MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - Playing with Fire (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: April 1, 2026Both of these stories are about two people who do not feel safe in their homes. And authorities can't help either of them until the situation spirals out of control. You can WATCH all new & exclusi...ve MrBallen podcast episodes on my YouTube channel, just called "MrBallen" - https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallen If 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 @mrballen Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
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In today's episode, I'm going to tell you two stories.
In the first story, it's ultimately about this person who is so set on making a change in their lives
that they take drastic measures to affect that change with some very unfortunate consequences.
The second story is about this town in California where there was this perceived threat,
and it was sort of normalized and people were not that worried about it until it totally spiraled out of control.
But before we get into today's stories, if you're a fan of the Strange, dark, and Mysterious,
delivered in story format, then you've come to the right place because that's all we do,
and we upload two, three, even four times every week.
So, if that's of interest to you, please sneak into the Follow Button's house and right on their bathroom mirror,
I'm watching you in red lipstick.
Okay, let's get into our first story, which is called The Tip-Off.
Early in the morning on February 5, 1990, 57-year-old,
Laverne Pavlinoch stood in the kitchen of her Wilsonville, Oregon apartment, making some coffee.
Mornings were the best part of LeBern's day, because she had the whole apartment to herself.
Now, she lived with her boyfriend, John Sosnovsky, but he worked at a nearby mill
and had to be out early in order to catch the bus there. And each time he left, Laverne felt
like a huge weight lifted off of her. Because when John wasn't home, Leverne could go about her day
and pretend she was safe. But that's all it was. It was pretend.
John, in reality, was an incredibly violent man.
I mean, he was seriously physically abusive,
especially when he was drunk, which was basically all the time.
So Laverne had actually been married,
but her husband had died of cancer,
and she had ultimately met John following her husband's death.
And so when they met,
Laverne was very vulnerable and lonely,
and she really hadn't realized the kind of person John was
until it was too late.
It had been 10 years now,
and Laverne still had not built up the courage to leave him.
I mean, the reality was,
is she was just scared of how he would react,
and so she sort of felt trapped.
Now, she sat down at her kitchen table with her coffee,
and she opened up the local paper.
And as soon as she did,
the first thing she saw was a big black and white photo
of a smiling young woman who likely was in her 20s.
The photo was connected to an article
about a recent murder that happened 30 miles away,
just northeast of Portland.
The victim had been identified as a woman named Tanya.
And Tanya Bennett, was the girl in the photo.
The article said she had been beaten and then also strangled with a robe, and then she had been
left on the side of the highway.
And when Laverne read about the area she actually had been, you know, dumped, she realized
it actually was only about a mile and a half down from this famous scenic overlook that Laverne
had actually been to before.
Like she was familiar with this area.
And so Laverne, she's reading the article and she's looking at this picture back and forth and it
was like something was sort of forming in her mind. She just had like this weird sense that she
knew something about this case. And then as she stared at this photo for a little bit longer,
it's like it all came together. And she realized almost certainly that she knew John very likely
killed this woman. And so even though she loved her peaceful, quiet mornings with her coffee,
Laverne immediately stood up, she grabbed the phone, and she called the police. After she hung up
with police, Laverne was very shaken up. I mean, her heart was still racing. I mean, this was a very
risky thing she was doing because she had no way of knowing if what she had just given authorities
was enough to arrest John. If it wasn't, it was entirely possible that John would discover this
betrayal of her calling the police about him, implicating him in a murder, and he would probably
just continue his abuse, if not amp up his abuse of Levern. And so the way she saw it,
either what she just did was going to end the chapter with John and he was going to go to jail for murder,
or Leverne might wind up being the next dead girl on the side of the highway.
A little over a week later, on the morning of February 16th, Detective John Ingram sat with his partner
in a very clean living room in Wilsonville, Oregon. Ingram was the lead investigator on Tanya Bennett's
murder case, and he was there to speak to Leverne, who was sitting on the opposite couch. And
Laverne seemed really nervous and kept fidgeting constantly and offering Ingram and his partner refreshments.
