MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - The Barn (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: April 24, 2023In the early 1990s, a teenager snuck into the barn right outside of his family's property and climbed up into the rafters. Once he was safely tucked away in his secret spot where no one could... see him from the floor below, he pulled some rolling papers out of his pocket, along with a bag of marijuana, and rolled a joint. A few minutes later, and he was enjoying a nice high and staring out the nearby window at the moon up above. But as he smoked, he suddenly heard the barn doors opening down below. The teen froze and held the smoke in his lungs, hoping it wasn't his family out looking for him. But when the teen looked down, he could tell right away this was not his family. This was something else, this was something bad. And moments later, it would get much, much worse. For 100s more stories like this one, 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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In the early 1990s, a teenager snuck into the barn right outside of his family's property
and climbed up into the rafters.
Once he was safely tucked away in his secret spot where no one could see him from the floor
below, he pulled some rolling papers out of his pocket along with a bag of marijuana and rolled a joint. A few minutes later
and he was enjoying a nice high and staring out the nearby window at the moon up above.
But as he smoked, he suddenly heard the barn doors opening down below. The teen froze and
held the smoke in his lungs, hoping it wasn't his family out looking for him.
But when the teen looked down, he could tell right away, this was not his family.
This was something else.
This was something bad.
And moments later, it would get much, much worse.
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 wash the Amazon Music Follow Button's dishes,
but instead of using a sink and hot water, just have your dog lick the dishes clean
and then put them away. Okay, let's get into today's story.
Hello, I'm Emily, and I'm one of the hosts of Terribly Famous,
the show that takes you inside the lives of our biggest celebrities.
And they don't get much bigger than the man who made badminton sexy.
OK, maybe that's a stretch, but if I say pop star and shuttlecocks,
you know who I'm talking about.
No?
Short shorts?
Free cocktails?
Careless whispers?
OK, last one. It's not Andrew Ridgely.
Yep, that's right. It's Stone Cold icon George Michael.
From teen pop sensation to one of the biggest solo artists on the planet,
join us for our new series, George Michael's Fight for Freedom.
From the outside, it looks like he has it all. But behind the trademark dark sunglasses is a man in turmoil.
George is trapped in a lie of his own making,
with a secret he feels would ruin him if the truth ever came out.
Follow Terribly Famous wherever you listen to your podcasts,
or listen early and ad-free on Wondery Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
or the Wondery app.
Hello, I am Alice Levine and I am one of the hosts
of Wondery's podcast, British Scandal.
On our latest series, The Race to Ruin,
we tell the story of a British man
who took part in the first ever
round the world sailing race.
Good on him, I hear you say.
But there is a problem,
as there always is in this show.
The man in question hadn't actually sailed before.
Oh, and his boat wasn't seaworthy.
Oh, and also tiny little detail almost didn't mention it.
He bet his family home on making it to the finish line.
What ensued was one of the most complex cheating plots
in British sporting history.
To find out the full story,
follow British Scandal wherever you listen to podcasts
or listen early and ad-free on Wondery Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
Before getting out of her car, 16-year-old high school junior Raina Rison
wrapped her boyfriend's navy blue letterman jacket more
tightly around her shoulders. Even if it hadn't been a chilly cloudy day in the town of La Porte,
Indiana, Raina still would have worn the warm and oversized jacket because this was 1993 and the
fact that Matt Elser had given Raina this baseball style jacket with his name embroidered across the
shoulder was a public declaration that the two of them were, once again, a couple, just as they had been on and off ever
since Raina had been in the seventh grade. And even more important to Raina, wearing Matt's
Letterman jacket gave her a feeling that most of her peers took for granted, a sense that she was
safe and protected. Now, stepping out of her tan 1984 LTD Ford sedan
into the high school parking lot, Raina gave herself just a few seconds to really savor the
excitement and happiness she had been feeling all week long about the date that she and Matt
had planned for tonight, Friday, March 26th. Turning to grab her backpack out of the car
before shutting the driver's side door,
Raina just felt thankful that after their latest breakup, she and Matt had both felt so lonely for one another, so incomplete without each other, that getting back together again was a mutual
decision. As Raina looked around the busy parking lot and waved to a few of her friends and fellow
members of the high school marching band, she thought about how
right she and Matt were for each other. Both of them made accomplishments like getting grades
good enough to consistently have their names listed on the school's honor roll look easy.
With all of its emblems, Matt's jacket alone represented many of his accomplishments,
like being a member of the school's track and basketball teams. But it was the treble clef note stitched on the chest across the school logo
that showed one of the passions they both shared, and that was music.
