MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - The Monster in the Closet (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: March 4, 2024On April 26, 2002, a man was walking to his apartment in Raleigh, North Carolina when he noticed something moving around in the bushes. The man looked closer, and to his horror, he saw a "Pee...ping Tom." A person was literally standing there staring in the window of this young girl's bedroom. The man yelled aggressively at the person, which sent them running for their life. When word spread about this incident, residents of the apartment complex were hopeful that the Peeping Tom was so scared from getting caught, that they would never do it again. But unfortunately, the residents would be wrong, because that Peeping Tom was not just being creepy – no, they were also planning something... something evil.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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On April 26th, 2002, a man was walking towards his apartment complex in Raleigh, North Carolina, when he noticed something moving around in the bushes.
The man stopped and looked closer, and to his horror, he saw a peeping tom. A person was literally standing there
in the bushes with their face up against the glass, looking in the window of this young girl's
bedroom. And so the man who saw this immediately yelled aggressively at the peeping tom, which sent
the peeping tom running for their life. When word spread about this incident, residents of the
complex were hopeful that the peeping tom was so scared from getting caught that they would never do it again.
But unfortunately, they would be wrong.
Because that Peeping Tom was not just being creepy.
They were also planning something.
Something evil.
But before we get into that story, if you're a fan of the Strange, Dark, and Mysterious delivered in story format,
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 Amazon Music Follow button and above-ground pool,
but don't tell them you've secretly poked hundreds of holes in the bottom liner.
Okay, let's get into today's story. Hello, I'm Emily and I'm one of the hosts of Terribly Famous,
the show that takes you inside the lives of our biggest celebrities.
And they don't get much bigger than the man who made badminton sexy.
OK, maybe that's a stretch, but if I say pop star and shuttlecocks,
you know who I'm talking about.
No?
Short shorts?
Free cocktails?
Careless whispers? OK, last one. It's not Andrew Ridgely. Yep, that's right. It's Stone Cold icon George Michael. From teen pop sensation to
one of the biggest solo artists on the planet, join us for our new series, George Michael's
Fight for Freedom. From the outside, it looks like he has it all. But behind the trademark
dark sunglasses is a man in turmoil. George is trapped in a lie of his own making with a secret
he feels would ruin him if the truth ever came out. Follow Terribly Famous wherever you listen
to your podcasts or listen early and ad-free on Wanderie Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
I'm Peter Frank-O'Pern.
And I'm Afua Hirsch.
And we're here to tell you about our new season of Legacy,
covering the iconic, troubled musical genius that was Nina Simone.
Full disclosure, this is a big one for me.
Nina Simone, one of my favourite artists of all time, somebody who's had a huge impact on me,
who I think objectively stands apart for the level of her talent, the audacity of her message.
If I was a first year at university, the first time I sat down and really listened to her and engaged with her message, it totally floored me. And the truth and pain and messiness of her
struggle, that's all captured in unforgettable music that has stood the test of time.
Think that's fair, Peter?
I mean, the way in which her music comes across is so powerful, no matter what song it is.
So join us on Legacy for Nina Simone. On April 26, 2002, 23-year-old Stephanie Bennett parked her car
outside of her apartment complex in Raleigh, North Carolina. Stephanie was worn out from a long week at work, and so she was looking forward
to relaxing and spending time with her friends over this weekend. She grabbed her purse off the
passenger seat, got out of her car, and began walking towards her apartment. Stephanie was
dressed in business casual work clothes. She had shoulder-length brown hair, brown eyes, and a huge
smile.
Stephanie's friends said she looked like she could play the perfect girl next door on a TV show.
It was a beautiful spring evening in Raleigh, about 65 degrees Fahrenheit,
and Stephanie saw a bunch of people out by the lake that was only about 100 yards from her apartment building. Stephanie just continued walking towards the lake, and as she did,
she saw all these people out having fun and walking around and jogging with their dogs.
Most of the people were Stephanie's neighbors, or they lived in the apartments just on the other
side of the woods that were next to her apartment complex. And while Stephanie loved seeing all the
familiar faces out there by the lake, who she really liked seeing were all the dogs.
And that evening, Stephanie saw a dog she thought looked particularly happy,
a big black and brown Rottweiler trotting in front of its owner with its tongue hanging out of its mouth.
Stephanie smiled wide and walked over to the owner and the dog,
and she leaned down and said hello to the dog.
Then after that, she said hello to a couple of her neighbors who were nearby,
and then finally she just turned and headed towards her first floor apartment. Stephanie stepped inside and found her two
roommates waiting for her on the couch. The three women had been friends for years, and they still
spent as much time together as they could, even though their lives had gotten really busy with
work and with boyfriends. Stephanie told her roommates she'd be back in a couple of minutes,
and then she went to her bedroom.
There, she changed out of her work clothes and put on a t-shirt and jeans.
It was Friday, but she and her roommates did not have any big plans.
They were just going to hang out at home together.
After getting changed, Stephanie grabbed the cordless phone off her bedside table, and she called her boyfriend, Walter Robinson.
