MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - Head for the Hills (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: December 16, 2024In January of 2012, a police truck parked on a trail in Griffith Park in Los Angeles, California. A member of the K-9 Unit opened the door, and a police dog named Indiana Bones jumped out. In...dy quickly caught a scent and led his handler to a mound of dirt just off the path. Indy pawed at the dirt and revealed the top of a plastic bag. The dog’s handler reached into the dirt with her gloved hands, pulled out the bag, looked inside, and saw two dismembered human feet and a hand. Indy’s discovery would launch an investigation that would lead two L.A. detectives into the most insane case they’d ever worked – a case that would involve everything from Mexican drug cartels to a Canadian cannibal.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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In January of 2012, a police truck parked on a trail in Griffith Park in Los Angeles,
California.
A member of the K-9 unit opened the door and a police dog named Indiana Bones jumped out.
Indy quickly caught a scent and led his handler to a mound of dirt just off the path.
Indy potted the dirt and suddenly revealed the top of a plastic bag.
The dog's handler reached into the dirt and pulled out the bag and when she looked inside,
she saw two dismembered human feet and a hand.
Indy's discovery would launch an investigation that would lead two LA detectives into the
most insane case they'd ever worked.
A case that would involve everything from Mexican drug cartels to a Canadian cannibal.
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, the next time the follow button goes camping, wait
for them to go to bed for the night, at which point light and then throw a Yawn Shakaduma
Firework onto their tent.
Okay, let's get into today's story. They say Hollywood is where dreams are made, a seductive city where many flock to get rich,
be adored, and capture America's heart.
But when the spotlight turns off,
fame, fortune and lives can disappear in an instant.
Follow Hollywood and Crime, the Cotton Club Murder
on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
On Christmas day, 2011, 67-old Hervey Medeine turned off the oven in his apartment in Hollywood, California, opened up the oven door, and pulled out a casserole dish covered
with foil.
Hervey looked up at the clock and smiled, because his friend, who was coming over for
a holiday visit, would be there any minute, and the food he was making had finished cooking
at exactly the right time. He turned down the radio playing Christmas music in the kitchen
and called out to his roommate, Gabriel Martinez, and told him lunch was almost ready.
Gabriel had his eyes glued to his laptop, totally engrossed in whatever it was he was doing,
and so he just gave Hervey a sort of grunt of acknowledgement.
Hervey responded with an irritated sigh. Gabriel, who was 30 years younger gave Hervey a sort of grunt of acknowledgement. Hervey responded with an irritated sigh.
Gabriel, who was 30 years younger than Hervey, had been spending so much time online lately
that he barely connected with the world around him.
Hervey realized it was very likely a generational thing, but he didn't understand why anyone
would want to spend so much time just staring at a computer screen.
But Hervey refused to be bothered by Gabriel today.
It was Christmas, and Christmas was a time for joy, friends, and good food.
Hervey sat down the hot casserole dish on the table in the small dining area, and he looked
around with satisfaction at all the Christmas decorations he had spent hours hanging up.
Hervey's entire one-bedroom apartment now looked like it had been decorated by a professional interior designer. But perhaps the most impressive part of the decorations was not actually the
Christmas stuff. It was the paintings that were hanging on the walls. These were not paintings
that would be found in most small one-bedroom apartments. These were original works by famous
artists. Just then the doorbell rang, interrupting Hervey's thoughts, and Hervey removed his oven mitts and went to open the door. And
when he did, he saw his friend Amelia standing there, holding several wrapped presents.
Hervey grinned and said Merry Christmas and gave Amelia a big hug. Then he let her inside
and told her to put the presents down, because before they got to presents and to food, he
had to show her something. Amelia put down the presents down because before they got to presents and to food, he had to show her something.
Amelia put down the presents, said hello to Gabriel, and then Hervey took her hand and led her across the front room. Then Hervey pointed to a painting hanging on the wall,
and he could hear Amelia gasp. She turned to Hervey almost in disbelief and asked if it was
an original. Hervey smiled and nodded. He said the last time he'd gone down to Mexico, where he was
originally from, he had acquired this painting, which was an original work of art by Diego Rivera,
one of the most famous Mexican painters to have ever lived.
