MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - Shipwrecked Podcast Exclusive Episode
Episode Date: January 11, 2026In the early morning hours on a Saturday in 2013, a man dressed all in black hid in the shadows on a side street in downtown Antwerp, Belgium. The man had lost track of how long he’d even been there..., but he didn’t care. He’d hide in the shadows for as long as he had to, waiting patiently for the right moment. Finally, he heard stumbling footsteps, and he felt a jolt of energy run through his body, and he crouched down, ready to lunge. You can WATCH all new & exclusive MrBallen podcast episodes on my 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 @mrballen Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
In the early morning hours on a Saturday in 2013, a man dressed all in black, hidden the shadows on a side street in downtown Antwerp, Belgium.
The man had lost track of how long he'd been there, but he didn't care.
He'd hide in the shadows for as long as he had to, waiting patiently for the perfect moment that he knew was going to arrive eventually.
And then finally, stumbling footsteps approached, and the man crouched down and got ready.
But before we get into today's story, you may be wondering.
why you're getting a new episode on a Wednesday. Well, I am now going to be uploading
four episodes to the Mr. Ballin podcast each week. Now, Mondays and Thursdays won't change.
But beginning today, you're also going to get new slash exclusive episodes on Wednesdays.
And on Fridays, you'll get a mix of new stories and also fan favorites. And these Wednesday stories,
they aren't just going to be true crime. In fact, many of them will be based on the kind of stories
that you already love if you're a fan of my YouTube channel. I call this series places you can't go
and people who went there anyways. Or maybe more accurately, things you really can't do,
but people who did them anyway, and here's their story. These stories are insane,
and I'm telling you, if you've not heard this series before, you're really going to like it.
So make sure you check them out here each Wednesday, and you can also watch me tell these
stories on my YouTube channel each week. So, if you're a fan of the Strange, Dark, and Mysterious,
delivered in story format, then you come to the right show because that's all we do.
So if that's of interest to you, please sneak into the Follow Button's house and lay hundreds
of mouse traps inside of their bed. Okay, let's get into today's story.
After midnight on Saturday, October 19, 2013, a 23-year-old man named O'Day Egyloos stood at the bar
in a packed dance club in Antwerp, Belgium. The bartender slid two shot classes across the bar
towards O'Day, and he grabbed both of them, he held one, and he handed the other to his friend,
Kevin Rodriguez Fuentes, who was standing right behind him. It was Kevin's birthday. So O'Day raised his
shock glass and shouted happy birthday in Spanish over the pounding dance music, and then the two young
men slam back their drinks. O'Day had moved to Antwerp Belgium from Spain about six months earlier
when he had gotten a job as a computer engineer. When he'd arrived, he hadn't known anybody.
But he'd met Kevin at a beer festival, and the two of them had gotten along right away.
And Kevin was from the area, so he'd introduced O'Day to a bunch of his friends and shown him the best spots to hang out in the city,
and the two had gotten very close very quickly.
Now, standing at the bar after, you know, taking their shots, Kevin tapped on Ode's shoulder,
and he pointed out at the dance floor, and he grinned because there was a group of young women about their age all dancing together out there.
And so the two young men, they headed out to the dance floor to go speak with the.
girls. And from this point on, the night really became a blur for O'Day, who kept going back and
forth from the dance floor back to the bar for more drinks. But, you know, despite that, O'Day was having a
great time. It was really nights like this that made him feel like Antwerp was his new home. But
he also knew if he stayed out much longer here, he might end up passing out right on the dance
floor. So O'Day and Kevin and some friends they had just met on the dance floor, stumbled out of the
club and into the city. When they got out there, the streets were pretty empty. And so Odei reflexively
pulled his phone out of his pocket and looked at the time. Now, his vision was fuzzy, but even still,
you know, one-eyeing it, he could see that it was close to 4 a.m. And given the fact that it was
so, so late, basically it was the next day at this point, he just told the group, good night,
and then he turned around to start walking home to go to bed. The next morning, O'Day's friend,
Kevin, woke up with a pounding headache. His eyes fluttered open and
and he looked around and he let out a sigh of relief because he was safely in his bedroom
in his apartment in Antwerp. He had been so drunk by the end of his birthday celebration the night
before that he literally didn't remember getting home. And so now, painfully, he rolled over
and grabbed his phone off the nightstand and reflexively texted O'Day, along with another friend
that had been out with him the night before asking how they were feeling. The other friend texted
right back, but O'Day did not respond. But this didn't really worry Kevin that much. I mean, he's
horribly hungover. O'Day has to be as well, and so he likely is just sleeping it off and he'll be in
touch when he wakes up. However, all day that day, Kevin did not hear from O'Day. And then the next day,
October 20th, when still Kevin has not heard from O'Day, he really started to get worried. But
when Kevin called O'Day to check on him to make sure he was okay, when he put the phone to his ear,
it didn't ring. Instead, it went straight to O'Day's voicemail, like his phone was turned off.
