MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - Silent Screams (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: August 12, 2024On the morning of July 7th, 2019, Sergeant Dan Birbeck responded to a call at the home of a 49-year-old woman in a small Texas town. Birbeck got to the house and found a bloody crime scene in... the master bedroom – evidence that a violent struggle had taken place there. Three other members of the family were home that night and had been in close proximity to the master bedroom – and none of them heard a thing. The victim’s husband had been asleep on the couch just steps away from the master bedroom. The victim’s teenage daughter was asleep in the room just next door. And the victim’s son had been in an upstairs bedroom playing video games all night. It seemed inconceivable to Sergeant Birbeck that a violent attack could have taken place in one room, while members of the family slept through it or played video games without hearing anything. Birbeck believed something sinister had happened in the house that night, and the family members might be in on it. But the sergeant had a problem… the victim of this apparent crime was nowhere to be found.For 100s more stories like these, check out our main YouTube channel just called "MrBallen" -- https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallenIf you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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On the morning of July 7th, 2019, Sergeant Dan Burbeck responded to a call at the home
of a 49-year-old woman in a small Texas town.
Burbeck got to the house and found a bloody crime scene in the master bedroom, evidence
that a violent struggle must have taken place there the night before.
Now three other members of the victim's family were home that night and they had been in
close proximity to the master bedroom.
The victim's husband had been asleep on the couch just steps away from the master bedroom,
the victim's teenage daughter was asleep in the room just next door, and the victim's
son had been in an upstairs bedroom playing video games all night.
But they all said they didn't hear a thing the night before.
And so it seemed totally inconceivable to Sergeant Burbeck that this violent attack could have taken
place in one room while the entire family just kind of went about their business and heard nothing.
And so Burbeck believed something sinister must have happened in that house the night before,
and it seemed very possible, if not likely, that these family members were a part of it.
But the sergeant had a problem.
The victim of this apparent crime in the master bedroom was nowhere to be found.
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, please offer to do all the grocery shopping for the follow
button, but when you get to the store, buy absolutely nothing on their list. Have you ever imagined what it would be like to see the newly built Duomo towering above
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join me every week as we explore the reallife stories and events that inspire the locations, the characters and the storylines of this legendary game
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of History has something for you. Listen and follow Echoes of History, a Ubisoft podcast
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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 the Idaho student killings, the Delphi murders, and our recent rundown of the Murdock
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Last year, we also started a second weekly show, Short Hand, which is just an excuse
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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
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Whatever the case, we want to know what pushes people to the extremes of human behavior.
Like can someone give consent to be cannibalized?
What drives a child to kill?
And what's the psychology of a terrorist?
Listen to Red Handed wherever you get your podcasts and access our bonus
shorthand episodes exclusively on Amazon Music or by subscribing to Wondry Plus in
Apple Podcasts or the Wondry app.
It had been a muggy day in North Texas on July 6, 2019, but the oppressive heat began to let up right as the sun set, and by 7pm it had become an ideal summer night of about
73 degrees Fahrenheit.
And so it seemed like the perfect Saturday night to go out in town.
But 49-year-old Manuela Allen, known to her friends and family as just Manu, along with
her husband Peter, had the house all to themselves that evening.
So instead of going out to enjoy the pleasant summer weather, they decided instead to have
a relaxing night in, just the two of them, on the couch, just watching TV together.
Peter and Manu had not had many evenings alone like this in their 23 years of marriage.
And that was because they had spent most of those years raising their four kids.
So this was a house that had constantly buzzed with activity and noise.
But now all but one of their four kids had graduated from high school and their oldest
son was away at college, so the house was getting quieter. And Manu and Peter were already
thinking about how someday soon it might just be the two of them living here. And as much
as they loved their children, it was nights like this that made them kind of look forward
to the day that they would be empty nesters.
Peter grabbed his glass that contained some vodka from the end table and took a sip, and
then he and Manu leaned back on the couch to watch a replay of a Texas Rangers baseball
game. Manu loved sports, and while baseball was not her favorite, it would have to do
until football season rolled back around. Manu and Peter lived in the small Texas town of
Olney with a population of just 3,000 people, and the nearest city with a major football team
was over two hours away. But both Manu and Peter were teachers at Olney High School, and so during
football season they went to watch their beloved Olney Cubs play every Friday night. Manu didn't
care that the Cubs were on the third longest losing streak in the state of Texas.
She just loved going to support her students who were on the team, and she enjoyed the
camaraderie of sitting in the stands along with her friends and her family.
As a teacher, Manu felt responsible for her students, even when they were outside the
classroom.
So she dedicated a lot of her time to tutoring and mentoring students, especially the ones
that seemed to have the most issues, even beyond just schoolwork issues. Kids that had problems at home, or kids who had behavioral issues, you know,
Manu was all about helping those kids. But the upcoming school year and the roaring crowds in
the stands on Friday nights felt really far away for Manu on this relaxing summer evening,
and the sound of the baseball game on TV started to become white noise for her, and by 10pm,
she could barely keep her eyes open.
