shot her in her garage.
Schutte figured that Anna had likely been killed the previous evening when she came
home from work.
Ranger Manken nodded in agreement, but he pointed out that Anna's car wasn't parked
in the driveway or the garage, so he wondered if her killer had stolen it.
Maybe Ana had been killed during a robbery.
But then Detective Schutte opened up Ana's black purse, and it didn't seem like anybody
had rifled through it, and Ana's wallet, which contained $300 in cash, was still inside
her purse.
And the inside of Ana's house also looked totally undisturbed, so if this was a robbery,
the only thing the killer stole was Ana's car, which didn't really make any sense.
Schuette told Manken that he really wasn't sure about the robbery theory, it felt kind
of weak, but the missing car did give them a good place to start.
So Schuette radioed the Frisco Police Department and asked a fellow officer to put out a bulletin
about Ana's stolen vehicle.
But at the same time,
Schuette was thinking to himself that it seemed most likely that Anna had been killed by somebody
she knew. After all, the killer had clearly gained access to the garage without breaking in,
and the young detective couldn't stop thinking about the very strange statements and behavior
of Anna's son, which the local police had briefed him about. Shudy really wanted to interview Igor as soon as possible.
Later that afternoon, Detective Shudy sat down across from Igor inside of an interview
room at the Frisco police station.
Igor looked remarkably calm, and when he spoke, his voice was flat and emotionless.
The detective asked Igor to please talk about his relationship with his mother.
Igor said that he and his mother had always been very close.
They both loved music, and when Igor joined a Christian rock band as a teenager, his mom
supported him and came to almost all of his shows.
Even now that Igor was living on his own at college, he still went home to visit her every
weekend.
Ana kind of babied him by doing his laundry and cooking for him, but Igor kind of liked
it. But he said
seeing Anna divorce his dad had been really difficult. Bob actually was not Igor's biological
father, he had adopted him, and so for Igor, you know, he looked at Bob as his father, that was his
dad. And when Igor said that, Shudy stopped him because he hadn't realized Bob was not his
biological father. But Igor explained that his mother had actually been married twice, once briefly to a man in Russia and then to Bob in
the United States. The Russian man was Igor's biological father, but Bob had legally adopted
Igor when he was just four years old. And as Igor talked about his dad, Bob, he became emotional.
Igor said he, personally, Igor, had been diagnosed with a rare form of bone cancer when he was
just eight years old, and his dad had always been there to support him.
Igor's cancer eventually went into remission, but the experience showed Igor that Bob genuinely
loved him like he was his own son.
Detective Schutte couldn't help but feel moved by Igor's story, but he wanted to stay
focused on the horrible crime he was still investigating.
So he asked Igor if there was anyone who would want to hurt his mother.
Igor thought for a moment and then said no.
But he added, whoever killed his mother should be forgiven.
Igor said he was a devout Christian and he believed all people, even killers, should
be treated with mercy.
Shudy was shocked.
Igor did not seem to care at all that his mother was horribly murdered, but the detective
just stared at the college student trying to remain professional and followed up by
asking Igor where he'd been the previous evening.
Igor said he had been in class from around 5.30 pm to 9.45 pm and he had classmates who
could vouch for him.
Schuette did not have any evidence that would allow him to hold Igor any longer, though
he still felt very suspicious of him.
But despite Schuette's inexperience as a detective, he still knew the worst thing an
investigator could do right now was get tunnel vision about one suspect.
For now, he knew he needed to explore every possibility, and he knew exactly who he wanted
to talk to next, on his ex-husband and Igor's dad, Bop.
After Schutte told Igor he was free to go, the detective went to his office,
and he saw Ranger Manken had left him a note about the progress in his investigation,
and that the medical examiner had sent a copy of Ana's autopsy report over.
Manken's note explained that he'd been able to reconstruct Ana's last day by obtaining
security camera footage from UT Dallas, local toll roads, a Taco Bell, and also an elementary
school near Ana's house.
After reviewing this footage, Manken estimated that Ana got home from work between 5.50 and
5.55 p.m. on January 13th, and based on the crime scene, he felt certain she was killed
almost immediately when she went inside.
Next, Schuette looked over the autopsy report that was sent over, which largely supported
Manken's theory about when Anna was killed.
The medical examiner said Anna had been shot at close range six times.
