MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - The Monster
Episode Date: March 31, 2022In 1999 there was a rash of disappearances inside of the famous Yosemite National Park in California. When the police couldn't figure out where these people had gone, or who (or what) was beh...ind their disappearances, a rumor started amongst locals that a "monster" must be running loose in the park attacking people. At first, this was just an urban legend, but by the end of the year, police would discover there really was a monster in the park, and they really were behind the disappearances.DISCLAIMER: This podcast is the remastered audio from a popular video on my "MrBallen" YouTube channel. The video is called "This nudist terrified a country" (Here is the link to the video -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26Ln8V6og-c)For 100s more stories like this one, check out my 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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Today's story is the remastered audio from This Nudist Terrified a Country, which is
a very popular video on my YouTube channel.
The ending to this story is quite graphic and highly distressing.
It is based entirely on a very detailed confession given to police by the guilty party.
As such, listener discretion is advised.
But before we get into today's story, if you're a fan of the strange, dark, and mysterious
Delivered in Story format, then you've come to the right podcast because that's all we
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Hello, I'm Emily and I'm one of the hosts of Terribly Famous, the show that takes you inside the lives of our biggest celebrities.
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OK, let's get into today's story.
On February 12th, 1999, 42-year-old Carol Sund, along with her 15-year-old daughter Julie and Julie's longtime
friend Silvina Peloso, who was 16 years old, boarded a plane in Eureka, California. After a
quick one-hour-long flight, they landed in San Francisco and then got their bags from baggage
claim and then walked over to the airport's car rental center. After Carol signed some rental
agreement paperwork with the person at the front desk, they were given car keys, and then the three women walked out of the airport into the parking lot where they saw their car.
It was a 1999 red Pontiac Grand Prix sedan.
After the women had put their luggage in the trunk, they all climbed inside, and then Carol began driving east towards the University of the Pacific in Stockton, California.
California. Julie was competing in a cheerleading competition the following day at that university,
and Julie was considering going to the school after she graduated high school, and so this cheerleading competition was a great excuse for her and her mom to check out the campus,
and since Sylvina was already visiting Julie at her home in Eureka, she just tagged along for the
trip. After an hour and a half long drive, the trio arrived in Stockton, California, and they
checked into a hotel, and then the next day, which trio arrived in Stockton, California, and they checked into a hotel.
And then the next day, which was the 13th, Julie competed in this cheerleading competition.
And then afterwards, her, her mom, and Sylvina spent the rest of the day checking out the campus and the surrounding town.
Early the next morning, which was the 14th, the women checked out of their hotel and then drove three hours southeast to the sprawling motel complex called Cedar Lodge
that was located just outside of Yosemite National Park's western entrance.
Their plan was to spend a couple of days sightseeing inside of Yosemite
before heading back to the San Francisco airport where they were going to meet Carol's husband and Julie's father, Jens,
and then the four of them would continue their journey and fly to Arizona
where they would explore the Grand Canyon before finally heading back home to Eureka, California. So midday on the
14th, these three women arrive at the Cedar Lodge and the lot would have been nearly empty because
it was the wintertime and not that many people were visiting the park at that time. So they pull
into the lot, they park their car, they go into the front desk where they checked in and they got
their keys and then they left the office and walked along the row of first floor rooms all the way to the
very corner of the building to room 509, which was their room. Carol used her key. She opened the door.
They went inside and dropped their luggage and then they decided that they were just too tired
to actually go in the park and go sightseeing that day. So instead, they kind of had a low-key
afternoon and evening, mostly in their hotel room. The next morning, which was the 15th, the women got up early, they hopped in their red
rental car, and they drove to the western entrance of Yosemite. They went inside, they parked their
car, and they have this wonderful day looking at these astonishing cliff sides and snow-covered
mountains and these huge sequoia trees and these beautiful meadows that stretched out in front of
them. And then towards the end of the day, Julie and Sylvina actually went ice skating on a frozen pond.
So it was just this totally magical day at the park.
And then finally, as the sun was starting to go down, the trio finally left the park,
got in their rental car, and drove back to the Cedar Lodge.
There, they ate dinner at the lodge's 1950s-style diner.
They ate hamburgers.
