MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - The Hitman (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: July 22, 2024In April of 1990, a bleary-eyed detective stepped into a townhouse in a suburb of Chicago, Illinois. The detective had been on call for days, and all he wanted to do was sleep. But now, he’...d been called in to investigate a double homicide. The detective opened the door to the basement, and started walking down the steps. The overhead light cast shadows on the floor below, so he couldn’t get a clear look at what he was walking into. Then the detective reached the bottom of the steps, and he suddenly felt wide awake. The scene in the basement was far more gruesome than he’d imagined – two dead bodies lay there on the floor. And there was one thing that jumped out at the detective immediately. On a cardboard box sitting between the bodies, a heart and the letter “U” was scrawled in blood. The detective had no idea if one of the victims had left the message, or if this was a scene staged by a deranged killer… and it would take him six months to get the answer he was looking for… and to discover what really happened in that basement.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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In April of 1990, a bleary-eyed detective stepped into a townhouse in a suburb of Chicago,
Illinois.
The detective had been on call for days, and all he wanted to do was sleep, but now he'd
been called in to investigate a double homicide.
The detective opened the door to the basement and began walking down the steps.
The overhead light cast shadows on the floor below, so he couldn't get a clear look at what he was
walking into. But when the detective got to the bottom of the stairs, he suddenly felt wide awake.
The scene in the basement was far more gruesome than he'd imagined. Two dead bodies lay there
on the floor. And there was one thing that jumped out at the detective immediately. On a cardboard box sitting between the bodies, a heart and the letter U was scrawled in
blood. The detective had no idea if one of the victims had left the message or if this was a
scene staged by a deranged killer. And it would take him six months to get the answer he was
looking for and to discover what really happened in that basement. 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 gift the follow button a homemade wind chime made
out of raw hot dogs.
Okay, let's get into today's story. A little birdie tells me Colin that you in your youth were quite a promising distance
runner.
Middle distance on Till Cider, which is something that Mo Farah managed to avoid.
And really that's the only difference between the two of us.
Everything to play for is back with a two parparter to celebrate Olympic summer, Paris 2024, on
Mofara.
Of all of the athletes we could have chosen, why Mofara?
Well, he's a distance-running icon.
He did the double-double, 5,000 and 10,000 metre gold at two Olympics.
One of those gold medals for him part of Super Saturday, maybe the most famous day in British
Olympic history.
It's fantastic to see Sir Mo Farah,
but what a career Brendan or Steve.
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 Wondry+.
on Wondry+.
From Wondry, I'm Indra Varma, and this is The Spy Who. This season, we open the file on Oleg Penkovsky, the spy who
defused the missile crisis.
It's 1960, and the world's on the brink of nuclear war.
However, one man in Moscow is about to emerge from the
shadows with an
offer for the CIA. His name is Oleg Penkovsky. As a Cold War double agent, Penkovsky wants
to supply the US with the Soviet Union's greatest nuclear secrets. But is this man putting his
life on the line to save the world, Or is he part of an elaborate trap?
Follow the Spy Who on the Wondry app or wherever you listen to podcasts. Or you
can binge the full season of the Spy Who defused the missile crisis early and
app free with Wondry+. On the evening of April 7, 1990, 25-year-old Nancy Langer looked at the cardboard boxes
stacked up in the living room of her home in Winnetka, Illinois, trying to figure out
what else she still had to pack.
She and her husband Richard were moving at the end of the month, and Nancy could not
wait.
She was almost three months pregnant, and the new house had a lot more space, including
a room for the baby's nursery.
But as Nancy scanned the room, she realized there really wasn't much left for her to
do.
Other than the boxes, the only things in the room were a TV, a stereo, a card table, and
some folding chairs.
The truth was that even though she and Richard had been staying in this small townhouse for
months that was owned actually by her parents, they had never actually really settled in.
It always felt like it was a temporary place to sort their finances out after Richard had
racked up some serious gambling debt.
As soon as the thought of Richard's gambling crossed her mind, Nancy shook her head and
then called for her little dog, Pepsi.
She heard his nails clicking across the floor and she picked him up and scratched under
his chin, trying to take her mind off of Richard's gambling and their money issues.
But it was no use, it was all she could think about.
Both Nancy and Richard had good jobs working at a growing coffee company, but Richard had
always liked to bet on sports.
And at some point he had started spending more than he earned and began also borrowing money from friends to keep up with his gambling. It had all come to a head months earlier
when Nancy and Richard fell behind on bills and had to move into this townhouse owned by
Nancy's parents. And then Nancy's mother had to create a budget for them and put them on a weekly
allowance which was very embarrassing for both of them. But recently things had gotten a lot better.