And to Kevin, this was pretty unusual.
O'Day was usually very responsive, even with a hangover.
And by this point, Kevin had given him a full day, 24 hours to recover, you know,
like he should be in touch by now, what's going on?
So Kevin called the other friend who they'd gone out with who had texted him back the day before
to see if maybe O'Day had checked in with him.
But that friend said he also had not spoken to O'Day.
And so at this point, Kevin hung up and just decided to go to O'Day.
's house and literally physically check on him. However, when Kevin arrived at O'Day's house,
he found O'Day's roommates, but no O'Day. O'Day's roommates did not know O'Day very well, so they didn't
know what was sort of normal and not normal behavior. So when he had gone out for Kevin's birthday
party and didn't come back, they just figured he was crashing at a friend's place or something.
But to Kevin, this was unusual. To hear that he had not come back, that was not normal,
he would know if O'Day was at a friend's house. And so Kevin was starting to
to panic. But then Kevin remembered one of his and Ode's mutual friends had recently gone out
of town for a wedding. And so Kevin thought, you know, maybe that's where Ode is. He's gone with
her to the wedding and that's why he's not here and that's why he's not answering his phone. So
Kevin left Ode's house and called this friend, a young woman whose name was Oyaane. He was
hoping that she would have an explanation for everything. But instead, when she answered the phone,
it was obvious from her voice that she was also freaking out about Ode.
O'Yane said she also had been calling O'Day nonstop over the past day or so,
and she couldn't get in touch with him.
And so it was becoming clear that nobody had seen O'Day since the night of the birthday party
when he set off around 4 a.m. to walk home drunk from the bar.
Kevin had no idea what he was supposed to do, but he felt like his friend was in trouble.
So he contacted the police and officially reported O'Day missing.
The following day, Monday, October 21st, Kevin sat in a small room across from members of the missing persons unit of the Belgian National Police.
And as soon as the officers started asking Kevin questions, it became clear that this was going to be a very frustrating meeting for everybody.
Because no matter how hard Kevin tried, he literally couldn't remember much at all.
His memory of his and O'Day's Night Out on his birthday were really just blurry images and pieces of random conversations, because, you know,
know, he was drunk. But Kevin did manage to remember what O'Day had been wearing. He had a gray hooded
sweatshirt and a black and white checkered scarf. And he also knew the area of town specifically where
they had gone out. But really, that was it. And so by the time Kevin left the police station,
he felt like he was really letting his friend down. And he just couldn't handle the idea that now
he would just have to sit around and wait and hope police magically found him, you know, when right now
O'Day, wherever he was, could be in trouble or hurt or something. You know, he just
felt like he had to do something. So that afternoon, Kevin met up with some of Ode's other friends,
and together they began hanging posters all around the city that had pictures of O'Day on them.
Antwerp was a very busy city, filled with bars and restaurants that stayed open very late,
so they were sure that somebody had to have seen O'Day while he was walking home. He couldn't
have just disappeared into thin air. People don't do that. Meanwhile, detectives in the missing
person's unit got to work. Now, Kevin had not given
them a ton to go on, but knowing where in the city he and O'Day had gone out and what O'Day had
been wearing did actually turn out to be quite helpful. Because with this basic information,
police were able to collect CCTV surveillance camera footage from outside of the bars,
restaurants, and street corners where Kevin and O'Day had been. And it didn't take them long
to pick up on O'Day's trail. The investigators were hoping to find footage of O'Day getting into a cab
or some other vehicle or maybe wandering into a building,
or even evidence that he'd been attacked in some capacity.
And at first, they thought that is exactly what they'd found.
Because on camera footage, around 4 a.m. on the morning O'Day disappeared,
the police saw him wandering down this dimly lit side street on his own.
His black and white checkered scarf really jumped out on the footage.
And the police watched on video as this man suddenly came out of the shadows and rushed O'Day.
The man attacked O'Day and stole what looked like O'Day's wallet right out of his pocket, and then the man took off running.
And as disturbing as it was, the footage did not actually surprise the investigators very much.
While Antwerp was not a particularly violent place, it was a big city, and drunk people wandering home at night did occasionally get mugged.
However, what the investigators saw next on the surveillance footage did completely shock them.