Walter and Stephanie had been together for four years
and they were planning on getting married someday.
Walter had even bought Stephanie a promise ring,
which is a piece of jewelry that typically precedes an engagement ring.
Walter picked up the phone on the other end
and he and Stephanie talked about how their days had gone.
Stephanie's face lit up whenever she talked to Walter
and she was always happiest when she was with him.
But at the time, they couldn't really be together nearly as much as they wanted to,
because Walter had moved to South Carolina for grad school.
They were only about a four-hour drive from each other, and they would go back and forth to see each other all the time.
But that wasn't enough for Stephanie.
She wanted to live with Walter and be with him all the time.
So recently, she had made
the decision to move to South Carolina as well, and she and Walter had already begun looking for
an apartment they could share. On the phone, Stephanie told Walter how much she missed him,
and he reminded her that she would be in South Carolina before she knew it and everything would
be perfect. Stephanie told Walter that she loved him and then hung up the phone.
She was a bit sad when she had to say goodbye,
but her roommates were waiting for her in the living room,
and they could always cheer her up.
That night, Stephanie and her roommates ate dinner, they watched TV,
and basically just made each other laugh for hours.
Stephanie knew her friends were going to miss her when she moved to South Carolina,
but they were also really excited that she was about to take this next big step in her life. A few hours later, Stephanie and her roommates were still sitting in the living room when there was a knock at the door. They weren't expecting anyone, but
they lived in the type of apartment complex where neighbors would sometimes drop by to borrow things
like sugar or laundry detergent. So, Stephanie got off the couch
and walked over to the door and opened it up. And standing on the other side was one of her
neighbors, a middle-aged guy she knew pretty well, and he looked very shaken. Stephanie's
roommates joined Stephanie at the door to see what was going on. Stephanie asked the neighbor
if everything was okay, and the man just shook his head and said no. He said he had been walking by outside when he saw
something moving in their bushes. It was dark out and the lights at the apartment were not very
bright so at first he thought it might just be an animal. But as he got closer he said he saw a man
in a hooded sweatshirt and that the man's face was pressed up against Stephanie's bedroom window.
When the neighbor had called out to him, this peeping Tom had run off,
so the neighbor didn't get a good look at him.
When Stephanie heard this,
she felt a chill run down her spine.
Earlier that night,
she'd been in her room taking off her work clothes,
and she pictured this guy in this hooded sweatshirt
just standing there watching her.
The neighbor told them he had reported the incident
to the apartment manager,
but he said Stephanie and her roommates really needed to be extra careful to always lock their doors and keep their blinds closed.
They thanked the neighbor for letting them know, and then as soon as he left, Stephanie shut and locked the door.
Then the three roommates just stood there in the living room, kind of stunned by what they had just learned.
They knew their apartments were not the nicest place to live or anything, but they'd always felt safe here. Now they had to worry about some pervert peeking into their windows and trying to
watch them undress. A few minutes later, Stephanie went back into her bedroom. Immediately, she
adjusted the blinds on the window so nobody would be able to look in from the outside. Then she
thought about maybe telling her boyfriend, Walter, or her dad about
what had just happened. She knew they both prided themselves on being strong southern gentlemen who
protected women, but in this case, Stephanie felt like there really wasn't anything either of them
could do. The incident had already been reported, and knowing about it would just make her father
and Walter angry and upset. And so Stephanie told herself everything would be fine, and in just
a couple of months, she'd be long gone to South Carolina, far away from this apartment and the
creep who tried to spy on her. On May 20th, 2002, so almost a month after the Peeping Tom incident,
Stephanie was getting back home from work again. She got out of her car, and she saw people walking around the lake like usual,
but this night, she didn't stop to talk to any dogs or any of her neighbors.
Instead, she went straight to her apartment.
The truth was, Stephanie had been feeling anxious and upset all day.
The weekend before, she had gone to South Carolina to see her boyfriend, Walter,
and it was the happiest she had been in weeks,
because they had found the perfect apartment. But when it was time for her to drive back home,
Stephanie had broken down in tears and told Walter that she just wanted to stay with him,
she didn't want to leave. He said he felt the same way, but he reminded her that she'd be back here
for good in only a month, and that the time between now and then would fly by. Stephanie
knew he was right,
but she still felt like every day she spent in Raleigh was a day she wasn't as happy as she could
be. And so Stephanie walked into her apartment and quickly closed and locked the door behind her,
and right away she had to admit to herself that there was actually another reason she was feeling
so anxious. Both of her roommates were out of town, and since she'd learned about the peeping Tom
a month earlier,
she had hated being alone in this apartment.
Without her roommates there,
the place just felt empty.
It felt too quiet.
So Stephanie turned on the TV
just for some background noise.
Then she made herself dinner,
sat down on the couch,
and watched TV while she ate.
At about 8 p.m.,
so a couple of hours after she'd gotten home,
Stephanie called Walter from the living room, and they talked about all the things they were going
to put in their new apartment to make it really feel like home. Talking to Walter definitely
cheered Stephanie up, but she was still dreading sleeping in her apartment by herself. So, after
she hung up with her boyfriend, Stephanie made herself a cup of tea, which she'd always been told was good to calm the nerves.