After staring at this painting with his friend for several minutes, Hervey said it was time to
go eat. He told Gabriel to put his computer away for a while and join them, and then the three of
them headed to the table and dug into the casserole Hervey had prepared.
While they ate, Hervey told Amelia more about his latest trip to Mexico and also about the
travel plans he was making to destinations all over the world.
Hervey said sometimes he still couldn't believe this was actually his real life.
He'd worked so hard from the moment he came to the United States as a young man with the
hope that one day he'd be able to do whatever he wanted.
And now he felt like he'd accomplished that.
He was retired and filling his days with adventure and art.
Hervey, Amelia, and Gabriel spent the day eating, talking, laughing, and exchanging
gifts.
For Hervey, who had spent most of his life far away from his family,
this really felt like the perfect holiday. And other than maybe traveling, he couldn't imagine
a better way to spend his time than eating delicious food and catching up with friends.
By late afternoon, Amelia said unfortunately she had to go home, so Hervey walked her to the door.
He gave her another big hug, wished her Merry Christmas again,
and said he couldn't wait to get together with her in the new year.
More than three weeks later, on the morning of Tuesday, January 17th,
a dog walker named Lauren Kornberg left her house with her mother and nine dogs.
They headed toward their usual hiking path, which cut through an area called Bronson Canyon.
Bronson Canyon is located inside of Griffith Park, which is basically LA's equivalent
to New York's Central Park, but it sits high above the city.
It was the perfect winter morning in Los Angeles, which meant it was a crisp 50 degrees and
the Hollywood hills were bathed in soft orange sunlight.
So Lauren and her mom took the dogs up a side path that branched out from the main hiking trail and once they were far enough away from other hikers they let the dogs off leash.
And as soon as that happened the dogs instantly began playfully running around together
but one of them, a golden retriever, broke away from the pack and wandered over toward a bushy
area next to a shallow ravine off the side of the path. And this golden retriever, broke away from the pack and wandered over toward a bushy area next to a shallow
ravine off the side of the path. And this golden retriever began digging in this one area of the
brush. Lauren watched as the retriever pulled out a plastic bag from the brush and then began sniffing
it. And as the dog began to sort of vigorously paw at this bag, a large round object suddenly
rolled out of it and began tumbling down into
the ravine.
Two other dogs from the group, a husky and a small terrier, ran down the ravine after
this big round object.
And Lauren's mom asked what had just rolled out of the bag.
Lauren said she didn't know, but it sort of looked like a movie prop.
Which wouldn't actually be an unusual thing to find lying around, because there were Hollywood
special effects and prop houses not too far from here, and many movies and
TV shows were filmed in this area.
Lauren's mom walked over toward the ravine to try to get a better look at this movie
prop, but as she got close to the edge, she looked down and saw that the dogs were no
longer playing.
In fact, the terrier was backing away from this object with its hair up like the dog
was terrified.
And so Lauren, she kind of leaned forward and looked as best as she could to see what
this object was.
And suddenly when one of the dogs stepped out of the way, she had a clear line of sight
onto this object.
And when she saw what it was, she began backing away too.
Because the object was no prop. It was a real severed human head.
About an hour later, helicopters loudly hovered over the canyon and police blocked access to the entire area,
as more than a dozen LAPD cruisers, CSI
units, and news vans parked along the nearby scenic overlook.
Detective Chuck Knowles and his partner, Detective Lisa Sanchez, walked up the trail and met
with the uniformed officers who had cordoned off the area with police tape.
By this point, crime scene investigators had retrieved the severed head from the ravine
and brought it onto the trail.
When Detective Sanchez walked over to them and saw the severed head, her stomach churned.
She had investigated her fair share of murder cases, but this was the first time she dealt
with any kind of dismemberment.
As Sanchez began to study the head, one of the uniformed officers walked up to her and
told her that the two women who actually found the head at first thought it was fake. They thought it was a movie prop. Detective Sanchez could understand why.