Although not even Matt could compete with Raina in her ability to play
not just first oboe in the school band, but also the flute and the clarinet.
Not that Raina planned to pursue music once she graduated from high
school. As she had told Matt along with her family, Raina's real dream in life was to become
a veterinarian, which is why her part-time job at the local animal clinic was far and away her
favorite of the three part-time jobs that took up so much of Raina's after-school life. Usually,
on a Friday evening, it would be that 4-6pm shift
at Pine Lake Animal Hospital that would be one of the high points of the start of the weekend.
But today, Raina knew that while she fed the animals and cleaned cages that afternoon,
what she'd really be thinking about was dinner later that evening with Matt.
A moment later, as Raina walked into LaPorte High School and headed for her locker,
she was immediately lost in the crowd of students who were all spinning their combination locks
and exchanging greetings with each other before the first bell of the day called them all into class.
With her thick mane of curly brown hair, her blue jeans and sneakers,
her average height and her average weight,
Raina looked like any other high school student from any other solid middle-class family
in this typical Midwestern town of about 20,000 residents. But in Raina's case, looks were
deceiving because Raina was different from most of the other girls in that loud and busy hallway.
Behind that smile and behind that talent for telling jokes that made her friends laugh out
loud, Raina had recently survived a profound physical and emotional trauma.
Beginning when she was just 11 years old,
Raina had become the victim of a sexually abusive relationship.
The perpetrator was her then 24-year-old brother-in-law,
the husband of Raina's then 20-year-old sister, Lori,
and the father of the couple's two small children,
Raina's beloved niece and nephew. Raymond McCarty's abuse continued until Raina was 13 years old. That's
when Raina became pregnant and not even her abuser's threats that he would kill her if she
told anyone about what he was doing to her could force her to keep this terrible secret.
Raina finally broke down and told her mother and father what had been going on during
those so-called family visits to her sister's home across town. Raina's father, Ben Rison,
had been the one to tell Raina's sister, Lori, what had happened. Confronted by Ben, Raymond
McCarty admitted that he had been having sex with Raina and agreed to turn himself in to police.
having sex with Reyna and agreed to turn himself into police. And in 1991, two years earlier, Raymond was convicted of a Class D felony for child molesting. A felony is the legal definition
for a serious crime. Punishment can range from one year in prison to death. Class D is the least
serious felony, a category that includes cruelty to animals, defacing a firearm, and aggravated assault.
And instead of being ordered to serve time in prison, Raymond was given two years probation.
Raymond's wife, Lori, stayed with Raymond, and Raina's parents also maintained ties with Raymond.
In order to keep Raina safe, the family decided they would set their own internal restrictions to keep Raymond away from Raina.
Now, three years after this traumatic experience, Raina's boyfriend, Matt, was one of just a few people outside the Rison family who knew the details of Raina's abuse.
small circle, there was also Raina's earlier boyfriend, a boy named Jason Tibbs, who Raina had quote dated, end quote, for about six months when both she and Jason were in the sixth grade.
Given how young both Raina and Jason were, Raina's parents were relieved when the youngsters broke up
and went back to just being very good friends. They were also pleased when Raina eventually
settled her affections on Matt, who was just the kind of clean-cut, studious, and straight-arrow teenager that they felt would treat Raina well.
Still, Raina had felt very relieved to be able to confide in both her friends, Jason as well as Matt,
about a recent and unwelcome development in her life. Just several weeks earlier, Raymond McCarty
had finished his probation sentence,
which meant that as far as the courts were concerned, he'd served his time for having
sexually abused Raina and now he was free. And now that Raymond was free of the restrictions
that the courts had placed on his behavior, it was up to the Rison family to monitor Raymond's
relationship and behavior towards Raina. Given how emotionally loaded this topic was for
Raina's sister Lori and for Raina's parents, it was easier for Raina to tell Jason and Matt,
rather than her own family, that it seemed to her that since Raymond's release from probation,
her brother-in-law was once again making unwanted advances towards Raina.
Standing in front of her school locker, Raina again pulled Matt's jacket
close around her and reminded herself that she was strong and that she was loved. Even when Matt
had asked for that recent break in their relationship, Raina had not fallen apart. She had said yes,
and she had kept herself busy with her job tutoring a couple of middle school students,
working at a local takeout restaurant, and best of all, working at the Pine Lake Animal Hospital. Still, Raina had been
incredibly happy when she and Matt had both decided to get back together again. Now, tucking
her school books under her arm, Raina looked down at her watch. She was so excited about this
evening's special dinner with Matt that she was literally counting down the hours. At 6 p.m sharp that Friday night, Raina stepped out of the Pine Lake Animal Hospital.