She took her tea into the bedroom, but left her bedroom door open a crack.
She just wanted to make sure she could hear any noises coming from other parts of her apartment.
Stephanie then put her cup of tea down on the bedside table, and then glanced over at the window to make sure the blinds were still closed.
When she saw they were, she felt comfortable, so she got undressed, put on a nightgown, and climbed into bed. Then she reached over and took
a sip of her tea, and then picked up a book and read for a bit. After finally feeling relaxed,
Stephanie put the book down, flipped off the light, and began to fall asleep.
The following afternoon, Stephanie's boyfriend, Walter, came out of one of his grad school classes
and immediately began scrolling through his contact list on his phone.
Walter and Stephanie talked almost every morning before she went to work and he went to class.
But that morning, Stephanie had not answered her phone when he called.
Walter hadn't thought much about it.
There was a chance that maybe Stephanie had been getting ready for work or that she'd gone in early. But Walter had tried calling a few more
times since then and he had sent Stephanie a couple of emails, but he still hadn't heard back.
Walter was getting worried. It was just weird for Stephanie not to respond to him at all.
After scrolling for a minute, Walter finally found the number for one of Stephanie's roommates on his phone.
Then he walked out of the building and called the friend while he headed to his car.
Walter told the roommate what was going on, and the roommate said that Stephanie hadn't answered her phone when she called either,
and so the roommate said that she was worried too.
She told Walter she was out of town right now, but she'd called their apartment manager,
and the manager could at least go by their place to just see if Stephanie was at home. Walter thanked the roommate and then tried to convince himself that everything was going
to be okay.
At 3.30pm, the apartment manager approached Stephanie's door.
Stephanie's roommate had given the apartment manager permission to unlock the apartment
and go inside.
And so, after knocking and not getting an answer, the apartment manager pulled out a key and opened up the door and walked into the living room.
And right away, nothing looked out of the ordinary.
So, she called out to see if anybody was home, but the place was silent.
So, the manager walked into the hallway that led to each of the three bedrooms.
Stephanie's bedroom door was closed, but the door across the hall was open just a crack.
So the manager walked down the hallway and looked through that crack into that room, and what she saw caused her to turn and run down the hall screaming.
And then once she got outside, she frantically pulled out her phone and called 911.
About 10 minutes after that 911 call,
Lieutenant Chris Morgan, head of the Violent Crimes Task Force in Raleigh,
put on his white fedora hat and walked out of his office.
Lieutenant Morgan was a big guy,
and he seemed even bigger when he spoke in his booming southern drawl.
But it was really that white fedora,
with its soft brim and indented crown,
that made people always notice him wherever he went.
In truth, Morgan had begun wearing the hat when he was a young investigator because he liked how it looked.
It was a throwback to he liked how it looked.
It was a throwback to lawmen from an earlier time.
But Morgan had proven to be a highly skilled detective, and the more crimes he solved,
the more attached he became to this white hat.
Over time, Morgan had started to see the hat as some kind of a magical charm that helped
him close case after case. A little before 4 p.m., Morgan arrived at
Stephanie's apartment. Other officers and crime scene analysts were already hard at work.
One of the officers greeted the lieutenant and then quickly ushered him down the hallway
to one of the bedrooms. Morgan stepped inside the bedroom and looked down at the floor.
Right away, he took up his fedora and stood there respectfully for a full minute, not moving or talking.
Everyone who worked with Morgan knew that his big, outward persona was actually just a small part of who he was.
Inside, Morgan was a highly empathetic person, and it was his empathy that really made him such a great cop.
He had worked violent crimes for years, but he still felt heartbroken every time he saw a victim.
Violent crimes were an attack on his community,
and a robbery of everything the victim would have experienced in their life.
After his moment of silence was over, Morgan put his hat back on and crouched down to the floor.
He was looking at one of the most gruesome crime scenes he'd ever witnessed. The young woman lying there had already been identified as Stephanie Bennett,
and Stephanie was lying on her back, naked, with her arms and legs stretched out to the sides.
There were ligature marks on her wrists and ankles from where she'd clearly been tied up.
There was a dark purple mark around her neck, and there was a pair of blue women's underwear
stuffed inside of her mouth. Lieutenant Morgan was sure the mark on Stephanie's neck meant she
had been strangled to death, but Morgan just couldn't get over how pronounced that mark on
her neck was. Whoever had done this to Stephanie had inflicted as much pain on her as they possibly
could. Then Lieutenant Morgan called over one of the crime
scene analysts. He wanted confirmation of something he already knew to be true. He told the analyst he
believed there were clear signs of sexual assault, and the analyst agreed. Morgan stood up. He felt
angry and sick, but he knew that in the case of sexual assault, there would be DNA samples from
the attacker on the victim's body,
and that was evidence Morgan could use to catch the person who did this.
Looking around the room, Morgan saw that the window was closed,
but the window's screen had been removed.
