MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - The Cindy Problem (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: October 3, 2022In February of 1985, a couple (a man and a woman) were sitting inside of a car chatting about their relationship, when the woman finally just turned to the man and said, “OK, you have to te...ll me, it’s now or never.” The man looked at her, and could see she was serious, and so after a long pause, the man sighed and then leaned across the center console of the car, and whispered something into her ear. Little did he know, she was not the only person who could hear him.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 February of 1985, a couple, a man and a woman, were sitting inside of a car chatting about their relationship
when the woman finally just turned to the man and said,
OK, you have to tell me, it's now or never.
The man looked at her and could see she was serious,
and so after a long pause, the man sighed and then leaned across the center console and whispered something into her ear.
Little did he know, she was not the only person
who could hear him. But before we get into today's 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 gently force the five-star review button to solve all three shopmrballin.com ciphers, but without any help.
Also, please subscribe to the Mr. Ballin Podcast wherever you listen to podcasts so you don't miss any of our weekly uploads.
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. Okay,
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? Okay, last one. It's not Andrew Ridgely.
Yep, that's right. It's stone-cold icon George Michael.
From teen pop sensation to one of the biggest solo artists on the planet,
join us for our new series, George Michael's Fight for Freedom.
From the outside, it looks like he has it all. But behind the trademark dark sunglasses is a man in turmoil.
George is trapped in a lie of his own making,
with a secret he feels would ruin him
if the truth ever came out.
Follow Terribly Famous
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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.
Maria Gonzalez would be very relieved when her employers got back from their vacation in Europe.
The 58-year-old live-in maid and all-around family companion looked up at the big house in the heart of Houston, Texas, where she had been employed for
the last five years, ever since September of 1977. Maria's friendly brown eyes softened at the sight
of the two little boys watching her from a downstairs window as she walked back into the
mansion on Memorial Drive, carrying the morning newspaper. The paper was in English, so Maria,
whose first language was Spanish, hardly gave it a glance before placing it neatly on top of the growing pile of newspapers in the home office of her employer, Houston lawyer James Campbell.
Mr. Campbell and his wife, Virginia, had been gone almost two weeks now, and Maria had, as always, loved the time she had spent with the couple's two grandsons, eight-year-old Michael and six-year-old Matthew. Maria and the boys had both arrived at 8901 Memorial Drive at nearly the
same time. That was when Cindy, one of the Campbell's four daughters, had come back home to her parents
following a divorce. Maria let out a sigh. Her feelings towards Cindy were a lot less warm than her
feelings for the rest of the Campbell family. It had all happened 10 years ago, before Maria
had joined the family, but everyone knew the story. In 1972, Cindy had run off to Colorado
at the age of 17, and once she was there, she met and married a man named Michael Charles Ray.
and once she was there, she met and married a man named Michael Charles Ray.
But right after her two boys were born, Cindy wanted out of the marriage,
and her father had arranged the divorce, making sure that Cindy got full and exclusive custody of her kids.
But then all Cindy had done was bring the boys back to the family home on Memorial Drive,
and hand them over to her parents to raise.
And by the time Maria had arrived to help with the house and the boys, Michael and Matthew were both calling their
grandparents mom and dad. And Cindy was living at her parents' expense in an apartment building
that was part of the Campbell's various real estate holdings in and around Houston. And when
Cindy did visit, it seemed to Maria that the second-to-youngest
Campbell daughter was much more interested in getting money from her mom and dad than she was
in spending any time with her own two kids. As Maria herded Michael and Matthew into the kitchen
to make them a nice hot breakfast, the three of them chatted away in Spanish. Thanks to Maria,
the boys were fluent in both Spanish and English,
and now that they were getting a little older, they were also doing their best to help Maria
brush up on her English skills. As Maria watched them settle down at the scuffed kitchen table
to eat their scrambled eggs dotted with bright jalapeno and sweet red peppers, she had to admit
that it was probably better that Cindy was not actively involved in her children's lives.
From her apartment over the garage, where she'd had a bird's eye view of the Campbell household for five years now,
it had seemed to Maria that Cindy mostly seemed to create problems for other people.
During the few years that Cindy was going to the same college as her younger sister Jamie,
Maria had seen Cindy get into the car with Jamie in the morning to
drive to school, and as soon as Jamie had started up the car and headed down the driveway to the
street, Maria had seen Cindy toss burning cigarette butts into Jamie's long hair. And not only had
Cindy never gotten her own driver's license, as far as Maria knew, she'd never really had a job
either, not even after she had dropped out of college and had a lot of time on her hands. There had been that time, maybe a year or a year and a half ago,
when Cindy had lived with a boyfriend who had helped her eat better and even go for walks and
do some exercising, and Cindy had not only lost close to 60 pounds, but she'd also told her family
that she'd gotten a job at a Houston nightclub doing stand-up comedy.