They'd paid down
their debt, built up their savings again, and now they were about to move out of this temporary home.
In fact, at this very moment, Nancy even had $500 in cash in her purse to deposit into her bank
account. Nancy gave Pepsi a kiss and put him down on the floor, and she reminded herself to stay
positive. Richard was trying hard to curb his spending and other than his gambling issue, he really
was a great husband.
And Richard and Nancy had both wanted a baby for so long and now it was finally happening
and she knew Richard was going to be an amazing father.
Feeling better, Nancy sat down on a folding chair and flipped on the TV.
At around 6.30 pm the phone rang.
It was Richard, telling Nancy he was leaving work and he'd be home to pick her up in
just a few minutes.
They were celebrating Nancy's father's 60th birthday that night.
They had an 8pm dinner reservation, but they were picking up Nancy's parents and sister
at her sister's place first.
Nancy turned off the TV, picked up Pepsi, and took him upstairs to the bedroom so he
wouldn't chew up any of the cardboard boxes while they were gone.
After putting him inside, she shut the door gently, walked back downstairs, threw on a
coat and walked outside to Richard's car, shivering in the early spring chill.
A few minutes later, Nancy's sister, Jean, opened the door to her apartment with a huge
smile on her face.
She led Nancy and Richard inside, and then she handed Nancy two beautifully wrapped presents
that she'd brought back from a recent trip to Ireland.
Nancy opened up the first gift and found a gorgeous Irish wool sweater inside.
But the other present made Nancy feel like she might cry from happiness.
It was a little onesie and booties for a newborn baby.
Nancy thanked Jean repeatedly and gave her a big hug.
She was so happy.
At around 8pm, the group got to the restaurant and Nancy was happily surprised to see that
none of her parents' friends were meeting them there. The celebration would now just
be with family. It wasn't that Nancy didn't like her parents' friends though. Some of
them had been around for so long that they actually felt like her own family. Like her
dad's work friend, Nick Biro and his wife Joan, who she had totally expected to be there.
But then there was this guy Victor, who was one of her father's closest friends, but he
was also rumored to be in the mob.
Nancy didn't mind Victor, but Richard could not stand him, so his absence from the party
was a relief.
As the food started to arrive to their table, Nancy suddenly didn't feel well.
Her pregnancy was giving her really bad nauseaa and the smell of pasta and steak just set
it off.
But she didn't want to ruin the night for everyone, so she tried to hide the fact that
she really just wanted to go throw up.
However, she could see her mom looking over at her with a raised eyebrow from across the
table and Nancy forced a smile back.
She knew she was not convincing her mother that she was doing okay, but her mother just went back to her lasagna without saying anything in fear she
might embarrass her daughter.
After dinner, Nancy and the rest of her family all piled back into Richard's car so he could
drive everybody home.
He dropped Nancy's sister Jean off first, and when she got out, Jean gave Nancy a big
hug and told her she would see her tomorrow at church. Then Richard dropped off Nancy's parents, however, Nancy's mother paused before getting out of the
car. She said she noticed at dinner that Nancy was feeling sick and asked if maybe Nancy and Richard
wanted to spend the night there, at her house. For a second, Nancy did consider it, I mean having
your parents around if you're feeling sick is kinda like what everybody wants, but Richard was
supposed to dog sit for a neighbor and she wanted to sleep in her own
bed cuddled up with Pepsi so she ultimately said no thank you.
Her parents then said goodnight and then they walked into their house.
On the drive back home Richard and Nancy planned out the rest of their evening.
Richard would walk the neighbors dog and then actually sleep over at the neighbor's house to keep the dog company. But first, Nancy and Richard would take their dog,
Pepsi, for a walk together. They pulled up to their townhouse and Richard walked around the car,
opened up Nancy's door, and helped her outside. They smiled at each other and he asked her how
she was feeling and Nancy said she still felt nauseous, but she was too happy about everything
to let it bother her. Richard gave Nancy's shoulder a quick squeeze and then they walked inside together.
At 7am the next morning, Nancy's mother called her daughter to see if she was feeling any better.
But Nancy didn't pick up, so her mom figured she must be sleeping in and hung up without
leaving a message. She knew she would just see her daughter later at church anyway.
However, when Nancy's mother got to church that day and took her seat in their
regular pew, the bench beside her stayed empty for the entire service. Nancy's mom worried
the entire time, so as soon as she got back home, she called her daughter again. And when
Nancy still didn't answer, Nancy's father said he was going over to the townhouse to
make sure everything was okay.
Nancy's dad got to the townhouse just a few minutes later.