He thought there was a chance that that window was how the killer had entered the apartment.
But Morgan also noticed several photos on the wall in this room
that were of a
young woman who was not Stephanie, so he assumed that this was actually not Stephanie's bedroom.
So Lieutenant Morgan walked to the bedroom across the hall, and right away he saw pictures of
Stephanie and her friends and family in there, so he knew this was her room. And so for some reason,
the killer had carried out their attack on Stephanie in her roommate's bedroom.
Morgan thought, you know, perhaps the killer just wanted to stay close to their exit route, which would be through the roommate's window.
Morgan walked around Stephanie's bedroom, and the way it was decorated really hit him hard.
There were stuffed animals on the bed and Harry Potter books on the shelves.
All he could think was that Stephanie was barely older than a kid, and some horrible person had crept in here and taken everything from her. Morgan also started
thinking about all the apartment complexes near the lake. They were home to a lot of other young
women like Stephanie, so Morgan really had to act fast to make sure this did not happen to anyone
else. At 9am the following morning, Lieutenant Morgan and his investigative
team were back at Stephanie's apartment complex. They had only wrapped up their initial search a
few hours earlier, so most of them had barely slept. But nobody would know that from looking
at Morgan. He was full of energy when he walked around the complex to meet up with Stephanie's
neighbors. He wanted to know if anybody had seen or heard something on the night of the murder.
But nobody had noticed anything strange.
In fact, it had been so quiet that the neighbors who shared a wall with Stephanie's bedroom
said they hadn't heard any noise at all.
Morgan had his team collect information on everybody they could find at the apartment complex.
But because of the nature of the crime,
the sexual assault and very violent murder,
he figured they were looking for a man.
Normally, Morgan's first suspect would have been Stephanie's boyfriend, Walter,
because in the United States,
almost 35% of female murder victims
are killed by an intimate partner.
But the night before,
Morgan had contacted Walter in South Carolina
and the young man had
completely broken down on the phone when he heard about what happened to his girlfriend, and Morgan's
team was quickly able to locate multiple witnesses who had been with Walter at the time of the murder.
So Morgan turned his attention to the men in Stephanie's apartment complex, and he found that
almost every man his team spoke to was willing to provide DNA samples.
In fact, just about everybody who had known Stephanie, even if they had barely known her,
told police they would do whatever it took to help police find her killer.
They just kept saying how kind Stephanie had been to everyone, that this just didn't make any sense.
While members of Morgan's team collected DNA samples from Stephanie's male neighbors,
Morgan met with residents who had not been home when police first arrived.
And Morgan pretty quickly found someone who had information that could help.
It was the neighbor who had warned Stephanie and her roommates about the peeping Tom a month earlier.
The neighbor recounted his story about seeing the peeping Tom,
but as hard as he tried, he really could not give Morgan much of a description. Then, Morgan spoke to another resident, a man with a very heavy Czech accent,
who claimed to have also seen the peeping Tom. But, just like Stephanie's neighbor, the guy with
the heavy Czech accent really did not get a good look at him. He just said the guy at Stephanie's
window appeared to be white, so Caucasian, he was pretty big, and he appeared to have short hair.
Morgan thanked both of the men for their help,
because even without a detailed description from either one of them,
they had actually given investigators a major lead here.
And Morgan thought the killer could have been spying on Stephanie
through her window for weeks or months,
picturing her as their victim and devising their plan.
So Morgan rounded up his team and told them to start looking for anyone who might fit
the limited description they had of this peeping Tom.
Then Morgan returned to Stephanie's apartment to see if maybe there was anything he might
have missed.
But what Morgan didn't know was someone was watching him while he was doing this.
They were hidden in the shadows of the parking lot, and they could see everything that was going on. After speaking to Stephanie's
neighbors, Lieutenant Morgan had focused his investigation on finding this peeping Tom.
But so far, police had come up empty in their search. Lieutenant Morgan encouraged his team
to please remain patient because he believed the
peeping Tom would slip up and they would eventually get him. Because Morgan was convinced this peeping
Tom would not just stop with Stephanie, they would start looking for another victim. So,
Morgan had made sure to have officers on site at Stephanie's apartment complex
and the other complexes nearby in case this peeping Tom started looking in other windows.
On the night of June 3rd, so roughly two weeks after Stephanie was murdered,
a young police officer was walking the grounds of one of the apartment complexes near Stephanie's.
And suddenly, this officer heard something coming from the bushes a few yards away.
The officer quickly crouched down behind a nearby wall
so he'd be out of sight.
And then the officer craned his neck around that wall
and he focused on the bushes
and there he saw a man standing in them
looking through an apartment window.
The young officer saw this man, this peeping Tom,
lean his face right up against the glass
and then he also saw this peeping Tom undo his belt and then
reach into his pants. The moment this happened, the young officer radioed for help and then got
out from behind that wall and began sprinting towards the sky in the bushes. The Peeping Tom
heard the officer, turned, and started to run. The young officer sprinted after him, but the Peeping
Tom was fast. However, just then, two more officers came running out of the darkness from the other direction,
and they leapt at this man and tackled him to the ground.