Peter noticed his wife nodding off, and he gently nudged her and asked if she wanted
to go to bed.
Manu looked over at the clock and said she should get some sleep.
Peter gave his wife a kiss, and Manu stood up, and she shuffled down the hallway, entered
the master bedroom, and closed the door behind her.
Peter would not be joining his wife tonight in the master bedroom.
He and Manu had this understanding that on any night when Peter drank, even if it was just one drink, he would have to
sleep on the couch. So, with his glass of vodka still half full, this would be one of those nights.
Peter continued watching TV and slowly nursing his drink, and he started to feel tired.
And then around 11.30, the couple's 20-year-old son Darian came home. He let himself in with a key,
nodded to his dad, and went upstairs to his own bedroom.
But then around 15 minutes later, there was a knock on the front door.
Peter stood up and groaned a bit as he walked bleary-eyed towards the front door.
He unlocked it and opened it up.
And outside the door stood the couple's 15-year-old daughter, Chiara.
She said hi to her dad, walked right past him, and went straight to her room.
Peter sat back down on the couch. The couple's 18-year-old daughter, Melanie, was away on
a weekend trip with her friends, so she wasn't expected home. And at this point, it was close
to midnight, so Peter dimmed the lights, reclined on the couch and slowly drifted off to sleep
while the TV stayed on at a low volume.
A little after 8am the next morning, Peter woke up feeling like he could have used maybe
another hour or two of sleep.
Now it was Saturday and if Peter wanted to he could keep sleeping, but even on these
weekends, Peter just could not seem to sleep in, he just automatically got up.
So Peter climbed up from the couch, grabbed his computer, and then went back to the couch
to read some news online.
At the same time Peter was doing this, his daughter
Chiara had just woken up as well and she was getting ready to go to the gym, but first she
wanted to put her dirty clothes in the washing machine. The Allen House had five bedrooms,
but it was still a fairly compact house, just a little over 2,000 square feet, and the house was
laid out in a way where Chiara actually had to go through her parents' master bedroom, which was
right next to her own bedroom, in order to get into the laundry room. So Kiara stepped out of her room
and then tried turning the knob to the master bedroom, but she found the door was locked from
the inside. Kiara walked down the hall and saw her dad on the computer, and she asked him where mom
was, and Peter just said, oh, check the master bedroom. Kiara said she already had, and the door
was locked. Peter then told his daughter to just go around through the garage, because in their house
the master bedroom had two entrances.
There was one in the hallway inside of the house, which is the door that was locked,
and then the other entrance was through the laundry room on the other side, which connected
to the garage.
So Chiara stepped outside of the house and went into the garage, and she walked into
the laundry room, and then she reached the door that led into the master bedroom, and
when she tried the door knob, it was unlocked.
So she swung it open, she stepped inside, and she froze, because what she saw was horrifying.
Chiara turned and ran back outside, back around into the main house, ran to her dad and said,
Mom is not in the bedroom, and there is blood everywhere. Peter instantly
sprung up, raced outside into the garage and into the master bedroom and right away he
stepped in this big puddle of blood in the carpet and he looked around the master and
there really was blood everywhere and his wife was nowhere to be seen.
Peter instantly thought his wife must be badly injured somewhere, so he ran from the master
bedroom with Kiara now following behind him, back into the garage and then out to the driveway
and that's when he realized Manu's car was gone.
Peter turned to his daughter and said, you know, mom must have hurt herself and driven
herself to the hospital.
And so Peter called his wife's cell phone, but it went straight to voicemail.
So a few minutes later, Peter and Kiara got into his car and they sped to a nearby hospital
thinking that's where Manu's gonna be.
But when they got there, Peter slowly drove through the parking lot of the emergency room
looking for Manu's white SUV, but they didn't see it anywhere.
So they parked the car and they went inside the hospital and asked the staff if Manuela
Allen had been admitted and they said no.
So Peter and Kiara left that hospital, went to another nearby hospital,
but again, Manu's car was not there
and the staff said she had not admitted herself.
And so Peter and Kiara returned home
and at this point, Peter dialed 911.
And he explained to the operator
that his wife was missing
and there was blood all over her bedroom. The first officer who arrived at the Allen House met with Peter outside.
He asked Peter what was going on and Peter told the officer that he really had no idea.
His daughter Chiara had come to him that morning, saying their mom was gone and there was blood
all over the bedroom, and then he went and checked and he saw the same thing, and then
he went out to the driveway and he noticed his wife's car was gone.
Peter explained that he and Chiara then drove to two hospitals thinking his wife must have
gotten hurt and then driven herself to a hospital, but when they got to the two hospitals, his
wife wasn't there and they said they had not seen her.
The officer noticed that as Peter was explaining the story, he seemed totally calm and not
shaken or panicked or really showing any kind of emotion, and that just seemed unusual to
the officer, considering the circumstances Peter had just described.