And then afterwards, they swung by the front desk
and rented some VHS movie tapes that they brought back to their room. Once they were inside room 509,
the women changed into their pajamas and then sat on the bed and watched one of their movies,
and then when it was over, they brushed their teeth, and then they got in bed, turned out the
light, and tried to go to sleep. But a few minutes after their lights were out, they heard a knock on
their door. The following day, which was the 16th, Jens, Carol's husband and Julie's father, was anxiously waiting at the San Francisco airport for his wife and his daughter and his daughter's friend.
And he's looking at his watch and he knows they don't have that much time before their flight is going to take off.
And he's just hoping they're going to come running around a corner and they're going to barely make this flight.
But they don't. And finally, Jens, who does not have a cell phone and neither does Carol,
he decides there must have been some sort of miscommunication and that Carol and the girls
must have flown on ahead. And so he decides at the last minute to just board the flight himself
and fly to Arizona and hopes his family will be there. But when he touches down in Arizona,
his family is not there. And so he rushed to the hotel, hoping that maybe they were there.
They weren't.
He spoke to the hotel's front desk and said, hey, you know, has my wife Carol contacted you?
And they said, no, she hasn't contacted us and we have no record of her being here.
And so Jens is obviously very upset.
He's very worried.
And he spends the rest of the day calling around to friends and family and acquaintances
and anybody who might know where Carol and the girls are.
But nobody has heard from them and nobody knows where they are. And so that night, as Jens is about
to go to bed, he convinces himself that they are probably just fine. This is just some screw-up.
Carol is an unbelievably fierce woman. She's incredibly competent. She will take care of
those girls, and I'm sure I will see them tomorrow morning. But when he woke up the next morning,
and Carol had not made any contact with the hotel or reached out to him in any way, and there was just no sign of her or the
girls, Jens finally contacted police. That day, after the police spoke with Jens, the first call
they made was to the Cedar Lodge, which is the last place they knew Carol, Julie, and Sylvina had
been. The manager of the lodge would tell police that he had not seen Carol or the
girls on the day they were supposed to check out, which was the 16th. But Carol had checked out in
advance, so the manager would not have seen her anyways. She would not have had to go by the front
desk on the way out, so that was not an anomaly. The manager also told police that on the 16th,
after the three women should have been out of their room, the cleaners went by room 509,
and when they went inside, it was vacant, and nothing seemed amiss. It was relatively clean,
minus some wet towels that had been left on the floor of the bathroom. The keys to the room were
left on the desk, as they should be. It just looked like the women had left. And so the police reached
out to the car rental company at the San Francisco airport to see if Carol had made it to the airport
and dropped off her car. But when they spoke to the manager of this rental company, they would say,
no, Carol has not dropped off her car and she hasn't called about extending her lease, which
is now overdue. Based on the information the police gathered from the lodge and from the rental car
company, they began operating on the theory that the three women left their lodge motel room on the
16th and then either got
into a car accident somewhere and had just not been found yet, or they had driven somewhere,
gotten out of their car, and gotten lost, perhaps inside of Yosemite National Park or some other
trail somewhere, or they had fallen victim to some crime. But at this point, the police were not
taking seriously the idea that foul play was involved. A massive search was launched in and
around the Cedar Lodge complex as well as around the western entrance of Yosemite, but absolutely
nothing was found. A number of workers from Cedar Lodge were interviewed by police and subsequently
cleared of any wrongdoing. Also, a number of friends and family of the three women were also
interviewed by police and cleared as well. Then a few days after the search
has started, there was a break in the case. Carol's wallet with her ID and credit cards inside of it
was found lying on the ground in Modesto, California, which was a suburb that was located
about two hours west of Cedar Lodge. Some high school students saw it on the ground and gave it
to a police officer. There was no reason for Carol and the girls to be in Modesto, California, and so this signaled to police that a third party had to have been
involved in their disappearance. And so if that was the case, then almost certainly these three
women had fallen victim to some sort of crime. Over the next several weeks, police continued
to search the roads and trails in and around Cedar Lodge and the western entrance to Yosemite,
and they looked all over Modesto. But besides this wallet being found, there were no further developments with
the case. Then on March 18th, which is about a month after the three women originally went missing,
a hiker was way off in the middle of this forest about two hours north of Cedar Lodge in about an
hour and a half northeast of Modesto california when he turned onto this
logging road that nobody really ever went down and as he's walking down this road he sees up ahead
the skeleton of a car it looks like a car had been set on fire and so he calls it into police
not really knowing what he's looking at the police come out and they're able to identify this car the
shell of a car is the red rental car car that Carol and the girls had been using.
When they searched the car, the inside, the main cabin of the car, there really was nothing left.