It was just very clear that there was a lot on this woman's mind.
So Ingram knew that Laverne had a week earlier called in a tip about the victim's killer.
She thought it was her own boyfriend, John Sosnovsky.
And right now, Ingram was very eager to hear what she had to say about her boyfriend,
to basically elaborate and sort of give the full story of why she believed what she believed.
in part because Ingram's case so far had absolutely no other leads, like this was it.
The victim's body had been found on a grassy slope so close to the edge of the highway that you could see her from the road.
But Ingram and his partner had not been able to find any witnesses.
A few people had claimed to have seen Tanya along with some man at a bar earlier in the night before she went missing,
but no one had been able to effectively describe that man.
It was just some guy she was with.
And so Ingram and his partner had basically talked to.
to just about anyone they could think of that might have known Tanya.
They'd canvassed her neighborhood.
They'd interviewed her family, co-workers' friends,
and they still had not been able to find anybody who fit as a suspect.
They also hadn't found any good physical evidence at the scene,
like fingerprints or helpful forensics.
So now, Ingram was hoping that Laverne was going to be the key to his whole case.
And so eventually, Ingram looked at Laverne and said,
whenever you're ready,
tell me what you know.
Tell me the story of why you believe John killed Tanya.
Now, at first, LeVern just continued to squirm in her seat and she was, you know, obviously very nervous.
But eventually, after Ingram told her to just, you know, take a breath, calm down, it's okay.
We just want to hear your story eventually with a shaking voice.
She told them that on the night of the murder, John had come home around maybe one or two in the morning and immediately got in the shower.
Now, this was unusual.
I mean, this is not something that he typically did.
he didn't shower at 2 in the morning, but Laverne really hadn't thought much of it until the next day
when they went to a local bar and she'd literally overheard John bragging to somebody about murdering
Tanya, describing how he had picked her up at a truck stop, killed her, then took her to the highway
by Columbia River Gorge to dump her body by this scenic overlook. As LeBern spoke, I mean, Ingram and his
partner were shocked. I mean, basically, Leverne had overheard effectively a confession and the details
of that confession did seem to line up with what they had heard so far. Tanya had been seen out late at
night with some man, although nobody could really describe the man, and also where her body was found.
You know, it was near the scenic overlook, something that was, you know, publicly known. But still,
I mean, that's what Laverne heard John say. It lined up. But he kept a poker face and just told Laverne to,
please keep going, keep elaborating. And so Laverne, she continued speaking and she went on to say
that the reason she didn't come forward right away
was because she was scared of John.
He was a violent alcoholic who abused her,
which is also part of the reason why this seemed real to her.
I mean, she was totally not shocked at the idea that maybe John killed someone,
but she was basically fearful that he might kill her too.
And so she had kept it to herself until she had seen the article in the paper
and also saw the picture of the girl,
and she just looked so young and innocent,
and she just couldn't help but feel like she owed it to that girl
to come forward. Now, at this point, Ingram's mind was whirling. I mean, if this was all true,
it was huge for this case. I mean, potentially, this just solved the whole murder. I mean, this is what
happened potentially. But he also knew, you know, right now, it was just one woman's story. You know,
he needed actual proof. He couldn't just take Leuern's word for it. So he asked Leverne if he and his
partner could just go ahead and search the apartment. And as soon as Leverne nodded, the detectives
jumped to their feet and got to work. Leverne led the detectives down.
hallway to the master bedroom and then from there she backed off and just you know let the men get to work
and the detectives they immediately split up and spread out to cover more ground ingram had actually brought
along a list of stuff that they were theoretically looking for and one of the things on his list was a
swatch of denim from the front buttons of tanya's jeans it had been missing when they found her like it had
been intentionally cut out which was obviously pretty unusual and it made him think that tanya's killer had
taken a trophy or something. But after a few minutes of searching around the bedroom, Ingram did not
see this denim patch. In fact, he actually didn't see anything at first glance that connected John to
Tanya until he went over to look through this cardboard box of papers and began sifting through them.