I mean, his wife at a minimum seems to have been gravely hurt if she's not already deceased,
and so you would think that would elicit a bigger reaction.
But the officer kept that to himself, and instead he had Peter lead him inside the residence
to the master bedroom.
And the first thing the officer noticed was that the bed had been stripped bare, and there
was a bloody pillow on the floor next to the bed.
And he did see blood spatter all over the room, across the mattress, the closet doors,
and the wall.
In fact, there was so much blood that the officer did not believe a person could survive
having lost that much of it.
And so he wondered to himself why Peter didn't immediately call 911 instead of getting in
the car with his daughter and driving around to various hospitals first.
It seemed obvious this was an emergency, so why wasn't it treated that way?
Then the officer noticed something else on the bedroom floor.
It was a knife.
And so at this point it was obvious this was a crime scene, so he asked Peter and Kiara
to clear out of the master bedroom and go wait for him on their couch.
And so after the father and daughter had stepped out of the room, the officer walked outside
and went to the garage.
And immediately he saw bloody streaks on the ground and he traced them through the laundry
room and back to the door of the master bedroom. And he recognized these bloody streaks had to be drag marks.
Everything the officer saw painted a picture of a very violent struggle having taken place
in the bedroom, most likely sometime during the night.
The officer then walked back into the house and observed bloody footprints leading from
the master bedroom to the kitchen, right to a spot next to the refrigerator.
And so the officer walked into the living room where Peter and Kiara were, and he asked Peter
about these footprints and why would somebody go into the kitchen potentially, and Peter
explained that actually his wife kept her keys on a hook right next to the refrigerator
and her keys were gone along with her car.
And so at this point the officer radioed dispatch for help and said the police should now be
on the lookout for Manu's vehicle, because clearly either Manu or someone who harmed Manu had taken the keys and taken
the vehicle.
A few minutes later, Sergeant Dan Burbeck of the Young County Sheriff's Department,
along with a couple of local police from Olney, pulled up in front of the Allen House, and
the officer who had first arrived on scene walked up to Burbeck and briefed him on what
he had seen. After being briefed up, Sergeant Burbek immediately walked into the
Allen House and told Peter and Kiara that they would need to step outside. As Peter and his
daughter walked out onto the porch, Peter told Burbek that actually one of his other kids was
still in the house upstairs. So Burbek told the father and the daughter to stay outside,
and then Burbek walked into the house and upstairs to a second floor bedroom, opened the door, and found 20-year-old Darian
inside with his headphones on playing video games.
Birbek asked Darian to come outside with him, and Darian, who looked very confused, asked
what was going on here, but Birbek just said he needed Darian to leave the house right
now.
So Darian just did as he was told and stood up and followed the detective downstairs
and then he, along with Birbek, joined Peter and Kiara outside on the porch.
Once they were out there, Birbek began questioning them, starting with the husband, Peter.
Birbek asked Peter, you know, why did you sleep on the couch that night instead of in your bed
with your wife? Peter explained the agreement he had with Manu, that whenever he drank, no matter
how much, he would sleep on the couch.
Now, Sergeant Burbek kept this to himself, but right away he wondered why would you have
that agreement in place?
Was Peter like a maniac when he drank?
Did he get violent?
You know, what was going on here?
Burbek then proceeded to ask each member of the family if they had heard anything unusual
during the night before, because Burbek assumed someone in the house must have heard something
considering the crime scene in the master bedroom.
And the couch where Peter slept was only about 20 steps away from the master bedroom.
Chiara was in the bedroom right next door to the master bedroom, and Darien was right above it in the upstairs bedroom.
It just seemed impossible that such a violent struggle could have taken place with them not hearing anything.
But Peter said he really heard nothing, aside from the sound of an engine, which he thought
could have been his wife's SUV, starting up around dawn.
He said the sound actually woke him up, but he went right back to sleep and figured it
was not a big deal, whatever it was.
Burbek asked Peter, you know, is it normal for your wife to just get up and leave in
the middle of the morning like that?
Like didn't you think to maybe ask her where she was going?
Peter replied that it was not his job to keep tabs on his wife.
Darien, who had been upstairs, said the whole night he'd had his headphones on and was
playing video games.
The only thing he said he heard over the course of the whole night was a rustling sound coming
from the kitchen sometime between maybe 3 and 5 a.m., but he figured it was just his
dad maybe getting a snack.
And then Kiara, who was in the room right next door to where her mother appeared to
have been in some life and death struggle, said she really had heard nothing.
Absolutely nothing.
Now, Burbek by this point looked totally stunned by their answers, and so Kiara, who kind of
picked up on his suspicion, she quickly explained that she had been out that night and when
she got home, she went straight to her room, slipped into her bed, put her earbuds in,
which would have nullified the noise, and she FaceTimed with her boyfriend.
And then after the call, she fell asleep still with the earbuds in her ears, which again
could have prevented her from hearing anything.
Birbek didn't know what to believe here, but he just still felt like something was off.