But, like most of Cindy's so-called fresh starts, that had not amounted to much.
Because now, Cindy was back to living in squalor in her own apartment again.
Maria had heard what the apartment looked like.
Unwashed dishes, open cans of partly eaten food, dirty sheets on an unmade bed. and it looked to Maria like Cindy had given up on
exercise, along with keeping herself clean and going to work. And lately, with her parents still
not due back in town for another few days, Cindy had started to drop by the mansion again, getting
lifts with people Maria did not know or recognize, and who just tended to sit in their car and smoke
or drop an empty soda or beer can out of the car window
while they waited for Cindy to come back outside.
One of the reasons that Campbell's had decided to go on this vacation in the first place was to get away from Cindy.
In the last six months, Mr. Campbell especially had gotten fed up with Cindy's tantrums and requests for money,
and he had told her that it was way beyond the time that she had found a job and started supporting herself.
Mrs. Campbell still found it hard to say no to Cindy,
but Maria knew that even Cindy's mother had finally run out of patience.
And ever since her parents had turned off the money faucet,
it seemed to Maria that Cindy was always in a very bad mood.
Yes, Maria thought, as she and the boys all squeezed themselves onto the worn couch in the living room to watch a little TV.
Maria would be very glad when Mr. and Mrs. Campbell arrived back home.
It had made Maria uneasy hearing Cindy clomping through the house.
Maria was a very strong and capable woman, but she had decided that she would rather not be alone at the house when Cindy stopped by for those visits.
But a few nights later, on June 9th, 1982, when Maria opened the big front door of the Brick and Flagstone house to welcome the Campbells back home from their vacation,
the housekeeper could see immediately that just stepping over the threshold back into their own home seemed to deepen the
lines of worry around Virginia Campbell's intensely blue eyes 50 years old and five foot four inches
tall Virginia's trim frame had gotten shorter over the years because of a slight curvature of her
spine and the three decades she'd spent as a paralegal hunched over a keyboard now the top
of her head barely reached her
husband's shoulders. But even though she was tired from all the traveling, Virginia gave Maria a warm
smile. Over the years, the two women had become friends, as well as employer and housekeeper,
and they had shared a bond in their love for Michael and Matthew. Maria appreciated Virginia's
sense of humor, and she liked that her employer did not show off her wealth with expensive and fussy furniture.
Despite its size, the inside of the Campbell's house was comfortable and plain.
Mr. Campbell sometimes accepted TVs and other appliances in place of payment from his clients,
and inside the living room, there were two TVs, one stacked on top of the other.
There wasn't very much that was fancy about Virginia either.
She was a hard worker, she enjoyed wearing inexpensive costume jewelry,
and if Maria could find one fault with her employer,
it was that Virginia was maybe overly generous with everybody,
and maybe a little too timid when it came to speaking her mind.
The same could never be said of Mr. Campbell.
came to speaking her mind? The same could never be said of Mr. Campbell. Six foot four inches tall,
201 pounds with a strong build and dark hair and features, James Campbell, who was 55 years old,
had made a name for himself as a highly skilled and successful Houston lawyer with a solo practice and a sly and unpredictable sense of humor. He was well known not just for winning cases, but for his courtroom
theatrics. With his trademark Panama hat with its wide brim and his slightly rumpled suits,
he was delighted when lawyers for insurance companies underestimated his ability to collect
money on behalf of his clients for physical or mental or emotional injuries. He was also a devoted
husband and family man. He and Virginia
had met when they were both in college in Los Angeles, California, and they had been together
ever since. James regularly fired difficult clients and refused huge cases that would take
up too much of his time. The Campbells seldom drank or entertained, although they did have a
circle of close friends that they liked to spend time with. James's only exercise was playing golf, and most of the time that he was
out on the green, he was chewing one of his favorite brands of cigars. Now, even though the
couple worked together in James's law office, both James and Virginia were thinking about retirement.
In the last year, Virginia had had a health scare. She discovered a lump in her breast, and even though it turned out not to be cancer,
it had reminded her and James that there was more to life than just the practice of the law.
And even though the couple had done well for themselves financially,
if they were going to retire, then they wanted to cut back on unnecessary expenditures,
like continuing to support their 27-year-old daughter, Cindy.