And when he pulled out a torn piece of scrap paper and read what was on it, he froze.
On this piece of scrap paper was a handwritten message that just said, quote, T. Bennett, good piece.
Ingram immediately called his partner over who walked over and looked at the note and both of them are like,
okay, obviously, we need to bring John in right away for a chat.
But after leaving the bedroom and walking towards the door to leave,
who comes in the front door?
None other than John Sosnovsky.
About an hour later, Ingram sat at an interrogation table in the sheriff's office,
staring across it at John.
And John had a very confused look on his face, but otherwise seemed relatively calm.
Back at the apartment when John had walked in the door and sort of saw the detectives and didn't know what was going on,
Ingram had told him who he was and why he was there.
And John had really just seemed surprised, but had quickly agreed to go with them to the station if they wanted to speak to him.
But Ingram knew from experience that, you know, just because John was acting very cooperative,
did not mean he was innocent.
Now, Ingram slid a picture of Tanya across the table and asked John if he knew who she was or had anything to do with her murder.
And John didn't deny it, or act horrified or offended to be asked.
He just said, he didn't really remember.
And when Ingram showed him the note they found in his bedroom that said T. Bennett, good piece on it.
John just sort of squinted at it and said he really wasn't sure if he wrote that or not.
So these were all very straightforward questions.
And it was highly suspicious to Ingram that John apparently just couldn't answer them,
at least not cleanly.
And really, the rest of his interview went the same way, with John giving mostly just vague non-answers
to everything Ingram asked, no matter how binary the question was supposed to be.
And Ingram was just sort of struck by how nonchalant John seemed whenever he responded,
even though, I mean, he was being questioned about his connection to a murder.
This was not a time to be nonchalant.
This was a time to be forthcoming.
However, despite Ingram's very high suspicion of John, realistically the only evidence he had
on John, at least at this point, was all circumstantial, and so was not nearly enough to actually
arrest John. What they needed in order to do that was some form of hard evidence that directly
connected him to Tanya's murder. So ultimately, at the end of this interview, you know, despite how weird
the whole thing had been, Ingram just sighed and told John that for now, he could go.
Four days later, Ingram had just caught into his office for the morning when his desk phone rang.
He picked up and was surprised to hear Leverne's voice on the other end.
But before he could ask her what this was about, Leverne told him she had found something in her car that morning
and felt like he needed to see it.
And when she told him what this thing was, Ingram said he would be right over.
Then he immediately hung up and ran to find his partner.
As he drove to Laverne's, he found his heart was racing.
I mean, over the last few days, they hadn't found any additional evidence to prove John was their killer.
In fact, if anything, they had actually lost some evidence since that note they found inside of John's things in his house
ended up being a dead end because their analysts couldn't actually match the handwriting to John,
so they didn't know for sure if it was him.
But now, based on what Laverne had just told him on the phone about what she found in her car,
he was pretty much positive that this was the break he needed.
Within the hour, Ingram and his partner were standing in Leuern's garage with Laverne,
staring into the open trunk of her car.
Laverne had told Ingram that she kept her car and really her whole life very, very clean,
like her apartment's clean, everything's clean all the time.
And when she went into her car that day, she noticed there was a little swatch of denim sitting in the trunk.
And she knew that she had not put it there, and considering she was sort of on high alert
about John and about his connection to this murder, it just seemed like something worth flagging to police.
And for Ingram and his partner, as they're staring into the trunk at this little swatch of denim
that looks very much like the swatch of denim they were secretly looking for, they had not publicly
revealed that the killer had taken a little swatch of denim from Tanya's jeans.
That was private.
They're looking at this thinking, oh my goodness.
Like, this is the break we needed.
Clearly, that's the denim from Tanya's jeans.
And so Leverne was right to call this in.
This is potentially huge.