Maybe these family members know more than they're letting on.
But he obviously had no proof, and so Birbeck told the family that, you know,
when he was done here at the house,
he wanted them to come to the station
so he could speak to them further.
It was around this time that Lieutenant David Wilk
was driving past the Allen family house
when he saw the yellow crime scene tape
stretched out around their property.
Now, Lieutenant Wilk worked for the sheriff's department
that was the next county over, so he had no idea what this crime scene tape was about, but he did know the
Allens personally. In fact, his son was a football player at Olney High School and the boy adored
Manu. So, Lieutenant Wilk just really liked the Allen family and seeing the crime scene tape,
it just made his stomach drop because he knew obviously something bad had happened.
Wilk immediately pulled over, got out of his car, and introduced himself to a local police
officer he saw standing outside of the residence.
And Wilk asked the officer, you know, what's going on here?
And the officer told Wilk that Mrs. Allen was missing and it didn't look good.
Wilk asked if there was anything he could do to help.
And the officer told him that actually right now other patrol units were out looking for
Manu's white SUV. And so if Wilk wanted to he could join in that search.
And Wilk said yes, you know, where should I look?
And the officer suggested that maybe he explore the recreational area around Lake Cooper,
which was a very popular swimming hole about eight miles north of town.
And so the officer gave Lieutenant Wilk a description of Manu's vehicle, and her license
plate number, and then Wilk left, got back in his car, and began driving north until he reached the lake area.
There he pulled into the recreational area and began driving along the perimeter of the
lake.
And as he approached a boat ramp, something on the other side of the lake, near the dam,
drew his attention.
It was a white SUV, just like Manu's missing vehicle.
And so Lieutenant Wilk parked, got out of his car, and walked around the lake to where
this white SUV was parked, and as Wilk got closer to it, he could see there was nobody
in or around the SUV.
He could also see that the SUV appeared to be stuck on a large mound of dirt, with all
four wheels kind of hovering off the ground, as if somebody had driven it there, gotten
it stuck, and then left.
Wilk approached the driver's side of the vehicle and he noticed there were brown
smears near the door handle. He leaned in closer and he saw that these smears were
clearly bloody fingerprints. So immediately Wilk turned on his body camera and proceeded to film
and photograph the car both outside and in and also the area around it. And then when he was done,
he decided to just go ahead and search the whole area because obviously, you know, this could be connected to Manu and maybe she was out here
somewhere.
And so Wilk walked towards a fence that was a short distance away from the car, and then
once he got there, he turned around and just began scanning the entire area, and that's
when something else caught his eye.
It was something off in the distance, beneath a thicket of trees, it looked sort of like
a pile of laundry on the ground.
Wilk began walking towards it, and as he did, he realized this was not just some pile of
laundry.
It looked like it was the outline of a white bed sheet, and very clearly this sheet was
wrapped around something fairly big.
And so Wilk picked up his pace a bit, and as he got closer, he began to see there were
blood stains on the outside of these sheets, and then when he was right on top, it was
obvious that there was a dead body wrapped up inside of the sheets.
Wilk had a sick feeling because he was sure the person who was inside of these sheets
would be identified as Manu.
And so he called into the Young County Sheriff's Department and said he'd found a dead body,
and it was almost certainly the one they were looking for. If you're listening to this podcast, then chances are good you are a fan of the strange,
dark and mysterious.
And if that's the case, then I've got some good news.
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In this free weekly show, we explore bizarre, unheard of diseases, strange medical mishaps,
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Each story is totally true and totally terrifying.
Go follow Mr. Bolland's Medical Mysteries wherever you get your podcasts, and if you're I'm Dan Tbersky.
In 2011, something strange began to happen at the high school in Leroy, New York.
I was like at my locker and she came up to me and she was like stuttering super bad.
I'm like, stop f***ing around. She's like I can't.
A mystery illness, bizarre symptoms, and spreading fast.
It's like doubling and tripling and it's all these girls.
With a diagnosis the state tried to keep on the down low.
Everybody thought I was holding something back.
Well you were holding something back intentionally.
Yeah, yeah, well, yeah.
No, it's hysteria. It's all in your head. It's not physical. Oh my gosh, you're exaggerating.
Is this the largest mass hysteria since The Witches of Salem?
Or is it something else entirely?
Something's wrong here.
Something's not right.
Leroy was the new dateline and everyone was trying to solve the murder.
A new limited series from Wondery and Pineapple Street Studios.
Hysterical.
Follow Hysterical on the Wondery app
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You can binge all episodes of Hysterical early
and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus.
Back at the Allen House,
Sergeant Burbeck heard about the discovery
of a body on his radio.
And so now that this was officially a homicide case, he reached out to the state police, known as the Texas
Rangers for help. He arranged for Peter, Kiara, and Darien to be taken to the nearest Texas
Rangers station, and then he got into his cruiser and drove down to the lake, as other
county and state police headed that way as well.
