MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - Swap Meet (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: October 28, 2024In April 2009, in a crowded shopping center in broad daylight, a young woman was walking to her car, when suddenly a strange-looking man came out of some bushes and rushed toward her. The wom...an tried to get to her car and escape, but the man was too fast – he blocked her way and pulled out a gun. He put the gun to the woman’s head, and before she could even process what was happening, he fired. The woman fell to the ground and died. Then the man turned, calmly walked into the nearby woods, and disappeared. When police arrived, they found a baby in the backseat of the woman’s car – confused but unharmed. But they did not find a single piece of evidence at the scene, or any clue about the identity of the strange-looking man.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 a spring night in 2009, a woman was walking through a busy Target parking lot carrying
a few things she'd just bought to her car.
Suddenly the woman heard a loud bang of a gunshot echo through the parking lot and she
heard other people screaming and running for cover. But amidst all this chaos, the woman actually turned to where she thought the sound
had come from, and she saw this strange-looking man with a big mustache and wild black hair calmly
walking away from a parked SUV. And then a moment later, she saw him walk out of the lot and into
the surrounding woods, where he disappeared. Soon, police would launch a
county-wide search to try to track this man down, not realizing he was hiding in plain sight the
whole time. 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 invite the follow button shopping with you and when you're inside of a very
fancy store, secretly stick a magnetic alarm sticker onto their back and then leave. Okay,
let's get into today's story. Kill List is a true story of how I ended up in a race against time to warn those who lives
were in danger.
Follow Kill List wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to Kill List and
more exhibit-see true crumb shows like morbid early and ad-free right now by joining Wandry Plus.
On the morning of Sunday, April 26, 2009, in a suburb of Atlanta, Georgia, a 25-year-old woman named Heather Stroob sat with her boyfriend, Mike, at the kitchen table of Mike's home.
Heather and Mike had been dating for a year, but somehow everything still felt fresh and
new, and Heather wished she could just spend all day with Mike.
But this Sunday, Heather had plans.
She was going to church, then to do some chores at her house, and then she would pick up her
19-month-old son from his father.
She knew, in theory, she could skip church in order to spend a little more time with
Mike.
But for Heather, skipping church was like missing a meal.
Whenever she did it,
she ended up with an empty feeling in her stomach. So after taking her last bite,
Heather stood up and dropped her dishes in the sink, kissed Mike on the forehead,
told him she loved him, and walked out the door.
Heather drove across town to church, went inside, sat down in a long wooden pew, and waited for the
service to start.
Church had always been an important part of Heather's life. In fact, she was convinced that
if it wasn't for church, she never would have been born, because Heather's parents had first
met and fallen in love at a Presbyterian church camp. That was why, when Heather was a teenager,
it had felt like fate when she went to youth group and fell in love with a young classmate
named Stephen Stroop. Heather and Stephen had connected right away. They dated for several
years and always talked about their future together. And then in May of 2004, they got married.
At first, life had been good for the young couple. Heather and her parents opened a flower shop,
and Heather worked there every day. She had always loved flowers, and being around them
just made her happy. And the flower shop was a true family business. Steven would often come by to help out
at the shop, and his mother, Joanna, she would even pitch in when things got really busy.
And in September of 2007, the family grew when Heather and Steven had a baby boy.
They named him Carson, and Heather felt like God had truly blessed her and her family.
But now, sitting in church, Heather did not feel so blessed anymore. She was vaguely aware
that the preacher had started the service, but she was barely listening. She was only
thinking about Carson. Heather had not seen her son all weekend, and she hated the days
when she wasn't with him, and she blamed her now soon-to-be-ex-husband, Stephen, for
keeping them apart. Heather and Stephen's happy life had fallen apart just months after Carson was born.
One day at the flower shop, Stephen's mom, Joanna, had come across a receipt for some
jewelry that Stephen had bought. Joanna figured the jewelry had been a gift for Heather, and she
thought Heather might want the receipt, to keep track of the family finances. But when Heather
looked at the receipt, she'd been really confused. She didn't recognize the jewelry that was listed on the
receipt. Steven had never given her anything like that. And that's when she realized Steven must be
cheating on her, and he had bought this jewelry for some other woman. And when she confronted him
about it, Steven admitted to everything. Heather had at least wanted to try to make the marriage work,
but Stephen told her he had a new girlfriend and he wanted a divorce.