Because there was very little decomposition and the head was so fresh and pristine that it looked
like it had just been removed. From the looks of it, Sanchez believed the head belonged to a man
who could be in his 60s, but that was about all she could guess about the victim at this point.
So police began fanning out and searching the area, hoping to find some more clues.
More helicopters and search units began to pour into the area, and the search expanded to a 7-acre radius. Searchers began entering backyards of the homes in the area, and some of these homes were
really expensive houses that belonged to famous movie stars.
So the police knew this case was going to draw even more media attention.
Around 4.30 p.m., the sun began to set.
And despite an exhaustive search of the area, no further human remains turned up.
So the searchers left their equipment, kept the area cordoned off, and went home for the
night.
That evening, reports of the dismembered body found in Griffith Park were all over local
news stations.
And although violent crime in LA was far from rare, violent crime in this particular neighborhood
in Bronson Canyon was almost unheard of.
The people who lived in the neighborhood who were willing to talk on camera were shocked
that something like this could happen just beyond their backyards
People who had been hiking and walking their dogs in Bronson Canyon for years told reporters
They were now afraid to step foot on the hiking paths until the killer or killers were apprehended
The following day LAPD returned to Bronson Canyon and performed a highly organized grid
search, scouring the area where the head had turned up.
The police were already feeling pressure from the media, city leaders, and local residents
to find the people or person who had committed this horrific crime.
But Detectives Knowles and Sanchez knew there was still so much physical area to cover and
search, and
they still had no idea who the victim even was.
So this just didn't seem like a case they could just wrap up in a couple of days.
And by late morning, the searchers had still found nothing new when a police truck pulled
up and a dog handler stepped out with her cadaver dog.
A German shepherd named Indiana Bones, who was famous for being the first four-legged
detective on L.A. County Coroner's team.
After getting out of the car, Indy's handler began leading the dog up a nearby hill. And
almost immediately as they began to walk, Indy pulled the handler in the direction of
this nearby dirt mound. The handler walked over to the mound and, with a gloved hand,
began pushing the dirt
aside, revealing what looked like a shallow grave.
And in this shallow grave was a plastic bag.
The handler reached her hands down and carefully cupped them beneath the bag and gently pulled
it out of the ground.
Then she took a pair of scissors out of her pocket, cut the bag open, and looked inside. And inside she saw a pair of human feet and a hand.
The next morning, Detective Knowles and Sanchez sat at their computers
sifting through recent missing person reports. The victim's torso, or any more of his body,
still had not been found. But the detectives hoped that the feet and hand that were found
also belonged to their victim and that with these new body parts they might be able to
connect their victim to somebody who went missing in the area.
Just then the sound of a fax machine broke their focus.
Knowles stood up, tore the paper off the machine, and saw that the medical examiner had completed
his examination on the severed hand, feet and head.
Knowles scanned the whole report and then read aloud the important parts to Sanchez.
The medical examiner had confirmed that all those body parts belonged to the same victim.
Also they said that after the victim was dead, his killer carefully cut apart the man's body,
right at the joints in a very precise manner, so whoever cut the body up seemed to really know what they were doing.
But what was even more intriguing was that the body parts had been refrigerated before they were
dumped, which explained why the head had looked so fresh when it was found. But this made it
difficult for the medical examiner to pin down exactly when the victim was killed. However, because the parts were
so fresh, the examiner was able to lift very clear fingerprints from the man's fingers.
And when he ran those prints through a system, he got a hit. The dismembered man was Hervey Medein.
Noles sat down at his computer and ran Hervey's name through every database he had access to.
And he quickly learned that Hervey had been reported missing just a day before his head
was found.
The missing persons report had been filed by a man named Gabriel Martinez who said he
was Hervey's roommate.
So Detective Noles and Sanchez got into their car and began driving towards Herbie's
apartment, which happened to be just two blocks away from the Hollywood police station.
While they were in the car, Knowles and Sanchez discussed their game plan for when they talked
to this roommate.
And their plan was simple, reveal nothing.
Although news of the grisly discovery was already all over town, that victim's identity
had not yet been released by the media.