In exactly one hour, Matt was supposed to pick her up at her house on 202 A Street, just one and a
half miles south of the animal clinic. Raina had already made a quick trip to the Rysons' neat
two-story home in the shady neighborhood
where Raina lived with her parents and her younger sister Wendy.
She'd stop there right after school, just long enough to grab a snack,
change into her work jeans and sweatshirt, drop off her book bag,
and say goodbye to her younger sister Wendy,
who was headed out the door to go see a movie with some friends.
Raina hadn't needed to tell her sister or parents how quickly
she planned to get back to the house after her 4 to 6 p.m. shift that evening. Everyone already knew
how much Raina and Matt were looking forward to their date that night and how Raina would want to
spend as much time as she could between 6 and 7 picking out what to wear and making sure she
looked her best for when Matt arrived. But now as Raina was getting ready to close up the animal clinic for the evening,
she heard the door to the waiting room open, and right away, Raina's heart sank.
Tightening her hands around the handle of the broom she was holding,
Raina hoped it was not the same person who had paid her an unexpected visit earlier in the afternoon.
who had paid her an unexpected visit earlier in the afternoon.
Matt was too excited about the evening he had planned for Raina to wait until 7pm.
Arriving early at the Reisenhaus at 202 A Street,
he parked his car by the curb, looking up first at the lighted front porch,
then down at his watch.
But when 7pm came and went, and Raina still had not opened her front door,
Matt decided to drive to the Pine Lake Animal Hospital, thinking that maybe Raina had had to work late that evening. But when Matt arrived at the square one-story clinic five minutes later,
there was no sign of Raina, and no sign of her tan Ford LTD car. After making the loop again,
from the clinic to Raina's house and then back to the
clinic, Matt drove back to 202A Street, parked his car at the curb, walked up to the Rison's front
door, and knocked. A moment later, Raina's dad, Ben, was telling Matt that Raina still had not
arrived home from work. When Ben invited Matt to come inside and wait for Raina there, Matt explained that Raina was not at the animal clinic either.
In that moment, both Matt and Ben Rison knew something had to be wrong.
For the past week, all Raina had talked about was this date with Matt.
If she hadn't been delayed by a work emergency, there was just no way Raina would have stood Matt up.
And there was also no way that Raina would just hop into her car and drive off
without a word to Matt or to her family.
By 10.30pm that night, Ben and his wife Karen Rison
arrived at the La Porte police station to report their 16-year-old daughter missing.
After being informed that police would not start searching for Raina
until she had been missing for 24 hours, the Reissens returned home and, frustrated by the response they had just gotten
from police, the Reissens contacted the La Porte High School music director and, together, the three
adults launched their own search. Twelve hours later, on the morning of Saturday, March 27th,
the town was plastered with flyers and posters showing pictures of Raina
and letting people know that she was last seen at the animal clinic the night before. Raina was
still missing, but now there were so many people, her family, her friends, her fellow band members,
her neighbors, out looking for her that local police realized they could not just stand on
the sidelines. So by mid-morning, well before that 24-hour mark
had passed, police issued their own call for information and tips about the missing 16-year-old,
and by Saturday afternoon, there were state police helicopters flying low over La Porte County,
and police from other nearby areas had also joined the search. Almost immediately, the public appeal for information
resulted in what police and the family believed might be an important lead. More than one witness
had stepped forward to say they had seen two cars in the parking lot at the animal clinic around 6
p.m. on Friday night. In addition to Raina's car, there was another sedan, this one with two men
inside, and a teenage girl standing outside the car who appeared to be arguing with the person in the passenger seat.
These bystanders had chalked up the scene to a possible teenage lover's quarrel until they saw the flyers that featured a missing teenage girl who fit the description of the girl they'd observed in the parking lot.
of the girl they'd observed in the parking lot. Raina's father, Ben, had already given police his account of Raina's disappearance and mentioned Matt's presence at the Rison family home the
night Ben first asked police for their help. But in light of this tip that suggested Raina's
disappearance might be connected to an argument or even a kidnapping that could involve more than
one suspect who might have had contact with Raina just before
she went missing, investigators got busy with formal interviews of Raina's family and friends.