He figured Nancy was just sick and sleeping, so he wasn't actually all that worried.
He rang the bell, but nobody answered, so he took out his own key, unlocked the door,
and stepped inside.
The place felt oddly quiet, and no one responded when he called out.
Then Nancy's dad saw his daughter's purse lying on the floor, surrounded by cash and
credit cards, and so now he was worried.
Suddenly he heard a noise upstairs.
It sounded like scratching on a door.
So he ran out of the room, took the steps up two at a time, and then headed down the
second floor hallway to Nancy's bedroom, where the scratching sound was coming from.
There he opened up the door, and the little dog Pepsi came running out and the stench
of urine immediately hit Nancy's dad.
Now he was really starting to panic.
He knew his daughter would never lock her precious dog in a room long enough for the
dog to have to urinate all over the ground.
He turned and ran back downstairs, now screaming his daughter's name, but still he didn't
get an answer.
He knew there was only one place he hadn't checked yet, the basement.
Nancy's father ran to the top of the basement stairs.
The basement light was on, but all he could see when he looked down the stairs were shadowy
shapes below, which he assumed must be their moving boxes.
But as he slowly walked down the stairs and the shapes came into view, he gasped.
They weren't boxes.
They were the bodies of his pregnant daughter and his son-in-law.
They were both covered in blood. Nancy was still wearing her clothes from the night before,
and her eyes were wide open. For a moment Nancy's father simply froze, unable to process what he
was seeing. Then he leapt down the remaining stairs to his daughter's side and grabbed her hand,
but it was freezing cold. He sprinted back up the stairs and he dialed 911.
When Etka Police Sergeant Gene Calvatis woke up to the sound of his wife's voice calling
him from the other room.
He blinked at his clock, which read 6.40 pm.
He'd worked overnight and hadn't gotten to bed until about midday, and now his wife was saying he had yet another phone call from headquarters.
All Sergeant Calvatis wanted was just to go back to sleep, but he forced himself to get up and go
to the phone because this was his job. And as soon as he heard his lieutenant's voice in the phone,
Calvatis snapped wide awake. The lieutenant said there had been a double homicide,
and Calvatis needed to get to the scene right now.
The lieutenant said there had been a double homicide and Calvatis needed to get to the scene right now.
A few minutes later, Sergeant Calvatis parked his car outside of Nancy and Richard's townhouse.
Calvatis had seen plenty of violent deaths in his life.
Before he became a police officer, he had served in Vietnam, and he had watched other
young men in his unit grow hardened to bloodshed and violence, but Calvatis really never got
used to it. In fact, Calvatis really never got used to it.
In fact, Calvatis could see the face of every dead person he'd ever seen as clearly as
if they were still right in front of him.
And now he braced himself for the faces he was about to see in that basement.
Sergeant Calvatis stepped out of his car and he saw several officers speaking to Nancy's
father outside the house.
Calvatis quickly introduced himself and then headed inside, where a forensics team was
already combing through the townhouse.
One of the forensics officers came over to Calvatis.
He said the double homicide had taken place in the basement, but before Calvatis went
downstairs, he wanted to show the detective three pieces of evidence they'd found on
the first floor.
The forensics officer pointed to the ground just a few feet away, and Calvatis noticed
Nancy's purse lying there with $500 in cash and several credit cards lying next to it.
Calvatis quickly noticed there was still a TV and a high-end stereo in the room, so it
seemed unlikely that what they were dealing with here was a robbery gone bad.
Then the forensics officer led Calvatis towards a door that opened onto a small back patio.
Calvatis saw a perfectly cut square piece of glass,
which had been removed from the door and placed on the floor inside.
And the Forensics Officer pointed out something interesting. The door was still locked.
So whoever cut the glass did not reach through the hole and unlock the door,
which would have been easy. Instead, they literally climbed through the small hole in the door,
which would have taken far more time and effort. Finally, the Forensics Officer took Calvatis over to a small card table that was next to a moving
box. The officer said it looked like someone had rifled through the box and put a single item from
it on the table. Calvatis leaned in and a look of surprise came across his face. The item on the
table was Nancy and Richard's marriage license, but the Forensics Officer said he didn't know
yet if the person who broke in had put the license
there or if maybe it just happened to be there already.
Calvatis thanked the officer and then after taking a deep breath, he headed to the basement,
hoping things would start to get a bit clearer down there.
Calvatis walked down the steps slowly and as the scene came into view, he couldn't
help but wince.
Richard had been handcuffed and shot in the back of the head.
It looked like he had probably died instantly.
Nancy though was not handcuffed, and her death had clearly been slow.