Only the police knew that information.
And so they wanted to feel out what Herbie's roommate knew and didn't know.
He was not a suspect yet, but he was definitely a person of interest.
The detectives parked at the curb and walked up to Herbie's building.
It was this elegantly plain, narrow building constructed in the 1920s that felt totally
vintage and old Hollywood.
The detectives walked up the stairs to the third floor, to apartment 319, and rang the
doorbell.
A few seconds later, the door opened and a dark-haired man in his 30s greeted the detectives.
They introduced themselves and asked if he was Gabriel Martinez.
Gabriel said yes and then asked immediately if they had news about Hervey.
Had they found him? Was he okay?
The detectives exchanged a quick glance and then Sanchez said they were still investigating
Hervey's disappearance and for now they just needed to speak to Gabriel to try to help with
that case.
Gabriel suddenly went from being sort of hopeful to looking pretty concerned, but then told
them he was glad to tell them anything they wanted, and he asked them to come inside.
Once inside, they all sat down at the table in the small dining area.
Detective Knowles asked Gabriel when he'd last seen Hervey, and Gabriel said not since
shortly after Christmas, on December 27th.
That's when Hervey had gone to Mexico.
It was where he grew up and where he still had friends and family.
Gabriel said that Hervey traveled internationally a lot, and sometimes he would go on these
open-ended trips, so Gabriel was not always exactly sure when Hervey was going to come
home again.
But Hervey had been calling pretty regularly just to check in,
and then suddenly the call stopped. So Gabriel started to get really worried,
and then eventually filed the missing person report. Detective Sanchez asked Gabriel if he
had called or texted Hervey after Hervey stopped calling, just to see if maybe he was staying in
Mexico longer. Gabriel said he hadn't, but he explained that Hervey had actually left his
cell phone behind at the apartment because he didn't get but he explained that Hervey had actually left his cell phone
behind at the apartment because he didn't get service in Mexico.
Now Gabriel knew there were ways around that, but he said discussing technology with Hervey
was usually a losing cause.
Hervey just preferred to use a landline and an international calling card whenever he
was in Mexico.
Sanchez asked if there was a record of these calls from Herbie, and Gabriel said
yes and he grabbed his phone and showed the detectives the calls he'd received from Herbie
in January. The detectives saw that these calls were from an international calling card
number which meant they didn't actually know who placed those calls, but it did corroborate
what Gabriel had told them. The detectives would talk to Gabriel for a bit longer, but
the whole time they stuck
to their original plan.
They didn't reveal anything about Hervey's murder.
Back at the station, Detective Knowles and Sanchez went over what they had so far, and
they agreed it was not very much.
And what little they did have didn't quite add up.
And it really had to do with this trip to Mexico they had just learned about.
Did Hervey really go to Mexico and then get murdered and dismembered there and then what
his body parts were shipped back to LA and dumped in LA?
Or did Hervey come back from Mexico in one piece and then somehow get intercepted before
he got home by somebody who then murdered, dismembered and dumped him?
Both these theories just seemed like they were missing something.
Like did Hervey really even go to Mexico?
They didn't know.
I mean, regardless of what Hervey's roommate Gabriel had told them, the detectives thought
it actually made a whole lot more sense that somebody would have killed and dismembered
Hervey right there in his own apartment and disposed of him in nearby Griffith Park.
Which certainly made Gabriel seem very suspicious.
The following day, which is now three days after Herbie's head had been found, the detectives
returned to Herbie's apartment, and this time they showed up with a search warrant, a team
of police, and cadaver dogs.
Once inside, they let the dogs loose, and the dogs began frantically sniffing around
the floorboards, the furniture, and the corners of every room.
Meanwhile, Gabriel sat at the table and watched in silence as the investigators practically
tore up the tiny one-bedroom apartment.
The search team rifled through drawers and closets, they confiscated computers and phones,
and they photographed every item inside the apartment.
But at the end of the search, they realized they had found absolutely nothing.
There was no blood, no hidden torso, no bone saws or other dismemberment tools, and so
this apartment just didn't appear to be the place where the murder or dismemberment or
both took place.