Detectives were especially interested in talking to Raina's boyfriend, Matt, asking him to give a
more detailed account of exactly what he had been doing and where he was the night that Raina
disappeared. But Matt's story was the same one
Ben and Matt had both told on the night of Friday, March 26th. He arrived at Raina's house before 7
p.m. for their date. When Raina didn't show up, he made a few trips out to the animal hospital
where he saw no sign of Raina or her car before he entered the Rison house at about 7.15 to wait
there with Raina's parents and sister for Raina to come home. But even
before police had a chance to confirm Matt's story and his alibi, there was yet another very big
development in what had become an official missing persons investigation.
I'm Peter Frankopan. and I'm Afua Hirsch
and we're here to tell you about our new season of Legacy
covering the iconic, troubled, musical genius
that was Nina Simone
Full disclosure, this is a big one for me
Nina Simone, one of my favourite artists of all time
somebody who's had a huge impact on me
who I think objectively stands apart for the level of her talent, the audacity of her message.
If I was a first year at university, the first time I sat down and really listened to her and engaged with her message,
it totally floored me.
floored me and the truth and pain and messiness of her struggle that's all captured in unforgettable music that has stood the test of time. Think that's fair, Peter?
I mean, the way in which her music comes across is so powerful, no matter what song it is.
So join us on Legacy for Nina Simone.
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.
We just launched a brand new Strange, Dark, and Mysterious podcast called Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries.
And as the name suggests, it's a show about medical mysteries, a genre that many fans have been asking us to dive into for years.
And we finally decided to take the plunge, and the show is awesome. In this free weekly show,
we explore bizarre unheard of diseases, strange medical mishaps, unexplainable deaths,
and everything in between. Each story is totally true and totally terrifying. Go follow Mr.
Ballin's Medical Mysteries wherever you get your podcasts, and if you're a Prime member, you can listen early and ad-free on Amazon Music.
On Sunday morning, March 28th, so about 30 hours after Raina's disappearance,
police reported finding Raina's car parked alongside a county road about nine miles from her home.
The hood was propped open like the driver had been having car troubles,
but police quickly determined that the scene had only been staged to appear that way.
Not only did police find Raina's purse and car keys left inside of the 1984 tan Ford sedan,
but when police turned on the engine, the car worked just fine. Then,
even as crime scene techs were called to the scene to look for fingerprints and other potential
evidence to explain what had happened, police found a ring, too large to fit Raina, in the
glove compartment of the car. Seven days after Raina's disappearance, inquiries among Raina's
friends about who the ring might belong to led police to Raina's disappearance, inquiries among Raina's friends about who the ring might belong to
led police to Raina's former boyfriend and childhood friend, Jason Tibbs, one of the many
people who had participated in the ongoing search for Raina. Jason was surprised but not worried
when police showed him the ring they had found. He identified it right away as his ring and explained
that he must have stowed it inside of the glove
compartment of Raina's car when he had taken it off so he could fit his hand inside of a tight
space while repairing Raina's car radio a few months ago. Jason also shrugged off Matt's
suggestion to police that Jason was still romantically interested in Raina. Jason readily
admitted to investigators that yes, he and Raina had dated
briefly back in middle school before Raina and Matt had become a couple. But since then,
Jason and Raina had just been friends, an account that was later confirmed by Raina's father, Ben,
who remembered that Raina had asked Jason if he could help her with some small car repairs.
Like Matt, Jason also had an alibi for the Friday night that Raina went missing.
He'd spent that evening playing a popular game of car hide-and-seek with his friends. Called
Fox Hunting, the game involved a driver parking their car somewhere in town, and then, using
citizen-banned radios called CBs, the driver would give out clues that would eventually lead a winner to find the car
and driver. And sure enough, police confirmed that Jason had given clues on and off throughout that
evening to his fellow players via the Citizen Band radio. It wasn't until several days later
that police made the discovery that would change the direction of the investigation
into Raina's disappearance. That's when police discovered the Letterman
jacket belonging to Matt Elser, the jacket that Raina wore or took with her everywhere
in a wooded area that police had already searched several times since Raina's disappearance.
Hanging three feet above the ground in the branches of a tree, located in a wooded area
six miles south of where Raina's car had been found,
the sudden appearance of the jacket confirmed the growing suspicion that there was nothing voluntary about Raina's disappearance, and that someone had realized after Raina went missing
that they had to get rid of a piece of important evidence that might link them to the missing
teenager. Right away, police re-interviewed the owner of the jacket, Matt,
but again, Matt's story was exactly the same, and everyone who knew Raina confirmed that whether
Matt was with Raina or not, Raina was always wearing or carrying Matt's Letterman jacket with
her. But it wouldn't be until 24 days later, on April 27th, 1993, that the Rison family received
the phone call that they, and the
rest of the close-knit town of La Porte, had quietly been dreading. That was when a teenage
daughter, whose dad was fishing at a county pond just 30 feet from a nearby road and seven miles
from the Pine Lake Animal Hospital, discovered the submerged and badly decomposed body of a white female wearing
clothes and jewelry that matched the physical description of Raina Rison. One day later,
an autopsy by the county coroner would confirm Raina's identity. The three and a half hour
examination would also reveal that the cause of Raina's death was strangulation, and suddenly,
what had been a missing persons investigation
was now officially a homicide investigation.