She was shot twice in her side and in her abdomen, and there was blood smeared all around
her body, like she had crawled or rolled in the blood after being wounded, and her eyes
were still open, frozen in her final moment.
Calvatus also saw an axe on the floor between Richard and Nancy, and he wondered how that
figured into the crime if the killer had a gun.
Had the couple tried to fight back with it?
He didn't know.
Then something else caught Sergeant Calvatus' attention.
On a moving box between the bodies, a small heart and the letter U were scrawled in blood.
Calvatus crouched down and saw blood on one of Nancy's fingertips, so he wondered if she
had left this message or if the killer had staged it to look that way.
Regardless of the answer, Calvatis realized whoever killed Nancy and Richard had not acted
in the heat of the moment.
The handcuffs and the execution-style shooting of Richard proved that.
And that execution-style shooting made Calvatis wonder if the murders had been carried out by a professional hitman. The cut glass in the patio door could also support that theory
because it suggested a very high level of planning. But Calvetis stood there and just shook his head,
like he was arguing with himself. Removing the glass in the door seemed like something
a professional would do, but then why would the professional killer squeeze through the small hole
in the door instead of just reaching in and unlocking the door?
Also, Richard's murder seemed like a cold-blooded, very efficient assassination, whereas Nancy's
murder seemed sloppy.
She clearly lived long enough to roll or crawl through the blood on the floor, and she might
have lived long enough to even write that message on the moving box.
So in a way, Calvatis felt like he was almost looking at two different crime scenes at once.
One crime scene for Richard and one crime scene for Nancy.
Calvades suddenly felt a tap on his shoulder.
It was one of the officers who'd been talking to Nancy's dad.
The officer told Calvades he had very important information.
Nancy had been pregnant.
Calvades' heart sank.
He knew the look on Nancy's face would stay with him for a very long time.
Later that day, as officers met with Nancy and Richard's neighbors, the chief of police
decided to form a task force to investigate the double murder.
He said he would ask for help from detectives from surrounding suburbs, but he wanted Sergeant
Calvetis to lead the team.
Calvetis knew this was going to be the biggest challenge of his career.
A double homicide of a young couple that was potentially carried out by a professional
hitman was a whole different level of crime than he'd ever seen in Winnetka.
The next day, Sergeant Calvatis knocked on the door of Nancy's parents' house.
Nancy's dad opened the door, and Calvatis could tell from his puffy eyes that he'd
been crying.
As gently as he could, Calvatis asked the father if he could get Nancy and Richard's
wedding albums and address books or anything that could help him identify
all of their friends and acquaintances.
Nancy's father just nodded, looking shell-shocked,
and invited the sergeant to come inside while he looked.
Calvatis stepped inside and then sat down on the couch, and Nancy's mother came in.
She also had a vacant stare on her face, almost like she literally couldn't process what had
happened.
Still, almost on autopilot, she politely offered him some coffee, which Calvatis said no thank
you to.
Then, Calvatis told her that he was the one leading this investigation, and he really
needed her to think as hard as she could about all the people in her daughter's life.
Did she know anyone who might want to hurt Nancy or Richard?
But Nancy's mother shook her head and said no.
And as Nancy's father came in with the things the sergeant had asked for, he also said the
same thing.
Nancy and Richard were wonderful people with a big supportive group of friends.
The idea that either of them had enemies seemed kind of ridiculous.
On Tuesday, April 10th, so three days after the murders, Nancy and Richard's bosses at
the coffee company offered a $10,000 reward for information in the case, and also Nancy's
parents matched it.
And so tips about Nancy and Richard began to pour in.
Phones at police headquarters rang constantly, and before long the task force was totally
inundated.
And as Sergeant Calvatis sifted through all this new information they were getting, a
new and much more complicated picture of the murdered couple began to emerge.
A few tipsters alerted the sergeant to Richard's gambling debts and the fact that he very likely
owed people money because of his gambling problem.
This was a major red flag to Calvatis, but the debts themselves actually seemed way too
small to be worth killing two people over.
However, the tips about Nancy were more promising.
Apparently, she had had an affair for more than a year and her former lover had left
town for Georgia just two days after the murders.
This combined with the marriage contract left on the table at the crime scene made Calvatis
wonder if the killings were retaliation from Nancy's ex-lover for breaking the affair off. Calvatis sent detectives down to Georgia to speak with
Nancy's former lover, but the man said the affair was far more emotional than physical.
Nancy mostly just wanted someone to talk to because Richard was working two jobs and she
was just kind of lonely. But when Richard got his full-time job at the coffee company,
the couple had totally
reconciled and they got back to normal.
And so this ex-lover said at that point, he also had been ready to move on.