Now, obviously, Ingram knew that they would still have.
to get this denim tested to make sure it really was Tanya's. I mean, it's entirely possible that
it was actually Laverne's or Johns or was unrelated, but circumstantially, this felt like hitting the
jackpot. And so Ingram watched as his partner picked up the swatch, put it into an evidence
bag, and then they left and said they would have it tested and they would be in touch.
The following morning, Ingram was at his desk reviewing all the evidence that they had so far.
And by this point, they had a lot of evidence. The previous night, after finding the
the denim. They had brought John in for a polygraph test, and he had completely failed it.
The test administrator had even noted that, in his opinion, John definitely knew what had
happened to Tanya. So now, realistically, Ingram was just sort of waiting on confirmation
that that fabric was a match. And then at that point, they could go and arrest John. And when
Ingram's phone rang, he picked it up immediately, and it was the lab. And so Ingram sat up
straight, ready for some good news. But the tech on the other line sounded sort of glum,
and he told Ingram that the denim from LeVern's car did not match the jeans that Tanya was wearing,
so it was not hers. And at this, Ingram was just completely stunned. I mean, the idea that
they had just found the same unique cut of denim in a car in their main suspect's house could not
be a coincidence. I mean, it was not typical for people to have little swatches of denim lying around.
Like, this is not something that you just happen to have.
It felt sort of specific.
And so there just had to be more to this than met the eye.
And even though Ingram tried to work out some kind of reasonable explanation for why that swatch was there,
the only thing that actually made sense was that the fake denim was planted there.
And so feeling a mix of, again, shock, but also just frustration here.
I mean, he thought he was so close to solving this thing.
And now he was sort of back to square one.
Ingram realized that the next stop had to be Laverne's.
He needed to go speak to her again.
Later that morning, Ingram and his partner were once again back in Laverne's living room
with a very nervous-looking Leverne sitting across from them.
This time, Ingram was going to be a little tougher on her
because he now knew that whatever she had told him before,
very likely was not the full story.
And as soon as Ingram asked Leverne point blank
if she had planted that evidence, that denim inside of her car,
Laverne just kind of looked back at him and her face began to sort of quiver and then she just started sobbing.
And she told them she was so, so sorry.
She explained that she had cut up some jeans and put that front button part in her car and pretended to have found it so that they'd be able to arrest John.
She said she had just gotten so worried when they let him go after interviewing him because she knew John killed Tanya.
He had to have.
She heard him talk about it.
Like he did it and he's dangerous.
then she just wanted to make sure the police held him accountable.
Now, when Ingram heard this, he could hear, like, the earnestness in her voice.
Like, clearly this woman is scared of John and thinks he did this.
She believes he did this.
And so he wanted to believe her angle here, as inappropriate as planting evidence was.
But, critically, he knew LeVern still was definitely not telling him everything.
Because there was simply no way she could have known to plant that unique
cut of the jeans unless she had intimate knowledge of the crime.
Or some other inside information, but there was just something missing here.
Why would she randomly choose that front cut of denim as just the evidence?
Oh, here's some evidence that's going to make John look guilty.
Why would she choose that?
That's way too on the nose.
And when he pointed this out to Laverne, it was like Laverne's energy completely shifted,
you know, from sobbing and sadness and remorse to just purest.
pure like hesitation. Like she didn't really know how to react, but there wasn't any more sadness.
It was like, uh-oh, something's off here. And then, Laverne kind of took a deep breath. And she looked at
Ingram and she said, I was lying. You're right. My story about planting the evidence, that was a
lie. But she went on to say that the reason she had lied was because she had ultimately been too
afraid that if the police knew the whole story that she would get in trouble too. Then Leverne explained
what really happened to Tanya. On the night that Tanya was murdered, Laverne said John called her that night,
and he was sort of frantic, and he said to her that he was in trouble and that she needed to meet him at the bar that he
was at, and to bring along a shower curtain. And so LeVern said, because she was very scared of John
and, you know, it was just fearful of asking any questions, she had just done what he said. And she got the
shower curtain and she had driven out there. And she found John in a parking lot standing over
a body. It was Tanya. And she was just lying there on the ground, motionless. Leverne said she was horrified
and didn't know what to do, so she just helped. She literally helped John put Tanya's body into her car,
LeBern's car, wrapped her up in that curtain she'd brought along, and then together they dumped
her body at a spot along the highway. But as Leverne continued to talk, her story suddenly got
much darker because she actually eventually confessed that actually
Tanya had not been dead when she had first arrived.