With the recovery of their 16-year-old daughter's body,
along with the terrible knowledge that she had been murdered,
the Rison family went from praying for Raina's safe return
to praying that her killer would be brought to justice.
And for the first time since Friday,
March 26th, the Rison family turned off their front and back porch lights that they had left on for 33 days, hoping to welcome home their beloved middle daughter. Three days later,
on May 1st, hundreds of people would attend the funeral service for one of LaPorte High School's
most gifted musicians, and Raina, one week shy of her 17th birthday,
would be buried by her family in a white casket,
trimmed with pink, and covered with a blanket of flowers.
Meanwhile, information that had been reported in the newspaper
just days after Raina's disappearance,
back when she was still considered missing and not murdered,
now took on new significance,
and pointed investigators towards
a new suspect, Raina's brother-in-law, Raymond McCarty.
Looking through old police reports, investigators had found the statement Raina had made back
in 1991 that contained graphic details of the sexual abuse that Raina had suffered at
the hands of her brother-in-law.
And during yet another round of interviews with both
Matt and Jason, both boys would tell police that since Raymond had completed his probationary
sentence several weeks before Raina's disappearance, Raina had mentioned that Raymond, once again,
seemed to be making sexual overtures. Now, with both Matt and Jason's alibis still holding up,
investigators wondered if maybe Raymond might have killed Raina out of anger that she had reported the abuse that led to his conviction two years earlier, or that she had rejected and maybe threatened to go public with any new advances he may have made.
suspicions were heightened when they discovered that Raina had had an argument with her sister,
Lori, Raymond's wife, the week before Raina disappeared, and during that argument,
Lori accused Raina of leading Raymond on. On April 30th, one day before Raina's funeral, and again on June 13th, police impounded both vehicles belonging to Raymond and Lori McCarty
to search for any evidence that might
link Raina's sister or brother-in-law to Raina's murder. Meanwhile, Raymond's account of where he
was on the evening that Raina disappeared would keep changing. At the time of Raina's disappearance,
Raymond told police he was out of the area at a friend's farm. But later, Raymond would tell
police that he had given a female hitchhiker a ride that evening. But later, Raymond would tell police that he had given a female hitchhiker a ride that
evening. Later still, Raymond would tell police that on the evening of Raina's disappearance,
he was actually looking at a house for sale that was located just a few blocks from the Pine Lake
Animal Hospital. 17 months later, police formally identified Lori and Raymond as suspects in Raina's
homicide. But before detectives could put together
a case against these two suspects, police received a shocking tip that looked like it would send the
homicide investigation in a completely different direction. In December of 1994, about three months
after Lori and Raymond were named as suspects, LaPorte law enforcement
got a call from police in Illinois who had arrested a man on kidnapping charges. Larry Hall,
who would later become a notorious suspected serial killer, claimed that he had raped and
murdered several young women including Raina Rison. Inside the man's van, police found newspaper articles about
Raina's disappearance and murder, along with a bottle of birth control pills that had a crudely
printed label on it with Raina's name. But it wouldn't take long for Larry Hall to recant that
confession, and in the meantime, police had determined that the label on the pill bottle
was a fake and that the suspect could not
have killed Raina because he had been in Kentucky at the time of Raina's disappearance. Three and a
half years later, with no other active leads, police had once again circled back to Raymond
McCarty as their primary suspect. And in May of 1998, just over five years after Reyna's disappearance and murder,
police arrested Raymond and charged him with Reyna's murder
and locked him up in LaPorte County Jail pending a trial.
But 15 months later, prosecutors decided that the evidence they had collected against Raymond
was not strong enough to support a charge of murder.
That evidence, found inside Raymond's
vehicle and inside the McCarty house, consisted of several handguns, a stun gun, and bloodstains
in his car that later turned out to belong to a deer that Ray had shot while he was out hunting.
So, in August of 1999, six years and four months after Raina was murdered, Raymond McCarty was
released from jail and the investigation into Raina was murdered, Raymond McCarty was released from jail
and the investigation into Raina's death hit what looked like its final dead end.