As the search team began to leave the apartment, Detectives Knowles and Sanchez sat down at
the table with Gabriel.
And Gabriel didn't look angry or raise his voice, but he wanted to know what had changed
since they spoke a day earlier that made the detectives feel like they could come into
his and Hervey's home and tear it apart like this.
Sanchez whispered something to Knowles, and then she finally broke the news to Gabriel.
Those body parts that were found in the canyon that were all over the news belonged to Hervey.
Hervey was deceased, and so now Hervey's death was being investigated as a homicide.
Immediately all the color drained from Gabriel's face.
He said he couldn't believe it.
This didn't seem real.
Now the detectives understood how upsetting this was for Gabriel,
but they needed more information. So they pressed Gabriel for more details about Herbie's trip to
Mexico. And so, for the next half hour, Gabriel, despite being in shock, was cooperative and
answered every question and tried to give detectives any information at all that could be useful.
information at all that could be useful.
They say Hollywood is where dreams are made, a seductive city where many flock to get rich, be adored and capture America's heart.
But when the spotlight turns off, fame, fortune and lives can disappear in an instant.
When TV producer Roy Raden was found dead in a canyon near LA in 1983, there were many
questions surrounding his death.
The last person seen with him was Laney Jacobs, a seductive cocaine dealer who desperately
wanted to be part of the Hollywood elite.
Together, they were trying to break into the movie industry.
But things took a dark turn when a million dollars
worth of cocaine and cash went missing.
From Wondery comes a new season
of the hit show Hollywood and Crime,
The Cotton Club Murder.
Follow Hollywood and Crime, The Cotton Club Murder
on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge all episodes of The Cotton Club Murder early and ad free right now by joining Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can binge all episodes of The Cotton Club
Murder early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus.
If you're listening to this podcast, then chances are good you are a fan of The Strange,
Dark and Mysterious. And if that's the case, then I've got some good news. We just launched
a brand new Strange, Dark and Mysterious podcast called Mr. Bolland's Medical Mysteries. And
as the name suggests, it's a show about medical mysteries, a genre that many fans
have been asking us to dive into for years, and we finally decided to take the plunge
and the show is awesome.
In this free weekly show, we explore bizarre, unheard of diseases, strange medical mishaps,
unexplainable deaths and everything in between.
Each story is totally true and totally
terrifying. Go follow Mr. Bolland's Medical Mysteries wherever you get your podcasts,
and if you're a Prime member, you can listen early and ad-free on Amazon Music.
Later that day, the two detectives returned to the station and went into an evidence room
where everything collected from Herbie's apartment was laid out on a table.
One of the evidence technicians in the room told the detectives that he happened to look
at the photos taken of the apartment and some of the victim's artwork hung on the walls
was worth a ton of money.
The Diego Rivera painting alone was likely worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Now this struck the detectives as being really odd. According to the information Gabriel
had provided and based on what the detectives had learned from their databases, Hervey was
a retiree living on a small pension in a small one-bedroom apartment. So how was he also
a serious art collector able to acquire paintings that were potentially
worth a small fortune?
The following day, so now four days after Herbie's head was discovered, a call came
through to Knowles' desk.
The man on the other end introduced himself as a retired LAPD narcotics detective, and
this retired detective said
he'd been reading the newspaper that morning and happened to see that the dismembered victim
from Griffith Park had been identified.
And when he saw the name Hervey Medellin, it immediately rang a bell.
He said back in the early 1990s when he was investigating a Mexican drug cartel, Hervey's
name had come up in the investigation.
And in fact, he had interviewed Hervey a couple of times.
Knowles kept listening but right away his mind began to race.
A connection to Mexican cartels and drug trafficking could maybe explain how Hervey had enough
cash to buy those famous paintings.
The retired detective explained that Hervey had worked as a ticket taker for Mexicana
Airlines. The retired detective explained that Hervey had worked as a ticket taker for Mexicana
Airlines.
At that time, that airline was believed to have been used for drug smuggling.