Now, in church, Heather realized the preacher was finishing up a sermon and she saw everyone
standing up around her. She felt bad for not having paid much attention, so she stood up
and smiled and spent an extra few minutes talking to other members of the congregation.
And after the service was over,
as Heather walked to her car, she told herself not to dwell on all the negative things in her life.
Even though her marriage had fallen apart, God still provided for her. She had a great new
boyfriend, she was part of a church filled with people who loved and cared about her,
and she had a beautiful little boy.
At around 6pm that night, Heather drove across town to pick up Carson. But the little bit
of hope she'd started to feel after church had now disappeared, and she felt uneasy.
She always felt like this when seeing Stephen, because their custody swap meetings had been
tense from the beginning.
Nearly every single time Heather and Stephen met to hand off Carson, they would get into
an argument.
The baby lived with Heather, and Stephen had him every other weekend, but Stephen had been
arguing for joint custody because he wanted Carson to live with him half the time.
The fights between the parents had gotten so bad at one point that Heather had insisted on doing the custody swaps in the
parking lot of a busy shopping center. Recently, though, the animosity had sort of leveled off.
Steven just wanted to be done with the divorce proceedings, so he had finally agreed to allow
Heather full custody of their son. Still, though, Heather preferred to meet Steven in public.
custody of their son. Still, though, Heather preferred to meet Stephen in public. When Heather pulled into the Target parking lot in the city of Snellville, Georgia that
night, she saw Stephen was already there, waiting outside of his car. So Heather parked
and then walked over to him. Stephen said a quick hello, and he lifted Carson out of
his car and handed him over to Heather. And without saying anything else, Stephen got
back in his car and drove out of the lot.
But Heather was so happy to have her son back, she didn't even care that Stephen had barely
acknowledged her. She had a huge smile on her face and talked to Carson as she carried him to her SUV.
She opened the rear passenger door and carefully secured him in his car seat.
Heather shut the door and walked around to the driver's side, and she heard footsteps
coming up behind her.
Heather turned around, and she was startled to see a strange-looking man standing there.
He had wild hair and a thick mustache, and he had a messenger bag strapped around his
shoulder.
This man spoke to Heather, and when she heard what he said, she lunged for the door and
tried to open it.
Seconds later, shoppers in this busy Target parking lot heard the loud bang of a gunshot.
Some of the shoppers just froze in complete terror, and others took off running and screaming,
afraid the shooter would keep on firing.
But a couple of the shoppers immediately turned in the direction of the sound, and they saw
a man with wild hair calmly walking away from an SUV towards the woods that surrounded the
shopping center.
These shoppers rushed over to the SUV, and when they saw a woman slumped on the ground and blood covering her face, they called 911.
Officer Neal Carter of the Snellville Police was patrolling in his cruiser not far from the
Target when he heard the call come through on the police radio. Carter instantly spun a U-turn and stepped on the gas. When he pulled into the target parking lot, he saw a group of
people already heading towards his car. Carter parked, stepped outside, and then walked directly
into complete chaos. Everybody in the parking lot, all these people who had just been doing some Sunday
shopping before they witnessed a shooting, descended on Officer Carter. And they were
shouting and trying to tell him what they saw. But there were on Officer Carter. And they were shouting
and trying to tell him what they saw. But there were so many of them and they were all so upset
that Carter couldn't understand anything they were telling him. Carter held up his hands and told
them to please step back. He needed everyone to calm down. But a few people in the crowd just kept
on shouting. Clearly they had something truly urgent. And they pointed Carter towards a parked SUV. Carter looked over and saw a woman's body lying on the
ground by that SUV. He ran to her, but even from a few feet away, he could see the woman
had been shot. Carter reached down to feel the woman's pulse, but he already knew she
was dead.
When Carter stood back up, he saw a woman from the crowd coming towards him, shouting.
But this time, Carter understood exactly what he was hearing. This woman was shouting,
there's a baby in the back seat. Carter felt his heartbeat spike. He turned around and peered
through the window, bracing himself for the sight of an injured child. Instead, to his relief,
he saw a little boy, maybe a year and a half old, staring back
at him with wide eyes.
The little boy looked scared, but he was unharmed.