But instead, she was still clinging to life.
And at John's request, Leverne had tied rope around Tanya's neck and held it tight while
John sexually assaulted her.
LeBern said after he was done, Tanya was no longer breathing.
Ingram could barely conceal his shock when she explained this.
I mean, here was this gentle, soft-spoken lady who was now telling him that she had actively
participated in the sexual assault and murder of this young woman.
It was hard to wrap his head around it.
And at the moment, all Ingram could think was, this can't be real.
But what Laverne was saying just fit.
It explained John's cagey answers to his questions, his failed polygraph,
and how Laverne knew the right part of the genes to cut out and fake his evidence.
because she and John had been the ones who actually made the cut on Tanya's jeans.
They knew.
But despite getting this earth-shattering confession here, Ingram wanted to be completely sure
that this version of the story LeVern was telling him was actually the truth,
and he knew exactly how to prove it.
The following day, Ingram was behind the wheel of his cruiser, next to his partner,
and Levern sat in the back, sort of absent-mindedly staring out the window.
They were driving down the highway northeast of Portland, and Ingram had instructed Laverne to let him know when they reached the spot where they dumped Tanya's body.
Now, the newspapers had published the general location of where the body had been found, but certainly not specifics.
So Ingram knew that if Laverne could point out the exact spot, well, that meant she was telling the truth.
As they began to get closer and closer to the spot Ingraham knew was the spot, he sort of felt his heart rate pick up.
up, but he didn't drive any faster or slower. He didn't signal that it was coming up. He just
kept on driving, steady, going straight, sort of expecting Levern to call it out any moment. But
the cruiser drove right past the actual spot where the body had been found, and Laverne didn't
say anything. For a few minutes, they just kept on driving down the road in total silence and, you know,
Ingram's feeling really disappointed here. And as they're driving along, suddenly Leverne says,
hey, wait a minute, turn around. So Ingram did, and soon they were headed back the way they'd come.
And this time, when they passed the actual crime scene, so the actual spot where Tanya had been found,
Laverne called it out and said that's where she was. Stop. As Ingram parked the car, he looked back at
Laverne, who was staring intently out the window right at the exact spot on that slope right off
the highway where the body had been found. Then once they were parked, all three of them got out of the car,
and Laverne went over to the edge of the road and pointed, like right to the exact spot where Tanya had been found on the slope.
And even though Ingram tried to keep his expression neutral here, internally he was sort of amazed.
I mean, clearly, Laverne was telling the truth.
It would have been impossible for her to have chosen that specific spot without having prior knowledge of where Tanya had been,
meaning she was telling the truth.
She must have been involved in killing Tanya.
As they all climbed back into the car, Ingram knew they now.
had more than enough to formally arrest John and also Laverne. She'd done the right thing by coming
forward, but of course now, there were going to be consequences. On February 21st, so 16 days after
Laverne called with her first tip, John Sovznovsky was arrested. And five days after that,
Laverne was arrested as well. And both of them were charged with murder. About 11 months later,
Laverne's trial started, and at that point, Leverne actually tried to change her story again.
She tried to recant her confession and said, no, I didn't actually do this, but the jury didn't
buy her change of heart and convicted her of murder, and she was sentenced to life in prison.
As for John, two months after Laverne's sentencing, he was given the same sentence, life in prison.
And that should have been the end of the case, at least from the legal perspective.