All of the bullets came from the same.22 caliber gun, and the wounds were grouped tightly
together, which made the medical examiner think her killer had some level of experience using firearms.
But there was one odd detail that really stood out to the medical examiner.
The detectives had told him before he did the autopsy that Ana had bought a quesadilla
at around 5.30pm, which would be less than half an hour before she was killed, and considering
they found the empty wrapper for this quesadilla next to her dead body,
it suggested she had eaten it. However, when the medical examiner examined Ana's stomach contents,
it looked like she hadn't eaten for many hours prior to her death. And if Ana didn't eat that
quesadilla, well, according to the medical examiner, it seemed highly plausible that her killer did.
Schuette was so disturbed by the idea of somebody who could shoot someone in cold blood six
times, kill them right in their house, and then pick up their Taco Bell and eat it over
their body.
It just seemed so unbelievably psychotic.
And so Shudy called Ranger Manken and said he knew it was late, but they did not have
time to waste.
They really needed to dig in right now.
So, shortly before midnight on Wednesday, January 14th, Schuette and Mencken knocked on the door of a medium-sized home in Frisco.
This is where Bob had been living since his and Anna's divorce.
He was renting a room and sharing the home with three other men.
Bob answered the door. He was wearing pajamas and looked confused to see the police.
He asked if everything was okay, and Detective Schuette just said no. They needed to speak with
him about his ex-wife, but it would be better if they talked at the police station. But Bob didn't
move right away. Instead, he stayed in his doorway and just kept asking, you know, like, really,
what's happening here? Can you tell me anything else? And finally, Detective Schuette said,
I'm sorry, but unfortunately, your ex-wife is dead. As soon as he said it, Bob's face just fell, and he agreed to go with them
to the station.
Bob's interview began at 1am, so it was now Thursday, January 15th. And it wasn't
until Schuette, Manken, and Bob were actually sitting in the interview room that they told
Bob Anna was not just dead, she had been murdered.
Bob looked horrified, and his first question was, is Igor okay?
The police assured Bob that Igor was fine, then Ranger Mankin asked Bob where he'd
been on the evening of January 13th, the night that Anna was killed.
Bob said he'd been home watching TV till about 7pm, and then he went out for dinner,
and he said his three housemates could easily confirm his story.
Bob admitted he owned five guns, three of which were.22 caliber, and he agreed to hand
them all over to police for ballistics analysis.
And when detectives asked him for a DNA sample, he gave them a swab without any hesitation.
Ranger Manken thanked Bob for his cooperation and told him he was free to go.
After Bob was gone, both Manken and Schutte agreed that Bob did seem honest and seemed
genuinely distressed at his ex-wife's death, but they still needed to follow up on his alibi.
However, it was super late, nearly 2am, and so Schutte and Mankin decided to call it a day.
But just then, Schutte's phone rang. A Frisco Police Department patrol officer told him that they had just found Anna's
stolen car in a residential neighborhood a few blocks away from her house, and the patrol
officer was pretty sure they could see blood inside.
Schuette's heart started to race.
He told the patrol officer to make sure nobody touched that car.
In the meantime, he would arrange for a tow truck to bring the vehicle to the crime lab
for analysis.
After a few hours of sleep, Schuette arrived at the Frisco Police Department Crime Lab early on Thursday morning. Ana's blue Hyundai sedan was there, and a technician was waiting to
brief the detective on what they'd found. The technician said the vehicle was remarkably
clean inside, except for a few things. There was an empty Red Bull energy can, there was a cigarette
butt, and there were two small blood stains, one on the right side of the driver's seat and one on
the center console. Schutte was really excited at this news, and so he had the can, cigarette, and swabs
of the blood sent off for DNA testing, along with the swab that Bob had given them during
his interview.
But Schuette knew it could take weeks to get these results back, so for now, he still had
to continue with old-fashioned detective work.
The most obvious person to interview next was on his boyfriend Michael.
He agreed to come in for an interview, then soon, Schuette was sitting across from the
business professor at the police station.
Michael leaned forward and ran his hands through his short brown hair.
He looked anxious, and before Schuette even began the interview, Michael asked if he should
have a lawyer.
The detective promised him this was all totally routine.
Michael picked at his fingernails as he told Schuette that he and Ana had not been dating
for very long, but their relationship had been moving in a good direction.
He said a few days ago on January 13th he'd gone to Anna's house to pick her up just
after 7.30 and he'd been confused by her absence.