Carter opened the door of the SUV, lifted up the boy, still in the car seat, and carried
him to his police cruiser, setting him down in the back.
At this point, Carter saw a wave of police and first responders arriving, and he saw
the crowd rushing towards them like they did to him.
Carter just looked at the baby in the back of his police car.
Carter could barely think straight and he wasn't sure what to do next, but at least
this little boy was safe.
Just then, Carter heard shouting behind him again and he turned and saw another woman
approaching him, waving her arms to get his attention.
His first impulse was to tell her to stay back, but she pointed to a spot near the edge of the parking lot and she said she had seen the shooter standing
there before the shooting. This could be a solid lead, so Carter quickly
refocused and started writing down the woman's account in his notebook. She said the shooter
had been watching the victim from nearby, on the other side of a few parked cars. He
was a short, slender man with an odd mustache
and wild black hair, and he was wearing khaki pants and a blue button-up shirt.
Carter thanked the woman and then shared her description of the shooter to the other officers
at the scene. Carter stayed behind and arranged for the baby to be taken to the police station,
while other officers fanned out and began searching the area around the target with
canine units hoping to find the suspect.
The police dogs led their handlers to the edge of the parking lot and then followed
ascent through the woods surrounding the target into the parking lot of an adjacent hotel.
But that's where the dogs lost the trail.
The police figured the killer must have gotten into a vehicle parked at that location and
driven off.
Just beyond the hotel parking lot was a highway, and the officers knew that by now, the killer was probably miles away.
Meanwhile, back at the crime scene, Officer Carter found the victim's purse with her
license inside of it. Now they had an ID. Her name was Heather Stroop.
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Soon after Officer Carter identified Heather,
Lieutenant Trey Downs of the Snellville Police Department arrived at the Target parking lot. The place was still pretty
chaotic, with police officers, witnesses, first responders, and police dogs spread out everywhere,
but Lieutenant Downs looked completely unfazed by any of it. He quickly met with Officer Carter
to get an update and also a description of the shooter. Then he walked right towards the Target.
As he got closer, he saw several security cameras
mounted on the roof of the store,
pointing down at the parking lot, and he smiled.
Downs had already figured that this store
would have decent security,
and now he believed these specific cameras
would be the key to finding the shooter.
Inside the store, Downs flagged down an employee
and told her that he needed to see the security footage for the entire day. The employee led him through the store, Downs flagged down an employee and told her that he needed to see the security
footage for the entire day. The employee led him through the store to a cramped room filled
with multiple security screens. A man was already hunched over the screens, watching
the scene currently unfolding in the parking lot. That man introduced himself to Downs
as the director of security. Downs told him that he needed to see everything the cameras
had picked up that evening, so
the security director pulled up the footage.
At first, as Downes examined each camera angle, he was disappointed.
There were no cameras aimed directly at where Heather had parked, and so there was no footage
of the actual shooting.
But as he looked closely at the footage that they did have, Downes spotted a man who perfectly
matched the description of the shooter. The man entered the parking lot on foot, walked in the direction
of Heather's SUV, and a short time after, walked away toward the surrounding woods.
The footage was low resolution. Downes asked if he could have the footage so he could send
it off to the crime lab for possible enhancement. But the security director surprised him by
saying that Target actually had its own forensics
lab that was so good, Target had actually closed cases that even the FBI couldn't
solve.
The security director promised he'd get the footage out first thing in the morning and
get the process started.
Downs said that would be a huge help, and he headed out of the store.
The sun was setting, and the parking lot looked calm and empty compared to how it had been
when Downs first arrived.
He saw crime scene investigators packing up their equipment for the night.
One of them had called him over to tell him that Heather had been shot with a.38 caliber
revolver, but the weapon itself had not been found at the scene, and neither had any clear
fingerprints.
This was not the news Downs was hoping for. So far, he had a good physical description of the suspect and some blurry video, but not much else.
But he figured he did have at least one other thing to go on. This shooting did not appear to
be a random attack. Downs believed Heather had been targeted.
Heather's parents were out of town driving through Alabama when Heather's mom's cell phone began to ring. She picked it up and heard the voice of her father, Heather's
grandfather, on the other end. And his voice was shaking. He told her that he had just
been visited by the police and he had some horrible news that he could barely even believe
was true. The police had brought Carson to his house and told him that Heather had been murdered.