The Peeping Tom tried to break free, but the officers kept him pinned down and got him handcuffed.
The young officer who originally spotted the Peeping Tom eventually joined the other two officers totally out of breath and then he called into the station and told lieutenant morgan they had
finally caught the peeping tom and as the officers led the peeping tom to a police cruiser they had
no idea there was somebody else nearby watching their every move To be continued... story of a British man who took part in the first ever round the world sailing race. Good on him I
hear you say but there is a problem as there always is in this show. The man in question
hadn't actually sailed before. Oh and his boat wasn't seaworthy. Oh and also tiny little detail
almost didn't mention it. He bet his family home on making it to the finish line. What ensued was
one of the most complex cheating plots in British sporting history.
To find out the full story, follow British Scandal wherever you listen to podcasts,
or listen early and ad-free on Wondery Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
In May of 1980, near Anaheim, California, Dorothy Jane Scott noticed her friend had an inflamed red wound on his arm and he seemed really unwell.
So she wound up taking him to the hospital right away so he could get treatment.
While Dorothy's friend waited for his prescription, Dorothy went to grab her car to pick him up at the exit.
But she would never be seen alive again, leaving us to wonder, decades later, what really happened to Dorothy Jane Scott?
From Wondery, Generation Y is a podcast that covers notable true crime cases like this one
and so many more. Every week, hosts Aaron and Justin sit down to discuss a new case covering
every angle and theory, walking through the forensic evidence, and interviewing those close
to the case to try and discover what really happened. And with over 450 episodes, there's a case for every true crime listener.
Follow the Generation Y podcast on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts.
Later that night, the Peeping Tom sat in an interrogation room at the police station.
In the hours following his arrest, police had been able to identify him as Christopher Campin.
He was 34 years old, he had short hair that matched the description police had gotten,
and he had an extensive criminal record.
Christopher had been arrested multiple times on misdemeanor charges for, quote,
secret peeping, end quote, also stalking, and also exposing himself.
And those were all acts that police considered potential gateway crimes
that could eventually lead someone to commit full-blown sexual assault or even murder.
So, for the first time since Stephanie had been murdered,
Lieutenant Morgan thought he had a real potential suspect here.
Morgan stepped into the interrogation room and sat across from Christopher.
Morgan took off his white fedora hat and put it down on the table
and then greeted Christopher in his booming voice.
And that voice and Morgan's sheer size
made Christopher immediately shift in his chair uncomfortably
and look down at the floor.
Morgan told Christopher that police knew all about his criminal history, and they knew that earlier
that night he'd been spying on a young woman while she got into the shower. Then Morgan just sat back
and stared at Christopher, and as he did, Christopher remained silent and just kept shifting around in
his seat. Finally, Morgan just asked him if he knew Stephanie Bennett.
Christopher immediately sat up straight in his chair,
and a look of fear came across his face.
He told Morgan he knew who Stephanie was,
basically everybody in Raleigh did,
because the case was all over the news.
But he said he actually didn't know her know her,
and he didn't have anything to do with what had happened to her.
Now, there was no denying what police had caught him doing that night, looking in the woman's window, but he said
that did not mean he was also a murderer. Morgan nodded and then asked Christopher some questions
about his criminal history. But the more Christopher spoke, the more Lieutenant Morgan felt like
something was off here. There was no question that everybody in the police department,
including Morgan,
hoped they had found Stephanie's killer when they brought Christopher in.
After all, he was caught red-handed being a peeping Tom.
He also roughly fit the description of the man
who had been seen watching Stephanie through her window.
But Morgan had made a long successful career
out of reading people.
And he was right way more often than he
was wrong. And listening to Christopher, he just did not think this guy could be behind the
absolutely horrific crime scene he saw in Stephanie's apartment. A lot of organization
and planning had gone into Stephanie's murder. Her killer had clearly been calculated and patient,
and they had not left any discernible fingerprints anywhere.
But the way Christopher spoke seemed completely scattered, not calm or organized at all.
Morgan knew others in the investigation would not want to hear the theory that had just crossed Morgan's mind,
that there might be two different Peeping Toms in the apartment complexes near the lake,
and that this one they had arrested was not the right one.
It was not the murdering Peeping Tom.
Still, Lieutenant Morgan was a strong believer in science,
so that night, police still charged Christopher with secret peeping and resisting arrest,
and officers swabbed his cheeks to obtain DNA samples.
Now they would have to wait to see if Christopher's DNA matched the DNA found on
Stephanie's body. It only took a few days for Lieutenant Morgan to be proven right about
Christopher. The DNA samples did not match those found at the crime scene. Christopher was indeed
a peeping Tom, but he was not Stephanie's killer. Morgan by this point had been pretty sure that
this would be the outcome,
but he was still disappointed. He had stayed in close contact with Stephanie's family,
and he had promised them that Stephanie's killer would be found. But now he was getting concerned,
because they were weeks into this investigation, and he no longer had any legitimate leads.
