MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - Rendezvous in Capistrano (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: March 25, 2024One night in November 1999, a deputy was driving along a remote mountain road in Southern California when he spotted a car pulled off to the side of the road. The car’s engine was still on,... and the passenger side door was open, but there didn't appear to be anyone inside the car. Now this was a very remote road, so the deputy assumed that the driver must be having some sort of car trouble, otherwise, why stop here? So the deputy pulled over his cruiser and began walking over to the car to see if they needed help. But before he reached the car, the deputy noticed something dangling out of the passenger side door. He reflexively put his hand on his holster and walked the last few feet up to the car. And when he finally could see into the car, he just froze. It looked like a set from a horror movie. Except this was not fake.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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One night in November of 1999, a deputy was driving along a remote mountain road in Southern
California when he spotted a car pulled off to the side of the road up ahead.
Now this car's engine was still running and the passenger side door was clearly wide open, but there didn't appear to be anyone inside the car.
Now, this was a very remote road, so the deputy assumed the driver must be having some sort of
car trouble because otherwise why would they stop here? So, the deputy pulled over, hopped out of
his cruiser, and began walking towards this car to see if he could help. But before the deputy reached
the car, he noticed something dangling
out of the passenger side door. The deputy reflexively put his hand on his holster and
walked slowly the last few feet up to the car. And when he finally actually got to see
inside of this car, he just froze. It looked like a set from a horror movie. Except this
was not fake.
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 Amazon music follow button is fast
asleep, slowly pull the blankets off their feet, exposing them to attack by monsters. Okay, let's get into today's story.
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 Murdoch saga.
Last year, we also started a second weekly show, Short Hand, 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 short hand episodes
exclusively on Amazon Music or by subscribing to Wondry Plus in Apple Podcasts or the Wondry
app.
Hello, I'm Emily and I'm one of the hosts of Terribly Famous, the show that takes you or the Wondry app. Short shorts? Free cocktails? Careless whispers? Okay, last one. It's not Andrew Ridgely.
Yep, that's right. It's Stone Cold icon George Michael.
From teen pop sensation to one of the biggest solo artists on the planet,
join us for our new series, George Michael's Fight for Freedom.
From the outside, it looks like he has it all.
But behind the trademark dark sunglasses is a man in turmoil.
George is trapped in a lie of his own making,
with a secret he feels would ruin him
if the truth ever came out.
Follow Terribly Famous wherever you listen to your podcasts,
or listen early and ad-free on Wandery Plus
on Apple Podcasts or the Wandery app. On the morning of November 19, 1999, Carolyn Stahl had an extra bright smile on her face
as she saw her patients at her eye clinic in Long Beach, California.
Sure, it was another busy and hectic Friday, but it was also Carolyn's 44th birthday,
and her husband Ken was going to take her out to dinner the next night to celebrate.
In many ways, Carolyn and Ken Stahl were a classic Orange County power couple.
She was an optometrist, and he was an anesthesiologist at a nearby hospital.
They lived in a condo in a gated community, and Carolyn's interior design talents had
made their home the envy of all their friends.
And with no children at home, Carolyn and Ken liked to spend their money on things like
expensive clothes, travel, and extravagant hobbies like Ken's antique sword collection.
But even with all that wealth, Carolyn had always remained down to earth.
She was sweet to her friends, and she remembered their birthdays and other special occasions
with cards and gifts.
She talked to her mother back in her native Michigan at least twice a week and she was
planning a trip back home for the holidays to see her.
And Carolyn took special care of Ken and always made sure he had whatever he needed.
Carolyn even picked out the seeds from Ken's watermelon because she knew he couldn't
stand them.
Carolyn remained in a great mood that day as she gave eye exams to one patient after
another.
And it was the first time in a while she'd felt like everything was going well in her
life because she and her 57-year-old husband, Ken, had been through a lot that year.
Ken had been having heart problems and a few months earlier he had undergone an 8-hour
operation to restore proper blood flow.
The surgery had left Ken feeling weak and depleted for months in a way Carolyn had never
seen before.
Carolyn knew that bad hearts ran in Ken's family.
His father had died from a heart attack, so she really didn't take her time with her
husband for granted.
And recently, Ken had finally started feeling much better and he told Carolyn how excited
he was to go out with her for her birthday, and so Carolyn was so excited.
Ken planned to take them to a Mexican restaurant in the pretty town of San Juan Capistrano
and then after dinner, they'd go on a romantic stroll near the historic Spanish Mission in
the area, and Carolyn thought this was a perfect way to celebrate her birthday, and to celebrate
a new start for the couple.