Heather's mom screamed and hung up the phone. Heather's dad, who was driving, asked her what
was going on. Heather's mom could barely get the words out, but she told him that their daughter
had been killed. Heather's dad pulled over to the side of the road and the two parents just sat there
and wept. Then they turned the car around and began making the trip back home to Georgia.
Several hours later, late on the night of the murder, Heather's parents walked into
the Snellville police station and saw Lieutenant Downs waiting for them. Heather's parents
looked completely dazed, like they barely knew where they were. They'd sped home from Alabama, almost without saying a word to each other.
It was almost like if they didn't talk about what had happened, maybe it wasn't real.
But earlier, they had gone right to Heather's grandfather's house, and when they saw him
sitting with Heather's little boy in his lap, it had hit them.
They had lost their daughter, and Carson had lost his mom.
At the station, Lieutenant Downs said he was deeply sorry for their loss.
He understood they were grieving and in shock, but every second counted in a homicide investigation,
and so he couldn't wait to ask them questions.
Heather's parents said they understood, and they followed Downs to his office and
sat across from him at his desk.
First, Downs wanted to know if they knew what their daughter was doing at the Target that
evening. Was she just shopping?
Heather's mom shook her head. She said Heather and her husband Stephen were separated and
they met at Target to hand off their son as part of their custody agreement. The custody
battle had been ugly, she said. She paused, and in a quiet voice, she asked Lieutenant
Downs if he thought Stephen could have had something to do with Heather's death.
Downs was not surprised by this question. A husband going through a divorce was almost
always suspect number one in a murder like this. It was his first thought too. But, as
an investigator, he liked to keep his evidence and theories under wraps as much as possible.
But he did tell Heather's mom that they had a good description of the shooter and it didn't
match Steven.
And beyond that, Steven had been seen driving away from the parking lot at the exact time
the killer approached.
So no, he said, he did not think Steven was the shooter.
What Downs didn't say was that he had not ruled out the possibility that Steven had
hired someone else to kill his estranged wife.
Downs told Heather's parents he just needed one more thing, a list of all the people who
knew that Heather would be in that parking lot at that time of day for the custody swap.
And after thinking for a few minutes, Heather's parents came up with about a dozen people,
and Downs wrote down all the names.
Downs told them again how sorry he
was, and then he walked them out of the police station. Downs went back to his office and read
over the list Heather's parents had just given him, and he decided there was no way around it.
The only person it made sense to start with was Heather's estranged husband, Stephen Stroop.
The next morning, Lieutenant Downs and another officer arrived at a house in a quiet suburban neighborhood.
This was Stephen's mom's house, and Downs discovered Stephen had started staying here
after he and Heather had split up.
Downs had barely slept, but nobody would ever know.
He looked sharp and full of energy.
He knocked on the door, and a young man answered it. Downs asked him if he was Stephen Strube, but the young man just said no, turned
around and walked away. Downs looked at the other officer, a little confused by what had just
happened. Downs was about to shout at the young man to come back and talk to them when a middle-aged
man walked up to the door and asked if he could help. So Downs asked him if Stephen was home.
And the man laughed. He said, yes, Stephen was home. He was the one who just answered the door.
Lieutenant Downs glanced over at the other officer again, and they both looked like they
might start laughing. Stephen lying to their face and then just walking off was really strange.
The middle-aged man invited Downs and the other officer inside the home and led them to the front room, where Stephen was now sitting on the couch.
Downs immediately asked Stephen why he just pretended to be somebody else. And without
missing a beat, Stephen said he was on probation for burglary and he'd violated his probation.
So now he was just trying to dodge the cops. Downs told him that was not very smart, but he said they were here about something far
more serious than Stephen breaking his probation.
They were here because Stephen's wife had been murdered in the Target parking lot right
after she had met up with him.
Stephen got off the couch and his attitude completely changed.
He looked terrified and he asked where his son was.
Was Carson okay?
Downs assured him Carson was safe and
that he had not been hurt. Police had already taken him to stay with Heather's grandfather
for the time being. Steven collapsed on the couch and tried to catch his breath. Downs
gave him a few minutes to collect himself and then asked him about his relationship
with Heather. Steven struggled to focus, but he admitted he had not been a great husband.