Once every year, a $200 scholarship in Raina's memory was still awarded to a member of the
LaPorte High School band. No one had ever claimed the $36,000 reward for information leading to the
arrest and conviction of Raina's killer, and no
one inside the community had come forward with any new revelation about what might have happened to
Raina. And over the years, while the town of La Porte never forgot that there might still be a
killer in their midst, people's fear that the killer might strike again slowly faded into the
distant past. It wasn't until the early summer of 2013,
more than 20 years after Raina Rison was murdered, that police finally got the break in this case
that they had been looking for. That's when detectives were able to act on a tip they had
actually gotten five years earlier and do a formal interview with an eyewitness to Raina's murder. In exchange for a promise that they would not face any criminal charges,
this eyewitness walked investigators through everything that happened
on the night of March 26th when 16-year-old Raina
stepped out of the Pine Lake Animal Clinic
and saw an Oldsmobile Buick parked in the lot outside the clinic door.
The story police heard would
change every single thing they thought they knew about Raina's murder. Based on that eyewitness
account, here is a reconstruction of what police believe happened on the night that Raina Rison
disappeared. As Raina's killer slipped into the front passenger seat of the Oldsmobile Buick,
they looked down at their watch and gave a nod of satisfaction. It was a foggy Friday night in
La Porte, Indiana, and the killer intended to kick off the weekend with a little visit to the Pine
Lake Animal Hospital. Turning to the driver, who had borrowed this car from a friend, the killer
gestured to the road ahead, time to get going.
A few minutes later, the driver and the killer had arrived at their destination. The killer looked first at the clock on the dashboard and then around the animal clinic parking lot to make
sure it was empty except for Raina's tan LTD Ford. Then the killer smiled, perfect. There was still
plenty of time before the clinic closed for the killer to get
inside. And from the empty lot, the killer assumed that no one other than Raina was inside.
Opening the passenger side door, the killer got out of the car and told the driver to wait while
the killer went into the one-story square building located at 330 Pine Lake Avenue.
Inside the clinic, Raina was doing what she always did
at the end of her shift,
sweeping the floor and tidying up.
But hearing the front door into the clinic open,
Raina suddenly froze.
She'd already had one unexpected visitor that afternoon,
and she hoped that whoever had just walked in
this close to closing time was just there for business.
But as soon as Raina saw who this new
visitor was, her shoulders relaxed. Letting out a breath that she hadn't even realized she'd been
holding, Raina pushed her hair back from her face as she stopped to lean on the handle of the broom.
But after just a short conversation with her visitor, Raina's sense of relief had been replaced
by frustration and annoyance. Having this discussion was not how
Raina had planned to spend even a minute of her evening. It was now 6 p.m. and time to close the
clinic and all Raina wanted to do was head home so she could get ready for her date with Matt.
But when Raina and her visitor walked out the front door together a few minutes later,
the two of them had already started to argue. And when Raina had
turned around after locking the front door of the clinic, she saw that parked right there in front
of her in the lot was a car, engine running, and a driver in the front seat. By the time Raina and
her killer had reached the Oldsmobile Buick, it was clear to Raina that her visitor was not going
to be satisfied until the two of them had finished this conversation once and for all. So when Raina's killer gestured toward the car and asked Raina to
just get in so they could drive around and talk, Raina looked down at her watch. She had a few
minutes to spare and better to just get this conversation over with here and now. So Raina
agreed to the plan, on the condition that it really would be a short drive
because she had a date at 7 p.m. that evening that she was not about to miss. Just a moment later,
Raina, wearing the letterman jacket that she would later take off inside the car, had slipped into
the back seat with her visitor. As soon as the driver heard the back door of the car shut, they
checked the side and rearview mirror, put the car into gear, and pulled away from the clinic, heading east on Pine Lake Avenue. By the time the car had turned
onto a heavily wooded section of North Vale Road, about four miles from the animal clinic,
one or both of the passengers demanded that the driver stop the car. The argument in the back seat
had gotten so loud that the driver was alarmed and immediately pulled over and turned off the engine.
Looking up at the rearview mirror, the driver saw both passengers jump out of the car,
then come into view again as they faced off on the deserted road, standing just behind the car's rear bumper.
Their fight now was physical, and Raina was using every ounce of strength to protect herself.
and Raina was using every ounce of strength to protect herself.
But a second later, the driver saw Raina's killer pull back their arm and deliver a savage punch directly into Raina's face.
Scrambling out of the front seat,
the driver made it around the side of the car just in time
to see that Raina lay on the ground
and that her attacker had straddled her body and wrapped their hands around Raina's neck.
