MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - The Cold, Dark Basement (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: August 26, 2024On a quiet morning in 1995, police cruisers, fire trucks, and ambulances raced down the road in a Queens, New York neighborhood toward an abandoned house that had caught on fire earlier that ...day. Minutes later, two homicide detectives stepped out of one of the vehicles and made their way inside the smoldering structure. After going down a hallway, they found a door that led to the basement. They descended the stairs, and when they reached the bottom, they froze, because there was something horrifying int he middle of the room. A dead body strapped to a chair. Neither man said a word. They just stared silently – praying – that this person had died before the mutilation had begun.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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Police cruisers, ambulances, and fire trucks roared down the street, shattering the early
morning silence in a Queens, New York neighborhood.
Minutes later, two veteran NYPD homicide detectives stepped out of their car and walked into what
was supposed to be an abandoned house.
They made their way down a long hallway, opened up a door, and then began going down into
the basement.
And when they got down there, it seemed like for a second that they had just stumbled onto
the set of a horror movie.
These two hardened homicide detectives just stood there, at a loss for words.
All they could think was, I hope this person died before all of this was done to them.
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 take the follow button out for baseball practice with an automatic pitching machine,
but make sure you aim it right at their stupid face.
Okay, let's get into today's story. I'm Raza Jaffrey and in the latest season of The Spy Who, we open the file on Willie
Carlin, the spy who sold peace to the IRA.
When Carlin quit the British army to return to Northern Ireland during the Troubles, he
received an unusual job offer to spy on his own community.
He would quickly find himself deep within the Irish Republican movement, having to choose
between preserving his cover or his conscience.
For 30 years, paramilitary groups from both sides murdered, maimed and bombed,
while British intelligence waged a dirty war in the shadows.
Follow the Spy Who on the Wondery app or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Or you can binge the full season of The Spy Who sold peace to the IRA early and ad-free with Wandery Plus.
I'm Ellis Janes. And I'm Colin Murray.
And we are the hosts of Everything to Play For.
And our next two-parter is all about the great Tanni Grey Thompson.
Eleven Paralympic golds, six London marathons now,
an important cross-bencher in the House of Lords.
And what makes this two-parter different than anything
we've recorded before, Ellis?
Finally, I get to discuss a Welsh athlete.
My Henwladvann had iron an oeil me.
No, it's that Tanni Grey Thompson is in the studio.
Yes, and there's that.
All my medals are in a rucksack anyway.
They're all kind of wrapped up.
So if you came to a house, you wouldn't see.
Rucksack?
Yeah, rucksack.
You don't want to stick them all out on the wall, do you?
I mean, that'd look a bit naff.
Follow everything to play for on the Wondry app
or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge seasons early and ad-free right now on One Tree Plus.
On February 28th 1995, 20-year-old Kim Antonakis sat in front of her mirror getting ready to go out for the night in Brooklyn, New York. Kim had long curly brown hair that matched her brown eyes,
which were actually the only part of her appearance that she was never happy with. So she put
on her favorite pair of gold earrings and leaned in close to the mirror to add the finishing
touch, her blue contact lenses. Putting in those blue contacts made Kim feel like a different
person. By day, she was a reserved college student who studied, did well in school, and
worked hard at her part-time job. But by night,
she was free and a bit wild, and men could not keep their eyes off of her or her blue eyes.
Kim took a final look in the mirror and then walked through her ground floor apartment,
a place most people her age in Brooklyn would have been jealous of. It had two bedrooms,
hardwood floors, and a private two-car garage right across the street. Now, Kim alone could
never have afforded this place,
but luckily, her dad covered most of the rent. Kim looked over and saw her friends, April Deedle
and Josh Torres, sitting on the couch watching TV. And April looked up and told Kim how pretty
she looked and told Kim to go out and have a great time. April and Josh had been staying at Kim's
place with their two-year-old son for the last couple of weeks while the floors got refinished
in their apartment. Kim loved getting to spend time with April and her little boy,
but really, she was glad that Josh was there. Having a strong man in the apartment made her
feel safer, and for most of the past month, Kim had not felt safe at all. In early January of that
year, Kim had met a guy named Flattickick who actually went by the nickname Psycho. He was Russian, he was very good looking, and he was a bit older than Kim.
At first Kim thought Psycho was one of those ironic nicknames, like when a really big guy
gets called tiny or something, because Psycho seemed like a lot of fun, he was laid back
and really nice when they had met, but recently that had all changed.
Kim said goodnight to April and Josh, she put her coat on, and walked outside.
It was about 40 degrees Fahrenheit, which wasn't bad for a New York winter,
but still Kim felt a bit cold. She glanced up and down the street, looking for strange cars parked
nearby or headlights coming down the road. Psycho had really begun to live up to his nickname
starting about a month before when Kim and Psycho had taken a quick trip to Florida together.