But for the next three years following sentencing, Ingram just couldn't stop thinking about Laverne and John and Tanya Bennett.
Despite what Laverne had done, he felt a lot of empathy for her.
She'd obviously been under John's control and had seemed genuinely terrified of him.
But more than that, Ingram had this horrible, nagging feeling that they'd gotten something wrong here.
Then one March afternoon in 1994, Ingram was in his office at the Sheriff's Department going over
some paperwork when his desk phone rang. When he picked it up, it was the prosecutor who'd worked
Tanya's case. And the prosecutor said they'd just gotten a very strange letter about Tanya's murder.
And as soon as the prosecutor described the letter's contents, Ingram felt sick to his stomach.
Ingram had been right to worry that he and his partner and really the whole legal system had
potentially just gotten something wrong with this case. It just felt like there was something left
unsaid. There was some loophole, there was some loose sense, something, but he didn't know what it was.
It would turn out the thing that was wrong was Laverne. Because their star witness, Laverne, was not just the
sweet older lady afraid of her abusive boyfriend who had come forward and told the truth
despite the consequences. That wasn't really the story. In fact, basically everything she told
Ingram and his partner was a lie. What was true and what ultimately was true? And what ultimately
ultimately drove Laverne to do what she did was she really wanted to break up with John,
but she didn't know how to do it.
And so what she ultimately did to attempt to rid herself of John was to frame him for murder.
And at first, she did an incredible job.
You know, she read everything she could, you know, little details about the murder and the news.
She also snuck a peek at Ingram's list of evidence during that early interview that was done at her apartment.
and so that's how she knew about, you know, that swatch of denim they were looking for.
And she also just happened to take a few really lucky guesses.
Like when she pointed out the spot on the side of the highway where the body was found,
she just guessed.
But it happened to be right.
However, the problem was, despite, you know, basically nailing the framing of John
and getting him wrapped up with a murder conviction,
she also sort of inadvertently implicated herself.
You know, when she came out and said, well, I participated in the murder,
her thinking was, they'll take pity on me and they'll blame John, he'll go to jail and I'll be okay,
but no, she also got convicted of murder and went to jail as well.
And Laverne and John were literally in prison, basically riding out their life sentences,
when the actual killer, the real Tanya Bennett killer, sent a letter to authorities confessing to his crime.
That was why that prosecutor called Ingram.
It was to tell him, like, I think there's been.
a mistake. They clearly didn't do it. After the real killer was arrested in 1995, Laverne and John
were both released from prison. In total, they both served four years in jail, all because of Laverne's
lies. Our second and final story is called The Intruder. One morning in early November of
2003, a 71-year-old woman named Patrice Miller stood in front of her fridge in her little home in the
rural town of Downeyville, California, and she saw she was running low on
food, which meant it was time to place an order with the market in town, which delivered her groceries
for her. Getting her food delivered was essential for Patrice and where she was at in her life right now.
She lived alone and had a whole house to take care of, which was definitely getting harder the older she got.
She'd also had some health problems lately, so it was getting more difficult just to move around.
You know, she even had a walking stick, just to prop herself up.
As Patrice stood in front of her fridge, wondering what she was going to add to her grocery list,
she heard one of her two cats meowing outside.
And this reminded her that amongst some other chores, she needed to feed her cats.
So she decided to make her list later, and she just closed the fridge door,
put some cat food in a bowl, and then grabbed her walking stick, and headed outside.
Patrice carried the cat food out onto the porch.
She had some other things to do outside, but she couldn't hold a lot of things at once because of her walking stick.
So once she had put the bowl down, she then headed back inside to get her compost,
and then took that back outside to her garden.
And she tried to do all these outdoor chores really quickly
because she didn't like being outside these days.
She had lived in Downeyville for a long time,
but over the past few years, it had gotten really dangerous there.
Now, she hadn't realized how bad it was at first
because she mostly kept to herself,
but eventually she learned that her neighbors
were starting to get intruders on their property.