He had cheated on Heather and he'd given her a really hard time about child custody
during most of the divorce process.
But he said he'd finally cut all of that out and had agreed to let Heather have full
custody of Carson.
And he said no matter how badly they might have fought about stuff, he never would have
hurt Heather.
Down said they could wrap things up, at least for now.
He just needed to know where Stephen went after meeting Heather at that target. Steven said he met up with his girlfriend,
and then they got his car washed. After that, he came home to his mom's house and just hung out
by himself, because his mom was away visiting her parents. Downs could check with the girlfriend
about the car wash, but Steven had no real alibi for where he went after that. Still, Downs knew
pinning down
exactly where Stephen had been wouldn't necessarily help the investigation,
because unless Stephen had the ability to be two places at once, he was not the one who pulled the
trigger. So Downs told Stephen they'd follow up if they needed to, and then he and the other officer
left the house and went back to the station. Sitting in his office, Downs felt conflicted. He thought Stephen could have paid someone
to kill Heather because of the divorce, and in addition to that, Downs now knew Stephen
had violated probation for another crime. But Downs had also seen how upset Stephen
got when he thought something might have happened to his son, and Downs just felt like he couldn't
be faking that. So, Downs began going
back over the list of people Heather's parents had given him, and something hit him right away.
And he admitted to himself it seemed pretty obvious. If Heather's husband didn't kill her,
maybe her boyfriend did.
Later that day, an officer led Heather's boyfriend, Mike Vickers, into an interview room at the station, where Lieutenant Downs was waiting.
And right away, Downs noticed Mike's slight size.
He was about 5'7", and he was slender, just like the suspect on the target surveillance
video.
Mike sat across from Downs in this small bright room and Downs casually asked him what he had done the past weekend, almost like this was a conversation between two friends just catching up.
Mike said on Saturday night he and Heather had gone to his parents' house for game night.
It was something they did on a lot of weekends. And on Sunday morning, they ate breakfast together
before Heather headed out to church,
and he went into work.
Following up with Mike's employer to check if he'd really been there would be easy enough,
so Downs shifted his focus.
He asked Mike about the custody swaps between Heather and Stephen.
Did he know how they worked?
Did Heather say anything about the custody swap this past Sunday?
Mike said he had actually gone to one of these custody swaps in the past, so he knew exactly how they worked.
The swap he had gone to had been one when Heather was still kind of freaked out about
meeting Steven alone. Mike had driven to the Target with her, and he ran into the store
to grab a few things before Steven got there. But by the time he was leaving the store,
Steven had arrived and was handing the baby to Heather. So Mike had just hung back and watched from a distance.
Lieutenant Downs sat quietly, just looking at Mike for a minute.
This was a guy who fit the description of the killer, at least in part.
He also knew exactly where Heather would be at the time of the shooting, and he most likely
knew the layout of the target parking lot and the surrounding area, because he had been
there before. So Downs asked Mike if there had been any problems or tension lately between him and Heather.
But Mike said he loved Heather and that their relationship was awesome. They almost never
fought and they had even been talking about having kids and buying a house together.
Not long after that, Downs finished up the interview and told Mike he was free to go.
On the surface, Mike had seemed to be telling the truth about his and Heather's relationship,
but that definitely wasn't enough for Downs to eliminate him as a suspect.
After all, boyfriends could get jealous and do really stupid things even if they were
in a good relationship.
And Downs knew if he could just get a clearer picture of the man from the surveillance video, he would know if Mike was the shooter or not.
After the interview with Mike, Downs called the security director at Target to see when
the enhanced images from the video would be ready. The security director said he had sent
the footage off to the lab, but it would take at least a week for the lab technicians to
finish their work. The idea of waiting around to get these images did not sit well with Downs. He wanted
to keep moving forward, and he knew there had been a whole parking lot full of people
who had at least caught a glimpse of the suspected killer.
That evening, still only about 24 hours after the murder, Downs had his team bring in as
many people who had witnessed the shooting as they could. And Downs had all these witnesses sit with a sketch artist who then drew a composite
based on the descriptions of the killer that the witnesses provided.
But when Downs and the other investigators saw the completed drawing, they thought it
might be a joke.