So, while their vacation was a welcome break for James and Virginia, it hadn't really done
anything to solve the family's Cindy problem or change the resentment Cindy was feeling about
her parents' decision to finally push her out of the nest. One look at Virginia's tired face and
Maria decided not to even mention Cindy's recent
visit to the house while her parents were away. But Cindy herself had no intention of protecting
her mother from worry. Instead, she seemed eager to make sure that her mother was as miserable as
possible. Two days after the Campbells had returned from their, and while James was at his law office, Cindy had
arrived at the mansion on Memorial Drive and yelled and screamed at her mother demanding more money.
By that afternoon, Cindy not only had more money, she was dragging her mother around Houston to buy
Cindy expensive silk blouses and designer jeans. The next day, June 12th, Michael and Matthew were waiting for Maria when
she came into the main house first thing in the morning. The boys cried when they told Maria about
the big fight late the night before between Virginia, who they called Mom, and their biological
mother, who they just called Cindy, that had occurred when Virginia gave Cindy a ride back
to her apartment with all her shopping bags full of new clothes.
Maria calmed the boys down as best as she could,
but it was clear to Maria that Virginia Campbell was just too timid to stick up for herself.
Maria wished that the other Campbell daughters lived closer,
so they could come by and visit and make Mr. and Mrs. Campbell and the boys smile again.
On June 17th, the Campbell's youngest daughter, Jamie, who had left Houston to attend a college out in Knoxville, Tennessee, called to check in on her mom. Now that
it was spring, Jamie was hoping to plan a long vacation back at home in Houston. But when Jamie
mentioned this plan to her mother on the phone, Virginia just changed the subject. And more and
more, Jamie had the feeling that her
parents just wanted her to stay right where she was in Knoxville rather than come back to the
family home. The next day, Friday, June 18th, was hot and humid, but the spring flowers were in bloom
and the Campbells, including Maria, were all looking forward to an evening out at Houston's
Memorial City Mall. And while Virginia did look delighted as she and Maria and Matthew strolled from shop to shop,
with Virginia buying small gifts for each of them,
when the three of them sat down in the mall cafeteria for a bite to eat,
Virginia seemed so anxious and worried that she had no appetite for food.
Instead, Virginia just lit one cigarette after another,
stubbing each one out after only
a few puffs, before ordering a Coke and then coffee. By the time they got home around 9pm
that evening, James and his older grandson Michael had already returned from their evening out,
and now James had stretched out his long legs in the living room and was watching TV. Watching as
Virginia joined her husband, Maria smiled before walking upstairs to check on the living room and was watching TV. Watching as Virginia joined her husband, Maria
smiled before walking upstairs to check on the two boys and get them settled for bed.
Friday nights were a special treat for Michael and Matthew. That was the one night of the week
when they were allowed to drag their sleeping bags and bedding into their grandparents' master
bedroom for a sleepover. That involved arranging themselves at the foot of their grandparents' bed
and watching a movie on a cassette tape before falling asleep. Maria glanced at her watch. It
was almost 9.30 p.m. She helped the boys get comfortable in their sleeping bags at the foot
of the bed, and as she kissed them goodnight, she told them that their grandfather would be up any
minute to start the movie. A few minutes later, after stopping by the living room to say goodnight to James and Virginia, Maria made her way out the back door to her own apartment over
the garage. As she climbed the wooden stairs and looked up at the big Texas sky, Maria shook her
head, wishing there was more she could do to help Mrs. Campbell. At about 3.40 a.m. on June 19th,
less than six hours after Maria had left the main house to
return to her apartment, Maria was startled awake by the sound of small footsteps running up her
outside stairs and then the sound of small hands banging on her door. A moment later, Maria heard
the frantic and terrified wails of Michael and Matthew as they begged her to let them inside.
After stumbling out of her bedroom and opening the door,
it took Maria another moment to understand what Michael and Matthew were telling her.
As she leaned down to gather the boys into her arms,
the oldest pulled on her nightgown and looked up at her, tears running down his face.
And now he was practically screaming as he told Maria in Spanish
that mom and dad, aka James and Virginia, were dead.
They just killed them! They just killed them! The little boy kept repeating. And then, Maria,
please call the hospital! Call an ambulance! At first, Maria believed the boys, both of them,
had just had a terrible nightmare. But even as she offered to make them some sugar water
and sit down at the table with them, Maria saw that the boys had wet their pants.
This was no bad dream, they told her.
This had happened.
The boys had been asleep, and then the light came on, and then there were loud noises,
and then it was quiet again.