Burbeck arrived at the lake, and Lieutenant Wilk led him to the body that was still wrapped
in the sheets. Since Wilk was not to the body that was still wrapped in the sheets.
Since Wilk was not working the case in any official capacity, he'd left the body as
he'd found it.
So, Sergeant Birbek leaned down and began pulling away the sheets and also some yucca
leaves that had covered up the victim's face, and then once the victim was exposed,
Lieutenant Wilk, who was standing nearby and who knew Manu personally, was able to positively
identify her.
Manu was deceased.
Berbek and a few of the other officers who had arrived put up crime scene tape while they waited
for a forensics team to get there. Berbek turned to one of the officers and shared his opinion that
the killer was almost certainly someone Manu knew. He pointed out that the violence inside of her
home was so brutal that it just seemed personal, and also the fact that her face seemed to be covered up with leaves when they found her,
well, that was something he'd seen before when the killer was someone close to the victim.
Then Burbeck radioed the Texas Rangers down at the station where he'd sent Manu's family,
and one of the Rangers broke the news to Peter that unfortunately his wife's body had been found.
Now, by this point, Peter and Manu's oldest daughter Melanie had returned from her overnight
trip, and their oldest son had also come back from his college campus, and so they were
also with Peter and Kiara and Darian at the station.
And so the rangers watched Peter closely as he turned and told the four children the news
about their mother.
The two oldest immediately broke down and cried, and Kiara, who had first discovered
the blood in the bedroom, collapsed to the floor. But Darien, who said he'd been up
all night playing video games, didn't break down, he just walked away and sat in a corner
by himself. The rangers noticed this and actually went to another room to talk about how odd
it was that Darien had not started crying and had just sort of sat down, so they decided
Darien should be the first person they speak to.
And so a few minutes later, one of the Rangers sat down with Darien in an interview room and
asked him how he had been getting along with his mother in recent weeks. And Darien admitted that
he and his mother had actually been arguing a lot about his college plans. Darien was 20 years old,
but he spent basically all of his time in his room playing video games. Now Darien was perfectly
fine with that, he figured he would get his life together at
some point, but Manu wanted him to act now to go enroll in college, but Darien said he
didn't want to go back to school and just sort of wished his mom would leave him alone.
After this the ranger just asked Darien point blank if he had anything to do with his mother's
death, and Darien was immediately adamant that no, he would never hurt his mom.
So the ranger asked him if he would consent to being fingerprinted, and Darien said yes,
of course.
Peter was the next to be interviewed, and he was unemotional just like he had been with
Belize at the house.
The ranger thought this was strange, so he pointed out that Peter seemed to be handling
the situation quite calmly.
Peter explained that his background was he had been in the army as a part of their special
forces unit, the Green Berets, and so he had been trained to keep cool under
pressure and that was just what he was defaulting to. But Peter clearly understood what the
ranger was hinting at here, that he was suspicious of Peter, so Peter quickly added that of course
he wanted justice for his wife here. And then after that, Peter said very calmly that he
also owned a whole lot of firearms and a whole bunch of ammunition and he'd make sure his wife's killer saw justice one way
or the other.
The ranger just stared at Peter for a second, not convinced if Peter really was being genuine
about potentially going out and seeking vigilante justice or if maybe this was just performative,
that this was Peter's way of kind of acting out his emotions.
And so the ranger decided to just kind of move on.
And he asked Peter, you know, you heard that car start sometime in the morning and you way of kind of acting out his emotions. And so the ranger decided to just kind of move on.
And he asked Peter, you know, you heard that car start sometime in the morning and you
believed it was your wife's car.
You know, how did you hear that noise?
How did that wake you up?
But the violent attack on your wife in your bedroom just down the hall didn't wake you
up.
Peter said he couldn't really offer an explanation, but he did offer a theory, which was that
maybe Manu's killer put their hand over his wife's mouth.
Sometimes violent struggles are silent, he said.
The ranger couldn't help but just shake his head.
At this point, the ranger was starting to feel like Peter had already thought of an
answer for everything, like he had prepped for this interview.
The pair spoke for a bit longer, kind of rehashing details, and then at some point the ranger
thanked Peter for coming in and told Peter that somebody would follow up with him soon.
After that, the rangers would speak to the two oldest Allen children separately, and then finally, after the longest day of their lives, the Allen family were told they could go.
However, they were told they were not allowed to return to their home because their house was now a crime scene.
So Peter made a few phone calls and a friend agreed to let them stay at his Airbnb until they could go home.
phone calls, and a friend agreed to let them stay at his Airbnb until they could go home. The next day, Sergeant Burbeck got a call from the medical examiner who had Manu's
autopsy results. The medical examiner revealed that Manu had been stabbed multiple times
and she had defensive wounds on her hands. She had also been strangled and her neck was
broken. And what's more, after Manu had been taken to the lake, the killer had shot her in the
face after she was dead.
The violence had been even more extreme than Burbek realized, and this only convinced him
further that Manu's killer had to be somebody close to her that had some sort of personal
issue with her.