And now he was horrified to know Anna had been lying dead in her garage the entire time
he was there.
Once Michael began talking, he started to open up a bit more,
but as soon as Schuette asked him for a DNA sample, he clammed up. Then he asked again
about maybe getting a lawyer. The detective said that really wasn't necessary, but he
would give Michael some time alone to decide whether he wanted to cooperate. Schuette left,
but what Michael didn't know was that the detective could still see and hear Michael
through a camera in the corner of the room.
So, Schuette watched as Michael began mumbling to himself.
The detective could not make out all the words, but at one point Michael asked himself,
am I overreacting?
A few minutes later, the detectives went back in and asked Michael if he had made a decision.
Michael said yes. He said he would give a sample of his DNA.
Schuette smiled, and then he got the swab from Michael and told him he was free to go.
Then Schuette sent this newest DNA sample to be tested against the other items from
Anna's car.
While they waited for the DNA results, Detective Schuette and Ranger Manken interviewed some
of Anna's friends and coworkers.
And quickly, the investigators soon learned that Bob and Michael were not the only men in Anna's life.
Anna's friends pointed detectives towards a man named Jerry Caspel, a poet who they
said had a deep spiritual bond with Anna.
Her coworkers also mentioned a vice provost at UT Dallas named Dr. John Warkowski, who
seemed to be Anna's mentor.
Detective Schuttey contacted Jerry first, and when he arrived for his interview, he was
totally overwrought and on the brink of tears.
He told the detective that Anna was his muse, and without her, he didn't know if he'd
ever be able to write poetry again.
Schutte narrowed his eyes at Jerry's very melodramatic display, but he let him keep
talking.
Jerry explained that he met Anna at a public speaking course a few years back and they'd bonded over their love of art. They often went to the
opera together and Anna would read and edit Jerry's poems, he'd published two books
of poetry and dedicated them both to her.
Schutte thought this connection sounded very intense, so he asked Jerry what Anna's boyfriend
thought about them being so close, and Jerry looked surprised. He said he didn't even
know Anna had a boyfriend.
But regardless, he insisted their relationship was not romantic, it was purely spiritual.
The detective found the whole tale pretty hard to believe.
He asked Jerry if he owned any firearms, and Jerry said yes, he had a.22 caliber handgun.
But he quickly agreed to let the police analyze it, and he also gave them a DNA sample.
Next, Schutte asked where Jerry was around 6pm on January 13th.
Jerry said he was driving home from work on a Dallas toll road that was very far away
from Anna's home, and the toll records would certainly reflect that.
Schuette thanked Jerry, and as soon as the poet left, Schuette just shook his head.
It did not seem like Jerry was a viable suspect.
So he called the next man on his list.
A few days later, Detective Schutte began to interview Dr. John Warkowski.
The university administrator explained that he met Anna through work and they grew very
close during her divorce.
Then Dr. Warkowski said something surprising.
He told the detective that he and Anna once had an affair.
Schutte stared at the man, who was 70 years old, making him 27 years older than Anna.
Dr. Wachowski said he knew that he and Anna seemed like an unlikely pair, but it really
was true.
He said Anna wanted to have a relationship with him, and he had had to cut it off because
of their age difference, it just seemed totally inappropriate.
But they still remained close friends, and so Dr. Warkowski knew very intimate details about
her life, like how she struggled emotionally and financially after her divorce.
Dr. Warkowski said he considered it his privilege to help Anna with money.
In fact, in the two years since her divorce, he'd wired her a total of $46,000.
Dr. Warkowski insisted this money was given as a gift with no strings attached, but Schuette
was not convinced.
He wondered if maybe during one of their intimate conversations, Anna had learned something
about the administrator that he wanted to keep hidden.
What if those gifts were actually hush money payments?
Or maybe he was paying Anna for sex and she was threatening to expose him?
Thinking about the items found in Anna's car, Schudy asked Dr. Wachowski if he drank
energy drinks or smoked cigarettes. Dr. Wachowski said he didn't like energy drinks, but he
definitely smoked. And when the detective asked for his whereabouts on the evening of January 13th,
the administrator said the same thing Jerry did. He was driving home from work on a toll road that
was far away from Ana's home, and certainly the records would reflect that. Schuette made a note of this, but unlike Jerry, he didn't think this let Dr. Wachowski off
the hook, so Schuette asked the administrator if he'd be willing to give a voluntary DNA
sample.