And when Michael had finally crawled out of his sleeping bag, climbed to his feet,
and looked onto the bed, he had seen that his grandparents, mom and dad,
were covered in red, and they were no longer moving.
Maria still could not believe it, and she didn't know enough English to tell this fantastical story to the police.
So instead of calling 911, Maria told Michael to call his uncle J.W. Campbell,
James Campbell's older brother, who was also a lawyer.
20 minutes later, J.W. and his wife, Broussine, arrived at 8901 Memorial Drive.
While J.W. waited in Maria's apartment with the two boys, Broussine and Maria made their way over
to the back entrance of the main house and stepped inside through the unlocked kitchen door. A minute
later, and the two women were standing in the doorway of the master bedroom, and Michael and
Matthew had been right.
James and Virginia Campbell were dead.
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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
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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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By 4.13 a.m., just half an hour after Maria had come suddenly awake,
Houston police and medical personnel had arrived on the scene.
Two men in uniform told the small group of three adults and two children, who were now huddled in the driveway, to step way back from the house, and Maria and
Broussine felt a bolt of fear as they understood what the officers were really saying to them,
that the killer might still be in the house.
Detectives Michael St. John and his senior partner Carl Kent got the call at 4.35 a.m.,
a big murder out on Memorial Drive in an especially affluent area of Houston known as the Golden Buckle on the Sun Belt.
Twenty minutes later, the two homicide detectives had arrived at the Campbell home
and were met in the back of the house by an officer who told them that police had searched the house and it was empty except for the two victims. Stepping into the downstairs
rooms, Detective Kent was surprised at how plain the inside of the house was, but when he stepped
into the master bedroom, any thoughts about home decor just vanished as his mind went blank with
shock. As a veteran homicide detective, Carl Kent had seen his share
of gruesome murders, but this was his first cold-blooded execution. And the fact that the
bodies in front of him were inside one of the safest and richest neighborhoods in Texas made
him feel like he was looking at an overdone and grotesque movie set rather than real life.
Everywhere he looked, there was blood. It
was spattered on the ceiling, it was dripping down the walls and pictures, it was sprayed onto the
curtains, and it was soaking into the sheets and mattress where James lay on his back and Virginia
lay on her side. Two tan sleeping bags lay in a heap on the floor at the foot of the bed. Detective
Kent wondered if the killer had even realized that the Campbell's grandsons and potential witnesses were lying right at the shooter's feet
when the shots were fired. Detective Kent left his junior partner and the crime scene techs to
do their work. He had already noticed some spent shell casings in the bedroom and a plastic surgical
glove in the living room that the killer may have dropped on their way out of the house.
But right now, Detective Kent wanted to talk to his first person of interest, James Campbell's brother, J.W.,
the man Maria had told Michael to call even before calling police.
The detective wanted to know why J.W., an able-bodied man,
had sent Maria and Broussine into the house to check out a possible murder
scene instead of going into the house himself. And why, after getting Michael's frantic call,
J.W. hadn't immediately alerted the police before heading over to the Campbells' residence.
And when Detective Kent eventually spoke to the Campbells' grandsons about what they had seen,
the oldest said what his uncle J.W. had told him to say.
I have a right to remain silent. The detective couldn't help but wonder if J.W. had anything he
was trying to hide. By late Saturday, three of the Campbell daughters had arrived in Houston
and were gathered at Memorial Drive. As the women, the oldest, Michelle, and the youngest, Jamie,
followed by the second oldest, Betty, started going through their parents' house to see if
anything was missing, they quickly discovered that the police were wrong when they assumed
there had been no sign of robbery. While no one had taken the gold watch and diamond ring that
Virginia had been wearing, and there was no sign that the house had been ransacked, the daughters and Maria quickly discovered that the fat roll of $100 bills that Virginia had
taken with her the previous day on her trip to the mall was missing. The fourth Campbell daughter,
Cindy, did not show up at 8901 Memorial Drive until the following afternoon, Sunday, June 20th,
a day and a half after she'd been told that her parents were dead.
And when Cindy did arrive, she and the man driving her, David West,
who was yet another one of her on-again, off-again boyfriends,
both looked totally hungover.
Investigators had already tracked down Cindy and interviewed both her and David.
While police were still checking out their alibis,
they both seemed pretty solid. David had driven Cindy to her parents' house at about 10pm on the
night of June 18th to get some money from her mom, and David had waited in the car. After that,
Cindy and David spent the night going out to eat, then attending two different parties where they
were seen by multiple witnesses before ending the night at David's house well past the time when the Campbells were murdered. And even though Detective Kent and
other investigators would hear plenty of stories about the fights Cindy had with her parents over
money, police could find nothing in her background or David's to suggest that they could be tied to
the murder. As for the other sisters and James's brother,
J.W. Campbell, it would turn out that all of them too had solid alibis. And that was the problem.