Then Burbek and members of the state police met with forensics investigators who had processed
the scene out by the lake, and they had found shoe prints in the mud near Manu's stranded
SUV and bicycle tracks that led away from the SUV out of the recreational area and onto
the main road.
And so while investigators followed up on these shoe prints and bike tracks, word of
Manu's murder quickly spread through the small Texas town.
Students at Olney High School, where Manu worked, were devastated when they learned
of the death of their beloved teacher.
And also rumors began to fly, in particular on a Facebook group called Rants and Raves,
where citizens of Olney voiced their theories about what they thought happened in the Allen
House on the night of the murder.
And most of those amateur theories pointed the finger at Peter.
And Peter suddenly began noticing that people around town were treating him differently.
They were treating him with suspicion.
A few days after Manu's death, Peter and his kids were finally allowed to return to
their family home.
And when they got there, Darien helped his father secure the house by bolting the windows
shut.
And Peter said he would sleep with a gun under his pillow because he said the killer was still out there. The next morning, Peter was contacted by Burbeck
and asked to come in for another interview. And so Peter drove to the station where Burbeck and a
Texas Ranger met him and led him into an interview room. The Ranger began the interview by asking
Peter why someone might want to kill his wife. In response to this question, Peter referred to his large collection of guns.
He said he had a ton of them, at least maybe a hundred, and a lot of people knew about
them, so he said, you know, maybe somebody broke into the house to try to steal the guns.
And actually Peter said he had a pistol, a communist block pistol, that he kept in a
drawer and when he had finally gotten back to his home the day before, he noticed that
that pistol was missing.
Birkbeck noted everything Peter was saying in his memo pad and he began to feel even more confident that Peter did have something to do with his wife's murder. Birkbeck felt like Peter
was trying to influence the investigation by suggesting an angle that would divert attention
away from him. So Birkbeck and the ranger stepped out of the room and talked for a second and decided
to shift to a more confrontational tone with Peter.
So they went back into the interview room and they revealed to Peter that in the master
bedroom where his wife was horribly attacked and killed, they had found a bloody sock which
matched footprints left by the killer.
And it happened to be the exact same type of compression sock that Peter wore because
they found socks just like those in his drawer.
And so they asked Peter to please explain that. And Peter said he really couldn't. He just kept repeating that he did not
hurt his wife. And so at some point the ranger asked how someone other than the family would know
exactly where Manu kept her car keys because that's where the footprints went right next to the fridge
and the keys were gone and the car was gone. And Peter just lowered his head and stared down at the
floor and said again you know he just had no explanation. And so Birbeck and the ranger continued drilling
Peter trying to get more information from him but Peter really didn't have any more
information he really stuck to this idea that he did not do anything wrong. And so eventually
at the end of the interview it was clear there was not enough evidence to arrest Peter, and so Peter was told to go home and that if they needed him again, they'd be in touch.
Sergeant Burbeck was sitting in his office that afternoon when he got a report from one
of the rangers who had been out in the field canvassing for witnesses.
Burbeck learned that the officer had made contact with an oil field worker who was on
duty in the area near Lake Cooper on the same morning Manu's body had
been found. The worker had been out near the recreation area when he noticed someone on a
bicycle peddling away from the lake and in the direction of Olney. The worker stated that this
actually struck him as pretty odd because it was so early in the morning, just after dawn,
and even though people did bike in that area, he never saw people biking that early in that area.
However, the worker said he didn't really get a good look at the person riding the bike,
he could only remember that the bicyclist wore shorts and had a backpack on.
And so Sergeant Burbeck assigned two investigators to contact area businesses along the route from
Lake Cooper to Olney to see if any of them had surveillance cameras that were running that morning
that maybe picked up some footage of this person on the bike.
And sure enough, the investigators found a local bank whose surveillance footage outside
had captured an individual on a bicycle, wearing shorts and a backpack, just like the oilfield
worker had described.
Burbek took a look at this footage and he was unable to make out the facial features
of the individual on the bike.
However, he was able to glean enough information from the footage about the person's general age, sex, and build to potentially narrow the suspect pool down.
Birkbeck was also still convinced Peter had something to do with his wife's murder,
but he knew he didn't have enough evidence to move forward with an arrest. But what he could do was
try to rule out other possibilities, like for example Peter's theory about a burglar trying
to steal his guns, because if he could rule that out, it would only help strengthen the case against Peter.
So Birkbeck began looking into recent gun burglaries in the area, and there was only
one, and the homeowner who was targeted happened to be the father of a friend of Darian Allen's.
Birkbeck wondered if that was more than just a coincidence. After all, everyone in the
town of Olney was connected by no more than two degrees of separation,
so maybe it didn't mean anything.
But Burbek knew he would have to dig into it further.
So he began reading the reports that were made from this burglary investigation, and
in examining the leads that had been developed, one name stood out, and that name was Corey
Taylor.