The following day, Saturday, November 20th, Ken was busy getting ready for his and Carolyn's big night out, and he really wanted everything to go perfectly. If Carolyn was sweet and sociable,
Ken was intense and ambitious. He always felt like he was following in his father's footsteps
and not quite measuring up. Ken was the only son of a prominent anesthesiologist who had once owned a hospital and made the
news all the time.
By comparison, Ken had only managed to get himself appointed to an obscure medical board
and he never seemed to fly quite as high as his father.
Ken was really close to his mother, but he suspected that even she thought his career
was less impressive than his father's had been.
Ken also had this growing sense that he was running out of time. He worked out like a maniac to stay fit, and routinely went on 25-mile hikes and day-long bike rides. He was naturally athletic
and had gone to college on a football scholarship, but Ken knew he had very likely inherited his
father's heart problems and so he was unlikely to live
to a ripe old age.
But this really only served to make Ken more driven to succeed in the time that he had.
But on that particular Saturday as Ken got ready, he actually found himself feeling quite
relaxed.
And when Carolyn walked into the room he was in wearing a pretty red dress and seemingly
all the golden diamonds she owned, Ken just stared and
smiled. Ken finished getting ready, then took his wife's hand, and they walked outside together.
They got into Ken's car, pulled out of their gated community, and set off on the 25-mile
drive to San Juan Capistrano for their big birthday dinner date.
At 10pm that night, Deputy Tony Castillo of the Orange County Sheriff's Department was
in his cruiser, out on his usual rounds.
Deputy Castillo eased off the gas when he noticed a Silver Dodge Stratus car pulled
over in the breakdown lane on a rural highway outside of San Juan Capistrano.
It was pitch black and there wasn't much traffic.
Castillo figured there wasn't a reason for anyone to stop right there unless they were having car trouble, so he decided he would walk over and see if they needed
any help. Castillo pulled his cruiser in behind the car. He could see that the car's engine was
still running and the high beam lights were on, and the passenger side door was wide open.
Just ahead of the car on the side of the road, Castillo saw a pole with an emergency phone box attached to it.
He thought maybe the passenger in this car had jumped out of the car after it pulled
over to go use that call box to call for help, because maybe their car had broken down.
But then Castillo noticed a woman's bare foot sticking out of that open passenger door,
and he knew right then something had to be wrong.
Castillo radioed to let Dispatch know what he'd found and that he was now going to go
investigate.
Then Castillo got out of the cruiser, put his right hand on his bolster, and began walking
towards the back of the Dodge.
Castillo's footsteps on the gravel were the only sound.
Castillo saw what looked like a smear of blood on the back passenger side door, but he went
around to the driver's side and he saw right away the front window was smashed, and Castillo
saw a scene of pure horror inside the car.
A man was slumped over in the driver's seat still wearing a seatbelt, and a woman who
had been in the passenger seat was sprawled across the front seat basically on the driver
with her head on the man's lap.
Both of them had been shot multiple times and they were drenched in blood and when Castillo
checked both of them for a pulse he found they had none.
They were both dead.
Castillo rushed back to his cruiser and he radio dispatched to tell them that he had
just walked up on two apparent homicide victims out on Ortega Highway.
Then Castillo ran the plates on the Dodge Stratus, and the vehicle came back as being registered to Ken and Carolyn Stahl. And while he couldn't know for sure quite yet,
Castillo was reasonably certain that those were the two victims.
After getting Castillo's message, the Sheriff's Office assigned two veteran detectives, Joe
Homs and James McDonald, to lead the potential murder investigation.
They arrived on the lonely stretch of road on Ortega Highway at about 1am.
The area was already alive, with crime scene technicians and Sheriff's deputies gathering
up evidence, photographing the victims, and just trying to make sense of the baffling
scene.
The deputies who were already at the scene informed Detectives Homs and McDonald that
the victims were indeed Ken and Carolyn Stahl.
And based on the scene in the car, the deputies believed that Ken had been shot first and
then Carolyn.
Detective Homs looked closely at the two bodies inside the car and he thought the deputies
were probably right.
He thanked them for their help and then did an initial search of the car and the surrounding
area.
And honestly, Homs was kind of impressed by how little physical evidence had been left
behind at the scene.
There were no footprints, no fingerprints, no skid marks, no bullet casings, and no weapon.
Whoever did this had been very thorough, leaving law enforcement
with almost nothing to work with.
But then, Homs and McDonald did an extensive examination of the bloody interior of the
car and they began to discover some clues. Carolyn was covered in expensive jewelry
and the only piece that was missing was a single earring that had fallen on the ground.