And Hervey had become a kind of personal concierge for the wives and girlfriends of drug cartel
members.
When these women would visit LA, Hervey would book their hotel rooms, arrange shopping trips,
and give them dining recommendations.
Now none of that was illegal,
so the narcotics detective had no reason to pursue Hervey. He ultimately just kind of became a minor
character in a much bigger investigation. But now that this former detective found out that
Hervey had turned up dead and dismembered, he wondered if maybe Hervey's connection to the
drug cartels had gone much deeper than he realized. As Knowles listened, he was having the same type of thoughts.
Was Hervey a drug mule?
Were those paintings a form of payment from the cartels?
Did Hervey fail to repay a debt and did the cartel brutally murder him for it?
After all, some Mexican cartels were known to behead and dismember some of their victims.
Knowles thanked the retired detective for reaching out to him.
He hung up and passed this new information along to his partner Sanchez.
The detectives now realized they could be in over their heads.
Poking the hornet's nest with a Mexican drug cartel is the kind of thing that gets people
killed, even cops.
Over the next week, Knowles and Sanchez started to pursue this new lead, but they quickly
discovered that a potential run-in with a violent Mexican drug cartel was actually not
the biggest issue they were facing.
Instead, the big issue that kept setting them back was just old-fashioned bureaucracy.
Getting Mexican law enforcement agencies to cooperate in any investigation was never really
easy but when the investigation involved the cartels it seemed almost impossible.
Mexican authorities weren't eager to anger the cartels or possibly jeopardize their own
investigations into the drug trade just to assist LA cops on a homicide case.
And when Knowles and Sanchez turned to federal law enforcement agencies in the United States,
they ran into similar problems.
The DEA and the FBI were running multiple investigations involving the cartels, and
they could not put those at risk just because Hervey had been interviewed by a narcotics
cop over 20 years ago.
But the FBI did at least tell Knowles and Sanchez that they would dig into Hervey's financial
records to see if he had a clear connection to the cartels before he was killed.
In the meantime, the feds told the LA detectives to go ahead and stay away from the cartel
stuff and just let them handle that.
They should just focus on leads that were in the United States.
Now Noles and Sanchez understood why the feds reacted that way, but they still felt like
a huge lead, i.e. going after the cartels, had just been yanked out from under them.
On top of that, the FBI had no reason to expedite finding these financial records
because this was not their case, so there was no telling how long it would actually take the feds
to provide them with any information. Feeling frustrated and a bit
lost on what to do next, Knowles and Sanchez turned their focus back to the victim. The
detectives reached out to Hervey's LA friends to learn more about who Hervey was. And the picture
that began to emerge of Hervey was of a warm, friendly guy who had moved to LA from Mexico
as a young man who had worked hard and was now enjoying his retirement and living the American dream that he had always believed in.
Now Knowles and Sanchez didn't think any of this information really helped their case,
and none of it seemed to make Hervey look like a guy who had deep ties to the drug trafficking
world.
The detectives would still need to hear back from the FBI, but if Hervey had been working
with a cartel, he'd managed to keep it pretty secret.
So the detectives just kept pushing forward, talking to everyone they could who knew Hervey.
And finally, just when they felt like they were running out of people to interview, the
detectives did learn something very interesting.
Hervey's roommate, Gabriel, was not just his roommate.
Gabriel was Hervey's boyfriend.
Now Gabriel had not told the detectives this and they couldn't believe that he had kept
this a secret across the two interviews they had done with him.
Having an intimate relationship with the victim immediately put Gabriel at
the top of the suspect list and the fact that he had lied about the relationship made him
look even more suspicious. So, Knowles and Sanchez called Gabriel into the station for
another interview. But when they confronted him, instead of him getting defensive or trying
to deny it, Gabriel readily admitted that he and Hervey were indeed in a relationship. He told the
detectives he was just a very private person and felt uncomfortable sharing those kinds of details.
Sanchez and Knowles did not believe Gabriel and they told him that because he had hid this
information they felt like he could be hiding something else. But Gabriel insisted he wasn't
hiding anything. And then without any further prompting, he opened up about his and Herbie's relationship. Gabriel told them all about how he and Herbie had
met, how at first they were good friends, and then they fell in love and moved in together.
