MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - You're the Greatest (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: May 6, 2024On the morning of May 26, 1990, Marlene Warren was at home inside of her mansion in Florida when she heard a knock on the door. Marlene was busy and was hoping that her son might go answer th...e door, but when she looked over to the living room, she saw her son was watching TV and didn't seem to have even heard the knock on the door. So, Marlene just sighed and walked over to the door and opened it up herself. And to her surprise, it was a person dressed up as a clown holding flowers and balloons. Marlene loved clowns, and it had been her birthday recently, so she was thrilled – figuring this must be someone's gift to her. But after the clown handed Marlene the flowers and balloons, there was this loud popping sound inside the house... and then Marlene fell to the floor, blood pouring down her face.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 the morning of May 26, 1990, Marlene Warren was at home inside of her beautiful mansion
in Florida when she heard a knock on the front door.
Marlene was busy and was hoping that her adult son might go answer the door, but when she
looked over to the living room where her son was, she saw he was laying down watching TV and didn't even
seem to have heard the knock on the door.
So Marlene sighed and just walked over to the front door herself and opened it up.
And to her surprise, standing on the other side of the door was a person dressed up in
a clown costume holding flowers and balloons.
Now Marlene loved clowns and she had recently celebrated her 40th birthday, so she figured
this must be someone's birthday gift to her, and she was thrilled.
But after the clown handed Marlene the flowers and balloons, there was this loud popping
sound inside of Marlene's house, and then Marlene fell to the floor, blood pouring down
her face.
But before we get into that story, if you're a fan of the strange, dark and mysterious
delivered in story format, then you've come to the right podcast because that's all we
do and we upload twice a week, once on Monday and once on Thursday.
So if that's of interest to you, please sneak into the Amazon Music Follow Button's house
in the middle of the night and superglue their nostrils shut. Okay, let's get into today's story.
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Some stories were never meant to be heard.
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In January of 1990, 39-year-old Marlene Warren made her way across her sprawling backyard in Wellington, Florida.
Marlene and her husband Michael were hosting a barbecue for some of their friends and family
and coworkers, and so far, the Florida winter weather had not disappointed. It was sunny and about 75 degrees Fahrenheit, so a perfect day for an outdoor party.
Marlene looked down and checked the food on the grill.
It smelled delicious and was almost ready to be served.
Then she looked up and saw all the people in her yard who were talking and laughing
and having a great time, and she smiled.
Her backyard, and really her entire house, were made for big parties like this one.
Where Marlene lived, Wellington, Florida, was a small upscale village not far from West Palm Beach
that was filled with mansions and golf courses. Marlene and Michael's five-bedroom home was over
5,000 square feet, it had a pool, and it even had an attached airplane hanger for Michael's prop plane.
Marlene enjoyed the luxury that her house and her neighborhood provided, but really what she loved the most was all the space she had on her
property so she could throw these big parties for all the people she loved. The smell of the food
drifted across the backyard and after a while, a few guests began heading towards the grill.
And amongst those guests were a young couple, Sheila and Richard Keene, who walked up and
asked Marlene if she needed any help.
But Marlene said she had everything under control and really she was just happy that
Sheila and Richard had made it to the party.
Sheila and Richard both worked for Marlene's husband, Michael, at the used car dealership
that he owned and so Marlene was just happy to meet some of these people that spent so
much time with her husband.
Sheila and Richard chatted for a little bit longer, and then they turned and headed back towards the party,
at which point Marlene began taking the food off the grill
and putting them out on serving dishes.
As soon as Marlene's 21-year-old son, Joey,
and a few of his friends saw Marlene putting the food out,
they rushed over and grabbed some paper plates
and began piling them full of food.
Joey's father, Marlene's husband, Michael,
spotted the boys doing what they were doing, and he laughed and told them to please save some food. Joey's father, Marlene's husband, Michael, spotted the boys
doing what they were doing and he laughed and told them to please save some food for the other
guests. Then Michael walked over to the grill and put his arm around Marlene and she leaned her head
on his shoulder. Both of them had been so busy with work lately that it felt like they barely
got any time together. So it was nice now to have a moment to relax together and just to enjoy the
company of their friends and family.
Marlene and Michael had been together for almost 18 years, and even though things weren't
always perfect, Marlene couldn't imagine her life without her husband.
Back in the mid-1960s, Marlene had gotten married to a different man.
She gave birth to her first son at the age of 16, and she had Joey a few years later
when she was 19.
But not long after that, her first husband had died and Marlene felt completely lost.
She was now a widow at just 20 years old and she was trying to raise two young boys all
on her own.
At the time, she had gotten a lot of support from her parents, but there were still moments
when she just felt like surviving was almost impossible.
Then she had met Michael and it was like everything in her life got better.
Michael was kind, he was handsome, he was driven to succeed, and he almost immediately
became this loving father figure to Marlene's two boys.
And Michael was just as taken with Marlene as she was with him.
He thought she was absolutely stunning with her beautiful red hair and blue eyes, but
more importantly he thought of Marlene as being a really strong person who had managed to overcome this terrible tragedy, losing her
first husband at such a young age.
And so clearly Marlene was just this really mature person.
And also Michael really liked how driven Marlene was to succeed just like he was.
Marlene and Michael had gotten married in 1972 and they eventually moved to Florida.
They started a real estate business that Marlene ran and over the years they had come to own
multiple rental properties. Michael had also opened up a used car dealership that specialized
in selling and renting cars to people who struggled to get loans because of their credit.
And ultimately both the real estate and car business had taken off in ways that not even
Marlene and Michael had seen coming.
And so they ended up making millions and millions of dollars between them and then buying their
beautiful home here in Wellington.