Because after the mugging, O'Day had pulled himself.
together and kept heading down the street. And on footage taken a few minutes later from a different
camera, the police saw O'Day still wandering on his own when suddenly two new men rushed up,
attacked O'Day, took his phone, and then they ran away. Meaning, in the span of just a few minutes,
O'Day had been mugged twice by three different people. And none of the investigators had ever seen
anything like that. It was like something you'd expect to see in a movie or a TV show.
about a guy cursed with bad luck or something.
But as bizarre as this was, investigators now had something to go on.
They didn't know if these muggers, the three men, were connected in some way,
or if this had truly been two random, unconnected muggings.
But Ode's cell phone and wallet had been stolen by these guys.
So they could track O'Day's cell phone data and also his credit card info,
and the investigators hoped that would then lead them right to O'Day's attackers,
and they could figure out what their affiliation was,
and why they targeted O'Day and hopefully where O'Day is now.
The investigators' plan took a few days, but it did pay off in a big way.
By tracking O'Day's credit card, investigators discovered that somebody had attempted to use
one of his cards at an ATM in the city, and so they pulled surveillance footage from that
ATM to identify the first mugger. Then by using cell phone tower data and CCTV footage
along the route where they saw his cell phone was taken, investigators were able to
to identify the other two attackers involved in the second mugging. And so now they believe they just
needed to talk to these thieves to figure out where Ode was. Fast forward to October 29th,
10 days after O'Day's disappearance, and he still is nowhere to be found, officers from the missing
persons unit interviewed these three muggers separately. The police made it clear that they had a
pile of evidence here that showed they mugged O'Day shortly before he banished, so there's no point
trying to deny it. They know what they did. And none of the muggers did try to deny it. In fact,
all three men admitted that they had jumped O'Day on the street and they told the police exactly
what they had stolen. But they insisted their attacks, the two muggings, were not coordinated at all.
They just happened to have gotten to O'Day within a few minutes of each other. And then even more
importantly, they also all insisted that they had nothing to do with O'Day's disappearance. All they did
was rob him, that's it.
As the investigators listened to these muggers talk, all they could do was stare and disbelief.
The idea that three muggers had randomly committed two attacks on the same man within minutes
of each other, and that their victim had then disappeared in what yet another unrelated
incident, seemed almost comical.
But no matter how hard the police pressed these guys, they all completely stuck to their stories,
which was, we mugged him and then they were, we mugged him.
and then we ran away and we never saw him again.
The police arrested and held all three men in connection to the robberies that they admitted to doing,
but their goal, despite what these men have said,
was to find enough evidence to still charge them with the kidnapping,
or maybe even murder, of O'Day.
But then, a new piece of surveillance footage surfaced from a new camera.
And this new footage actually showed O'Day moments after the second mugging.
And on this footage, investigators did.
didn't see any of the muggers dragging O'Day away or something. Instead, just like the muggers said,
they really did take off after that second mugging. And just like he'd done after the first attack,
O'Day dusted himself off and just kept on walking down the street and out of the camera's range.
But he was alone. And so now, to their complete astonishment, the police had to admit that the muggers
might be telling the truth. And that O'Day could have just kept wandering the streets of Antwerp for hours
after he'd gotten attacked. They didn't know. But they know the muggers ran away and Ode was alone,
at least briefly after the second attack. And also, this new footage made them realize that to really
conduct this investigation, they were going to need to search the entire city to see if anyone,
anywhere, had seen O'Day. So in early November of 2013, about two weeks after O'Day's disappearance,
Belgium National Police conducted a massive investigation throughout all of Antwerp.
They visited all the bars, all the restaurants, all the clubs in the area roughly where O'Day and his friends had been out partying.
But no matter who they spoke to, no matter where they went, nobody knew where O'Day was or what happened to him.
But as they hit all these dead ends, the investigator's search continued and it sort of slowly migrated north through Antwerp in the rough direction where O'Day had been last seen walking.
away from the city center and towards the banks of the River Skelt, which runs right through Antwerp
on its way to the North Sea. On the evening of November 7th, so by this point it is 19 days since O'Day
was last seen, several detectives from the missing persons unit stepped onto the deck of a very
unique structure that literally floated on the river Skelt. The structure was called the bodboat.
That morning, police boats had been dragging the river itself and were searching the river
banks with dogs looking for any signs of O'Day. But the search of this river couldn't be completed
without a stop at the bodboat. So the bodboat was basically a massive club, bar, and high-end restaurant
that had been built into a converted ship that was moored right in the middle of the stretch of the
river that police were dragging. But the biggest attraction of the bodboat was not the food or the
dancing. It was the almost Olympic-sized swimming pool that had been built into the deck of the ship.
and it looked like it was floating right on top of the river.