And after several minutes of this, when the detectives were finally able to steer the
conversation back to the weeks leading up to the murder, Gabriel's story about Herbie's
trip to Mexico and the phone calls he got didn't change at all.
By the end of the interview, Knowles and Sanchez really didn't know what to think. Gabriel
had clearly held back information from them about the relationship with Hervey, but when
confronted he told them all about it and then hadn't changed or embellished his story at
all from that point forward.
And also, they had already searched the apartment and there was no evidence that connected Gabriel
to the crime.
Not long after this meeting, things only seemed to get worse for the two detectives.
The FBI came back to them and told them that after doing some digging, they found that
Herbie's financial records did not show
any connection to any drug cartels, or any other known criminals for that matter. Now they still
couldn't completely rule out the cartels involvement in this murder, but for now at least, this lead
felt like a dead end. By mid-April, so three months after Hervey's head had been found, the LAPD finally released
Hervey's remains to his family so they could have a proper funeral.
Knowles and Sanchez couldn't help but feel like they had let Hervey and his family down.
They were no closer to finding the killer or killers than they had been on day one of
the investigation.
And in the weeks following the
funeral, Knowles and Sanchez started to get assigned new cases that required immediate action.
Herbie's murder was slowly becoming a cold case.
Until one day in June, so now five months after Herbie's head had been found, Detective Knowles'
phone rang, and he had one of the most bizarre conversations he'd had in all his time working in homicide.
The caller introduced himself as an investigator with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
For a second, Knowles thought somebody might be prank calling him, because it was not every
day an LA detective gets a call from a Canadian Mountie.
But the Mountie quickly told Knowles that he'd been made aware of the case from back
in January with a severed head and limbs.
And the Mountie said they had actually just had a very similar case up in Quebec.
A video had been uploaded to the internet that showed this naked man tied to a bed and
another individual dressed all in black repeatedly stabbing him with an ice pick.
And then once the man was dead, the killer dismembered the body before sexually abusing the body and cannibalizing some parts of
it. And as if that wasn't brutal enough, the killer then sent other parts of the body to
members of Canadian parliament and several different elementary schools.
Detective Knowles just sat there on the phone in silence. I mean, this was a totally brutal and horrible story, but he couldn't see any real connection
to Herbie's murder, aside from both victims having been dismembered.
But the mounting continued and said they had actually already arrested this internet killer.
And this man, who was a Canadian citizen named Luca Magnata, was obsessed with Hollywood. He had recently
lived in Los Angeles, not far from where Hervey lived, where he acted in porn movies and worked
as a male escort before going back to Canada. But the big thing, the real reason the Mountie
had called Knolls in the first place, was that while Luca was living in Los Angeles,
he kept a blog in which he wrote about his exploits. And one of the things he wrote about
was the dismembered body found in Bronson Canyon, Hervey's body.
After the call with the Mountie, Knowles quickly met with Sanchez, and the detectives decided the
first thing they needed to do was figure out exactly when Luca had been in the United States
to see if maybe he could have actually crossed paths with Hervey in late December or January, the time they believed Hervey was killed. They reached out to the agencies in
the US and Canada that maintained customs data and they were able to find out when Luca actually
crossed the border into the US and when he went back into Canada. Then they dug into Hervey's
customs data to try to nail down the exact time he traveled to Mexico and if and when he came back to the states in order to see if he and Luca had
been in LA at the same time.
But while they were looking into this, they discovered something that totally shocked
them and made them rethink everything about this investigation.
They came to realize that the reason the case had stalled out was because they had been
operating under a false assumption the whole time.
And after making this huge discovery, Knowles and Sanchez believed they had finally cracked
the case.
Based on all the evidence gathered throughout the investigation, the following is a reconstruction
of what police believe happened to Hervey Medein.
At around 3am on December 27, 2011, the killer crept through Hervey's apartment to the
bedroom.
The door was cracked open and the killer looked in and saw Hervey sleeping inside.