There looked to be some remnants of some suitcases and maybe some clothing,
but mostly it was just the frame of the car and some springs. But when they opened the trunk of the car, they made a grisly discovery. Inside were two very badly burned bodies with their hands
still bound behind their backs. Using dental records, they were two very badly burned bodies with their hands still bound behind their
backs. Using dental records, they were able to confirm the bodies belonged to Carol and Sylvina.
But there was no sign of Carol's daughter, Julie, the 15-year-old. She was not in the car, around
the car, or in the surrounding areas. And so there was this glimmer of hope that maybe if law
enforcement acts fast enough, they can find Julie and save her before
it's too late. But all hope was lost when just a couple of days into this search around the car,
when they still hadn't found anything, the police received an anonymous handwritten letter. And on
this letter was this crude map that showed this very specific spot overlooking a lake. It was
Don Pedro Lake, which was located about an hour to the south of where the car was. And then on this
note as well was a phrase that just said, we had fun with this one. Using this crude map, the police
went to Don Pedro Lake. They went up to the overlook as marked on this map. And there they
looked down and they saw the crumpled and badly decomposed remains of Julie. At this point, police
already had several suspects they'd picked up in Modesto, California that they believed were connected in some way to what happened to these three women.
Of these suspects, two were of particular interest to the police. They were half-brothers Eugene
Dykes and Michael Lorwick. They had been arrested shortly after Carol's wallet had been found
for shooting at a Modesto police officer and for several drug charges and for violating their parole.
Once these half-brothers were in custody, Eugene made several self-incriminating remarks,
basically insinuating that he and Michael had been involved in what happened to these three women.
And then after Carol, Sylvina, and Julie's bodies had been found,
the synthetic fibers that were found all over Carol matched the synthetic fibers
that were pulled off of Michael and Eugene on their clothing and from their vehicle when they were arrested. And
so the police were very confident that they had their killers and they had them behind bars
already, but they still needed to compile evidence before they could formally charge them and make
their names public to the media. And so when the news broke about the women's bodies being found
and the public began panicking about a killer or killers on the loose, the police came out and said, everybody calm down,
we have the people responsible, we just can't tell you who they are yet, you need to be patient,
we're building the case, but everybody's safe, there's nothing to worry about. But four months
went by and the police still had not come out and publicly charged anyone with these murders,
but they continued to assure the
public that they had their killers behind bars and so nobody has anything to worry about. On the
afternoon of July 22nd, roughly four months after the discovery of the three bodies, Dr. Desmond
Kidd, who was the medical director for Yosemite, had just finished a long 24-hour shift in the
clinic and he had just gotten back to his cabin, which was inside of Yosemite, when his pager went off. And so he went to a phone, he dialed the number that was on his
pager, and the park dispatcher picked up and said, hey, Dr. Kidd, can you be a part of a search for
a missing person? And Dr. Kidd said, sure, you know, I'd love to help. And then there was a pause
and the park dispatcher said, hey, just so you know, there are law enforcement implications with
this one. And then before he could clarify, there are law enforcement implications with this one.
And then before he could clarify, he hung up the phone. So Dr. Kidd is really confused what he
meant about these implications, because in the past three years he had worked at this park,
he had unfortunately been involved in many searches for missing people in the park,
but they were never tied to any sort of criminal activity. They were always because the person got
lost or fell or something, which was fairly common inside of the park. And so as soon as this convoy of other Yosemite staff
members that are part of the search rolled up in front of his cabin, Dr. Kidd ran outside,
he hopped in one of the vehicles, and he asked the driver, you know, what's going on? What are
these law enforcement implications with regards to this missing person? And the driver would explain
to him that, you know, hey, four months earlier, we had those three Yosemite tourists go missing, Carol, Julie, and Sylvina,
and they were found murdered outside of Yosemite. And while the police have said they have their
killers behind bars, the police still have not come out and actually named who their killers are
or charged anyone in their murders. And so that's made many of us think that maybe they don't have the killer or killers behind bars. Maybe there's a killer or killer still on the loose. And unfortunately,
tonight we have another person who's gone missing inside of the park. And she's gone missing under
very mysterious circumstances, which has led many of us to think that it's possible if there really
is a killer out there, they've struck again tonight. Dr. Kidd was totally shocked at this news, but he was even more shocked when he discovered who it was that was missing. It was
somebody he knew. Her name was Joey Armstrong, and she was a 26-year-old naturalist employed by
Yosemite. A naturalist is like an expert tour guide that knows everything about the park.