Likewise, Ken had plenty of cash and credit cards in his
wallet, but nothing of value had been taken, so this didn't look like a robbery. The two
detectives saw that both victims had been shot multiple times from outside the car.
One bullet had gone through the driver's side door and the others through the open window.
So this could not be a traditional murder-suicide either. Somebody else had fired 8-12 bullets into Carolyn and Ken and then left them for dead.
To Holmes and McDonald this honestly looked like a mob hit, and the shootings had a depressing
familiarity to McDonald.
In his years as a detective, he had investigated multiple murders on this highway or Tega Highway.
There was the farmhand who was found buried in a shallow grave,
and the dead man in the trunk of an abandoned car.
McDonald sometimes thought that Ortega Highway
was pretty much just a place for killers to dispose of bodies.
But he just couldn't begin to understand
how two middle-aged, very successful doctors
from a wealthy gated community
could wind up slaughtered in this desolate
place.
Word that Carolyn and Ken had been gunned down on a rural mountain road near San Juan
Capistrano immediately dominated the news.
The seemingly random quality of the shooting sent a shiver across the whole region of Southern
California where Carolyn and Ken lived and it left Ken and Carolyn's family and friends almost speechless.
No one could imagine somebody hating the couple so much that they needed to kill them.
The owner of the eye care clinic where Carolyn practiced joked that Carolyn was so kind they
deliberately gave her the grumpiest patients because she could always cheer them up.
And Ken's colleagues spoke equally highly of him. A doctor who had served on a state board with Ken said that he was revered by other doctors for his
wise medical judgment. And friends also pointed out that the couple worked all the time, often
six days a week. Ken provided anesthesia for surgeries at multiple medical facilities,
so he had a complex, unpredictable schedule. And Carolyn was so devoted to her practice that she had previously cancelled vacation
plans to avoid inconveniencing her colleagues.
So their friends wondered when they would even have time to have made enemies. On December 4th, so two weeks after the murders, hundreds of mourners crowded into St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church in Huntington Beach, California.
They cried together, they comforted each other, and they celebrated Carolyn and Ken's lives.
Ken's 87-year-old mother made her way to the front of the crowd.
She said she had always braced herself for the possibility that her son might die young
because of his bad heart, but nothing had prepared her for her son's violent end.
Then she broke down in tears and said all she wanted to do was hold her son one more
time.
In the days following the funeral, Detectives McDonald and Homs still didn't have much
encouraging news for Ken and Carolyn's families, but their investigative team was still very
busy.
At a separate memorial service held for Ken by his colleagues, deputies had asked all
the attendees to sign in in a guest book.
They wanted to know who was there, and they wanted to compare handwriting samples to documents they had collected from where Ken and Carolyn lived and worked to see if
they could find anything connecting Ken's colleagues to the killings.
But after a few weeks into the investigation, Homs and McDonald's still didn't have a
suspect in mind, but they were getting a better picture of the killer.
The autopsy confirmed that both Carolyn and Ken had been killed by multiple gunshots sometime
between the hours of 8.30 pm and 10 pm, so not long before Deputy Castillo had found
the car.
Also, a separate ballistics analysis found that all the gunshots came from a single gun,
most likely a.357 Magnum revolver.
That gave Holmes and McDonald a couple of key pieces of information.
First, Ken and Carolyn were most likely murdered by a single gunman.
And second, the killer was cold and collected.
They had fired at least eight shots from a revolver that held only six bullets, meaning
the shooter had to stop in the middle of the murders, reload their weapon and start firing
again. Those reports forced Homs and McDonald to think about the last minutes of Carolyn's life.
Her husband was dead and she was all alone in a cold, dark, strange place. Meanwhile,
her killer was casually reloading their gun so they could shoot more bullets into her.
I mean, this was a truly awful way to go.
And that information pushed the detectives to dig even deeper into Carolyn and Ken's
lives in the hope they would find something that would lead them to the killer.
And in doing this deep dive, Homs and McDonald soon discovered that Carolyn and Ken's 14
year marriage was not nearly as perfect as some of their grieving friends and relatives
had thought.
Some of the couple's loved ones had come forward and told the detectives that Carolyn
and Ken had problems.
A lot of problems.
Carolyn's sister Linda actually reached out and asked to meet with the detectives.
She said she didn't want to speak ill of the dead, but she really needed them to know
the truth.
And so on a cool December day, Linda arrived at the sheriff's station and she followed
Homs and McDonald into a small, comfortable office.
And within a few seconds of sitting down, Linda went on an absolute tirade about her
brother-in-law, Ken.
She told the detectives that Ken had a history of cheating that began way before he even
met Carolyn.