People referred to it as the world's largest floating swimming pool, and it was always packed.
The bodboat had a very good, very wide, unobstructed view of the city and the river.
And so the detectives were hopeful that if Ode had passed by, someone on the bodboat
likely would have been able to see him.
So now the detectives split up and began interviewing the bodboat staff and the patrons,
asking if any of them remembered seeing a young man in a distinctive black and white checkered scarf
on the morning he went missing. Now, at this point, pretty much everybody in the city had already
heard of O'Day. I mean, his face was plastered on posters everywhere and people really wanted to help.
But as detectives talked to everybody at the bodboat in the pool, in the bar, in the restaurant,
everybody, as much as people wanted to help and thought they might have tips that could help,
nobody had anything that was meaningful.
And so eventually, the investigators had to leave the bodboat,
and they just spent the rest of the afternoon on the banks of the river,
watching the Marine unit do its work.
But just like on the bodboat, there was nothing found in the river itself.
On November 19, 2013, so now one full month after O'Day's disappearance,
friends and family gathered publicly, both in Antwerp
and his hometown in the Basque country of Spain.
In Spain, his family made it clear that they still hoped Ode would be alive,
and that this gathering was not a memorial.
It was instead to show their love for Ode,
and to bring continued attention to his story so he could be found.
In Antwerp, Ode's friends tried to convey the same message with their meetup,
that Ode had to be out there somewhere and he might be okay.
We just need to keep looking.
However, by the end of 2013, so now over two months after Ode's disappearance,
it became clear that the police investigation was really not making much headway at all.
Police still had those three muggers in custody and hopes that maybe they would crack and they would
admit that they had done something to O'Day after the muggings, but the three men had not changed
their stories at all.
And also, after over a month of canvassing the entire city, no new evidence had really surfaced
at all.
And so O'Day's friends and family really began to worry that the police might just abandon the
search because there was nothing they could do. But then, starting in the early summer of 2014,
so a little more than seven months after Ode first disappeared, something incredible happened.
Ode's story went viral, and not just in Belgium or in his native Spain, but all across
Europe. And this really is not how things typically played out. Thousands of people go missing
in Europe every year, and most of those cases go relatively unnoticed by the media and the general
public. It just is what it is. But the story of this young man who had moved to Antwerp to start his
career and a new life, only to vanish without a trace after being mugged twice in the middle of the
night, it just seemed so unbelievable and also resonated with people everywhere. It just felt so
tragic. And so as the police, who by this point really had throttled back their search quite a bit,
I mean, it's been seven months by now, as police were showing signs of just basically dropping the case,
people all across the continent demanded the police not just continue, but increase their scrutiny.
Look everywhere.
Triple your efforts.
Find O'Day.
And so there's all this unbelievable international outpouring of support from this viral story.
I mean, you had poets all over the world writing poems about O'Day, and you had musicians
writing music about O'Day.
You had charity groups coming out in Belgium and doing their own search for O'Day.
I mean, it's like the whole world was rallying.
to get the Belgian government to act.
Like, triple your efforts.
Find O'Day.
He's out there.
And then what sort of pushed it over the edge
was in October of 2014,
as the first anniversary of O'Day's disappearance approached.
One of the most famous soccer players in the world,
Cristiano Ronaldo,
played a game with images of O'Day on his jersey.
I mean, his story really had reached basically everyone.
And it was at this point that Belgium did act.
The Belgium National Police literally did.
doubled down on their efforts to search the entire country for Ode. They're not just looking in
Antwerp anymore. They're going to look everywhere. They also enlisted the help of Interpol, an international
police organization, to expand the search to other European countries. And so throughout 2014 and into
2015, investigators in Antwerp revisited bars, restaurants they had gone to during their initial
canvas, and they re-interviewed people connected to O'Day. They also made public announcements to let
people know they were still looking for O'Day. But despite all this effort, despite really doing
their absolute best to find O'Day, they couldn't find him. But then on September 18th, 2015,
so one year and 11 months after O'Day's disappearance, something happened with the bodboat
that changed everything. So to understand what happened, you need to take into account the
literal design of the bodboat. So the bodboat really was,
you know, this entertainment hub that had been installed in this decommissioned boat.
But the boat is not like a boat that we think of,
and we think of a huge ship or something where there's multiple stories
and a huge deep keel that goes beneath the surface of the water.
Instead, it was more like a big floating dock,
almost like a catamaran-style boat,
where it's sort of one level, this big rectangular square,
and there really is nothing below the surface.