Dr. Kidd and the rest of the convoy of Yosemite staff that were going to be a part of the search
sped around the corner and went down this unmarked road with huge trees on either side.
And then eventually they came out of this heavily forested road
and they entered into this unbelievably beautiful meadow.
And on the very far end across this huge meadow is this one green cabin
sitting at the base of this mountain with a forest on the other side of it.
This totally secluded cabin in the middle of Yosemite was where Joey was living. As Dr. Kidd and the convoy went
across this meadow and got closer to this cabin, Dr. Kidd could see park rangers walking around
the perimeter of the cabin marking it off with yellow police tape. When Dr. Kidd and his vehicle
came to a stop right outside of the marked off area, they got out and they could see parked right next to the cabin was this white pickup truck.
It was Joey's pickup truck.
And inside of it was a bunch of luggage.
And it looked like there was luggage that had spilled out onto the ground and some of the doors were still open.
And so it gave Dr. Kidd and the rest of the searchers the impression that Joey must have either been loading things into her truck or unloading things out of her truck at the time she went missing. Dr. Kidd and the rest of the searchers kind of huddled up with
the park rangers and the rangers explained that Joey's friends that were living in San Francisco
were expecting Joey to arrive at their house the day before but when she didn't and they couldn't
get in touch with her they had called it in and that's why they were there looking for her. And
so after talking about the circumstances of the case, they all decided they would break into five different search groups and they would begin
searching the immediate area. Dr. Kidd and four other searchers began walking behind the cabin
towards the tree line and then once they got into that forest, they started walking towards this
creek. And as they walked up along this creek, they suddenly noticed a whole bunch of trampled
ferns and saplings and it looked like someone had come running through there and perhaps the person who was running was joey and so they
begin following these tracks that go right alongside this creek and then at some point one
of the searchers yells out hey what's that up there and about 10 feet ahead of them where the
ground kind of sloped down into a ditch out of view right before the ditch hanging on a little
tree on the ground was a set of car keys glinting in the sunlight. And so Dr. Kidd, who was at the front of his small search party,
he began walking towards these keys. And as he got closer and closer, he began to be able to see
down into this ditch right on the other side of these keys. And as soon as he could actually see
what was at the bottom, he immediately began to gag and he turned around and quickly walked away.
The other four searchers, they walked up and they had a look down and they too had a similar reaction. was at the bottom he immediately began to gag and he turned around and quickly walked away the other
four searchers they walked up and they had a look down and they too had a similar reaction and before
long the group was running back to the cabin to tell the park rangers what they had just discovered
when the rangers heard about what was in the forest they immediately contacted the police
and the police sent a police officer to joey armstrong's house, which was just outside of San Francisco.
When the mother opened the door,
the officer told her that they had just gotten a call from Yosemite
and they need her to call them.
And then he handed her a piece of paper with a phone number on it.
Joey's mother was immediately concerned and confused
and tried to get more information from this officer,
but the officer just said,
look, you're just going to have to call that phone number.
I really don't know anything.
And so eventually she thanked him, she shut the door, and she went into the kitchen and she dials this number. After someone picked up, she introduced
herself as Joey's mother. And at that point, the person who picked up quickly handed the phone off
to someone who sounded much more senior. And this person asked Joey's mother, are you aware that
your daughter is missing? So Joey's mother says, no, I was not aware of that.
And then this person very delicately says,
ma'am, we believe we found your daughter's body near her cabin.
Joey's mother's reaction was instant.
She said, well, did you check her hair?
She has red hair.
Can you confirm it's really her because she's got bright red hair?
Can you make sure it's really her?
And the person on the other side of the line hesitated for a minute
and then just said, ma'am, we're not sure if she has red hair or not. We'll get back to you. And so after this call
finally ended, Joey's mother was confused. How could they not know what color her daughter's
hair was? That seems like such an easy way to potentially identify whether or not this was
really her daughter. Why would they make her wait for something like that? And so she was horribly
distraught. She didn't know what else to do.
She was told to just kind of wait for more news, but she couldn't do that.
And so she began planning a trip out to Yosemite to actually get out there and see what was going on.
But the earliest flight she could possibly get was not until very early the next morning.
And so she has this very restless night's sleep where she's just praying that this person
was not actually her daughter.