And not long after Christopher's DNA test results came in,
Morgan got more bad news from the crime lab. The DNA samples found on Stephanie's body did not
match any samples in the state or national DNA databases. In short, that meant that the one
major piece of evidence investigators had found had not given them any idea who killed Stephanie.
had found had not given them any idea who killed Stephanie. So Morgan went back to square one and just started re-interviewing residents at Stephanie's apartment complex. But he didn't
discover anything that gave him the break in the case they desperately needed. On top of that,
there was something else that kept gnawing at Morgan. Almost every man who lived in the
apartments had voluntarily provided DNA samples,
but there were a few men who had refused.
However, without just cause, Morgan couldn't force them to submit DNA samples.
So he believed there was still a chance that someone who lived close to Stephanie was her killer,
police just needed something to point them in the right direction.
They at least needed enough evidence to get a warrant to obtain the DNA samples they were missing. But after months of interviewing residents
and monitoring the grounds, investigators still did not have anything to go on. And by the fall
of 2002, Morgan knew the case was going cold. And as more time passed, he felt like he was failing
Stephanie's family. Then 2002 came to an end, and then all of
2003 passed with no real progress on the case. Stephanie's story slowly disappeared from the
media, and it almost seemed like the community had moved on. But Morgan was determined to keep
the promise he'd made to Stephanie's family, even if he was not the one to solve Stephanie's murder.
to Stephanie's family, even if he was not the one to solve Stephanie's murder.
In April of 2004, almost two years after Stephanie's murder, Lieutenant Morgan called on Detective Ken Copeland to take over Stephanie's case.
Copeland was a member of the Ha'awa'a Soponi Indian tribe, and he'd grown up in a rural
area not far from Raleigh.
He also was a former United States Marine
who looked like he could punch a hole through a brick wall.
But most importantly to Morgan,
Detective Copeland was known around the department as the, quote, garbage man.
Copeland was so detail-oriented
that he would often find small pieces of evidence
that other cops had just assumed were garbage.
So Morgan knew that if
anyone could discover something that he had missed, it would be Detective Copeland. After getting the
assignment, Copeland immediately laid out a plan to re-interview as many people as he could at
Stephanie's apartment complex who had been a part of the initial investigation. He hoped that
somebody would have new information for him. The process was slow
going, and getting people to help police again years after the murder was not always easy. But
several residents did tell Copeland something that had not come up before. They said they remembered
seeing someone that they didn't know, who seemed to spend day after day after day just watching the
police conduct their investigation during that
initial investigation period. But nobody could give Copeland a decent description of this person
because this person always seemed to be just out of sight or blending in with a crowd.
Nothing Copeland heard was enough to give him a solid lead, but he was sure this was significant,
and he wondered if maybe the killer had come back to
the scene of the crime just to relish in what they had done. But even with this new information,
Copeland did not rush to any conclusions. He was trying to rebuild this case from the ground up,
and he was confident his method would pay off. And finally, in February of 2005,
10 months after Copeland had taken over the case, he caught a massive break.
He was back at Stephanie's apartment complex to conduct another round of interviews
when a man came running towards him, calling out in a strong Czech accent. The man was one of the
people who had told police early on that he had seen the peeping Tom by Stephanie's window.
The man came up to Copeland and just started talking right away, sounding very excited.
He said he had remembered something, and it was very important.
In fact, the man couldn't believe it had taken this long for him to remember this.
He told Copeland that when the Peeping Tom had run away from Stephanie's window,
he'd headed towards the apartment complex that was just on the other side of the woods.
Copeland felt a rush. Police had searched those apartments early on, but nothing had come of it,
and Copeland had spent the bulk of his time focused on Stephanie's complex. Now suddenly,
he had a strong feeling that he would find what he was looking for just beyond the woods.
Copeland thanked the man with the Czech accent for his help and then headed
toward the neighboring apartment complex. When he got there, he went right into the management office
and he asked one question of the people in that office. Were there any residents in their building
who made a practice out of spying on other residents? The people in the office didn't
even hesitate. They said absolutely there was one person who did do that,
and they pointed Copeland toward that person's apartment.
Copeland's time as a U.S. Marine had enabled him to remain calm in even the most stressful situations.
But in this moment, as he walked towards this apartment, he could feel his heart beating faster and faster.
Copeland was sure that talking to
whoever lived in this apartment would finally break this case wide open. Copeland finally
arrived at the apartment, and after taking a deep breath, he knocked on the door. A moment later,
the person who lived there answered, and they were clearly intimidated by how big Copeland was.
But Copeland smiled, introduced himself, and showed his badge.
And the person let him inside.
Copeland didn't waste any time.
He asked this person right off the bat if they knew anything about Stephanie Bennett's murder.
And within minutes, Copeland knew the case had its first real suspect in years.
After that meeting, Detective Copeland followed up on some of the information
he had just gotten. Then he rushed back to the police station and told Lieutenant Morgan he was
sure they had a lead that would finally pan out. Morgan felt a mix of relief and urgency.