There had also been a clear uptick in vandalism
in people's yards and to their home.
And in fact, over the past few months, Patrice herself had begun to experience this directly.
In fact, she had dealt with so many attempted break-ins at her own house
that she'd become convinced that she had a stalker.
She'd even put bars on her windows as a security measure.
So that's why Patrice did not like being outside.
She felt exposed like her stalker or whoever it was that was doing this
was going to be watching her and would come over here and attack.
And so as fast as she could, she'd dump her.
the compost in her garden, turned around, hustled inside, and shut the door behind her,
and as soon as she had done that and was safely inside her house, she felt hugely relieved.
A few days later, on November 8th, at the market in town where Patrice typically got her groceries,
a 55-year-old cashier named Cassie Coke rang up a customer at the register.
But as she bagged their purchases, her mind was elsewhere.
She was thinking about Patrice.
Cassie was typically the person that delivered Patrice's grocery order,
but over the years they had become closer than just a customer provider relationship.
You know, they were friends.
In fact, these days, the two of them would speak on the phone fairly often, just to chat.
But now, Cassie realized she hadn't heard from Patrice in days, which was very odd,
both because of their friendship, but also because she knew it had been a while since Patrice made her grocery order.
And so Cassie had begun asking around at the store and had found out that nobody else had heard from Patrice either.
Now, Cassie knew it was possible that Patrice was just busy, and for pretty much anybody else,
you know, one missed order or even a couple missed orders, wouldn't be enough to make Cassie worry.
But in this case, Cassie was extra concerned because she knew about Patrice's stalker.
And she knew that Patrice had even called the authorities about it, but they really hadn't been much help.
Remember, this is a tiny rural town in California that had experienced a lot of exactly what Patrice was experiencing.
break-ins, harassment, and other kinds of vandalism or damage.
However, neither Patrice nor anybody else had reported any actual violence.
So authorities were basically overwhelmed with a flood of what they considered sort of relatively minor complaints.
And Patrice's situation really didn't seem much worse than anybody else's in town.
And also officials just didn't have the manpower to deal with it.
And so ultimately, all authorities did was just advise Patrice on ways she could handle it herself.
which was why she'd installed those bars on her windows.
All this is to say, Cassie knew that Patrice was genuinely terrified of her stalker,
who Patrice referred to as Big Bastard,
and she was worried about what the stalker might do next.
So after Cassie was done with her shift that day,
she tried to get in touch with Patrice one more time.
But when she couldn't reach her yet again,
Cassie called the police and asked them to go to a wellness check.
That evening, a deputy from the Sierra County Sheriff's Department
drove up to Patrice's house and parked in front.
And immediately, he could tell something was wrong.
The front door of her house was clearly smashed in,
and there was a garden hose that was laying across her porch steps
and was spraying water everywhere, like the water had just been left on.
And so the deputy got out of his cruiser, and he walked over to the house,
and he found the turnoff for the water on the side of the house,
and then he walked up the front steps of the porch.
And as he did this, he was constantly looking around and listening,
trying to figure out what was going on here.
I mean, he didn't know if there was an active threat inside the house.
He had no idea what he was walking into.
And so he's on the porch.
And before going in through the front door,
which was obviously smashed open,
he looked in a window to see if he could see into the house
to gauge what was going on here.
And when he looked inside the house,
the first thing he saw was blood all over the floor.
And at that point, he unholstered his gun.
And so now with his gun raised,
the deputy stepped into the house.
And he slowly walked through the living room, listening for any signs of sudden movement or an
indication there was someone still in the house, but he didn't hear anything.
And so there didn't appear to be an intruder present right now, but there was also no sign
of Patrice.
All he saw was that blood towards the front of the house.
That was it.
And so the deputy, he left the living room and walked towards the kitchen.