Now Kim had thought this getaway was just had taken a quick trip to Florida together.
Now Kim had thought this getaway was just kind of a casual chance to go hit the beach
and have some fun, but apparently Syko saw things very differently.
Because when they got back to New York, he got Kim's name tattooed on his leg and then
he proposed to her.
Kim had broken things off right then, a marriage proposal was way too fast and way too serious
for her, but since this breakup, too fast and way too serious for her. But
since this breakup, Psycho had been basically stalking her. He called Kim constantly and
he came around and literally shouted at her from outside the apartment. And lately, Psycho
had been showing up more and more often at her apartment because he had discovered that
Kim had gotten back together with one of her ex-boyfriends and so he was very jealous.
And so Kim scanned the street one more time and saw that no one was there, and so she
took a deep breath, like she was trying to relax herself.
Then she walked to her garage, opened up the garage door, and then slid inside of her white
Honda Civic car, and cranked up the stereo.
She loved all kinds of music, but hip-hop was her favorite when she was going out.
Kim drove about 15 blocks to pick up her friend, and as she did this, she refused to let thoughts of psycho come into her head because that would ruin her night and she didn't want that.
And so after getting her friend, the two young women had a great night out. They ate dinner,
and then eventually ended up at a club where they danced all night, until the place shut down at
about 4am on March 1st. Kim drove her friend home, and even though Kim was extremely tired from being out all night,
she was in a great mood. And then after dropping her friend off, a few minutes later, Kim pulled
into her own garage. By this point, Kim's contacts, her blue contacts, were starting to hurt her eyes.
All she wanted to do was just take them out and fall asleep in her bed. She actually had to work
later that day, so she really needed to get a few hours of sleep.
Kim stepped out of her car, but immediately she froze, because she heard something in
the darkness.
She turned, but she couldn't see anything, and then she heard a noise from the other
side of her garage.
Terrified, Kim just clutched her keys in her hand and rushed towards the open garage door.
Later that day at 4pm, Kim's father, Tommy Antonakis, knocked on the door of his daughter's apartment.
Kim's friend, April, opened up the door, carrying her son in her arms,
and she could tell right away that Tommy was upset.
She asked him what was going on, and he said he hadn't heard from his daughter all day.
Tommy stepped inside the apartment, and at the same time,
April's boyfriend, Josh, came over to say hello, but he also could see how upset Tommy looked,
and so Josh just stayed quiet and kind of waited to be told what was going on.
Tommy asked April and Josh if they had any idea where Kim was,
and they would tell him that they actually hadn't heard from Kim since she left the night before to go out, but they also didn't want to tell her father
that this was actually pretty normal for Kim. Josh and April figured that Kim had either gone
home with the guy she met, or maybe stayed out super late and crashed at her friend's house.
But then Tommy told them that his daughter had not shown up for work that day. Kim actually
worked for her father's girlfriend, and the girlfriend had called Tommy that day to let him know she was not in.
At this, April and Josh both got very concerned looks on their faces. As much as Kim liked
to go out and party and have a good time, she was also very responsible when it came
to school and work. She would never just not show up for work without calling. And on top
of that, Kim did have a cell phone, which still wasn't very common at this time, but she hadn't answered any of her father's calls. And so Josh
asked if maybe Kim had tried calling Tommy at his house, but Tommy said he'd only missed one call
on his home phone that day, and when he checked the message on his answering machine, it was just
static, so he had no idea if, you know, that was his daughter or not. And so Josh asked Tommy if he
wanted to go down to the garage to see if Kim's car was there. Tommy agreed this was a good idea, so the two men
made their way out of the apartment and across the street and opened the garage door, but
Kim's white Honda Civic was not inside. Now both men didn't know how to react to this,
however Josh threw out there that this could be a good thing, this might mean Kim is actually
still with her friend. But now Josh also looked as worried as Tommy.
A few minutes later, Tommy left the garage in the apartment and went straight to the
nearest police station.
And when he got there, two officers listened to his story, but they told him that even
though of course he was concerned, that realistically, an adult woman who hadn't even been gone for
24 hours at this point did not warrant a missing persons report, at least not yet.
But Tommy begged them to please at least go to his daughter's apartment to see if maybe
they could find anything out of the ordinary.
And now at this point Tommy was so distraught that the officers were actually worried that
he might have a total mental breakdown right there in the station.
And so they told him, okay, we'll swing by your daughter's apartment and have a quick look around.
And so a little later that afternoon,
Tommy stood outside of Kim's garage
while the officers searched inside the garage.
And at some point, one of the officers knelt down
and waved his partner over
because he had found a gold earring laying on the ground.
And when Tommy heard this, he lost it.
He said this had to be proof
something bad happened to his daughter.