This killer with the huge hair and big mustache looked like a caricature or like Sonny Bono,
the famous singer from the 1960s and 70s. But all of the witnesses looked at the drawing, and every one of them
swore that was what the killer looked like. Downes was pretty sure he was not looking
for a famous singer, so he resigned himself to the fact that he was going to have to wait
for the images from the lab to get a clear picture of what this man really looked like.
And this frustrated him, because he felt like until he had those images, he and his team
would just be sort of treading water.
But the next day, two days after the murder, Downs was in his office going over his notes
when an officer rushed in and said he needed to come quick.
A phone call had just come into the tip line and the caller said he had seen the killer
up close.
Downs didn't hesitate.
He got up,
walked across the station, and grabbed the phone from the officer who was manning the tip line.
Downs quickly introduced himself and asked the caller to tell him everything.
The caller said he happened to be at that hotel that was right by the target on the day before
the shooting, and he had seen this really strange-looking guy lingering in the hotel
parking lot. But that wasn't all. This weird guy was clearly staking out the area. He was looking through a
pair of binoculars, and then he took a bunch of photos. And then when the guy was done taking
the photos, he hopped in a Ford F-150 pickup truck and took off. Downs, who prided himself
on almost always remaining calm, felt a huge rush of excitement.
He asked the caller if he managed to get the truck's license plate number.
But the caller said he didn't.
However, he said the truck was white and it had a really distinctive black trim all around
it.
Downs got even more excited.
A license plate number would have been perfect, but this description was still huge.
Downs got the caller's info and
then hung up the phone. He quickly gathered his team and they ran a search through motor
vehicle records for all the white Ford F-150s registered in the county. And when Downs saw
the name of one of the people who owned a Ford F-150 in town, he thought he might have
just found Heather's Killer.
Later that afternoon, Lieutenant Downs drove through a quiet suburban neighborhood with
the hotel witness sitting next to him in the passenger seat.
Downs spotted the house he was looking for and stopped the car.
He pointed to the white truck parked in the driveway and the hotel witness looked at it
through the passenger side window.
And when he saw it, the witness immediately said that that was the truck
he'd seen the strange-looking man get into at the hotel. There was no mistaking the distinct black
trim all around it. Down said that was great news. He thanked the witness for coming along,
then he hit the gas and sped away from the house. The following day, which was only three days after
the shooting, police got a search warrant
for the house where the white truck was parked, and they impounded the truck and brought it
in for a forensics search.
And the forensics team quickly discovered that the truck had clearly been recently cleaned,
because it was absolutely immaculate inside.
This made it difficult for them to find anything useful in the truck, so they sent it to the
Georgia Bureau of Investigations lab to undergo trace evidence testing, hoping the state lab
might be able to find something that they couldn't.
In the meantime, Downs and his team catalogued everything they had taken when they searched
the house where the white truck had been found, and the more evidence Downs saw, the more
confident he became that he had found the killer.
Still, Downs wanted to make sure his case was airtight before he made an arrest. He
didn't want to bring the killer into police custody just to have the district attorney's
office tell him that the case wasn't strong enough to argue in court.
But Downes didn't have to wait too long to get another big piece of evidence. A little
over a week after the murder, the Target lab sent the enhanced surveillance
images to Downs, and as the lieutenant looked at these images, he saw something that he
believed would help him close this case.
On the afternoon that Lieutenant Downs got the images, he led Heather's estranged husband,
Steven, into one of the station's interview rooms.
Downs sat Steven Down at a table that had a laptop sitting on it. Downs flipped open the laptop and pulled up several images.
He told him that these were enhanced images that had been pulled from target surveillance
footage taken on the evening Heather was killed. Downs leaned in and asked Stephen if he recognized
the man with the big hair and the mustache in the images.
Stephen stared at the screen, and then he dropped his head and the mustache in the images. Stephen stared at the screen,
and then he dropped his head and looked down at the floor. Without looking up at Downs,
he just said he did recognize this man. Lieutenant Downs felt like this investigation
had just been wrapped up in a nice little bow. He knew it would still take time to compile all
the evidence and put together the strongest case possible, but in that moment,
Downs was sure that he knew who killed Heather Stroop.