And then the next morning she gets up, she rushes to the airport,
and as she's waiting to board her plane,
she grabs a newspaper from a nearby kiosk,
and the headline reads,
Naturalist Beheaded at Yosemite.
And that's when she understood why that person could not tell her
whether or not this was her daughter based on hair color.
It's because this body did not have a head.
But from the time she got that phone call
to this headline running in the paper, these searchers had found the head. It was located
27 feet away under some brush, and they were able to confirm that it was the body of Joey Armstrong.
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And if that's the case, then I've got some good news.
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music. Joey's death was immediately treated like a homicide, and right away the public began to openly suggest that maybe Joey's murder is connected to the murders of Carol, Julie, and
Sylvina from four months earlier. Even though the police were still saying, we have our killers
behind bars for those murders, Joey's murder is completely unconnected. Luckily, the public and
the police did not have
to argue for very long about who was right about this because there was a break in Joey's case
almost immediately. On the night that Joey went missing, another Yosemite staff member had happened
to drive by her cabin and they noticed a distinctive SUV parked outside of her cabin
that they didn't recognize. It was a blue 1979 International
Scout. And as it happened, there were only two of these particular types of vehicles registered in
Yosemite Valley. And so within 24 hours, the police had tracked down one of these two vehicles.
It was located about 12 miles away from the western entrance of Yosemite and was pulled off
the side of this highway. The police pulled up alongside it and parked. They walked up. There was no one inside of this vehicle. But then down this embankment
off the highway led down to this forest where there was a river kind of out of sight that people
like to swim and fish in. And so these two officers decide to head down and see if maybe the driver is
down there. So they make their way down and sure enough, they come in contact with the driver.
He was laying on this rock, completely nude, smoking marijuana.
And so the two officers, they come up to him and announce themselves.
And this very well-built, good-looking guy stands up and he calmly covers himself.
And he takes the marijuana out of his mouth.
And he says, hey, what can I do for you guys?
And so over the course of their conversation, the police would learn this guy's name was
Kerry Stainer.
He was 38 years old.
And he was the handyman at Cedar Lodge Motel.
He would tell police that he was not anywhere near Joey's cabin on the night she went missing
and the police ultimately bought it and said, okay, you know, they confiscated his marijuana
and then they walked back up the hill leaving him down there and they took some pictures of his car
and the tires on his car and then they left. A couple of days later, some FBI investigators that
had been called in for
this case, they analyzed those pictures those officers had taken of the tires of Carrie's car
and they compared them to pictures of the tire tracks at Joey's cabin and they determined they
were a perfect match. So later that day, which was July 24th, police officers went back out and
tracked Carrie down again. This time he was having lunch at one
of his favorite spots. It was a nudist resort about three hours northwest of the Cedar Lodge.
There he was arrested on the suspicion of murdering Joey Armstrong and he was brought in for
questioning. As soon as he was walked into the police station and was booked, Kerry dropped a
bombshell. He confessed to not only murdering Joey Armstrong, but also he confessed to murdering Carol Sund,
along with her daughter, Julie Sund,
and Silvina Peloso, the friend of Julie Sund.
And he did all of this on his own.
He had no other accomplices,
which means the police never had the killer or killers behind bars.
It would turn out Eugene Dykes, who was one of their primary suspects,
was lying when he made those self-incriminating remarks about he and his half-brother Michael.
And as for those synthetic fibers that were found on Eugene and Michael, those fibers belonged to a very commonly sold blanket.
And so they did not definitively tie Michael and Eugene to the crime. in 1999, there really was a serial killer just roaming free in Yosemite National Park,
just like many people who lived in that area and like some people in the media had speculated.
Carey would go on to give a very detailed and graphic six-hour-long confession of how he went
about killing all four women. This is his awful story. On February 14th, 1999, so the day that
Carol, Julie, and Sylvina arrived at Cedar
Lodge, Cary was on his way to his girlfriend's house. His girlfriend, like Cary, worked at the
Cedar Lodge. She was a waitress at their 1950s-style diner. That night, as Cary walked up her front
walkway towards her front door, he made up his mind that he was going to act on a fantasy he
had had since he was seven years old.
And that fantasy was to kill a young woman.
And so his plan that night was he would go inside and he would not only kill his girlfriend,
but he would also kill her two daughters who were 10 and 11 years old at the time.
But when he went inside the house and was about to carry out this plan,
he noticed out one of their windows there was a man in their backyard.