Ken's first marriage had ended because Ken had an affair. Then Ken had married the woman he had the affair
with, but that marriage also fell apart within just three months.
Linda said her sister Carolyn was well aware of Ken's romantic history when she had moved
in with him back in 1984. But Carolyn was determined to make a better man of him. And
after they had been living together for a year, Carolyn gave Ken an ultimatum.
Marry her or the relationship would be over.
Ken had told friends he never wanted to get married again, but he reluctantly gave in
to Carolyn's demand.
Linda said their marriage actually seemed to go pretty smoothly for a while.
Carolyn was close with Ken's mother, and she was also close with Ken's son from his first
marriage, and with two doctors' incomes they made a ton of money and so their
future looked quite bright.
Suddenly Linda trailed off and just stopped talking.
The detectives asked her if she needed a break or if they could get her anything, but she
said she did want to keep going, she needed to get this all out.
Then Linda took a deep breath and composed herself and told the detectives that things
had taken a really bad turn for her sister about five years earlier.
She said Carolyn had come home from visiting family in Michigan and she found a woman she
didn't know eating fast food on the couch in her living room.
The woman was just as surprised as Carolyn and she fled the house immediately but Ken
had admitted he was romantically involved with that woman.
Linda said she had hoped her sister would just leave Ken right then and there, but she didn't.
Instead of demanding a divorce, Carolyn had demanded marriage counseling.
But even with marriage counseling, Ken's behavior didn't change. He had at least three more affairs
that Linda said she was aware of, and she said his address book was still full of women's names and phone numbers.
Linda clutched the arms of her chair tight and she fought back tears while she talked
about her sister.
But she took a deep breath and continued her story.
She told the detectives that she had been so angry at Ken that she finally confronted
him about his chronic cheating and about how much he was hurting her sister.
One of the detectives asked how Ken responded to that, and Linda gave a slight laugh and
shook her head, and then she said Ken had just shrugged his shoulders and told her that
you know he was the person he was and Carolyn just had to accept that.
Finally, Linda told the detectives that Carolyn went to great lengths to hide the ugly truth
about her marriage.
Carolyn was always very careful to give the impression of marital bliss to friends and
coworkers.
She would even buy herself her own Christmas presents, she would wrap them and put tags
on them that said they were from Ken, even though obviously they were not, and she would
put them under the tree so that when friends and family came over they would see how good
Ken was being to his wife.
And Ken just played along with this for the sake of appearances.
Linda said one of the reasons Carolyn was buying all these gifts for herself is because
she believed buying nice things for herself made her happy.
She called it retail therapy.
But Linda knew her sister better than anybody.
And she knew no matter what Carolyn did, no matter what she bought, no matter how nice
it was, nothing could change the fact that Ken had totally broken her heart.
The detectives shared a look.
Linda's retail therapy comment had just potentially cleared up a question they'd had for weeks.
When they had searched Carolyn and Ken's home right after the murders, they found nearly
$30,000 in brand new women's clothing and accessories.
A lot of it was actually still wrapped in plastic with the price tags still attached. That had really confused the detectives
at the time, but now it kind of made sense. The detectives thanked Linda for all her help
and then they walked her out of the station.
McDonald and Homs hadn't let on in front of her, but Linda's revelations about Ken
and Carolyn's troubled relationship opened up a world of
potential murder suspects.
Did a former girlfriend take revenge on Ken for leaving her?
Or did a jealous husband of one of the women that Ken had an affair with lash out?
There was even a chance that Ken had been the lone target of one of those jilted lovers
or angry husbands and Carolyn had just happened to be with him at the time of the murder.
With this new information, the detectives now wanted to dig into all of Ken's communications
with all the women he was potentially having affairs with.
Like most doctors in the 1990s, Ken carried a pager, which is a small electronic device
that buzzes and gives a phone number to call when somebody needs you.
The detectives got Ken's pager and they contacted every phone number on it.
This at least allowed them to reconstruct key parts of Ken's last day.
The detectives found a fellow anesthesiologist who paged Ken around 8 p.m. on the night of the
murder. This other anesthesiologist had hoped that Ken could cover for him at a surgery the
next morning. The doctor said Ken sounded normal when they talked and that Ken was out celebrating his
wife's birthday.
So McDonald and Homs reasoned that whatever happened to the couple that night probably
caught them completely by surprise.
McDonald also came across a Mexican immigrant named Adriana Vasco who had paged Ken on the
morning of the murders.
She explained that she had become friends with Ken several years earlier when she worked in the office at the National Pain Institute where he was a part-time anesthesiologist.
Adriana said that Ken had agreed to get her desktop computer repaired and she had paged
him to find out how the repairs were going.