The officers tried
to calm him down, telling him, you know, hey, her earring could have just fallen out when she
got into the car, that's not totally out of the realm of possibility. But they did tell Tommy
they would now issue a search for her vehicle and let him know if they found anything. Tommy then
gave the officers a photo of Kim and said she had two distinct tattoos that people might have noticed,
depending on how she was dressed.
There was a scorpion on her left thigh and an infinity symbol on her lower back.
The cops said they'd keep Tommy informed and then headed out.
Tommy immediately went back to Kim's apartment and when he got inside, he said to April and
Josh that he knew something was wrong here and he didn't think the police were taking
him seriously.
And so he asked Josh if he would help him put up missing person flyers with Kim's picture
all around the city, and Josh said, yeah, whatever you need, I'll help you.
And so while the two men laid out their plan for these missing person flyers,
April contacted the friend that Kim had gone out with the night before,
and the friend said that, you know, her and Kim had stayed at the club until around 4am when it closed,
and then afterward Kim had dropped her off and that was the last the friend had seen Kim.
And so after April relayed this information to Tommy, Tommy became convinced that this,
in conjunction with the earring that was found in the garage, meant something must have happened
to Kim in the garage right when she got home after dropping off her friend.
And so Tommy looked at Josh, totally despondent, and said they were already running out of time if they wanted to find Kim alive.
On March 3rd, so two days after Kim had gone missing, Kim's mother arrived in town. Over
the last two days, her ex-husband, Tommy, had continued to put up flyers all around
the city and the police had really ramped up their search for Kim and her car, but nobody
had any idea where Kim was. So that's why Kim's mom had come to New York to conduct a search for her
daughter in her own way.
Kim's mother walked through a small row house in the Bay Bridge neighborhood of Brooklyn,
and the house was dark and smelled of incense and candles. She stepped through a curtain
at the back of the house and entered a room where a woman with long dark hair sat at a
small wooden table.
This was the psychic Kim's mother had come to see.
The psychic told Kim's mom to take a seat and then asked her how could she help. Kim's
mom fought back tears and said her daughter had not been seen in days. She put a photo
of Kim and a few of Kim's personal belongings on the table, then she pulled out a small
tape recorder from her purse and asked the psychic if she could record this session.
The psychic nodded and then touched the objects that belonged to Kim.
Then the psychic closed her eyes and took a deep breath.
For a minute, the only sound in the room was the hypnotic click of the spinning tape in
the tape recorder.
Then the psychic opened her eyes and began talking.
She said to Kim's mother that Kim was alive, but she was no longer in Brooklyn.
She was tied up in some place cold and dark, maybe a basement.
Then the psychic looked up like she was trying to see something in the room that was invisible to everybody else,
and she told Kim's mom that different letters had begun to appear in front of her, and one of them was a big letter T.
A moment later, the psychic sort of came out of her trance, and at this point Kim's mom had stopped on the tape recorder.
Later that day, Kim's mom met with April, Josh, and Kim's ex-boyfriend, Jay Negron,
at Kim's apartment.
Kim's mom knew that her daughter had started sleeping with Jay again, even though Kim didn't
really like him.
Kim's mom didn't think this was a good idea, but she was happy to see that Jay was there
and willing to help. Kim's mom took out her tape recorder and said idea, but she was happy to see that Jay was there and willing to help.
Kim's mom took out her tape recorder and said she had come from a meeting with a psychic.
Jay stifled a laugh and glanced over at Josh and April, but they looked like they were taking this very seriously.
The recording started and Jay quickly stopped smirking.
The psychic's voice on the recording sounded eerie, like it was coming from someplace far away.
And when the psychic got to the part about seeing the letters in the room floating around,
everybody got a deadly serious look on their face.
April didn't want to say anything in front of Kim's mom,
but she thought the letter T that the psychic saw
clearly pointed to a particular person, Kim's father, Tommy.
T for Tommy.
At 2 a.m. on March 4th, three days after Kim had gone missing, a man woke up at his house
in Queens, New York, about 30 minutes from Kim's apartment.
The man smelled smoke, so he rushed out of his bedroom, but he quickly realized the smoke
was not coming from inside of his house.
So the man ran outside and looked down the street, and flames engulfed an old wooden
two-story house down the block and smoke was pouring out of the windows.
The man ran back inside and called 911, and he would tell the operator that the house that was on fire
had been abandoned for a long time, but there could be squatters inside, so it was possible there were people in immediate danger right now.
So the operator said they would send fire and rescue right away.
Soon after that, fire trucks roared down the street with their sirens wailing, right away.
Soon after that, fire trucks roared down the street with their sirens wailing, and they
arrived in front of the abandoned burning house.
Firefighters got right to work, and luckily, once they got inside, they could tell the
house did seem to be empty, and they were able to put out the flames quickly.
But then several firefighters walked through the now smoldering house to try to discover
what the source of the fire had been and
One of them led the way down the stairs into the basement of this building and he quickly told the others to stay back
He had seen some terrible things on this job
But what he saw in the basement was the worst he had ever seen
The others called down to him and asked if he was okay
And he just turned and shouted up that they needed to get the police down here right away.