And he asked his girlfriend, who's that guy out there? And she would and she would say oh you know I hired someone to take care of our property so he's going to be cutting the grass and you know doing some things with our garden he's going to be
here for a little bit but he'll stay outside and so this totally screwed up Carrie's plan because
he was not expecting there to be anybody there that night and so for several hours Carrie anxiously
sat there constantly looking out the window waiting for this guy to leave so he could kill these three people.
But the worker was just taking a lot of time and it didn't seem like he was even close
to being done.
And so finally Cary left without any explanation.
Angry and frustrated, he began driving back to Cedar Lodge where he had an apartment on
the second floor.
And when he pulled into the parking lot, he noticed there was a car he had not seen earlier in the day it was a 1999 red pontiac grand prix and suddenly carrie had this
urge to find out who owned that car and maybe if he was lucky it was a woman who owned that car
and she was potentially alone and if that was the case he could fulfill his fantasy on this woman
and not worry about the fact that he couldn't kill his girlfriend and her two kids. And so Carrie parked his car a little bit a ways from this red
car and he walked over to the room that was right in front of this red car. And it was room 509 and
he peeked behind one of the curtains into the room which was all lit up and he couldn't believe his
luck. There were three women inside of this room. It was Carol, Julie, and
Sylvina. And so Cary stayed back and continued looking through the window just to make sure
there wasn't a man inside of this room. And after a while of watching them go in and out of the
bathroom and nobody coming into the room but these three women and no men coming into the room from
the outside, he was certain they were alone. And so when Cary finally turned around and left to go
back to his room,
he made the decision that he was going to come back the next day and kill them.
The next day, which was February 15th,
Cary secretly followed the three women when they hopped in their rental and drove to Yosemite.
He followed them to the parking lot,
and then he waited in the parking lot until the women had finished going through the park
and having this wonderful time.
He trailed them from the parking lot back to the Cedar Lodge. And then he secretly followed them when they went to that
diner and they had hamburgers for dinner. And he continued to follow them from a distance and
watched them rent movies from the front desk. And he followed them all the way back to their room.
And once he knew they were inside their room and he watched them long enough to confirm they were
not going to leave again, he went back to his room and he got his toolbox.
In his toolbox was rope, duct tape, a knife, and a gun. And then around 11 p.m., he left his apartment and went downstairs and walked all the way back over to that corner room, room 509,
where the women were. And he looked in the window and it was totally dark inside, so he assumed they
must be sleeping. And he knocked on the door. A few minutes later, Carol came to the door and very cautiously
opened it up just a crack, leaving that chain link lock still attached. And so she looked through at
Carrie and said, hi, can I help you? And Carrie, who held up his handyman toolbox and pointed to
his name tag that said he was the Cedar Lodge handyman, he said, hi ma'am, sorry to disturb you
so late, but there is a leak in the room right above yours and I need to make sure the leak is
not coming down into your room. So can I come in and just have a quick look, and then
I'll be out of here. And Carol apparently was just not buying it, and she said, look, I haven't seen
any leaks in this room. I don't think there is one, but even if there is, can it please wait until
tomorrow, because we're all trying to sleep. But Carrie was very persistent, and Carrie was known
to be very charming and very disarming, And eventually he talked his way into the room.
And so he walks inside.
He walks past the bed where the other two teen girls are still sleeping.
He goes into the bathroom.
And for a few minutes, he kind of pretends to fiddle around inside of the bathroom while
Carol is standing right outside looking in at him.
And then at some point, Kerry reached into his toolbox, pulled out the gun, and he aimed
it at Carol.
And he said, stay calm.
I'm not going to hurt you, this is just a robbery. Carol most likely believed their best chance at
getting out of this situation was just to comply and do what he says, he'll rob us and then he'll
leave and we'll be okay. And so Carol very dutifully went back into the room and she quietly woke up
her daughter and her daughter's friend and before long Carrie had tied up all three of them. He put the two teenagers in the bathroom and shut the door, and then he put Carol on the bed.