McDonald was immediately suspicious of this.
He couldn't understand why a busy doctor would be volunteering to repair computers
on the side.
The detective asked Adriana flat out if she was having an affair with Ken,
but she denied it. Adriana insisted that Ken was just a very generous guy. He had helped
her out financially numerous times over the years.
The call with Adriana lasted only five minutes, but McDonald came away from it with the distinct
sense that he had just been lied to.
But he had no evidence to back up his gut feeling, so he let it drop, at least for the
moment.
Over the coming days, McDonald and Homs repeatedly asked Ken's family and friends what they
knew about Adriana Vasco.
The detectives got nothing but blank stares.
None of the friends or family had ever heard of her.
Then in late December, a woman contacted the detectives and admitted right at the start
that she'd had an affair with Ken in the mid-1990s.
And when she heard about the murders, she'd recalled a conversation she'd had with Ken
back then.
She said Ken had complained that he was being blackmailed by someone close to him and that
he was not in control of his own life.
The woman's story was chilling and blackmail was not in control of his own life. The woman's story was
chilling and blackmail was not out of the realm of possibility. After all, Ken had had multiple
affairs and most people assumed he was rich because he was a doctor. But the detectives had
also discovered that Ken's health issues had caused him to miss months of work in the past
that had led to some financial strain and had forced Ken and Carolyn to move out of their $700,000 home into the comfortable but much more modest condo where they had
lived at the time of their deaths.
The detectives also knew Carolyn had spent at least $30,000 on clothes and jewelry for
herself.
So now, Homs and McDonald wondered if the murders simply came down to money.
Maybe Ken couldn't pay someone who was blackmailing him, so they killed him and his wife.
But as 1999 came to an end, the detectives still had no major suspects.
They had followed a bunch of different leads, but so far nothing had paid off.
However, both detectives had a strong feeling that cracking this case would begin with one
of the women Ken had an affair with, and they thought that woman could be Adriana Vasco.
Both detectives were confident she knew a lot more than she had told them, so it was
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It's just that easy.
easy. On February 29, 2000, so over three months after the murders, Detectives McDonald and
Homs met Adriana Vasco at her friend's house in Anaheim, California.
Adriana was little, she was barely five feet tall and she was quite thin, she was 33 years
old and a single mother of two young kids.
Over coffee at her kitchen table, Adriana told the detectives how she had become friends
with Ken, a man who seemed to live in a completely different world than she did.
She explained that Ken had noticed her walking with a limp when they were both working at
the National Pain Institute.
Ken had offered to inject pain medication into her back to correct the limp, but he
told her it would be an ongoing procedure.
At the kitchen table, Adriana took a sip of her coffee and then a smile came across her
face.
She said she had agreed to the procedure and as the pain injections continued, the two
of them started getting a bit closer.
Adriana said she had even begun calling him Ken instead of Dr. Stahl, and Ken had clearly taken a growing interest in Adriana's life.
Then when Adriana had split with her husband, Ken paid for her and her son to go live in
a motel. When Adriana's car had broken down, Ken gave her money to buy a new one, a white
Mazda. So Adriana told the detectives it became normal for her to turn to Ken for help because he
was always so kind to her.
And Adriana said that in return, she became a shoulder for Ken to cry on.
He opened up to her about his unhappiness.
He told her he hated the Orange County doctor's life.
He thought it was totally phony.
He said he had a lot more fun when he went to the beer and barbecue chicken restaurant
which was down the street from Adriana's apartment.
Ken had even told Adriana at one point that she was his only real friend.
Detectives McDonald and Homs sat on the edge of their seats wanting to ask Adriana again
if she was actually romantically involved with Ken, but they held their tongues and
just let her talk.
Adriana continued and said that Ken's marriage had been empty for years.
He complained about his wife's looks and her weight, and he said they mostly slept in separate
bedrooms.
Then, Adriana began to cry.
She apologized and said she was still in shock over Ken's death.
She said when she found out he died, it was like her whole world had just collapsed.
Ken was like her hero.
Finally, after Adriana wiped the tears from her face, she looked across the table at the
detectives and she admitted that she had had an affair with Ken.
And Ken's wife, Carolyn, knew about it.
She told the detectives that about three and a half years earlier, she had received a phone
call from Ken, but the moment she answered, Ken quickly handed the phone off to his wife Carolyn, and Carolyn's message to Adriana was blunt,
''Stay away from my husband.''
Adriana said she broke off the affair soon after getting that phone call.
She knew Ken would never divorce his wife, and she didn't want to get hurt.
But she and Ken had remained friends even when Adriana found a new romantic partner
and even had a daughter with him.