Detective Copeland, the garbage man, had come through just like Morgan had hoped.
But Morgan knew they had to make sure they had enough evidence to convict their new suspect in court.
Copeland had gathered a lot of information that day,
and so with Morgan's help, they were able to secure warrants that would allow police to conduct surveillance on their suspect
and to obtain a DNA sample without the suspect's cooperation.
and to obtain a DNA sample without the suspect's cooperation.
After visiting the apartments near Stephanie's,
Copeland had been trying to secure a DNA sample from their new suspect.
But this suspect had stayed one step ahead of Copeland,
this man somehow knew he was being pursued,
and he seemed to be a master at covering his tracks.
When the suspect went to restaurants, he always ate finger foods,
so he wouldn't leave prints on forks or knives. He also pocketed any straws he used, and he flushed his napkins down
the toilet. At work, he wiped down his computer and desk every day, and he never disposed of
anything in the trash can by his desk or in the dumpster outside the building. Detective Copeland
knew the suspect was beating him, but he also knew the suspect's one small weakness.
The man had a sweet tooth.
The suspect's boss had told Copeland that the man often ate ice cream and other snacks at work.
So Copeland had come up with a last-ditch effort to get a DNA sample.
He had asked the suspect's boss to arrange a lunch for her entire department,
and he had asked the boss to do something important at that lunch so on september 15 2005 almost three and a half years after stephanie's murder
two members of copeland's team were dressed in plain clothes sitting inside of a golden corral
restaurant the officers watched from across the restaurant as the suspect's boss walked up to the buffet line and grabbed a tray and put some banana pudding on it.
The tray trembled in the boss's hands because she was so nervous, but she did the very important thing Copeland had asked her to do.
She put that dessert tray right on the table in front of the suspect, and the suspect took the bait.
They grabbed a banana pudding, and then he picked up a fork and began eating.
After a few bites,
the suspect wiped the fork down with a napkin
and put the napkin in his pocket,
but the suspect left the fork on the table.
Minutes later, the suspect walked out of the restaurant
and at that point, the two plainclothes officers
rushed over to the table and bagged the fork as evidence.
And that fork would provide a DNA sample
that would eventually allow police to determine who had killed Stephanie.
Based on interviews, DNA samples, and evidence found at the crime scene,
here is a reconstruction of what police believe happened to Stephanie Bennett
on the night of May 20th and the early morning of May 21st in 2002.
The Sun Was Shining Bright The sun was shining bright when the killer walked from his apartment complex over to Stephanie's.
He was carrying a duffel bag on his shoulder,
he tucked his long hair under the hood of his black sweatshirt,
and he kept his hands in his sweatshirt pocket so nobody would see the latex gloves he was wearing.
The killer scanned the grounds to make sure nobody was nearby,
and he saw that everything was clear. He'd chosen this time to come because he knew most people would still be at work and
not out walking on the footpaths near the lake. The killer moved quickly towards the high bushes
in front of Stephanie's roommate's bedroom window. He crouched down, climbed through the bushes,
and then removed the window screen. The window itself was locked, but the
killer knew it was not that secure. And so he grabbed the bottom of the window with his gloved
hands, used all of his strength, and he forced it open. Once it was open, the killer climbed into
the roommate's bedroom and closed the window behind him. He walked across the bedroom, opened
the door halfway, and looked across the hall at Stephanie's room. The door was closed.
Satisfied, the killer turned back around and went inside of one of the roommate's closets,
and once he was inside, he positioned the door so it was barely open a crack so he could still
listen to what was going on in the apartment, and then the killer put his bag on the closet floor,
he sat down, and he waited for hours.
floor, he sat down, and he waited for hours. Finally, at about 6 p.m., the killer heard the front door unlock and open. He held his breath. He knew he still had to wait just a bit longer.
The killer heard the TV turn on in the living room, then he smelled food cooking in the kitchen,
and he listened as Stephanie spoke on the phone. All the while, the killer just kept
breathing slowly so he would stay calm and patient. Finally, hours after Stephanie had gotten home,
the killer heard her coming down the hall. From his spot in the closet, he not only could see
Stephanie walk into her bedroom, but he could see her in the bedroom. She left her bedroom door open.
So the killer watched Stephanie as she got undressed and put on her nightgown.
Then he saw Stephanie grab a book and get under her covers,
and he waited while she read.
Then the killer saw the light go off in Stephanie's bedroom,
and he felt a jolt of adrenaline.
It was time to go.
The killer grabbed his bag, stepped out of the closet,
and then placed the bag down right in the middle of the bedroom floor.
Then he rushed out of the room, he went across the hall, he slammed open Stephanie's door, and he leapt onto the bed, pinning Stephanie down.
Stephanie was in complete shock and terror, but the killer just pushed one hand over her mouth to keep her quiet, and he used the other hand to hit her multiple times.