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. Bolland'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. Bolland'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.
I'm Dan Tuberski.
In 2011, something strange began to happen at the high school in Leroy, New York.
I was like at my locker and she came up to me and she was like stuttering super bad.
I'm like, stop f**king around. She's like, I can't.
A mystery illness, bizarre symptoms, and spreading fast.
It's like doubling and tripling and it's all these girls.
With a diagnosis the state tried to keep on the down low.
Everybody thought I was holding something back.
Well, you were holding something back intentionally.
Yeah, yeah, well, yeah.
No, it's hysteria.
It's all in your head.
It's not physical.
You're, oh my gosh, you're exaggerating.
Is this the largest mass hysteria since The Witches of Salem?
Or is it something else entirely?
Something's wrong here.
Something's not right.
Leroy was the new dateline and everyone was trying to solve the murder.
A new limited series from Wondery and Pineapple Street Studios, Hysterical.
Follow Hysterical on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge all episodes of Hysterical early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus.
Later that morning, Detectives Lewis Pia and Tom Shelvin of the NYPD arrived at the burned out building in Queens.
Other cops thought that Pia and Shelvin made the perfect team.
Pia could talk to anyone and seem like their best friend right away or maybe their favorite
uncle.
He was known on the force for getting guilty people to quickly confess to their crimes
because they suddenly just wanted to do the right thing and not let Pia down.
On the other hand, Shelvin was quiet and methodical.
Other cops said when he analyzed evidence at a scene, it was like he could transport
himself to the moment of the crime and see exactly what had happened.
Pia and Shelvin could still smell smoke as they walked through the burned out house. They descended the stairs and stepped into the
basement. Just like the firefighter, these two experienced New York homicide detectives
could not believe what they were looking at. In the basement, slumped over in a burned
out chair, they saw an obvious corpse that was charred from a waist up. This person's
clothes and their facial features had been completely and utterly burned off.
The detectives walked closer to the body and they were able to identify that the victim
was almost certainly a woman, and she still had pieces of burned duct tape on her wrists
that had been used to bind her hands behind her back.
Detective Pia stared at the body.
He knew it was not much of a consolation, but he said he hoped this poor woman was already
dead by the time her body was on fire.
Detective Shelvin crouched down to get a better look at the body, and as he did, he leaned
in close and he saw something on her left thigh that caught his attention.
He shouted to Pia, and Pia also crouched down next to him.
Through the very badly burned skin on this woman's leg, the detective saw a scorpion
tattoo.
The two detectives walked around the chair, which had actually mostly survived the blaze
intact, and they looked at the woman's back.
Most of the skin was completely charred, but a small piece of skin on her lower back was
not as badly burned as the rest of her.
And that's where the detectives saw the infinity tattoo.
Pia called into the station and was quickly put in touch with an officer who had been
working a missing persons case in nearby Brooklyn.
And the officer said those two tattoos that were found on the victim inside the basement
matched the description of a young woman who'd been missing for a few days in the area.
Pia knew he would need to get dental records to actually confirm everything,
but he knew deep down they had just discovered the body of Kim Antonakis.
The following day, Detectives Pia and Shelvin met with April and Josh at their own apartment.
The couple had moved out of Kim's apartment so her mother could stay there, and so now
Josh and April, who were very shaken up, took turns speaking to the police about what happened
to their friend while the other parent would stay with the son.
Pia and Shelvin wanted to know about any close relationships Kim had, particularly romantic
or sexual relationships.
Something about the horror and brutality at the crime scene had made the detectives think
that maybe an angry or jealous boyfriend was the most likely culprit.
April and Josh, who again were kind of shell-shocked by everything that had happened, basically
said the same thing to police.
That Kim had begun seeing her ex-boyfriend Jay again, but honestly that did not seem very serious.
However, there was one person they felt like the cops needed to speak to right away, and
that was Kim's other ex-boyfriend, whose nickname was Psycho.
Now, the detectives couldn't believe this guy actually referred to himself as Psycho,
it was like advertising yourself as a violent criminal.
But then after talking to April and Josh about how psychotic Psycho really had been after
stalking Kim and being totally maniacal after she had broken up with him, well, the detectives
were pretty sure they had the perfect suspect who, you know, maybe his nickname was right
on brand.
And it didn't take them long to discover that Psycho had ties to the Russian mob in
New York and that he was out on bail from a statutory rape charge and that he had a history of physically assaulting people who made him angry.
So, later that day, the detectives tracked down Psycho and called him into the station for questioning.
Psycho walked into the interview room with a level of confidence the detectives weren't used to seeing in suspects.
Psycho was tall, pale, blonde, had blue eyes and a light beard,
and when he sat down across from the two detectives,
he grinned and actually laughed before either of the detectives had asked him anything.