In fact, Adriana said that Ken would sometimes go out to dinner with Adriana's new guy.
Also, Adriana said after they split up, Ken never tried to have sex with her again.
And she told the detectives that she really believed that Ken and Carolyn had genuinely
started to work on their marriage at the time
they got killed.
And when she had spoken to Ken on the day he was killed, Adriana said he sounded happier
than he had in months.
McDonald and Homs had more questions for Adriana, but the coffees were long since cold and it
was after 5pm, so they thanked her for her time and they headed for the door.
By the summer of 2000, the sensational double murder that had once gotten so much media
attention was increasingly in danger of going cold.
McDonald and Hums had come away from their interview with Adriana, convinced that her
grief over Ken's death was actually sincere.
She was probably lying about the length of their affair, but the detectives couldn't
see why Adriana would want Ken dead.
He had been a ready source of money and support to her for years.
So the hope that one of Ken's lovers would lead them to the truth about the murders began
to fade, and the detectives hadn't found any evidence that Ken had been blackmailed
by anybody.
Homs and McDonald continued to pursue every possible lead, and they re-interviewed anyone
who seemed to be remotely connected to the case, but their investigation stalled.
In the fall of 2000, about 10 months after the murders, McDonald and Homs were reassigned
to another unit, and two new detectives, Brian Heaney and Phil Villalobos, took over Carolyn
and Ken's murder case.
Initially, the two new detectives felt totally overwhelmed.
Villa Lobos had only been a homicide detective for two weeks, and Heaney's experience was
mostly just in narcotics.
But as they began to dig through the huge case file, they realized that their predecessors,
McDonald and Homs, were likely overwhelmed too.
But something caught Detective Villa Lobos' eye as he reviewed Ken's cell phone records
from the day of his death.
Ken had called the same number four times, and the calls were to the same person who
had paged Ken on the morning of the murders, Adriana Vasco.
So Villalobos and Heaney quickly decided to pick up where the previous detectives had
left off, and they turned their focus to Adriana.
And at 8pm on October 11th, almost 11 months after the murders, Adriana arrived at the
sheriff's station for another interview, but this time she was not eager to help.
Adriana insisted that on the day of Ken's murder, she had only contacted him to talk
about those computer repairs and that the conversation was so innocuous that she couldn't even remember anything else they
talked about.
The two detectives pressed Adriana hard to get her to say more.
Villalobos even asked her straight out who killed Ken.
But Adriana broke into tears and said she had no idea and genuinely could not remember
anything substantive from their last conversation.
The detectives would question Adriana really aggressively for several hours until finally
it was clear she just didn't have anything else to say, so they let her go.
But the detectives were not quite finished with Adriana.
After she left, the detectives rushed outside after her and hopped in their car and followed
her.
After driving for several minutes, Adriana arrived at a house where the father of one
of her children was waiting for her. Adriana and this man had split up, but they remained
close for the sake of their daughter. The detectives watched Adriana with this man from
a distance and they began to develop a new theory.
Maybe Adriana did have nothing to do with Ken's death, but maybe this man who she was with,
the father of her daughter, had gotten jealous of her affair with Ken and maybe he lashed out.
And so now maybe Adriana was doing everything she could to protect him,
really just so her young daughter would not be without her father.
Villalobos and Heaney waited for Adriana leave, and then after she had, they hopped
out of their car, walked up to the front door, knocked, and then when the man came to the
door, they led him to the front yard to question him.
And to the detective's surprise, this man was completely open and asked how he could
help.
Villalobos told him that he was convinced someone close to Adriana
had killed Ken and Carolyn Stahl, but the detectives didn't know who. The man said that
made sense to him and he understood why they would want to question him, but then this man
said something that sent Villa-Lobos and Heaney reeling. He told them that he had nothing to do
with Carolyn and Ken's murders, but he had a pretty good idea of who probably killed them.
Villa-Lobos just stared at him and then asked him outright, okay, who's the killer?
And the man would say one word, Tony.
The detectives were caught off guard.
In all those files from nearly a year-long investigation, the name Tony had never once
come up.
Now, they had someone telling them a guy named Tony was probably the killer they had been
looking for?
The detectives followed up with a bunch more questions about who this Tony person was,
and they would learn that Tony was Adriana's current boyfriend and he was a handyman at
her apartment building.
He also had a long criminal rap sheet, he had a temper, and he loved guns.
A few days later, Detective Heaney was waiting in an unmarked car outside the hospital where
Adriana worked.
Investigators had been trying to track down Adriana's boyfriend, Tony, but the man seemed
to have disappeared.
So Heaney wanted Adriana to help them find him.