And so even though the move to Georgia came so close to the murders, it had actually been
planned out for weeks.
Calvatis wasn't quite prepared to rule this man out quite yet, but he was already finding
this case very frustrating.
Everything from the conflicting evidence at the crime scene where one murder is well planned
and the other seems sloppy and the glass, why did you climb through and not unlock it
by reaching through, to the contradictory stories about the victims seemed to pull him
in very different directions.
Meanwhile, rumors of hitmen and criminal syndicates began flying all over town.
There was a bike path that ran behind Nancy and
Richard's house leading basically all the way to Chicago and residents became convinced that a
Chicago mobster must have been the killer and they must have used that path to travel in and out,
sight unseen. Calvatis did not necessarily buy that, but he got a tip that a close friend of
Nancy's father, a man named Victor, supposedly had ties to the mafia.
So, Calvatis began digging. However, he struggled to find anything useful. At least on the surface,
Victor looked like an upstanding businessman. So, Calvatis was not any closer to nailing down
a primary suspect.
If you're listening to this podcast, then chances are good you are a fan of the strange, dark and mysterious.
And if that's the case, then I've got some good news.
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Each story is totally true and totally terrifying.
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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***ing around.
She's like, I can't.
A mystery illness, bizarre symptoms, and spreading fast.
It's like doubling and tripling and it's all these girls.
With a diagnosis the state tried to keep on the down low.
Everybody thought I was holding something back.
Well you were holding something back. And tension eye.
Yeah, yeah, well, yeah.
No, it's hysteria. It's all in your head. It's not physical.
Oh my gosh, you're exaggerating.
Is this the largest mass hysteria
since the witches of Salem?
Or is it something else entirely?
Something's wrong here.
Something's not right.
Leroy was the new dateline
and everyone was trying to solve the murder.
A new limited series from Wondery
and Pineapple Street Studios, Hysterical.
Follow Hysterical on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge all episodes of Hysterical early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus.
Four days after the murders, a massive crowd of 800 people from the area gathered for Nancy
and Richard's funeral.
I mean, the community really
came out in force to the point where random local groups like the high school's peace alliance club
and the track team were waiting in these long lines after the service just to offer their
condolences to Nancy and Richard's family. I mean, their deaths really took a toll on this town.
Sergeant Calvades and some other detectives also went to the funeral, but mostly just to look for anybody who seemed nervous or excited or maybe overly dramatic.
But all they found was a large group of people trying desperately to understand how something
this horrible could have happened.
After the funeral, Calvatis went back to the station.
He was on his way to his office when a lieutenant stopped him to tell him that somebody was there to see him. The lieutenant took Calvatis to a very nervous
looking couple who said they had a tip about Nancy's sister, Jean. Jean was a lawyer,
and she was heavily involved in political issues in Ireland. At that time, Ireland was in the midst
of a violent period known as the Troubles. The Troubles were clashes between Protestants and
Catholics over
control of Northern Ireland, and there were regular shootings, car bombings, murders, and
kidnappings. And Jean was not neutral. She provided legal aid to members of the Irish
Republican Army, or IRA, which was the Catholic organization blamed for many acts of violence.
The couple also told Sergeant Calvades that Jean had received a threat that if she returned to
Ireland, she would be injured or maybe even killed.
But despite that threat, Jean had gone back to Ireland very recently, and when she had
arrived home, she showed up with gifts for Nancy and the baby just three days before
the murders.
The sergeant listened quietly, but inside, he was practically jumping out of his skin.
This was the best lead he'd gotten so far.
Maybe he thought somebody was hired to kill Jean, but killed Nancy and her husband by
mistake.
Or maybe they killed Nancy on purpose just to hurt Jean.
It was not unheard of during the troubles for innocent family members to be targeted
for political revenge.
And so, after speaking to this couple, Calvatis got on the phone and called Jean into the
station.
Later that day, Calvatis sat down across a table in a small interview room with Jean,
and he could tell right away she was completely unlike any suspect he'd ever questioned before.
Jean was unusually confident for somebody who was about to be questioned by a homicide
detective.
She sat up perfectly straight and calmly looked Calvatis right in the eyes, without fidgeting or tapping her fingers or shifting around in her seat.
Calvatis asked Jean some basic questions about her job, and she was quite helpful.
But then, the sergeant mentioned the threat that had been made on her life because of her work in
Ireland, and also this theory that maybe a hired killer took out Nancy either by mistake or for revenge.
At this point, Jean's demeanor totally changed.
She went from cool and collected to sharp and visibly angry.
She said it was ridiculous to imagine a gunman could confuse Nancy for her.