Based on the parking lot surveillance images, suspect and witness interviews, and evidence
collected throughout the investigation, the following is a reconstruction of what police believe happened to Heather on the evening of April 26, 2009.
At around 6 p.m., the killer crouched down behind a row of parked cars at the edge of
the Target parking lot, tightened the messenger bag slung over their shoulder, and watched Heather and Steven's custody swap.
When Heather started putting baby Carson into her car, the killer began walking fast right
towards her.
Heather heard the killer's footsteps approaching, and she turned around to see this bizarre-looking
man standing there.
The killer spoke, and it frightened Heather.
So much so that she turned and tried to open up her driver's side door to get away, but
the killer immediately pushed themselves between Heather and her SUV.
And then before Heather could even call out for help, the killer reached into their bag,
pulled out a revolver, pressed the muzzle right against Heather's forehead, and squeezed
the trigger.
There was a deafening bang, and then Heather crumpled to the ground as blood began to pour
from the wound in her head.
The killer heard screaming coming from all of the shoppers who had just witnessed this,
but the killer did not panic.
Instead, they turned and calmly walked across the Target parking lot, through the surrounding
woods and into the nearby hotel parking lot.
There, the killer got into their truck that they had left parked right there, they drove
off and pulled onto the highway. lot. There, the killer got into their truck that they had left parked right there, they drove off
and pulled onto the highway. Once the killer was far enough away, they peeled off their fake mustache
and removed their wig. A cheap disguise, but one they knew would conceal their identity.
Because neither Heather's husband nor her boyfriend killed her. Her mother-in-law, Joanna, did.
It turned out Stephen's mother, Joanna, did not like Heather at all.
And she had told different people on several occasions that she did not think Heather was
a good mother and that Heather should not have custody of Carson.
Now Joanna was not anywhere near the top of Lt. Downs' suspect list when the investigation
started.
After all, he thought he was searching for a strange-looking man.
But then, Downs discovered that the distinctive white Ford F-150 truck was registered to Joanna.
And when that truck was sent to the state lab for further testing, they lifted a single
fiber from the truck's interior, and that fiber was determined to be synthetic hair, most likely from a wig.
So Down started to rethink everything. Maybe that strange-looking man on the surveillance
video, the suspected killer, was really a woman in disguise, and when he saw the enhanced
images from Target's lab and rewatched the entire surveillance video, he was sure he
was right, and that Joanna was the entire surveillance video, he was sure he was right,
and that Joanna was the person in the wig and fake mustache.
And when Downs showed the surveillance images to Stephen, he recognized his mother through
the disguise.
But even after that, Downs and his team wanted to lock their case down further, and they
eventually discovered that Joanna had owned a.38 caliber Rossi revolver.
Now Joanna's gun was never actually found, but ballistics tests confirmed that a.38 caliber
Rossi was one of only two types of revolvers that could have fired the bullet that killed
Heather.
And with that final piece of information, Downs and his team made their arrest.
Joanna was found guilty of murder and sentenced to life in prison with possibility of parole
in 30 years. She was prohibited from having any contact with Heather's family, including
her grandson, Carson. Heather's parents were granted full custody of Carson and are raising
him themselves, but they do make sure he continues to have a relationship with his father, Steven
Stroop. Police do not believe that Steven had anything to do with Heather's murder,
or that he knew his mother was involved. That is, until he saw the surveillance footage.
Thank you for listening to the Mr. Ballin Podcast. If you like today's story and you're looking for more strange, dark, and mysterious content, be sure to check out all our studios' podcasts. They are this one, the search for Ballin Studios wherever you listen to your podcasts.
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In a quiet suburb, a community is shattered
by the death of a beloved wife and mother.
But this tragic loss of life quickly turns
into something even darker.
Her husband had tried to hire a hitman on the dark web
to kill her, and she wasn't the only target.
Because buried in the depths of the internet is the Kill List,
a cache of chilling documents containing names, photos,
addresses, and specific instructions
for people's murders.
This podcast is the true story of how I ended up
in a race against time to warn those
who lives were in danger.
And it turns out convincing a total stranger
someone wants them dead is not easy.
Follow Kill List on the Wandry app
or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen to Kill List and more exhibit C
True Crime shows like Morbid early and ad free right now by
joining Wondry Plus. Check out Exhibit C in the Wondry app for all your Truecrime
listening.