As the driver stood
there, frozen, Raina's attacker leaned hard into Raina's neck, cutting off her supply of oxygen,
and literally squeezing the life out of her. Afterward, there was a moment of stunned silence,
and then, standing up slowly and still breathing hard, Raina's killer gestured for the driver to open the trunk of the car.
Together, the killer and the driver lifted Raina's body up off the road and dumped her into the trunk. Slamming the lid of the trunk shut, the driver and killer got back into the car and headed
for the barn located a few miles away that belonged to the family of the person who owned the Oldsmobile Buick. Once inside the
big open space of the pole barn, neither the killer nor the driver looked up at the rafters
and saw 14-year-old Ricky Hammonds, the brother of the car's owner, sitting up in the loft getting
high on a joint of marijuana. But that 14-year-old boy saw them, and when the two people below him popped open the trunk of the car and stared down at the body of a teenage girl with brown curly hair, dressed in blue jeans and sneakers, Ricky saw that too.
And later that weekend, when 14-year-old Ricky Hammonds heard about the missing girl from LaPorte High School and saw her picture in the papers and on the news, he knew that the name of the girl in
the trunk of the family's Oldsmobile Buick was Raina Rison. But on that cool Friday evening,
all Ricky knew was that he better stay really, really quiet because people who drove around
with a dead body in their car were dangerous. Ricky was relieved when the car's driver and
passenger finally stopped arguing, hopped back in the Buick, turned on the engine, and then reversed out of the barn.
But even after the sound of the car tires rolling across gravel had faded,
Ricky stayed where he was, holding the smoke from the joint inside his lungs.
If he told anyone about what he had seen, maybe those two people would come back and kill him too.
Or maybe he'd get in trouble for
smoking marijuana. Either way, the 14-year-old boy decided not to say anything at all. Breathing the
smoke out through his nose, he tried to enjoy the last few puffs on his joint, but it wasn't any use.
The buzz he'd been feeling before the car had rolled into the pole barn was as dead as the
girl with the white face, all the color drained right
out of her. Meanwhile, the Buick's driver had dropped Raina's killer back off at the Pine Lake
Animal Hospital to pick up Raina's tan Ford sedan. Holding Raina's purse and car keys, the killer
hopped behind the wheel of Raina's car, started up the engine, and then, one behind the other,
the cars headed in the direction of a small county pond about
seven miles away. Once they were close enough to their destination that they could see the water
about 30 feet from the road, the cars pulled to a stop. A few minutes later, the driver of the Buick,
along with Raina's killer, had dragged Raina's body out of the trunk. After dumping Raina face
down in the weeds and muck at the edge of the
pond, the driver and killer grabbed two nearby logs and pulled them on top of Raina's body until
she was fully submerged. The driver and killer wiped off their hands and got back into their cars.
A few minutes later, they came to a stop along County Road 200E, five miles northwest of La Porte. After parking Reina's
car on the shoulder of the road, Reina's killer propped open the hood so the car looked disabled
and abandoned. Then, hopping back into the passenger seat of the Oldsmobile Buick, the killer
rolled the car window partway down, leaned back, and sucked in big mouthfuls of the chill night air.
Pulling away from the side of the road,
the driver turned the car south. A few minutes later, the driver of the car dropped the killer
off at the killer's house and then returned the car he had been driving that night to the pole
barn. Even if the driver of the car had known to look, by then 14-year-old Ricky Hammonds was
nowhere in sight. Later that same night, the killer would return to
the pole barn to pick up the Letterman jacket that Raina had left in the back seat of the Buick. And
a day or two later, and Raina's killer would drive to the same secluded area where the killer had
strangled Raina, and the killer would throw the jacket as far as they could into the woods, hoping
that if the jacket was ever found, it would lead police to Raina's boyfriend, Matt Elser.
Fifteen years later, in 2008, Ricky Hammonds decided it was time to tell police what he
saw in the pole barn the night that Raina Rison was murdered, and give the police the
names of the two people he believed killed her.
By then, Ricky's own life had gone off the rails and the
now 29-year-old Ricky was serving a 44-year-long prison sentence for a murder that he had committed
10 years earlier. But Ricky wasn't looking for any personal benefit in exchange for talking with
state police. According to Ricky, now that he had nieces of his own, he just wanted the Rice and
family to know what happened to their 16-year-old daughter.