Stephanie was stunned and already bleeding. With one hand continuing to cover Stephanie's mouth,
the killer pulled her off of her bed and dragged her across the hall into her roommate's bedroom,
where he had left the bag. Stephanie fought back and tried to break free, but the killer was so
strong and he held her down and managed somehow to keep her
totally silent the killer dragged stephanie into the center of the room and then he reached over
into his bag and took out several pieces of rope and then using that rope the killer quickly bound
stephanie's wrists behind her back and then he pushed her onto the ground and then he used the
other piece of rope to bind her ankles, and then once she was
all tied up, he removed all of her clothing, and then he shoved her underwear into her mouth to
gag her. Then the killer left Stephanie on the floor of the roommate's bedroom, and then the
killer crossed the hallway back into Stephanie's bedroom. And there, the killer went into Stephanie's
dresser and looked through her clothes, and eventually removed a piece of Stephanie's underwear.
This would be his trophy.
After that, the killer walked out of Stephanie's room, closed the door,
and then went back into the room where Stephanie was bound and gagged on the ground.
The killer placed his trophy inside of his bag and then turned his attention to Stephanie.
The killer raped Stephanie.
And then after he was done,
he reached into his bag again
and pulled out a long metal wire.
He leaned over Stephanie,
wrapped that wire around her neck,
and slowly strangled her to death.
After she was dead,
the killer just stared at Stephanie's body
for a whole minute.
Then he threw the wire back into his bag
and also cut the restraints off of her wrists and ankles and threw the wire back into his bag and also cut the restraints
off of her wrists and ankles and threw that rope back into the bag as well. Then the killer picked
up the bag, climbed back out the window he had come in through, and ran across the dark apartment
complex towards the woods. A few minutes later, he arrived at his apartment, he opened the door,
and the second he did, he was greeted by his very
friendly and extremely happy-looking black and brown Rottweiler. It would turn out that Stephanie's
murderer was someone she had met before, but only very briefly. His name was Drew Planton,
and he was the owner of that very happy-looking Rottweiler that Stephanie had noticed and gone
up to and crouched down and pet
after coming home from work about a month before her murder. And that was it. That was Stephanie's
entire connection to Drew. But for Drew, that small chance encounter had been enough.
And not long after that interaction, Drew had begun to stalk Stephanie and spy on her through
her windows when she was in her bedroom. And finally, Drew had decided Stephanie would be his next murder victim. Because it would also turn
out that Drew Planton had very likely killed before. Police would discover that years earlier,
he had very likely murdered an exotic dancer in Lansing, Michigan, but the case had gone unsolved.
However, everybody involved in
that case fully believed Drew was the killer. Drew was not on Lieutenant Morgan and his team's radar
at first because he had moved out of the apartment complex near Stephanie's not long after the murder,
and he didn't really fit the description of the peeping Tom they had been given.
He was tall, but he was gangly and had long, shaggy hair.
Also, Drew was a well-respected chemist in Raleigh
who did not seem to fit the initial criminal profile.
But everything changed when the garbage man, Detective Copeland, took over.
When Copeland learned that the killer had most likely lived
in the apartment complex near Stephanie's
and that someone who Stephanie's neighbors didn't recognize had been watching the police from a distance, he had an idea.
Copeland did not like to stereotype people, but as someone who'd grown up in the rural south,
he believed every community had a busybody who made it their job to know everybody else's
business. So he went to the apartment complex where he believed the killer lived, and he asked the office workers which resident spent the most of their time keeping tabs on
their neighbors. And they immediately pointed him to one of the resident's apartments.
But Copeland was not talking to the killer inside of that apartment. He was talking to a woman who
regularly spied on her neighbors and who knew everything about all of them.
And it turned out she was the person who had spent a lot of time lurking around the apartment complexes near the lake watching the police investigation unfold.
And that woman told Copeland he really needed to talk to Drew Planton, a man who used to live in an apartment close to hers and who had a pet Rottweiler.
in an apartment close to hers and who had a pet Rottweiler.
She said Drew had always creeped her out, but more importantly, she had seen him several times before the murder,
hanging around near the apartment where Stephanie would be killed.
And Copeland got confirmation from a few of Stephanie's neighbors,
including the man with the heavy Czech accent,
that they had often seen a man walking a Rottweiler around their apartment complex,
and there was a chance that man could have been the peeping Tom they saw outside of Stephanie's window.
So, Copeland came to believe that Drew was very likely Stephanie's killer.
Drew was able to elude police for a while, but eventually his love of sugar brought him down.
Copeland knew nobody would eat banana pudding with their hands,
so he set up his
sting operation with Drew's boss, and sure enough, a partial DNA sample taken from the fork Drew used
to eat the pudding showed that he was most likely Stephanie's killer. And that was enough to convince
Drew's boss to continue helping the police, and she would ultimately secure a pair of gloves Drew
had used at work before he could throw them away. And those gloves
provided police with a more complete DNA sample that would be strong enough to hold up in court
and that did make it clear that Drew really had murdered Stephanie.
In court, Drew Planton refused to walk, speak, or even open his eyes. He acted like he was in a
totally catatonic state. But Drew was
not catatonic. And ultimately, he would commit suicide in jail before a verdict could be handed
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