Dr. Wachowski said he was happy to do anything that would help the police solve this case,
so he let the detective swab the inside of his cheek before he left the police station.
At this point, Detective Schutte felt like he had five strong suspects, Anna's son
Igor, her ex-husband Bob, and her boyfriend Michael, plus the poet Jerry, and the university
administrator Dr. John Warkowski.
They all claimed to have alibis, however, none of them had been corroborated yet.
Detective Schutte briefed Manken on everything he'd discovered about these suspects suspects and Mancon agreed that they couldn't rule any of them out quite yet. Shortly after that,
the detectives got disappointing news from the ballistics analysis on Bob and Jerry's guns.
None of the guns matched the one that killed Anna, so they still didn't have the murder weapon.
Schuette sighed. Until he got the DNA results and Manken finished investigating their suspect's
alibis, he had no other leads to pursue.
But Detective Shudy didn't want to just sit around waiting for other investigators to
do their work, so he started wondering if maybe he should go back to Ana's house and
have another look around. Police had done an initial search, but there was always a
chance something got missed. So Shudy obtained a search warrant, and in late January,
about two weeks after Ana's murder, he returned to her home.
When he got there, he saw there were two cars parked outside.
So, he went up to the door and knocked,
and was surprised when Ana's ex-husband, Bob, answered the door.
Igor was standing just a few feet behind him.
It turned out the father and son had moved into Ana's home a couple weeks ago, one day
after her body was found in the garage.
This struck the detective as a very strange thing to do, but Bob quickly explained that
he and his son were grieving together, and because Igor lived in a college dorm and Bob
lived in a house with three other men, Ana's home was the only private place they could
go to.
Shudy said that did make sense, however, home was the only private place they could go to.
Schutte said that did make sense, however, even though they wanted private time, he held
up a search warrant and said he needed to come inside.
So Bob immediately opened the door wide and said come on in.
The first thing Schutte did is he went into Anna's home office.
There he dug through her desk drawers until he found something that stopped him in his
tracks.
It was a copy of Anna's life insurance policy.
Anna had taken out a policy worth $750,000 U.S. dollars, and she had named one person
as the sole beneficiary, her son, Igor.
Suddenly it looked like Igor, whose behavior had struck investigators as very odd from
the onset, stood to gain a lot from his mother's
death.
Then, Schuette managed to jimmy open a locked drawer in her desk and he found something
even more interesting.
It was a handwritten letter, mostly in Russian.
He couldn't understand what it said because he didn't speak Russian, but he figured it
must contain something very private since Anna had kept it in a locked drawer.
Schuette quietly slid the letter into an envelope and then left the desk and finished searching
the rest of the house.
He didn't find anything else in the house of note and so after he left and got back
to the police station, he sent a copy of that letter to the FBI so an agent who spoke Russian
could translate it for him.
In early February, Detective Schutte received a translation of that letter from Anna's
desk, and suddenly Anna's murder started to make a lot more sense.
Anna had written this letter herself about one of the police's suspects, and it cast
her connection to this man into a totally new light.
Next, Ranger Manken reported back that he had checked out all five men's alibis and
he'd been able to verify all of their stories except for one of them.
The person whose alibi could not be confirmed was also the same person Ana had written about
in her letter.
And finally, Schuette got the results of the DNA analysis.
DNA from the Red Bull can and cigarette butt in Ana's car did not match any of the suspects,
and it didn't match anybody in their criminal database, but those blood stains found in Ana's car did match a suspect, the same one who did
not have an alibi and who Ana wrote about.
And so, based on this evidence, along with further investigation into this primary suspect,
here is a reconstruction of what police believe happened to Ana Moses
when she returned home from work on January 13, 2015.
Late that afternoon, Ana's killer crouched in a corner of her garage,
clutching a.22 caliber rifle.
He'd been able to slip inside a few minutes earlier because he knew the code to open the
garage.
Now, he was waiting for Anna to get home.
Just past 5.50 pm, the killer heard the sound of the automatic garage door sliding open.
Light began to fill the dark garage, and so as it did, he pressed his body back against
the wall, trying to be as small and out of sight as possible.
He watched as Ana pulled her car inside, the garage door shut, and the killer heard Ana's
car door open and then close, then he listened to her footsteps as she walked towards the
door to her house.
But before she could open it, the killer stood, raised his gun, and fired three shots into
her back.