Eventually, Adriana walked outside still dressed in her scrubs,
and right away Heaney rushed up to her and caught her completely by surprise.
He asked her point blank if she would take a polygraph test right now. He said the test was
all set up at the local police station right around the corner, all she had to do was come with him.
Adriana was clearly shocked and pretty angry with Heaney for surprising her like this,
but she did go with him to the police station. Adriana was clearly shocked and pretty angry with Heaney for surprising her like this,
but she did go with him to the police station.
During the polygraph test, Adriana faced round after round of very difficult questions from
Heaney and Philolobos, and Adriana held her ground, denying any knowledge of the murders.
But then, Heaney hit her with a surprise question.
He asked if Tony was the killer.
She tried to deny knowing Tony, but it was already too late.
The detectives knew he was her boyfriend and that she was lying to them.
So Heaney began asking rapid-fire questions about Tony.
Where was he?
Did he know Ken?
But Adriana collected herself and she insisted she had no answers for them.
But the detectives were convinced Adriana was now the key to unlocking this case, and
too many people had been working for too long on this investigation to let this opportunity
slip away.
And it turned out the detectives had one more surprise for Adriana.
There was an outstanding warrant for her arrest for driving with a suspended license, and
they were going to use that to lock her up for the night. Adriana begged to be allowed to go home to her kids, but the detectives handcuffed her and
led her to a cell. Now they just had to find Tony.
Even after being locked up, Adriana did not tell the detectives where her boyfriend Tony
was. But her phone bill showed that she had repeatedly called a number in Greenville,
North Carolina over the past couple of days, and Detective Villalobos had a hunch that those were
calls to Tony. Villalobos sent a picture of Tony to local police in Greenville and right away,
an officer in Greenville contacted him and said he recognized Tony. He told Villalobos that Tony
actually went by the name Dennis Godley in Greenville,
but the local cops just called him the Weasel because he was so good at eluding arrest.
However, the officer in Greenville said he would still be able to lead Villa-Lobos and his partner
right to Tony. So, detectives Villa-Lobos and Heaney headed right to the airport and took a
flight from California to North Carolina.
And while they were there, they did meet and interview Tony, however he was totally uncooperative.
He claimed that he had never been close to Adriana and that he had absolutely no role
in the death of Ken and Carolyn Stahl.
The detectives flew home feeling frustrated and with almost no new information, but their
plan with Adriana had
worked.
After spending the night in jail and worrying she would not get to go home to her kids,
she was now finally ready to tell the detectives everything she knew about Tony and everything
she knew about Ken and Carolyn's murders.
And by the time Adriana was finished talking, detectives Villalobos and Heeney were ready to make arrests in a
case that had now gone on for almost a year.
Based on Adriana's jail cell interview and evidence collected by both teams of detectives
throughout the investigation, Here is a reconstruction
of what police belief happened to Carolyn and Ken Stahl out on Ortega Highway on November 20, 1999.
On that November day, the killer sat in the passenger seat of a parked car not far from
the restaurant in San Juan Capistrano where Ken and Carolyn were celebrating Carolyn's
birthday.
The killer calmly loaded their.357 Magnum and made small talk with the driver.
But the driver wasn't listening.
They had their eyes focused on the road right outside of the restaurant.
Then the driver suddenly told the killer to be quiet.
Ken's Dodge Stratus had just pulled out onto the road.
The driver waited to let Ken's car get a little further away.
Then the driver started their car, pulled out onto the road, and followed Ken.
The driver tracked Ken onto Ortega Highway.
The highway was dark and oddly quiet.
The driver gripped the steering wheel tight and closed in on Ken.
Meanwhile, the killer just kept talking like nothing out of the ordinary was even happening.
Then at some point, Ken's car pulled off the highway into the breakdown lane near an
emergency phone box.
The driver told the killer it was time to act, then the driver hit the gas, raced by
Ken's car, and then did a U-turn into the breakdown lane.
The driver's headlights were now shining directly into Ken's car and then did a U-turn into the breakdown lane. The driver's headlights
were now shining directly into Ken's windshield. The driver put the car in park, and then the
killer casually stepped out of the car. The killer walked right up to the driver's side
window and tapped on the glass, and Ken rolled the window down. Ken was about to say something
when the killer casually raised the.357 Magnum and fired.
The bullet hit Ken behind the left ear and exited through his right eye.
Carolyn began to scream from the passenger seat and tried to undo her seatbelt, but she
was in shock and her hands were shaking and so she couldn't get free.
The killer then fired another shot into Ken and this time the bullet shredded his aorta,
the body's main artery. And so blood
sprayed all over the car and Ken slumped over, dead.