Detective Pia told Psycho that Kim Antonakis had been murdered,
and after that, Psycho just stared at Pia, completely calm and unaffected.
And so Pia eventually broke the silence by asking Psycho how he knew Kim,
and at this,
Psycho smiled and laughed again. And then he said, you know, the name Kim rings a bell,
but I can't really picture her. Pia smiled right back at Psycho and asked, you know, hey,
if you don't know who Kim is, then why do you have her name tattooed on your leg?
Psycho leaned back in his chair and got a look on his face like this was the most ridiculous
thing he'd ever heard. He said he did have the letters K-I-M tattooed on his leg, but it wasn't for this girl Kim.
It stood for something that wouldn't make sense to these detectives.
It was just a positive phrase that inspired him.
The detectives looked at each other and they almost started laughing.
Psycho's act would be entertaining if he wasn't a murder suspect,
so Pia leaned in and told Psycho to stop lying.
The police knew Psycho had been coming around Kim's apartment after she broke up with him,
and also several people had told the detectives that they had seen Psycho physically on Kim's
block the day she disappeared.
At this, Psycho lowered his eyes and dropped the tough guy act.
He admitted to not only knowing Kim, but also dating her at one point, but he still insisted
his tattoo had nothing to do with her,
and that their relationship wasn't actually all that serious.
And then he told the detectives that he really had nothing to do with her death.
By the end of the interview, despite Psycho seeming like a totally psychotic and very likely suspect,
the detectives did not have enough information to actually hold Psycho, so they let him go.
However, based on his criminal record and
his connection to the victim, they were able to secure a warrant to conduct surveillance on him.
The detectives hoped that surveillance would pay off quickly, but in the meantime,
they decided to move on to another one of Kim's ex-boyfriends, Jay.
A few days after Kim's murder, the detectives met with Jay at the station, and they had a much
easier conversation than they'd had with Psycho.
Jay told them that he and Kim had been dating for a while, and even though they split up
for a time, they had been back together at the time Kim disappeared and was ultimately
killed.
The detectives both took note of this.
April and Josh had made it sound like Kim was sort of back with Jay, but it wasn't
serious, they were just sleeping together, and so maybe this upset Jay.
Maybe he wanted more from her, maybe he did want to be fully back together, and you know,
when Kim didn't want that, maybe he got angry and kidnapped and killed her in a rage.
But the detectives didn't let on what they were thinking, instead they just let Jay keep
on talking.
And eventually, Jay would say that there was actually someone the cops needed to look into.
At this, Pia raised his hand to stop Jay and said yep, they'd already spoken to Psycho, but Jay shook
his head. He wasn't talking about Psycho. The cops needed to investigate Kim's own
father, Tommy. The detectives looked at each other surprised. Tommy had rushed to the police
first and he had been trying to find his daughter even before the NYPD launched a full-scale
search and Tommy by all accounts had been devastated the second he found out his daughter could be in trouble.
So Pia asked Jay why on earth would he think Tommy had anything to do with what happened to his daughter?
Now, Jay did not want to say the real reason that a psychic had told Kim's mother about seeing a letter T floating in the air,
because he figured the detectives would laugh in his face if that was his reason for suspecting Tommy.
And so instead, Jay lowered his voice like he was afraid somebody could be listening
to him and he told the detectives that he was pretty sure Kim's father, Tommy, had connections
to the mafia.
This seemed completely out of left field to the detectives, but Jay said he knew the family
pretty well and he really was not making this up.
All they needed to do to confirm this was just look into Tommy's businesses.
The detectives chatted with Jay for a bit longer and then eventually they wrapped up
the interview and thanked Jay for coming in and sent him home.
After he was gone, the detectives struggled with what they had to do next.
The idea of interrogating a father who had just lost his daughter in such a violent,
horrific way made both detectives feel sick. But unless the
cop surveilling Psycho found something basically right now, they had to keep digging if they were
going to find out what happened to Kim. And so later that day, Pia and Shelvin drove to Tommy's house and Tommy came to the door
and welcomed them inside, but he looked horrible, like he hadn't slept in days. He was jittery
and he struggled to even put full sentences together. And then Pia told Tommy they were
actually there to question him. And at this, Tommy lost it. He screamed that they were
just wasting their time while his daughter's killer clearly was out there roaming the streets, and if they knew how to do their jobs, they would not be questioning
him about the murder of his beloved daughter, the person who meant more to him than anybody else in
the world. Pia told Tommy that it really was just routine for police to follow up with everyone who
was close to the victim, and Tommy at this managed to calm down a bit, but he was still very upset
about this, and so Pia just got right to the point and asked if Tommy had any connections to the mafia.
Tommy shook his head. He couldn't believe where this investigation was going.
He said they could look into his businesses or whatever they wanted,
and they wouldn't find any links to organized crime.