They looked nothing alike.
And the idea that someone would kill Nancy to get back at Jean was even more outrageous.
Jean insisted that her job in Ireland was mostly human rights work and not worth killing her over, let alone her sister. Jean leaned forward and
looked Calvatus dead in the eyes and told him he was really stretching with that theory.
Calvatus was genuinely surprised. This was not what he was expecting, and he wasn't sure if
Jean's reaction was fueled by righteous indignation at questions she truly considered unfair or anxiety and guilt at the idea that she might have played a role
in putting her sister at risk.
But the sergeant pressed on and he asked Jean for the names of every person she had visited
the last time she was in Ireland along with all of her work associates there.
Jean turned red and yelled at the sergeant that none of this had anything to do with
her sister's murder.
She said Calvatus was not getting anything from her, and then she stood up and stormed
out of the interview room.
Sergeant Calvatus just sat there, both really surprised and really mad.
This death threat on Jean was the first real lead they had, and he couldn't fully investigate
it without the names from Jean.
He had expected her to be grateful and to immediately offer up anything she knew to
try to figure out who killed her sister.
And so he just couldn't believe Gene was unwilling to help him unless, of course, she was involved.
Without any information from Gene about the death threat, Calvatis was left chasing other
possibilities that frankly just seemed increasingly unlikely.
Both Richard and Nancy had worked for a coffee company that imported their beans from Colombia, which Calvetis, and basically everybody knew, was a major importer of cocaine. He knew that drug
cartels sometimes hid cocaine in coffee shipments, in fact just three months before the murders,
federal agents had seized five kilograms of cocaine in a coffee shipment from a different
coffee company.
So Calvetis started poking around into the coffee company looking for any ties to cartels,
but the owners of the company seemed mostly puzzled by this and they gave Calvetis permission
to inspect their next shipment like they didn't care at all, look at whatever you want.
And so Calvetis did that, flagging the ship that had their coffee on it to US Customs
officers who then met the vessel when it came into port.
A giant crane lifted the container with their coffee out of the ship and onto the dock and
then Customs officer cracked it open.
Then they began slicing through random bags of beans to see if their drug-sniffing German
shepherds could pick up a scent.
But like Calvatus had feared, they found nothing.
The police began to feel like they were just grasping at straws, and so they decided they
should just go back to the beginning and kind of start over.
So they re-interviewed all the neighbors and they got one tantalizing tip about a mysterious
man walking around the neighborhood the night of the murders, but after looking into it,
they discovered it was actually just a bored teenager who lived nearby.
After that, they looked into whether Richard and Nancy had maybe taken a loan from mobsters to lease their new place, but when they
looked at the couple's tax records, they saw they could easily afford the rent. And so, once again,
one after another, all the tips and leads they were finding just went nowhere.
Calvetis still had suspicions that Jean's ties to the IRA got her sister killed,
but without Jean's cooperation, he struggled to make any headway on that lead.
So, by the end of May, Sergeant Calvatis was basically out of ideas as his big case rapidly went cold.
Finally, on May 30th, so about a month after the murders, the police chief pulled Calvatis into his office.
From the look on Chief's face, Calvatus knew the news was not good.
But he could not have guessed what was coming next.
The Chief told him they were going to dismantle the task force.
They had spent a whopping $1 million on this investigation so far and still had not come
up with a serious single suspect.
Calvatus was shocked.
This felt way too early to basically give up.
But the Chief wasn't done. In addition
to dismantling the task force, he wanted Calvatis back on the beat while another investigator
stepped in and took a look at this case. The chief followed up and told Calvatis that he was not
taking him off the case completely, he just wanted a set of fresh eyes on it. But as Calvatis nodded
and turned to walk out of the office, it definitely felt like he had failed and he was being removed.
Sergeant Calvatis walked slowly towards his team to break the bad news, at the same time
feeling totally sick and angry at the thought of patrolling the neighborhood again with
everything in this case still completely up in the air.
But a few days later, sure enough, Calvatis was back in his blue uniform driving a police
cruiser around Winnetka.
He figured his days as a detective were likely over.
Six months passed with no progress at all in the Langert case.
Sergeant Calvatis focused on working his beat, but at the same time he just felt so distracted
because all he felt was regret that he had not been able to find the killer.
But then on October 4th, Sergeant Calvatis was home sleeping when his wife woke him up
telling him that work was calling, just like she had done on the day of the murder.
But this time when he picked the phone up, his lieutenant was yelling excitedly that
there had been a break in Nancy and Richard's case and Calvatis had to get down to the station
right now.