From the very start of the investigation, detectives were hampered by the lack of any
useful physical evidence they had collected from the crime scene. They had discovered shell casings
along with silver-tipped bullets, a kind of ammunition favored by professional shooters, but there was no murder weapon. They had discovered the point
of entry into the Campbell's house, a downstairs den window that had been left unlocked, and in
front of the window, a sofa that Marie had told them had been pushed out of its usual place under
the window. Outside the window, they found footprints that looked like they belonged to a
pair of men's boots, along with a few cigarette butts, and inside the house, they had found that
single blue surgical glove that the killer must have dropped on their way out of the house.
Today, crime techs would have been able to run DNA tests on the cigarette butts and inside of
the surgical glove, but back in 1982, the only forensic
tool police had were fingerprint tests, and the killer, who appeared to have worn gloves during
the attack, had not left any prints at the scene. But even without any solid leads, police continued
the slow process of investigating every other clue they could find. They interviewed James Campbell's
clients and anyone else whose name came up as someone James had crossed in a court case.
They also tracked down Cindy's ex-husband and the father of her children, Michael and Matthew,
but it turned out that in addition to having an alibi himself, the boy's biological father had
no interest in getting custody of the boys. The same was true of Cindy. On June 23rd,
the day after her parents' funeral, Cindy had arrived at the house to take Michael and Matthew
home with her. Over the objections of both Maria and the children and her sisters, Cindy had marched
out with Michael and Matthew. But less than a week later, she had given up completely on parenthood.
Police got a call from the DePelchen Children's Center and Adoption Agency
saying that Cindy Campbell had just turned her two young boys over to the center.
After police went to the orphanage and retrieved the children,
the Campbells decided that the safest place now for Matthew and Michael
was to stay in the care of their uncle, J.W., a lawyer, and his wife,
Broussine. Over the next four months, the Houston police racked up so much overtime investigating
the Campbell murder that they could only put in for half of it and still expect to get paid.
They followed up on tips that the mafia might be involved, they followed tips from a prison
inmate bragging about slitting the throats of some rich couple in Houston, and because Cindy's three sisters had zeroed in on Cindy
as their prime suspect, the police did spot surveillance checks on Cindy and on David,
even though the couple seemed to have broken up and gone their own separate ways.
But even as the investigation slowly sputtered to a halt, the family drama among the Campbell
sisters was just swinging into high gear.
Cindy wanted her parents' house sold and the estate settled right away so she could
get her share of her parents' money.
But it turned out that most of the Campbells' wealth was tied up in real estate, not cash
or stocks or bonds, and Cindy's sisters wanted to hold off on selling the house or other real
estate holdings until the market improved and they could get a better price. And while investigators
were eager for any new evidence, the frequent calls they were now getting from Betty and Jamie
insisting that their sister, Cindy, had to be guilty of something had started to sound more
and more unreliable, like detectives were just hearing the
same old lines from a long-running and distorted family argument. By the end of October 1982,
almost five months after James and Virginia were shot in their own bedroom, investigators quietly
shelved the Campbell murder case. There were a lot of other homicides in the huge city of Houston that were
just as important and a lot easier to solve. It wouldn't be until February 1985, more than two
years after the murder of James and Virginia Campbell, that investigators would finally get
the tip they were hoping for. And when that call came in, the story police heard was so unbelievable
that not only would it make detectives yank that
cold case right off the shelf, it would also put the Campbell homicide case onto the front pages
of national newspapers from Washington, D.C. to Los Angeles, California. Based on that big tip
and follow-up work by police, here is a reconstruction of what really happened in the early morning
hours of June 19, 1982, at the Big Brick House on 8901 Memorial Drive in one of Houston's most
affluent neighborhoods. At 2.30 a.m. on Saturday, June 18, the Campbell's killer cleaned the.45
caliber pistol one more time before sliding the
magazine of silver-tipped bullets inside. By 3 a.m., the killer had inspected the rest of the
gear, smeared mud on the license plate of the car they'd be driving so no one could read all the
numbers, and slipped on a tight-fitting pair of plastic surgical gloves. Then the killer slid
behind the car's steering wheel and eased out
onto the main road that led west to Memorial Drive and the Campbell House. As the killer neared the
street, they turned off their headlights and pulled their car onto the shoulder of the road
on the opposite side of the hulking brick and stone house with the red tile roof. The time
was 3.20 a.m. The.45 was tucked into the killer's
shoulder holster, and a white hockey mask that goalies wore to protect their entire face fits
snugly over the black ski mask underneath. Crossing the road to the front gate that blocked the
entrance to the Campbell's property, the killer, careful not to make any noise, unwound a heavy
metal chain that was wrapped, but not locked,
around the latch. Stepping to the rear wall of the house, the killer found the window that looked in
on the den. After easing the screen out, they began to work the window until it slid up just
far enough that the killer could slip inside the house. A moment later, after pushing aside a sofa
that had been under the window, the killer had crossed the den and then the living room,
headed for the curved stairway to the second floor.