But even though Ricky's account of what he saw that night in the barn seemed very credible,
it would take another five years before Indiana state prosecutors would offer immunity to the driver of the Oldsmobile Buick in exchange for testifying against Raina's killer.
in exchange for testifying against Raina's killer. That driver was a man named Eric Freeman,
who, at the time of Raina's death, was the boyfriend of the car's owner, Ricky's older sister. And in June of 2013, after more than 20 years of chasing hundreds of dead ends,
investigators sat down with Eric Freeman and finally confirmed the identity of Raina's killer,
her one-time boyfriend in middle school and one of the few people Raina's killer, her one-time boyfriend in middle school
and one of the few people Raina had entrusted with her secrets and her friendship, Jason Tibbs,
who was 16 years old at the time of her murder. It would turn out, starting back in the sixth grade,
Jason had developed such strong feelings for Raina that even after their six-month pre-teen romance ended, Jason had never
given up on, quote, getting Raina back, end quote. Instead, in the years after their breakup, Jason
had always kept in touch with Raina. He sent her love letters that police and Raina's family had
found among Raina's belongings. Jason helped Raina with small car repairs, and Jason was outraged by the abuse
that Raina had suffered at the hands of her brother-in-law Raymond. And according to Jason's
friend, Eric Freeman, on March 26th, 1993, Jason had asked Eric to drive him to Pine Lake Animal
Hospital where Raina worked so when Raina got off her shift at 6pm, Jason could talk with her again
about the two of them maybe getting back together. But even before Raina agreed off her shift at 6 p.m., Jason could talk with her again about the two of them
maybe getting back together. But even before Raina agreed to get into the car with Jason and Eric,
Eric told investigators that it was clear from Raina and Jason's argument that Raina, quote,
just didn't want to be with Jason Tibbs, end quote. Eric told police that during that drive,
the couple's argument got so loud that Eric told
them he wanted to leave, and Eric felt relieved when they told him to stop, and then both Raina
and Jason got out of the car, but Eric said he never suspected that Jason was about to kill Raina.
Afterward, when Eric and Jason arrived at the pole barn that belonged to the family of Eric's
girlfriend, neither teenager noticed 14-year-old Ricky Hammonds up in the rafters smoking a joint. But when Eric stood next
to Jason, looking down at Raina's body in the open trunk of the Buick, and asked Jason why he'd
killed her, both Eric and Ricky heard and remembered Jason's answer. Quote, if I can't have her, nobody can. End quote.
As for Jason's alibi that he was out fox hunting in his car with friends, police would discover
that while players may have heard Jason's voice on their CB radios that night, no one actually saw
him and could confirm his physical whereabouts. As for Reyna's earlier visitor at the animal hospital on the afternoon
of March 26th, that was her brother-in-law, Raymond McCarty. It was Raymond's sexual abuse of Reyna,
coupled with his eventual admission that on the afternoon Reyna had disappeared, he had gone from
looking at that house for sale directly to the animal clinic to visit Reyna that would make
Raymond the prime suspect in Raina's murder
and help lead to his wrongful arrest back in 1998. On August 23rd, 2013, 20 years and 5 months after
Raina Rison was strangled to death, 37-year-old Jason Tibbs, who was married with children and
still living in La Porte County, Indiana, was arrested and charged with Raina Rison's murder.
On November 7, 2014, Jason was found guilty. One month later, Jason Tibbs was sentenced to
the state minimum for a murder committed in 1993, 40 years in prison, but with 20 years of that
sentence already served. Raina's brother-in-law, Raymond McCarty, would die in February 2018 at the
age of 52 from a self-inflicted wound. At the time of his death, Raymond McCarty was in jail,
having been arrested three days earlier on a charge of battery resulting in serious bodily injury.
The inscription on Raina Rison's headstone reads, quote,
she now plays a flute of silver and an oboe of gold, end quote. Be sure to check out our YouTube channel, Just Called Mr. Ballin, where we have hundreds more stories just like this one, many of which are not available on this podcast.
Again, the YouTube channel is just called Mr. Ballin.
So that's going to do it.
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In May of 1980, near Anaheim, California,
Dorothy Jane Scott noticed her friend had an inflamed red wound on his arm
and he seemed really unwell.
So she wound up taking him to the hospital right away so he could get treatment.
While Dorothy's friend waited for his prescription,
Dorothy went to grab her car to pick him up at the exit.
But she would never be seen alive again,
leaving us to wonder, decades later,
what really happened to Dorothy Jane Scott?
From Wondery, Generation Y is a podcast
that covers notable true crime cases like this one
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Every week, hosts Aaron and Justin sit down to discuss a new case covering every angle and theory,
walking through the forensic evidence, and interviewing those close to the case
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