Calvatis was so excited he rushed out of bed, he jumped into his car and he sped to the
station but when he got there he found the supposed break was just a kid.
And not a very tough looking kid either.
It was a skinny high school senior who had arrived at the station with his girlfriend
for moral support asking about the witness protection program.
Calvetis had to keep himself from rolling his eyes.
He wondered what this kid could possibly know about a brutal double homicide.
And at first, when the kid began talking, his story, predictably, sounded unbelievable.
The kid said he somehow knew the killer, and the killer had supposedly confessed everything
to him in unbelievable detail.
But as he began walking Calvatis and the other detectives through what he knew, Calvatis
realized this kid was telling the truth.
The teenager knew details of the crime that had never been made public, like how many
shots were fired and the fact that the marriage contract was on the table.
But beyond individual details, the teenager's story explained all the strange contradictions
that Calvatis had struggled with since the beginning of the case.
Richard was killed quickly and efficiently, but Nancy's murder was messy and slow.
The killer had apparently brought a gun along, but someone had grabbed an axe that wasn't
entirely clear, and then the killer had used glass cutting tools to get inside, but then
needlessly crawled through the tiny hole in the door instead of just reaching through
and unlocking it.
And so all these things definitely lined up with what Calvatus had suspected.
Calvatus had never been able to figure out if the killer was a professional hitman or
a sloppy amateur, but now as the sergeant listened to this kid talk, it seemed like
the killer might have been a little bit of both.
After speaking to this kid and looking at all the evidence in the case and looking at
all their interviews, here is a reconstruction of what police think happened on the night
of Saturday, April 7, 1990, when Nancy and Richard were murdered inside of their home. The killer arrived at Nancy and Richard's townhouse while the couple was out to dinner.
The killer had been preparing for this moment for months.
They approached the patio door from the path that ran behind the house.
They didn't even bother trying the doorknob.
Instead, they pulled out a glass cutter to remove a section of the sliding patio doors.
And then once the cuts were made, they stuck some very sticky tape to the front
of the glass piece and then pulled it out silently, just like they had been practicing. Then, once it
was out, instead of reaching through and opening the door, the killer crawled into the house through
the hole and then waited. But they had no idea how long it would be before Nancy and Richard came home,
and as the minutes turned to hours, the killer began to get restless. And so they just started wandering around the house, sort of aimlessly, rifling through
random boxes that were sitting around.
And it was there that the killer found Nancy and Richard's marriage contract.
They began to read it, but it was mostly legal jargon, so they just placed it on the card
table near the box they'd dug it out of.
But the longer the killer waited for Nancy and Richard to come home, the more impatient
they got, and the more nervous.
And so they ultimately just turned on a light and then sat on a chair in the shadows with their gun on their lap.
They had a hood pulled down low, but they thought the light shining from behind them would help hide their face even more.
Then finally, sometime after 11pm, the killer heard voices and then the key in the door.
Nancy and Richard walked inside, but they were so caught up in their conversation, they
didn't even notice the killer sitting there.
But then the killer spoke and told them to be quiet and closed the door behind them.
The killer could instantly see how startled Nancy and Richard were.
The killer then raised their gun, and Nancy and Richard's surprise quickly turned to
fear.
The killer loved it.
The killer demanded Nancy hand over her purse.
She said she didn't have any money, but the killer demanded the purse again.
And so Nancy threw it to the killer.
And everything inside of it fell out onto the floor, including the stack of cash totaling
$500.
Nancy started stammering that she'd forgotten about the money, and Richard urged the killer
to just please take the cash and go, she wasn't trying to lie to you.
But the killer, who acted totally offended at the idea that they were hiding things from him was not actually here for
their money.
They didn't care.
The killer, still aiming their gun at Nancy and Richard, reached into their pocket to
pull out handcuffs, but as they fished around in their pocket, they began to curse.
In their excitement about this night, they'd only brought one pair of handcuffs, not the
two they actually needed.
But Richard was clearly the bigger threat.
He was a tall, athletic guy, so the killer gave the cuffs to Nancy and told her to handcuff
her husband.
As Nancy handcuffed Richard's hands behind his back, she began to plead with the killer,
"'Please don't hurt us.
I'm pregnant.'"
Something about Nancy's plea hit the killer hard, and they could feel their hands begin
to shake.
Suddenly there was a noise upstairs and the killer accidentally pulled the trigger,
shooting a bullet into the baseboards. But the killer quickly realized that the noise was just
a dog, closed in the upstairs bedroom, barking at something. Still, the killer felt like their plan
was now quickly falling apart. Things were already going so wrong. The killer started to lose their
nerve and they thought about sparing Nancy and Richard. So the killer told the couple to go to the basement and then once they were down there,
the killer would lock the door and just leave.