He said yes, he did happen to have an office near the office of famous New York mobster John
Gotti, and he had met some of Gotti's people and passing a couple of times, but that was it, there was no actual connection
to the mafia.
And then Tommy just began shouting for the detectives to do some real work and go find
his daughter's killer.
The detectives could tell Tommy was not willing to talk to them right now, so they quickly
left the house and just headed back to the station.
As a father, Pian knew how gut-wrenching it must be for Tommy to hear someone even suggest
he might have done something to hurt his own child. But as the detectives dug into Tommy's
potential ties to the mafia, something did jump out at them. Tommy owned several businesses,
and one of them was a fire insurance company. Detective Shelvin said that regardless of whether
Tommy had mafia connections or not,
as someone who dealt with fire insurance professionally, he would likely know how
to burn a house down and leave nothing traceable behind. And if the guy in Queens hadn't smelled
smoke and woken up when he did, there was a chance firefighters would have not stopped the blaze
before it basically totally consumed Kim's body. Pia hated to even consider this theory,
and he still hoped it was just a matter of time
before Psycho or somebody else made a mistake and proved that Tommy had not murdered his
own daughter, but as the days went by, police didn't seem to be getting closer to pinning
down Psycho or anyone else, the case was just wide open.
Police did, however, finally locate Kim's abandoned car miles away from her apartment,
but it had been completely
wiped down, so there were no prints to point the detectives in the right direction.
And so soon, months went by with no new leads, and Pia and Shelvin felt like they were running
out of ideas. So they engaged in what they called, quote, shoe leather work, end quote,
literally walking the streets around Kim's apartment and the house in Queens where she
had been found, knocking on doors and talking to anybody they could. It felt like a very thankless job.
But then in June of 1995, so three months after Kim's murder, the detectives got a call
from a police officer in the Queens neighborhood they'd been walking around in and they would
tell the detectives that another body had turned up and this body was a young man who
had been murdered in the street, literally, mafia execution style.
Pia and Shelvin got the victims' details and then sped to his house in Queens.
When they got there, the victim's mother let them in and said they could look around
to see if they could find anything that would help their case.
She told them that she had no idea who had killed her son, however she did tell them
her son had begun hanging around what she considered to be a bad crowd.
Pia sat and spoke to the very upset mother some more while Shelvin searched the house.
And at some point Shelvin got to a room at the back of the house and he looked out the
window and just over the fence he could see the backyard of the abandoned house where
Kim's body had been found.
Shelvin walked back through the house and asked the mother if she'd ever seen anybody
going in or out of that abandoned home or if she knew if her son had ever gone in there
for any reason.
And the woman said she hadn't seen anybody go in there for well over a month and really
couldn't imagine why her son would have gone inside either.
The detectives thanked her for her time and then they headed back to their car.
And once they got in there, they both agreed there was just no way this could be a big
coincidence that this young man who had been murdered mafia style just happened
to live right behind the abandoned house where Kim had been murdered. And with all this talk
about the mafia connection to Kim's murder, it just felt like this young man's murder
had to be connected to Kim's in some way. They just didn't know what that way was.
On September 3rd, 1995, so six months after Kim's murder, Detectives Pia and Shelvin
sat at their desks and went over their notes like they had been doing almost every day
since the murder. They had found a possible connection between Kim and that young man
who was the shooting victim in Queens, but nothing concrete had come out of that yet.
On top of that, Psycho, despite being under surveillance, had not shown his hand in any
way, and also the detectives had discovered that Kim's father Tommy really had absolutely
no discernible ties to the mafia.
So at this point, none of their leads had panned out.
However, the detectives refused to say that Kim's case had gone cold, but they admitted
it was, at the very least, lukewarm.
But just then, the detectives heard shouting and crying down the hall.
They looked up and saw an officer leading a blonde woman towards them.
The officer had an apologetic look on his face and he said, you know, this woman claimed
to have vital information regarding Kim's murder and she kind of barged her way down
here.
Now a lot of people had made similar claims over the past several months, so Pia and Shelvin
understood why this officer was hesitant to let this woman come down and talk to them
right away, but they stood up and they could see how upset this woman was. Also, it looked
like she had some serious bruising on her cheeks and around her eyes.
So the detectives walked over to the woman and wanted to make sure she didn't need
immediate medical attention, but the woman shook them off and said she needed cops, not
doctors. Pia nodded and said, okay, well, what's your name? And she smiled through tears and pointed to her
hair and said, everyone just called her Blondie. Pia smiled back at her and asked her to tell him
and his partner, you know, what's going on here? Blondie took a deep breath and stopped crying.
She said that morning she and her boyfriend had gotten into an argument. Blondie said she was sure
he was cheating on her. And so she got very upset and angry and began yelling at him, but instead of just yelling back at her, her boyfriend
grabbed a shovel and hit her with it. Blondie fell to the floor and thought her boyfriend
was going to literally kill her, but he ended up just running outside, stealing her motorcycle
and speeding off. Pia told Blondie, you know, I'm so sorry, and then told her she really
ought to go get some medical attention, but then he also asked her, you know, what does this have to do with
Kim's murder?