Before placing their boots soundlessly on the first tread,
the killer gently released the safety on the.45 caliber pistol in the shoulder holster.
At the landing, the killer paused to listen.
The big house was quiet.
Turning to the upstairs hallway that was faintly lit by a
nightlight plugged into an electrical outlet in the woodwork, the killer went up the last few
steps to the second floor. Ignoring the closed doors on either side of the hallway ahead,
the killer stopped at the first door on the right. They reached out a gloved hand and slowly turned
the knob, pushing the door to the master bedroom open just an inch at a time.
Stepping into the room, the killer saw that the queen-sized bed was positioned so the headboard
was to the killer's right. The killer could just make out the figures of James and Virginia Campbell
asleep on top of the covers. The killer slipped their hand upwards along the inside wall to the
light switch. Taking a slow and steady
breath, they flipped on the light and then took two steps forward towards the end of the bed.
James rolled over onto his right side and started to bring his left arm up towards his face.
The first bullet hit him in the neck. The killer immediately shifted their sights and aimed at
Virginia. As the killer pulled the trigger again, Virginia moved slightly and the first bullet grazed her upper arm. Quickly, the killer moved their weapon back to the man and the third
round struck James Campbell in his left eye. The fourth shot hit Virginia in her head. Stepping
closer to the bed, the killer fired two more rounds, one into each of the victim's chests.
Breathing hard, the killer took in the spray of blood
across the headboard wall and ceiling. Then the killer looked down one more time to make sure
that the Campbells were dead. All of 12 seconds had passed since the killer had switched on the
light. Turning, the killer ran out of the room, down the curved stairway, through the living room,
and out onto the front yard. The killer had never
even noticed that upstairs in the master bedroom, inside of the heap of bedding at the foot of the
bed, lay two small boys. 20 or 30 feet from the house, the killer suddenly stopped. Looking around
and then swearing softly to themselves, the killer turned and went back to the house. The killer saw her at once,
crouched on the living room floor in the dark, patting her hands over the rug, looking for the
blue surgical glove she had dropped. Even without her black ski mask on, with her hair tucked inside
of the man's hat and dressed in a man's coat and boots, it would have been hard for anyone to
recognize the figure as Cindy Campbell.
Sweating under the hockey mask and his hooded field jacket,
David West grabbed Cindy's arm and pulled her to her feet.
Come on, he told her, let's go.
A few seconds later, they were both back inside of the car to Buffalo Bayou,
a marshy body of water in Houston,
where they would get rid of everything that could connect them to the murders they had just committed. The plot to kill James and Virginia Campbell started to take form two years earlier, back in the fall of 1980. That's when a 22-year-old ex-Marine named David Duvall
West first met Cindy Campbell. The meeting happened totally by chance at the student center
at the University of St. Thomas in Houston,
where Cindy and her younger sister, Jamie, were both students.
David was not a student, but he sometimes came to the Crooker Student Center to eat lunch.
The two sisters were sitting there together one fall afternoon when David walked in and,
recognizing Jamie as a girl he had once dated, walked over to their table to say hello.
When Jamie introduced David to her older sister, Cindy, at first David was repelled by Cindy's
physical appearance. David only liked women who were slim and attractive in a very conventional
way. At 5 foot 4 inches tall and weighing 180 pounds, Cindy, with her stringy brown hair and
round face, could hardly have been further
from David's ideal. Except that David found himself noticing how long Cindy's eyelashes were
and how her hazel eyes had an exotic tilt to them. And the second time he bumped into Cindy a few
weeks later, he stopped again to talk. And this time he told her that she could actually be very
attractive if she just lost a
little weight and tried a little harder with her appearance. A few days later David got a call from
Cindy. She asked David out on a date and David said yes. When Cindy hung up the phone she turned to
her sister Jamie who was sitting in the same room with her at 8901 Memorial Drive and Cindy said
this about David quote he's really gross, he looks like a
pig, but you know what? He'd be easy to train, end quote. And it would turn out that Cindy was right.