And as soon as he stepped across the threshold into the kitchen, he breathed in and just kind
held his breath because what he saw was just chaos. All the cabinets were open and all over the
floor were remnants of all the food that likely was in the cabinets, like pieces of food and ripped
up packaging and broken jars, a window at the far end of the room was also smashed, and the
security bars that Patrice had put on the window were bent and hanging by their hinges. There was actually
so much just debris and just chaos in the kitchen that at first, the day, the day
The deputy didn't register what was actually laying in the center of the kitchen on the floor.
But then when his brain sort of processed it, he realized what he was looking at was Patrice, at least what was left of her.
But she no longer looked human because her body had literally been torn apart.
The deputy quickly left the house and called in his terrible discovery to the sheriff,
and within an hour, Patrice's property was swarming with police and crime scene tax.
and a forensic expert who specialized in this type of scene,
and detectives fanned out all across the area
and began speaking to Patrice's neighbors.
And because pretty much everyone in the neighborhood
had been experiencing the same type of break-ins
and property damage that Patrice had been,
it actually didn't take long for police to develop a profile of Patrice's killer.
Their conclusion was that very likely,
the killer was the same individual who was harassing everybody else.
But what officials couldn't understand is,
Why had everybody else experienced effectively minor vandalism,
but Patrice went from minor vandalism to really excessive violence?
And this required developing a profile of Patrice.
And so as police searched for her killer,
they were also working on reconstructing Patrice's movements
on the final day of her life.
And at first, in their efforts, really they were just stumped.
I mean, all she had done on that day, as far as they could tell,
were some basic chores.
But as they dug into what those chores consisted of,
they found two things that actually explained everything.
It would turn out that every day for the past couple of years,
Patrice had been making two terrible mistakes.
She fed her cats out on the porch,
and she emptied her compost into the garden.
And these two actions ultimately were what sort of attracted her stalker,
Big Bastard, to her home.
because Big Bastard was a black bear.
He loved to eat cat food and kitchen compost scraps.
And eventually, he decided that Patrice was food too.
So on that day in early November of 2023,
when Patrice fed her cats and emptied her compost for the last time,
Big Bastard waited until Patrice was in bed
and then broke into her house and savagely killed her.
By the time the deputy arrived at Patrice's home,
Big Bastard had been eating Patrice's body
for days. And so what he saw in the kitchen was what was left of her. Black bears are not typically
dangerous to people. In fact, Patrice was the first known black bear fatality in California history.
But it was exactly that sort of lack of perceived danger, which is why officials didn't help Patrice
or any of our other neighbors get rid of these black bears when they were coming into their
neighborhood and causing all this property damage and all this alarm. They basically said,
what's the worst they could do?
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.
The Mr. Ballin podcast, Strange, Dark and Mysterious Stories,
is hosted and executive produced by me, Mr. Ballin.
Our head of writing is Evan Allen.
Our head of production is Zach Levitt.
Produced by Jeremy Bone.
Story editing by Evan Allen.
Research and fact-checking by Shelley Shoe,
Samantha Van Hoose, Evan Beamer, Abigail Shumway, and Camille Callahan. Research and fact-checking supervision by Stephen Ear.
Audio editing and post-produced by Whit Lacasio and Cole Lacasio, Perry Crowell and Jordan Stidham.
Mixed and mastered by Brendan Cohn. Production Coordination by Samantha Collins.
Production support by Antonio Manata and Delana Corley. Artwork by Jessica Clogston Kiner.
Theme song called Something Wicked by Ross Bugden.
Thank you for listening to the Mr. Ball.
And just a reminder, every new and exclusive episode we put out on the Mr. Ballin podcast,
you can also now watch on the Mr. Ballin YouTube channel that very same day.
And trust me, some of these stories you truly have to see to believe.
Again, my YouTube channel is just called Mr. Ballin.
If you want to listen to episodes one week early and ad free, you can subscribe to SiriusXM
Podcast Plus on Apple Podcasts or visit seriousxm.com slash podcast plus to listen with Spotify,
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So that's going to do it.
I really appreciate your support.
Until next time, see ya.