And so the killer directed Nancy and Richard to the basement stairs at gunpoint and no
one said a word.
But as Nancy and Richard descended the stairs and then reached the bottom of the stairs,
Nancy suddenly turned around and looked at the killer.
And the killer knew from her surprised look on her face that she had seen the killer's face.
The light was better down there, and the hood did not disguise the killer enough.
The killer knew Nancy would be able to identify them.
And so now the killer had a choice to make. Let them live and face the consequences, or follow through with the plan.
But before the killer could decide, Richard made a desperate move.
With all his strength, he snapped the cheap handcuffs, jumped at the killer, and smashed
his own head against the killer's head.
Almost instinctively, the killer just fired the gun and it hit Richard right in the back
of his head.
Richard crumpled to the floor.
Nancy rushed to his side screaming, then looked back at the killer, whose gun was still raised.
Nancy shouted, not again, no!
And covered her face as the killer took a shot at her.
The killer turned and ran up the stairs, but as they got to the top, they looked back.
Nancy was still alive and moving.
The bullet had only hit her in the elbow.
The killer knew at this point they had already come this far, they had to go back.
So the killer raised their gun again and pulled the trigger one more time.
The bullet hit Nancy and lodged in her pregnant stomach.
She collapsed to the floor, and the killer turned and ran out of the basement.
But after the killer left, Nancy was still alive.
Barely.
She tried to climb up the stairs, but it was a struggle.
The coat she was wearing was quickly filling with blood, weighing her down. And so with an enormous effort, she managed to pull off her jacket,
but as she looked up the stairs, she knew it was just too much. She would never get
up there.
So, Nancy turned and dragged herself over to the basement shelves and grabbed the nearest
thing she could reach. The axe. And then with the axe, she banged on the shelf, hoping that
the noise would get somebody's attention, but nobody came to the rescue. And then with the axe, she banged on the shelf, hoping that the noise would get somebody's attention,
but nobody came to the rescue. And so, with her last bit of strength,
Nancy dropped the axe, dipped her finger in her own blood, dragged herself over to a moving box
on the floor, and drew a heart and the letter U. She looked at Richard, hoping maybe there was
a small chance he would live and see her final message. I love you. And then Nancy took her final breath.
When the police began investigating this case,
they knew that some of the evidence suggested the killer was an amateur,
but most of their leads pointed to a professional hitman,
which is why Calvatis and his team had been so interested in the mob and in drugs and the IRA.
It was a mistake that allowed one person to escape any attention at all, because the killer
was right there, hanging around the investigation in plain sight the entire time.
He was one of the members of the High School Peace Alliance club who came to the funeral.
He was on the track team too, so he ran past the Langer's house almost every single day.
The police had even questioned him, because he was also the teenage boy who had been seen in the neighborhood on the night of the murders, but had quickly been written off.
But it turned out that kid, the 16-year-old named David Biro, was the killer.
And he also happened to be the son of Nancy's family friends, Nick and Joan Biro, who Nancy had thought might beat her father's birthday party on the night that she was killed.
It would turn out 16-year-old David had serious psychological issues, and he had become obsessed
with becoming a hitman after seeing the 1980s movie, Best Seller, about a hitman who wanted
to turn his story into a book.
The idea of killing people excited David, and he had actually already tried to do it at least once
before. Prior to the murders, David's parents had him committed to a psychiatric hospital after he
tried to poison his own family, but after only two months his parents had let him come home against
the recommendation of his doctors. And once he was home, teenager David Biro chose to live out his
hitman fantasy by killing Nancy and Richard. And his reason for targeting Nancy and Richard had nothing to do with their connections to
his family.
Instead, he chose them as his murder victims because their townhouse was conveniently located
and he also found them, quote, annoying.
David might have gotten away with these murders, but as the months went by and the police never
came for him, he got cocky, and he began to brag to a friend about what he had done.
He even showed his friend the glass that he'd practiced his glass cutting on, and he also
showed him the murder weapon.
And David's friend pretty much immediately turned him in, because he was very worried
David would kill again.
And so on October 5, 1990, almost six months to the day after Nancy and Richard were gunned
down, David was arrested.
It was the day before Nancy's baby would have been due.
David was sentenced to life in prison for killing Nancy, Richard, and their unborn child.
Nancy's parents would move back into Nancy and Richard's townhouse shortly after the murders as a way to feel closer to Nancy and Richard.
Thank you for listening to the Mr. Bolland Podcast. If you enjoyed today's stories and you're looking for more strange, dark, and mysterious content, be sure to check out
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