Corey was a young guy who was a loner, who was known around town as a troublemaker, and
he'd had numerous run-ins with law enforcement, and he also had what looked like a love affair with guns.
Burbek found a video on Corey's Snapchat of him showing off a semi-automatic rifle with a
sight attached to it. So Burbek decided to pay Corey a visit. He drove to Corey's apartment complex
and began walking towards Corey's place, and as Burbek made his way towards the stairwell,
he saw something that made him slow down and then back up, because in the storage space underneath the
stairs right in front of him was a bicycle. Birbeck knelt down to inspect the tread pattern
on the bicycle's tires, and he wasn't 100% sure, but the treads looked a whole lot like
the bicycle tracks that were found down by the lake. Birbeck took a picture of the treads
and then proceeded up the stairs to Corey's apartment.
When he got to the door, Burbek knocked, and Corey opened it up.
Burbek introduced himself, and Corey allowed Burbek inside.
And right away Burbek noticed that Corey appeared to be very nervous, like he couldn't even
stand still.
Burbek asked Corey if he knew about what happened to Manu Allen, and Corey said he was aware
of what happened to Mrs. Allen.
He said he knew her as Mrs. Allen because he knew her from his high school, only high
school where she worked, and he said everybody knew what happened to her.
It was horrible.
Corey said he didn't know her well, and he'd never been inside of her house.
Burbeck then asked Corey if he owned the bike that was outside under the stairwell, and
Corey said no, the bike was not his, it belonged to his friend, Julius Mullins.
Birbeck recorded this name in his notepad, and he and Corey talked for a few minutes longer, and then he left. And within a day, investigators had tracked down this new person Corey had
mentioned, Julius Mullins, and they brought him in for an interview. Investigators asked Julius
where he was on the night of July 6th, and Julius said that he had gone to a party. Afterward,
he had gone to Corey's apartment, let himself in, and crashed there.
He said he didn't actually see Corey that night, so he wasn't sure if Corey was actually
in the apartment or not.
And so this sounded pretty odd, that he just crashed at Corey's place and didn't even
know if his friend was there, but it sounded like the two were close friends and maybe
this was normal.
And so eventually the investigators just asked Julius if he would submit fingerprints and
DNA, and Julius voluntarily submitted both and was then allowed to leave.
A day later one of the rangers who had been working the case returned to Corey's apartment
to confiscate the bicycle that Burbeck had seen underneath the stairwell, and as the
ranger was approaching the stairs he suddenly had a chance encounter with someone he was
very familiar with.
On a whim the ranger asked this person if he could look at the bottom of their shoes,
and the person said yeah sure, so the ranger looked at the bottom of their shoes, and when
he did, the ranger could barely contain his excitement, because he knew he had just broken
the case wide open.
Investigators would meet with this person the ranger had just happened to run into,
and after that interview, they knew who had killed Manu Allen.
Here is a reconstruction of what police think happened to Manu Allen in the early morning
of July 7th, 2019. Around 2am, Manu's killer quietly climbed through a window in the garage of the Allen's
household and then made their way into the hallway of the house.
From there they quietly crept down the hallway and went into the master bedroom where Manu
was sleeping in the bed.
Now the killer tried to be quiet, but Manu was a light sleeper, and very quickly they
woke Manu up.
And when the killer noticed that Manu was sitting awake in the bed looking over at them,
the killer froze for a second, but then suddenly the killer reached out and grabbed a butterfly
knife off the dresser and just jumped on top of Manu before she could do anything, and
the killer began furiously stabbing her.
Manu tried to shield herself from the knife, but the killer plunged it into her again and
again in this frenzied attack, eventually rolling Manu over, jamming her head into the
mattress, and then jabbing the knife into her head multiple times.
And after the 47th and final stab wound, the killer dropped the knife onto the bed.
But the killer convinced themselves that Manu was not dead, she was still breathing.
So the killer wrapped their hands around Manu's neck and squeezed as hard as they could
until they were sure she was dead. The killer then wiped the knife off on the sheets and then
placed the knife into their backpack. Then they took the bed sheets and kind of wrapped them all
around Manu who was on the bed and then they dragged Manu inside of these sheets off the bed
onto the ground. Then the killer casually walked out of the bedroom into the kitchen to retrieve
the car keys from the spot where Manu always kept them, and so with Manu's keys in hand,
the killer returned to the master bedroom, locking the door behind them, and then they
dragged Manu in the bed sheets out the other door of the master bedroom, through the laundry
room and the garage, and then outside to Manu's
SUV. There, the killer put Manu's body, still wrapped in the sheets, in the trunk,
and then they also placed the bike that they had driven over to the Allen's house into
Manu's SUV. Once Manu's SUV was all packed up, the killer hopped in the driver's seat
and drove 8 miles north to the recreational area by the lake, but as they were driving
along, the SUV got
stuck. So at that point, the killer hopped out of the SUV and removed Manu from the vehicle
and dragged her over to the spot where she would later be found. However, before the
killer actually left Manu there, they pulled out a gun and shot Manu in the face, even
though at this point Manu was obviously already dead.