And then he proceeded to assault Carol before strangling her to death with more rope. And then
after she was dead, he carried her body outside of the motel room and put her in the trunk of her
own rental car. And then after he shut the trunk, he went back inside the motel room, he went to the
bathroom, he opened it up, he grabbed Sylvina, who was crying, and pulled her out. And he left Julie
alone, cowering inside the bathroom by herself. He shut the door behind her, and then he brought
Sylvina over to the bed, where he assaulted her before strangling her as well to death with some
additional rope. And then after Sylvina was dead, he carried her body outside of the motel and put
her in the trunk of the rental car along with Carol's body. And then after dead, he carried her body outside of the motel and put her in the trunk of the rental
car along with Carol's body. And then after that, he went back inside the motel room and then once
again, he opened up the bathroom door, he grabbed Julie, pulled her out, and proceeded to assault
her as well. But then afterwards, he did not strangle her to death. Instead, he walked her back into the
bathroom and shut and locked the door. And while she was in there wondering what's going to happen
to her, what happened to her mom, what happened to her friend, he proceeded to clean up the bathroom and shut and locked the door. And while she was in there wondering what's going to happen to her, what happened to her mom, what happened to her friend, he proceeded to clean up
the room and tidy it up. And he moved all of their luggage out of their room and put it into the
rental car. And then after he was satisfied, he went back inside the motel room. He opened up the
bathroom door. He pulled Julie out and had her stand right outside the bathroom. And then Carrie
proceeded to clean up the bathroom, but left a couple of wet towels on the ground to give the impression that the women had left in a bit of a
hurry. And so after that, he grabbed Julie and he walked her out to the car and he sat her down in
the front seat. She only had a blanket on at this point. Everything else had been taken off of her.
And then Carrie hopped in the front seat and he began driving off. Julie must have been beyond
terrified. She has no idea where her mom is. She has no idea where her mom is.
She has no idea where her friend is. She has no idea they're actually dead locked in the trunk
right behind her. And the man that had just assaulted her for hours is now driving her into
the darkness. She has no idea where she's going and all she's got is this blanket around her.
It's just beyond brutal what's happening to this poor girl. And so for two hours,
Carrie drove them west along the highway in the middle of the night.
And the whole time he's trying to make small talk with this poor girl,
trying to tell her that she's going to be okay and that her mom and her friend, they're going to be okay.
And then finally he pulls off the highway down some switchbacks into this big parking lot of the Don Pedro Lake.
And then once he parks the car, there's no other cars around.
It's still dark out. The sun hasn't come up. He gets out and he tells Julie to get out of the Don Pedro Lake. And then once he parks the car, there's no other cars around. It's still dark out.
The sun hasn't come up.
He gets out and he tells Julie to get out of the car.
But Julie is so scared she can't move.
So she can't even get out of the car.
And so Carrie gets out.
He walks around to her side.
He opens the door and he scoops her up like you might hold a baby.
And he walked with her up the trail all the way to this overlook
that was well away from any prying eyes in the parking lot. And once he was out of sight, he took her blanket off and he laid it down. And then he
proceeded to assault her again. And then as the sun began to come up over the lake, Carrie realized
that he had to end his fantasy and begin to cover his tracks. And so Carrie stops what he's doing.
He stands up. He reaches down and pulls Julie up to her feet. And so she's standing with her back to the lake. And as he's looking at her, he says, I love you. And then he pulls out
his knife and begins hacking her throat. And then he pushes her down the hillside where she tumbles
and finally comes to a stop underneath some bushes where she dies. Kerry grabbed the blanket on the
ground and he walked back to the rental car in the lot. There was nobody out there. So he hopped
inside. He drove out of the lot and drove
one hour north until he was well into this forest, and he pulled down a logging road where he
abandoned this car. After he ditched it, he walked back up to the highway and caught a cab back to
Cedar Lodge. He would come back to the car and torch it two days later. He would also make a
special trip to Modesto, California, where he would drop Carol's wallet in the middle of the road near a high school in order to confuse investigators.
A month later, when Carol and Sylvina's body were found in the back of the burned-out car,
Carey would send that handwritten note to police that had the map of where Julie's body was and that horrible message of,
We had fun with this one, referencing Julie.
He sent that to police in order to further confuse
them. He wanted them to believe that there really was more than one person perpetrating these
murders, hence the we had fun with this one. Months would go by and the police, despite
questioning Kerry along with the other Cedar Lodge staff members, never considered him a suspect.
And that was because, one, they really thought he was
just a nice normal guy and couldn't be capable of committing violence against these three women.
And two, probably most importantly, the police discovered when Carrie was a child, his younger
brother was kidnapped by a pedophile and held for seven years. And although his brother was
ultimately returned to the family alive, that experience was incredibly traumatic and devastating to Carrie. And so the police figured
there's no way this guy would ever abduct or harm other people because he knows how traumatic and
awful that is for the victim and the victim's family. If anything, Carrie seemed like the type
of guy who would go out of his way to protect and save these three women from being abducted or from being harmed.