David was very easy to train. By the spring of 1981, Cindy had dropped out of college and had
been living with David for six months. He'd put her on a diet and prescribed a regular regimen of exercise
and Cindy had lost 50 pounds. She still wasn't interested in getting a job, but David was so
proud of how successfully he was managing Cindy's weight and appearance that he didn't mind
supporting her. And now, everywhere they went, men admired Cindy. And Cindy had decided to take a gig
as a stand-up comic at the bar where David
worked as a bartender. But even as David congratulated himself on having created his
own perfect woman, Cindy was busy drawing David into a tangled web of lies. According to Cindy,
she had been relentlessly and continually abused ever since she was a child, by her parents, by her sisters, by her first husband,
and by every boyfriend she had ever had. She had been hit, pinched, tripped, beaten, cut,
neglected, and humiliated in every way imaginable. But, according to Cindy, the worst thing that had
ever happened to her was getting sexually molested by her father. For weeks and then months,
Cindy talked non-stop to David about the abuse she had suffered until finally David agreed with Cindy
that both her parents were such horrible human beings that they deserved to die. And when they
did die, Cindy, who had been supported by James and Virginia her whole life,
would no longer have to ask for money.
Instead, her parents' money would simply become her money in the form of her inheritance.
What David had no way of knowing was that Cindy told any person she became close to
about being horribly abused.
But depending on her audience, the type of abuse and the names of
the abusers would change. As for her charge that her father had committed incest, she was just as
likely to tell people that she herself was illegitimate and that James wasn't her father at
all. Sometimes it was Michael James was supposed to have fathered, other times it was Matthew,
and other times the father of both
sons was her no-good ex-husband Michael Ray. The point of Cindy's stories, none of which police
were ever able to substantiate, seemed to be so she could manipulate people and play on their
sympathy to get money, and persuade them to take care of her and feed her and invite her into their
homes. Even after Cindy left David and moved on to other boyfriends,
she always popped into David's life either to rekindle their sexual relationship
or ask for some kind of help,
and each time she made sure she reminded him about what she claimed her father had done to her.
And by early spring 1982, when James and Virginia decided it was time for their daughter
Cindy to go get a job, Cindy returned to David, and when she did, it was to tell him that suddenly
her father had started making inappropriate advances towards her, and Cindy wanted David to
kill both James and Virginia Campbell. So, while James and Virginia began planning their trip to
Europe with a return date of June 9th, David and Cindy began planning their trip to Europe with a return
date of June 9th, David and Cindy began to plan exactly how they were going to kill them.
And by the evening of June 19th, David and Cindy were ready to put their plan into action.
Weeks earlier, David had picked up a Combat Commander.45 caliber pistol from one of his
friends, and he'd been going to
a local shooting range to brush up on the marksmanship skills he had learned in the marines.
He'd also bought jackets, coats, ski masks, and boots for himself and Cindy so even if anyone saw
them, no one would recognize them. While her parents were in Europe, Cindy started dropping
by the house on Memorial Drive.
Not only did she help herself to towels and food, she also began trying the downstairs
windows to see which one opened with the least amount of noise and effort.
On the evening of June 18th, one hour after Cindy's parents and Cindy's sons and Maria
had all returned from their evening out on the town, David drove Cindy to
her parents' house at 10 p.m. so Cindy could get some cash from her mother. But the real purpose
of that visit was to unlock the window in the den so when Cindy and David came back at 3.30 in the
morning to kill Cindy's parents, they would have a way to get inside the house. After that short
visit to 8901 Memorial Drive, Cindy and David
carefully set up an alibi, making sure they were seen at several parties that were too big for
anyone to remember exactly when they left, only that they were there. And then, at 3.20 am,
dressed to kill, David pulled the car they were driving up onto the shoulder of the road,
directly across from the Campbell's mansion. And when David slid into the Campbell's house through the den window that Cindy
had left unlocked, Cindy was right behind him. And it was Cindy who led David up the stairs to
her parents' bedroom. And it was Cindy who flipped on the lights just before racing back downstairs
where she dropped that blue glove to wait for David. And for months after the murders,
it looked like David and Cindy may have committed the perfect crime. They only had one moment of
panic when they realized that Cindy's boys were actually in the Campbell's bedroom when the
murders were committed and might be able to ID them. That's when Cindy dragged the children out
of the Campbell home on June 23rd and took
them to David's apartment where she and David grilled the two little boys about what they had
seen or heard on the night of the murders. Satisfied that the boys could not ID them,
Cindy and David simply dropped the boys off at the orphanage. Six weeks after the murders,
Cindy broke up with David and started borrowing large
amounts of money drawn against her expected inheritance. And at the same time, the Houston
Homicide Division put the Campbell murder investigation in the cold case files. But then,
two years and four months after the murders, and just before Cindy's sisters were ready to settle
their parents' estate and distribute the Campbells' inheritance among the four daughters,
Cindy's older sister, Betty, decided to make one final attempt
to see if Cindy had been involved in their parents' murder.