Carolyn finally got her seatbelt off, but by this point the killer stuck his gun through the open
driver's side window and fired multiple shots point blank at Carolyn, hitting Carolyn in the chest.
Carolyn screamed again and blood began to pour down her shirt, but she was still alive.
So the killer aimed the gun at her and fired again, but they were out of bullets.
So as Carolyn is sitting there slowly dying and screaming and looking at her dead husband,
the killer walked back to the other car, they opened up the passenger side door, shouted
something at the driver, and then grabbed extra ammunition from a bag on the floor.
Then the killer calmly reloaded their gun and then turned back and began walking towards
Ken's car again.
By this point, the killer saw the passenger side door of the Dodge Stratus was now open.
Carolyn tumbled out of the car and one of her earrings fell to the ground.
She was covered in blood and struggling to breathe, but she managed to brace herself
against the back door of the car and stay on her feet.
Carolyn looked around for any kind of escape route, but then she heard something behind
her.
She turned and saw the killer walking towards her with their gun raised.
There was nowhere to go.
In a last, desperate attempt to save herself, Carolyn dove back inside the car head first.
One of her red shoes fell off as she struggled to pull herself across the front seat of the
car over the body of her dead husband.
She was trying to get to the driver's side so that maybe she could speed away and save
herself.
But the killer just walked to the open passenger door, aimed their gun at the back of Carolyn's
head and fired off two more shots.
Carolyn fell over dead in Ken's lap.
The killer leaned in to make sure both Ken and Carolyn were dead.
Then they did a thorough sweep of the car and the road around it to make sure they picked
up any stray evidence, like bullet casings.
Finally, when the killer was satisfied, they walked back to the white Mazda that was still
parked with its lights shining directly into Ken's car.
Then the killer got back into the Mazda and looked over at the driver.
And the driver was shaking and horrified.
The killer told the driver to calm down and just get out of here.
But the driver shouted at the killer that they were not supposed to kill Ken.
The driver said she loved Ken, and Ken was actually the
one who had paid them to murder his wife.
It would turn out Adriana was the driver, and her boyfriend, Tony, had indeed pulled
the trigger and killed Carolyn and Ken. But Ken had actually been the one who set the
entire thing in motion.
It turned out Ken had wanted his wife dead for a long time.
He wanted to be free to have relationships with lots of women without any repercussions
and just to live his life however he wanted.
But Ken felt like he was reliant on Carolyn.
She took care of him and she made a lot of money, so if his health issues kept him from
working again, he would still be able to live well because of Carolyn.
Ken went so far as to tell some people that Carolyn had control of his life and it was
like he was being blackmailed just to stay in the marriage, even though that was just
not true.
But finally, Ken told Adriana that he had just had enough and he asked her to help him
murder his wife.
Adriana said her boyfriend Tony would be perfect for the job, he was good with
guns and calm in any situation. So, Ken paid Adriana and Tony $30,000 to carry out a hit on
Carolyn. And Ken and Adriana hammered out all of the details, including the exact location on Ortega
Highway where Ken would pull over and the murder would go down.
On the day of the murder, Ken had contacted Adriana multiple times to let her know when
he and Carolyn were heading to the restaurant and then when they arrived and then also when
they were leaving, and Adriana and Tony had been waiting nearby to follow him to the spot
they'd agreed on.
But when it came time to actually do the job, Tony took things into his own hands.
He didn't trust Ken and he didn't want the middle-aged doctor around to pin the whole
thing on him.
So Tony decided to just kill Ken too.
Carolyn was truly just an innocent victim.
Her husband had plotted against her and had even tried to paint her as some kind of blackmailing
monster.
But Carolyn's friends and family knew that despite all of Ken's cheating, Carolyn still
loved him and she still believed they could repair their marriage.
But Ken had no intention of doing that.
At trial, Adriana insisted that she tried to talk Ken out of going through with the
shooting and that she ultimately only went along with it because she was afraid of Tony.
But ultimately a jury would convict her of masterminding the entire murder plot and sentenced
her to life in prison without parole.
As for Tony, he would ultimately plead guilty to the murders in exchange for a life sentence
instead of the death penalty, and Tony would insist to the very end that Adriana was the one who shot Carolyn, not him.
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And before you go, please tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondry.com
slash survey. In May of 1980 near Anaheim, California, Dorothy Jane Scott noticed her friend had an inflamed
red wound on his arm and seemed unwell. She insisted on driving him to the local hospital
to get treatment. While he waited for his prescription, Dorothy went to grab her car
to pick him up at the exit, but would never be seen alive again, leaving us to wonder,
decades later, what really happened to Dorothy Jane Scott?
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