It's more like a big floating dock.
That was the bodboat. And on September 18, 2015, the swimming pool on the bod boat began to leak.
Now, remember, you're looking out at the bodboat from land, and it basically looks like a big floating dock with all these attractions on it, including a pool.
And so even though you'd see the surface of the swimming pool being at level with everything else, basically right at the top of the river,
well, there's a recessed portion that effectively touches down into the river.
And so at some point, there's a leak that formed on the base of this pool, and the pool began taking on all this extra water, and the pool literally broke off from the bodboat structure, and it sank to the bottom of the river.
Now, luckily, no one had gotten hurt when this happened, but the story had taken over the news.
The bodboat was a huge attraction for people in Antwerp, as well as for tourists visiting the city.
And so the city immediately began working to come up with a plan to resurface the swimming pool.
and rebuild the bodboat.
Finally, on February 11, 2016,
so almost two and a half years after O'Day's disappearance
and five months after the swimming pool sunk,
two cranes attached to a boat were brought in
to latch onto the base of this pool at the bottom of the river
and try to resurface it.
And on that afternoon, a member of the work crew
stood on the boat,
watching the water and helping oversee everything
as the cranes slowly did their work.
And as he kept his eyes trained on the water,
eventually, the bodboats swimming pool, which was still actually mostly intact, broke the surface.
And as this happened, a few of the workers let out a cheer.
But something in the water caught the crew members' attention.
At first he couldn't tell what it was.
But when he leaned down to get a better look, he immediately shouted for the crane operator to stop.
The cranes fell silent and with shaking hands, the crew member took out his phone and called the police.
Eventually, once they put all the evidence together,
this is what police believe happened to O'Day
on the early morning of October 19, 2013.
At around 4 a.m., after leaving his friends,
O'Day began his walk home.
And like the police already knew,
he was mugged twice in a matter of minutes.
But after the second mugging,
he really did pick himself up and sort of collect himself,
and very likely he was hurt, he was scared,
and he was very drunk, so likely disoriented,
doesn't know if there are more threats coming, doesn't really understand what's even happening,
but he needs to get home. And we know he continued trying to walk home for some time
because eventually he came in contact with a group of strangers who would eventually come forward and
confirm this. But they apparently saw this guy who looked beat up and disoriented. It was O'Day.
And they called out to him and tried to convince him to let them book him a cap to get him home.
But he was so disoriented and so drunk, he didn't even answer him and he just walked off.
But at that point, he had moved fairly far north in the city, and he was getting near the banks of the river Skel.
So for reference, he had walked pretty far off course. He was not near his home. He was clearly lost.
And at some point, in his disoriented, scared, drunken state, he tripped and actually fell into the river.
Now, the shock of landing in the water likely, you know, potentially sobered him up a little bit, but he was really, really drunk.
And so even if he had tried to swim and get to shore, there was a strong enough current
that it would have been fairly difficult to get out of the water.
And so the current ended up pulling him all the way up against the side of the bodboat.
And so once he was there kind of pinned against the side of the bodboat, right on the side of the
bodboat where that swimming pool was, he was too weak and drunk to swim out of the current.
And so he's just kind of being pressed up against the wall of the side of the bodboat until he had no more
energy left to fight, and he was slowly pulled under the surface and forced underneath the
bodboats, specifically to the bottom of the recess of the swimming pool where there's not much
space between the bottom of the pool and the bottom of the river.
And so he basically got pulled down and got wedged right in that space underneath the
pool of the bodboat, and there he drowned.
And for more than two years after his death, O'Day's body remained wedged underneath that swimming pool.
And so for all that time, people are swimming in the pool, not realizing they're a couple feet away from a dead body.
But then finally, the swimming pool, you know, sunk to the bottom.
It was pulled back up by those cranes and attached to it at this point was O'Day's body.
And that was how they found him.
The muggers who attacked O'Day were ultimately convicted of robbery, and they also,
served approximately four years in prison. Now, the muggers were never actually shown to have any
direct connection to O'Day's death. And while authorities believe the most likely scenario is that
O'Day simply fell into the water, they were never able to officially rule out foul play.
O'Day's parents have called for further investigation. 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 Lacassio, Perry Crowell, and Jordan Stidham.
Mixed and mastered by Brendan Cain.
Production Coordination by Samantha Collins.
Production support by Antonio Manata and Delana Corley.
Artwork by Jessica Klogstenkiner.
Theme song called Something Wicked by Ross Bugden.
Thank you for listening to the Mr. Ballin podcast.
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 or another app of your choice.
So that's going to do it.
I really appreciate your support.
Until next time, see you.