The killer threw the door open, rushed the bed, and jumped on top of him.
Hervey immediately woke up and began yelling as the killer tried to cup their hands over
Hervey's mouth to muffle his screams.
Hervey kept fighting back, but the killer wrapped their hands around his throat and
began to squeeze.
Hervey continued to yell so the killer squeezed harder and harder and after about five minutes
of this, Hervey stopped struggling.
His face was blue and his eyes were empty.
He was dead.
The killer remained in Hervey's apartment and a bit later that morning, they opened
up Gabriel's computer and did a search.
They pulled up an article titled, Butchering the Human Carcass for Consumption.
This article provided detailed instructions on how to dismember a human body for the purpose
of cooking and consuming it.
Once the killer felt like they had a clear understanding of what to do, they went back
to Hervey's bedroom and used a saw they had recently purchased
to separate Hervey's head and limbs from his body.
The killer then refrigerated those body parts for three weeks, but for reasons no one fully
understands, the killer never actually consumed any of it.
There was no cannibalism, despite clearly there being some level of interest based on
that search that was done on Gabriel's computer on the night of the murder.
And so three weeks after the murder, the killer walked through Bronson Canyon in the dark
with Hervey's body parts and dug shallow graves at various spots and buried them.
And soon after that, with Hervey now officially out of the picture, the killer was able to
transfer all the money from Hervey's personal bank account into the joint bank account they
had opened after they had moved in together.
Gabriel Martinez murdered his boyfriend Herfriend Hervey In The Apartment They Shared
It turned out that before Christmas of 2011, Gabriel and Hervey's relationship had started
to completely fall apart.
In fact, things had gotten so bad that Hervey told Gabriel he wanted to end things and he
said Gabriel should start looking for another place to live.
Gabriel knew he would not be able to afford a Los Angeles apartment or lead the life he'd grown accustomed to on his own,
because he didn't have a steady income. He had become financially dependent on Hervey,
and so in his desperation he had decided to kill Hervey and steal his money.
On Christmas Day, when Hervey's friend Amelia came over, Gabriel sat on the couch with his laptop,
googling what tools to use to cut up a human body.
Being Hervey's significant other and failing to disclose their relationship to police
had made Gabriel a leading suspect early on, but police had found no clear evidence pointing to
Gabriel or anyone else, so the case had gone cold. But it was the customs data that detectives obtained while following the lead on the Canadian
internet killer Luca Magnata that helped lead them back to Gabriel.
Customs data showed that Luca had been in Canada at the time Hervey went missing, which
ruled Luca out as the killer.
But more importantly, this customs data made it clear that Hervey had never actually traveled
or even booked a flight to Mexico at any time in late December or January.
Gabriel had crafted this intricate lie about Hervey's trip, even providing phone records
showing all the times Hervey had called him from Mexico.
But once investigators knew Gabriel was lying, they dug deeper into his phone records and
discovered the calls had actually come from Hervey's friend, who was calling Gabriel
from Mexico, but they were doing so to find out why they had suddenly stopped hearing
from Hervey.
At this point, the detectives were sure Gabriel was the killer, but the final piece of evidence
they would need to convince the district attorney would not be discovered until 2014, over two
years after the murder.
At that time, a city worker was digging in the ground not too far from where Hervey's
head had been discovered and he found a plastic bag containing pieces of decaying human flesh.
A DNA sample of this flesh matched Hervey's DNA, but it was actually the bag itself that
sealed Hervey's DNA, but it was actually the bag itself that sealed Hervey's case.
Because this was a very specific type of bag, one that was used to protect and transport
expensive paintings.
And it matched those same types of bags that had been found in Hervey and Gabriel's apartment.
Los Angeles detectives tracked Gabriel down in San Antonio, Texas, where he had married
a wealthy woman who was supporting him, and with
the help of local police, they arrested him. Gabriel was eventually found guilty of murder
and sentenced to 25 years to life in prison. A quick note about our stories, they are all
based on true events, but we sometimes use
pseudonyms to protect the people involved and some details are fictionalized for dramatic purposes.
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