Blondie glanced between Pia and Shelvin and took a deep breath, and then she said, while
she was on the floor after being struck by the shovel and thinking she was about to be
killed, her boyfriend, before running off, leaned down, got into her face, and told her
he had already set one woman on fire and he would have no problem doing it again.
The detectives asked Blondie who her boyfriend was, and when she gave them the name,
they knew he had been telling Blondie the truth about previously burning someone
because they knew her boyfriend had to be Kim's murderer.
Based on the information Blondie provided, interviews and evidence found at the crime
scene, the following is a reconstruction of what the detectives believe happened to Kim
Antonakis beginning in the early morning of March 1st, at about 4am, the kidnappers sat crouched behind a parked car a few feet
away from Kim's garage.
It was getting colder outside, and the kidnappers were tired of waiting.
Finally, they saw a white Honda Civic coming down the street, and they knew it had to be
Kim's.
So the kidnappers stood up, and after confirming it was hers, they ducked back down. They were wearing all black clothes, gloves, and face masks, so they remained hidden
in the darkness. From their crouched position, they watched as Kim's car pulled into the
garage and they waited right outside. Once the overhead light inside of the garage went
out, each of the kidnappers crept inside and crouched down on opposite sides of Kim's
car. The hip- hop music from inside the car
cut out and then Kim turned off the engine. At this point the kidnappers were totally still,
fixated on the driver's side door. The door opened and Kim stepped out, but immediately she stopped,
because when she looked to one side of the garage and then the other, she saw something moving
around, she heard something, it scared her, and so she began rushing towards the open garage door.
At this point, one of the kidnappers leapt out of the darkness and surprised Kim from
behind.
They wrapped their arms around her, but Kim screamed and thrashed with her elbows and
almost broke free.
She scraped her long fingernails down the kidnapper's arm and thrust her keys at the
kidnapper's face, and finally the kidnapper's grip loosened and Kim got away.
Kim made a break for it, but at this point the other kidnapper leapt at her and brought
her to the ground.
It was at this point one of her earrings fell out and landed on the ground.
Kim kept on fighting, but the kidnapper now had her pinned.
And then suddenly Kim's head slammed against the ground, completely stunning her.
The kidnapper on top of Kim turned her over onto her stomach and pulled her arms behind
her back.
At this point the other one rushed over and unrolled a strip of duct tape and bound Kim's
hands behind her back.
Then both kidnappers flipped her back over.
Kim would have felt a piece of duct tape being stretched across her mouth and then would
have felt her head slam against the ground one more time, at which point she lost consciousness.
The kidnappers lifted Kim up and threw her in the trunk of her own car, and then sped
down the street in her car and drove from Brooklyn to Queens.
They made their way to that abandoned house and parked right out front.
The street was pitch black and nobody was out that early in the morning.
So the kidnappers just pulled Kim out of the trunk and dragged her right into the abandoned
house and down the steps into the basement.
Once in the basement, Kim began regaining consciousness and she screamed through the
tape, but the kidnappers threw her onto a chair, crouched down, taped her feet, and
then walked out of the basement, locking the door behind them.
Kim would remain in that basement for about 36 hours without food or water just sitting
in that chair all tied up until the cold sent her into the final stages of hypothermia.
She drifted in and out of consciousness and started hallucinating, so she could never
really tell if she was alone or if people were there with her.
Then in the early morning of March 4th, three days after Kim was kidnapped, the basement
door flew open again.
Kim's kidnappers remained at the top of the stairs, but Kim's killers walked down the steps into the basement, and one of them held a gas can. The killer with the
gas can walked right up to Kim, and from the looks of it, Kim seemed dead. But the killer
didn't care. The killer leaned down, kissed Kim on the forehead, and said, quote, shit
happens and life sucks, end quote. But the truth was, Kim was not dead.
Hypothermia had simply slowed down multiple functions of her body, so she appeared dead
but certainly was not.
Which means Kim was fully alive when the killer doused her with gasoline, took several steps
back, lit a match, and flung it at her, setting her on fire.
Once the fire started, the killers and the kidnappers turned and fled the scene and watched
from outside as the house went up in flames.
Then the killer and the kidnappers got in two separate cars and drove away.
Eventually the killers made it back to Brooklyn and they split up.
One just kind of walked the streets for a while, while the other went back to their
apartment and checked in on their two-year-old son before they went to bed.
It would turn out, the man who called himself psycho that police really believed must have had something to do with Kim's murder had nothing to do with it.
And as for Kim's father Tommy, he loved his daughter more than he loved anyone,
and he would never have done anything to hurt her just like he said.