Then after covering up Manu's face with some leaves, the killer walked back over to the
SUV, took the bike out, and then pedaled away from the scene back towards town.
Police would track down Manu's killer and place them under arrest.
And then once they were brought into an interrogation room, investigators asked them why.
Why had they killed Manu?
And that's when the killer claimed that Manu's husband, Peter, had made them do it.
The killer said Peter had cornered them at a convenience store and made them get into
his car and put a gun to the killer's head and said, you're going to kill my wife.
But as much as investigators had suspected Peter at different times during this investigation,
this story didn't make sense with the timeline of the murder, and the forensics, both the fingerprints and DNA, implicated only one person, Julius Mullins.
Julius was the owner of the bike who had stored it under the stairs at his friend's apartment,
but more importantly, Julius was the ex-boyfriend of Peter and Manu's oldest daughter, Melanie.
The pair had dated for a year when Melanie was a junior in high school.
Julius' home life was undeniably rough,
and there were times when his parents would kick him out of the house
and he would have no place to sleep.
Sometimes the only high school coaches would let Julius,
who played tight end for the football team, sleep in the gym.
And on at least one occasion when Julius had been kicked out,
Manu had allowed Julius to sleep over at their house.
And also Julius was a frequent visitor to the Allen's household, but just for the day
he'd come over for a couple hours at a time to see Melanie, and so it was during these
frequent visits that Julius learned where Manu kept her car keys, which is how he knew
where to go in the kitchen to find them.
Manu always treated Julius incredibly kindly, because she was just a person who really looked
out for the kids in this town.
She was always spending her spare time looking after kids and mentoring kids and tutoring
kids, especially kids who had rough home lives like Julius did.
And so Julius was no exception to her kindness.
Manu would sometimes help him with his homework and talk to him and make sure he was doing
okay.
But during Manu's daughter's relationship with Julius, it seemed like Julius' behavior began to change. He was very temperamental and moody and just seemed
like he was snowballing. And so eventually Melanie broke off the relationship and Manu kind of stopped
talking to him as well and Julius did not take it well. And this was about seven months prior to the
murder. Police noticed that when they brought Julius in for his first interview that he had
cuts and scrapes all over his arms and legs. And when that when they brought Julius in for his first interview, that he had cuts
and scrapes all over his arms and legs.
And when that ranger went to retrieve the bike from Corey's apartment, Julius was the
person he ran into who he was very familiar with because of this case.
And he asked Julius to see the soles of his shoes, and when Julius showed him, it was
immediately apparent that they matched the shoe prints that had been found by the lake
where Manu's body was discovered.
The shoes were later found to be an exact match, and the treads on Julius' bicycle
were also an exact match to the tracks that were found leaving the scene.
Investigators also performed a sound test at the Allen residence, with one ranger in
the master bedroom and the other on the couch where Peter had been asleep, and they turned
the TV on in the living room to a low volume as it had been the night Peter fell asleep on the couch and Manu was later murdered, and
the ranger in the master bedroom shouted and yelled and made all this noise, and the ranger
in the living room could not hear a thing. That's how poorly sound traveled in the
Allen household, which is a big reason why nobody heard what was going on in the master
bedroom.
And also, Kiara, when she had fallen asleep, she had her earbuds in, which did already
degrade her ability to hear what was going on in the house, and Darian really had been upstairs
with headphones on, which also affected his ability to hear what was going on in the house.
So really, nobody heard anything. As for the knife that was found in the bedroom,
it was determined to have not been the murder weapon, the knife that was used to kill Manu
was found in Julius' backpack, and Peter's stolen communist-block pistol was found in the home of Corey Taylor, Julius'
friend, but Corey was found to not have been involved with the murder at all.
Julius would eventually come clean and would admit that Peter actually had nothing to do
with the murder and that Julius had acted totally alone.
And it would turn out, Peter's theory about the murder, the idea that somebody had maybe
tried to break in to steal his guns but then inadvertently killed his wife, seemed to be
at least partially right.
Julius claimed when he snuck into the house, he was looking to steal Peter's guns.
Julius said he was in the process of stealing an unsecured gun from a cabinet in the master
bedroom when Manu woke up, and he said his fight-or-flight response kicked in, and it
led him to stab her 47 times and then strangle her and then eventually, later on, also shoot her in the
face post-mortem.
Julius Mullins, who was 18 years old, pled guilty and was ultimately sentenced to 55
years in prison. Thank you for listening to the Mr. Bolland Podcast.
If you enjoyed today's stories and you're looking for more strange, dark and mysterious
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Divorced beheaded died, divorced beheaded survived.
We know the six wives of Henry VIII as pawns in his hunt for a
son, but their lives were so much more than just being the king's wives. I'm Arisha Skidmore
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world to show you the darker side of what it means to be royalty. We rarely see Henry VIII's wives in their own light
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