In July of that year, so four months after the three women's bodies were discovered,
Kerry, who believed he had completely gotten away with murder, and to that point he really had,
he was just driving around Yosemite kind of reveling in the fact that he had gotten to live out this fantasy and not get punished for it,
when he noticed there was this woman way off in the distance walking in and out of this cabin
that was fairly isolated. And so he drove his 1979 International Scout blue SUV down this forested
road and he reaches this meadow and he looks across this meadow and now that this woman is
even closer he can tell she's clearly loading things into her truck. And she's going back and
forth, back and forth, and he's watching wondering if there's anybody else helping her because this
cabin is very secluded. And he's thinking, if she's alone, I might be able to kill her too.
And so after a while, when he only sees her loading things into her white pickup truck,
he decides he's going to go kill her. And so he drives across the meadow and he pulls up right
next to her truck and he gets out and he introduces himself. And the woman is so completely caught off guard by this random strange man showing up in the middle of the night,
suddenly acting so friendly that kind of reflexively, in an effort not to be rude, she says,
Hi, you know, I'm Joey Armstrong. Nice to meet you. What are you doing down here?
And Carrie would proceed to spark up some small talk.
He asked her if she believed in Bigfoot and they kind of got on this tangent about Bigfoot.
And then at some point, Carrie drew a pistol and he aimed it at her and said, go inside your cabin. And so Joey put her hands up and she went inside the cabin like she
was told. And Carrie followed her inside. And then he bound her wrists and he bound her mouth with
duct tape. And then he ordered her to get back inside of his SUV. And then once she was sitting
inside the front passenger seat, Carrie got in the driver's
seat and he began leaving the cabin headed back out away towards that road he came in on. And as
he's bombing across the meadow, Joey leaps headfirst out of the window of this moving car and smashes
onto the ground. And she immediately jumps up and just starts running back towards the cabin.
Carrie jams on the brakes. He hops out and he starts chasing after Joey, but Joey manages to get fairly close to that tree line right behind the cabin before Carrie
ultimately grabs her and tackles her to the ground. And then Joey is viciously trying to
fight Carrie off of her, and Carrie, kind of in a panic, draws his knife, and he tries to slash at
Joey, but Joey tucks her chin, protecting her neck from being stabbed. And so frustrated, Carrie just
stands up and he grabs Joey by the hair and he begins hauling her towards the forest behind her
cabin. And the whole time Joey's doing everything in her power to try to escape, but she just can't.
And finally they get inside the woods and Carrie drags her into this ditch. And once she's down at
the bottom, he puts his foot on the top of her head and forces it back, forcibly exposing her
throat. And then at
that point, he pulls out his knife and he begins to cut. Afterwards, Carrie considered keeping
Joey's head, but ultimately he would try to hide it in some bushes nearby. After Carrie attempted
to cover up some of the blood in the area with some branches and leaves, he left the forest and
went back to his SUV. He didn't even attempt to tidy up the scene. He left her truck as is. He
left her cabin as is. He just hopped in his SUV and drove back to Cedar L He didn't even attempt to tidy up the scene. He left her truck as is. He left
her cabin as is. He just hopped in his SUV and drove back to Cedar Lodge. Carey would tell police
that as soon as he killed Joey Armstrong, all he wanted to do was go kill his girlfriend and her
two young daughters, the 10 and 11 year old. But police caught him before he could carry out the
attack. Carey Stainer, who never showed any remorse for his victims, was ultimately sentenced
to death and is currently awaiting execution in San Quentin Prison in Northern California.
One of the more distressing aspects of this case was Carol's camera that was found intact near the
burned out car in the woods. The police would develop the pictures on this camera in hopes
there would be some clue as to who murdered them, but it would turn out
there wasn't any usable evidence on the camera. It was just pictures of Carol, her daughter, and
Sylvina having this wonderful time in Yosemite, and that was it. But after Carrie confessed to what he
did to these poor women, those pictures take on a whole new, much darker meaning. In the final eight
images of the camera roll, we know Carrie Stainer
was either literally watching these women secretly at the time the picture was taken, or he was
patiently waiting nearby for them to return. The final image that was taken on this camera was taken
by Julie of her mother sitting on the bed and her friend Sylvina sitting on the other bed as they're
getting ready to turn out the lights and go to sleep. That picture was taken just moments before Carrie knocked on their door.
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