The truth was, Kim's horrific murder had taken place simply because somebody wanted a new car.
Josh Torres, the man who'd been staying at Kim's apartment with his girlfriend,
April, and their two-year-old son, really liked Kim's white Honda Civic.
And he started thinking that he really wanted a car just like that, or one maybe even nicer.
And Josh's good friend, Jay, just happened to be Kim's ex-boyfriend,
and he knew firsthand that Kim's dad was rich and could easily hand over enough money for Josh to
get whatever car he wanted. And Jay was willing to help Josh pull this off because deep down,
Jay knew that Kim did not really love him the way he loved her, and so he knew this relationship
was never really going to amount to much. And also Jay figured he wasn't really ripping Kim off, he was just ripping off her rich
dad who could easily afford giving up some money.
And so Josh came up with a plan to kidnap Kim and get ransom money from her dad, and
he reached out to two friends to pull off the kidnapping job, and one of them lived
near an abandoned house that he said would be the perfect place to stash Kim until her
dad forked over the ransom money.
Jay, who knew Kim's schedule really well, helped the other guys, the kidnappers, work out the details of the plan and pick the perfect time to put it in motion.
And in the early morning of March 4th, when Kim was kidnapped, everything seemed to be going the
way it was supposed to. But later that day, things began to fall apart. After the kidnapping,
Josh called Kim's father, Tommy, and played him a pre-recorded ransom demand, things began to fall apart. After the kidnapping, Josh called Kim's father,
Tommy, and played him a pre-recorded ransom demand, telling Tommy to leave $75,000 at
a specific location at a specific time. But Tommy's answering machine did not pick up
the recorded message. Instead, it just sounded like static and Tommy had no idea that message
had anything to do with his daughter. And when Tommy showed up at the apartment asking Josh for help, Josh panicked.
So he did everything he could to make it look like he was desperately trying to find Kim
while he and Jay secretly figured out a different way to get Tommy the Ransom message.
But then everything changed again when Kim's mother came to town and visited the psychic
and played that recording for Josh and Jay.
Because the psychic correctly said Kim was no longer in Brooklyn and that she was in
a cold, dark basement.
But more importantly, the psychic did not just mention the letter T floating around,
she also said that she kept seeing one other letter, the letter J.
And when Josh and Jay heard that, they freaked out because their names begin with J.
And so totally convinced the psychic knew exactly what was happening, Josh and Jay heard that, they freaked out because their names begin with Jay. And so totally convinced the psychic knew exactly what was happening,
Josh and Jay went to that abandoned house where Kim was with the two guys they had hired to kidnap Kim.
Josh had picked up a gas can on the way over, claiming they would just move Kim to a different location
and then burn the abandoned house down, kind of destroying evidence.
But investigators would never know if that was actually Josh's intention. Because when Josh saw Kim in the basement and thought she was dead, even though
she wasn't, she was just hypothermic, Josh would say he felt like the only way to deal with the
situation was to light her on fire and burn her body along with the house, destroying all evidence.
But of course, you know, Kim was actually alive. Detectives Pia and Shelvin had actually begun to
suspect Josh and Jay when that dead young
man turned up in Queens, the guy who was shot out in the street, mafia execution style.
That young man, who would turn out to be one of Kim's kidnappers, had connections to both
Josh and Jay.
But it was ultimately Blondie, the woman who had been attacked by her boyfriend, who broke
the case wide open.
Because Blondie's boyfriend at the time was Josh.
Not long after Kim's murder, he had left April and their kid and started seeing Blondie.
Police arrested both Josh and Jay, and Detective Pia very quickly got Jay to tell him absolutely
everything that had happened.
In fact, Jay cut a deal with the prosecution and would only serve two years in prison.
As for Josh,
he was not found guilty of the execution-style murder in Queens of that young man, however,
he was found guilty of kidnapping and murdering Kim and was sentenced to 58 years to life Thank you for listening to the Mr. Bollin Podcast.
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She struck him with her motor vehicle. She had been under the influence that she left
him there. In January 2022, local woman Karen Reed was implicated in the mysterious death of her
boyfriend, Boston police officer John O'Keefe. It was alleged that after an innocent night out
for drinks with friends, Karen and John got into a lover's quarrel en route to the next location.
What happens next depends on who you ask. Was it a crime of passion? If you believe the prosecution,
it's because the
evidence was so compelling. This was clearly an intentional act. And his cause of death was
blunt force trauma with hypothermia. Or a corrupt police cover-up. If you believe the defense theory,
however, this was all a cover-up to prevent one of their own from going down. Everyone had an opinion.
And after the 10-week trial,
the jury could not come to a unanimous decision.
To end in a mistrial,
it's just a confirmation of just how complicated this case is.
Law and crime presents the most in-depth analysis
to date of the sensational case in Karen.
You can listen to Karen exclusively with Wondery+.
Join Wondery+, in the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.