Ana spun around in shock. She dropped her mail,
purse, and the quesadilla she'd been carrying but not eating. Before she could say anything,
the killer fired three more shots. Two hit Ana in the chest, and the other hit her in the neck.
Ana crumpled to the ground with blood flowing out of her mouth.
Ana's killer slowly lowered his rifle and walked towards her. He watched her chest for
any sign of movement, but it wasn't moving, she was not breathing. So he picked up her
car keys off the floor and was about to get into her car when he saw the uneaten chicken
quesadilla on the floor. So he picked it up, ate it right next to her body, and left the
wrapper behind.
The killer then got into Ana's car, opened up the garage door again, backed out, and
shut the door as he drove away.
But he didn't realize that he had a cut on his right hand and it was leaking blood onto
Ana's car seat and center console.
The following evening, the killer abandoned the blue Hyundai in a neighborhood a few blocks
away from Ana's home and as law enforcement investigated Ana's murder, her killer did
his best to appear very cooperative.
He agreed to be interviewed, and he agreed to give a swab of his DNA.
But at the same time the killer was kind of putting on this act, in the background, he
was doing everything he could to profit off of Ana's death.
And that's what police understood as soon as they read the translation of that Russian
letter.
It was a note that Anna had written to her lawyer in 2013 during her divorce from Bob,
and she told her lawyer that Bob was now threatening to kill himself and frame Anna as his murderer
just so her son Igor would hate her.
When Detective Schutte read this, he realized Anna and Bob's divorce was not nearly as
amicable as people thought.
In fact, the couple had a long history of problems.
In 2008, Anna visited a counselor after learning Bob had an affair.
She wanted to leave him, but said she felt indebted to him because of how much he'd
helped her during Igor's cancer battle.
And years later, Anna had called one of her close friends crying, saying she had locked
herself in a closet because she was afraid Bob was going to kill her.
Ana hid these ugly realities about Bob from her son because she knew her son loved Bob.
Bob was the only father figure Igor had ever known, and Ana didn't want to damage that
relationship, even if it meant she had to act friendly towards a man she feared.
But Bob was angry that Ana divorced him, and he was filled with jealousy over Ana's relationship
with Michael.
Adding to Bob's bitterness, Ana got total ownership of the large two-story house they
used to share.
Bob claimed that at the time Ana was killed, he was at home watching TV, but his housemates
told police they did not remember him being home at that time.
And while none of Bob's guns matched the murder weapon, he was a military veteran with
experience using guns.
And so police believe Bob must have taken apart the murder weapon and hid or destroyed
the pieces.
And if police had any doubts that Bob was the killer, well, the DNA evidence totally
erased those doubts.
It was clearly Bob's blood inside of Ana's car, likely from a cut on Bob's right hand
that he had bandaged by the time he met with police.
On February 26, 2015, Detective Schutte and Ranger Mankin arrested Bob at Ana's home.
Bob maintained his innocence and pleaded not guilty at his trial.
Bob's defense argued that there were too many unanswered questions in Onus' murder,
like whose DNA was on the Red Bull can and the cigarette butt found in Onus' car, but
the prosecution argued that Bob may have planted this evidence just to confuse investigators.
In the end, a jury found Bob guilty of murder and a judge sentenced him to life in prison.
Bob would appeal his conviction in 2018, but an appeals court upheld the jury's original
ruling and to this day, Bob remains incarcerated.
Thank you for listening to the Mr. Bollin Podcast.
If you enjoyed today's stories and you're looking for more strange, dark, and mysterious
content, be sure to check out all of our studios' podcasts.
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Nancy's love story could have been ripped right out of the pages of one of her own novels.
She was a romance mystery writer who happens to be married to a chef.
But this story didn't end with a happily ever after.
When I stepped into the kitchen,
I could see that Chef Brophy was on the ground
and I heard somebody say, call 911.
As writers, we'd written our share of murder mysteries.
So when suspicion turned to Dan's wife, Nancy,
we weren't that surprised.
The first person they look at would be the spouse.
We understand that's usually the way they do it.
But we began to wonder,
had Nancy gotten so wrapped up in her own novels.
There are murders in all of the books.
That she was playing them out in real life?
Follow Happily Never After, Dan and Nancy
on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge all episodes of Happily Never After, Dan and Nancy early and ad free right
now by joining Wondery Plus.