And in December of 1984, Betty hired a private detective firm
called Clyde Wilson International Investigators to find out who killed James and Virginia.
On the evening of Wednesday, December 19th, David West looked up from his drink at the Park Lane Bar
in Houston and saw just his kind of woman weaving her way towards him. Tall, athletic-looking,
and plenty of curves, Teresa Neal, as she later introduced herself, was wearing high-heeled suede
boots, black satin pants and jacket, and black eyeliner around her big vivid blue eyes.
Two weeks later and David was totally smitten with her.
He was fine with the fact that Teresa wanted to keep things between them platonic, at least
for now.
David had always prided himself on respecting and defending women, which was really what
had gotten him mixed up in Cindy's murder plot in the first place. He'd been trying to protect her from her father. But now,
the crime he had committed weighed on David, and by January 4th, he had started dropping hints to
Teresa that he was keeping a very big secret. And it had to do with an old girlfriend of his, a woman named Cindy Campbell.
By mid-February of 1985, David and Teresa had declared their love for one another.
But before Teresa could fully trust David and begin the physical relationship he wanted,
he had to tell her the details of this secret he was keeping.
He had to be totally honest and open with her before she could commit to him.
So, on the night of February 20th, after spending the evening together and listening to David talk about Cindy Campbell's crazy tales of abuse, neglect, and incest, Teresa told him it was now
or never. As they sat inside her car in the driveway of his house, Teresa's black purse on
the console between them, Teresa told David
that if he didn't tell her exactly what he and Cindy had done, then Teresa was going to walk out
of his life forever. After a long moment of silence, David reached across the space between
them, put his fingers under Teresa's chin, and turned her face so he was looking directly into
her blue eyes. Then, in a quiet voice, David told Teresa,
quote, I killed both her parents, end quote. Teresa, whose real name was Kim Paris,
and whose real job was working as an undercover private detective for the firm that Betty had
hired to find her parents' killer, let out a long, astonished breath. In all her time working this case, it had never really occurred to
the young private eye that David himself might have executed James and Virginia Campbell.
Meanwhile, the tape recorder, whirring away silently in the purse that sat between them,
picked up every word of David's confession. And so did the surveillance team in the police van
around the corner, where Kim's
partner was listening with two police officers. Back at the Houston police station, investigators
got the call and the tip they had been waiting for. Thanks to the work done by Clyde Wilson
International Investigations and 23-year-old Kim Paris, Houston police could finally close the case
on the Campbell murders. Before Kim Paris
left David's driveway that night, she and David agreed to meet up together the following night
for dinner. And on February 21st, after that dinner, during which David gave up even more
details about the murder and Cindy's involvement, Kim told David she needed to stop on their way
home at a convenience store so she could buy another pack
of cigarettes. When they made that stop, Kim told David to wait in the car, saying she'd be back in
just a couple of minutes. As soon as she walked away, an entire team of police officers surrounded
the car. When David stumbled out of the front passenger seat, he caught sight of Kim standing
on the other side of the store's glass windows. As David was arrested and charged with capital murder,
Kim met his eyes and raised the beer can she was now holding in a silent toast.
Later that same Thursday, Houston police issued an arrest warrant for Cindy Rae Campbell,
and on December 11, 1985, David West pleaded guilty to the first-degree murders of James and Virginia Campbell.
In exchange for that guilty plea, he did not face the death penalty, and he agreed to testify at
trial against his one-time girlfriend, Cindy Campbell. David was immediately sentenced to
life in prison. In June of 1987, Cindy was also convicted of first-degree murder and was also sentenced to life in prison.
David is still incarcerated today at Ramsey Correctional Center in Brazoria County, Texas.
As for Cindy, on September 13, 2021, while serving her life sentence at Mountain View Women's Prison in Gatesville, Texas, she died of natural causes.
She was 65 years old. all three shopmrbollen.com ciphers, but without any help. Also, please subscribe to the Mr. Bollen podcast on Amazon Music,
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