In the backyard, Marlene and Michael stepped away from the grill and mingled with their
guests.
Marlene said she was glad people from different aspects of their life, friends, family, and
work all seemed to be getting along so well. Then Marlene and Michael split up to cover more ground and to see if aspects of their life, friends, family, and work, all seemed to be getting along so well.
Then Marlene and Michael split up to cover more ground and to see if any of their guests
needed anything.
A little while later, Marlene went back to the grill to cook more food and her mother-in-law
approached her.
Marlene had a great relationship with Michael's mom and they always had plenty to talk about,
but her mother-in-law had a serious look on her face, so Marlene asked if everything was okay.
Her mother-in-law leaned in, like she was about to tell Marlene some big secret.
Then she just pointed towards some of Michael's employees, Sheila and Richard Keene, the two
that Marlene had spoken to at the grill earlier, and in a quiet voice, she told Marlene to
watch out for Sheila because she was young and pretty.
Marlene understood that her mother-in-law was just trying to help.
They both knew Michael could be a bit of a flirt, but Marlene wasn't too worried about
anything like that.
And so she ended up not really saying anything back to her mother-in-law after she made this
comment.
But inside, if she was going to worry about either of the Keens, it would not be Sheila,
it would be Richard.
Richard had a bit of a shady past.
He'd faced weapons possession and drug charges with the police, and he worked for Michael
as a repo man, which meant he took cars back from people when they were behind on payments.
It was a difficult job, and a lot of people did not want to give up their cars, but Richard
was known as a tough guy who people did not want to mess with, and so no matter how much
people fought him, he would get them to give up their cars.
Still, Marlene was not about to hold anybody's past against them.
She knew Richard was one of Michael's hardest-working employees, and the two men, Michael and Richard,
really seemed to get along well, so if Marlene's husband trusted him, then she did too.
The party lasted into the night, and by the time the final guests left, Marlene felt exhausted
but really happy.
The barbecue had clearly been a success.
Inside the house, she and Michael sat down on the couch and put their feet up.
Michael looked over at his wife and said, hey, pretty soon we're going to have to start
thinking about our next party, your 40th birthday.
Marlene laughed because her 40th birthday was still almost five months away, but Michael
said it was never too early to start thinking about it.
After all turning 40 was kind of a big deal.
Marlene and Michael sat and talked a bit longer.
Then Michael said he was tired and kissed his wife and headed to bed.
Marlene stayed in the living room by herself and as she sat there it really hit her that
she was going to turn 40 soon.
Now there was a time when she would have seen that as getting old and she would have
dreaded the birthday, but Marlene actually felt kind of excited for her birthday. For her age,
she had actually accomplished a ton. You know, she had the kind of life that people envied
and she believed that everything would just keep on getting better as she got older.
About 6 months later, at around 11am on Saturday, May 26, 1990, Marlene was cooking food again.
This time though, she was in the kitchen making breakfast for her son Joey and two of his
friends who were over at the house.
Marlene finished up the food and then hollered for the boys to come and get it.
Joey and his two friends rushed into the kitchen, they got their breakfast, and then went back
into the living room to keep watching TV. Marlene was happy to have a relaxing weekend ahead of her. A little bit earlier, Michael had
headed out to a racetrack in Miami with a friend about 70 miles away, so Marlene was totally solo
and she figured she might just spend the day driving around. Michael had surprised her for
her 40th birthday with her dream car, a candy apple red Firebird. Marlene loved this sports car and today felt like the perfect day to go out for a drive.
But before she could head outside to hop in her car, the doorbell rang.
Marlene was pretty sure her son and his friends were not going to get up to answer the door,
so she headed to the front door and she opened it up.
And as soon as she did, Marlene smiled, because standing there was a clown.
It was this person
in a clown costume with a curly red wig and white makeup, and this clown was holding balloons and a
small picnic basket filled with flowers in one of their hands. At this point, Joey and his friends
looked up from the couch towards the door, and when they saw the clown, they just started laughing.
They wondered why there was a clown at the house, but they quickly turned back to the TV.
As for Marlene, she figured these balloons and flowers must be some sort of late birthday
present or just a kind of random nice surprise from Michael.
The clown grinned and handed the balloons and flowers to Marlene.
Marlene said, oh, these are so pretty, and then began looking for a card to see who had
sent this to her.
But as she did this, Marlene didn't notice the clown pulled their other hand out from
behind their back.
And then a second later in the living room, Marlene's son Joey suddenly heard a loud
pop and then he turned and looked towards the front door and he saw the clown had turned
and begun running away from the house and his mother was now lying on the floor.
Joey and his friends had no idea what just happened, but they ran over to Marlene's
side and right away they saw her face was covered in blood.
She had been shot.
The boys ran out the door screaming for this clown and screaming for help.
And then at the end of the road, they saw a white Chrysler sedan called a LeBaron racing
away around the corner.
And so one of Joey's friends rushed back inside to call 911.
Joey ran straight for his car, he hopped inside, and began flying down the road after this
Chrysler.
But Joey, after turning the corner and driving all around the neighborhood, he could not
find the white Chrysler LeBaron.
It was gone. Not long after the 911 call, Detective Michael Harrison of the Palm Beach County Sheriff's
Department arrived outside of Marlene's house.
When Harrison had first gotten the call to investigate a shooting carried out by a clown
in one of the wealthiest neighborhoods in the county, he wondered if he was hearing
everything right or if maybe a fellow officer was playing some sort of twisted joke on him.
But Harrison quickly realized this was not a joke.
After being shot, Marlene had been rushed to the hospital and she was now fighting for
her life.
All Harrison knew about the person who had shot her was that they were last seen wearing
a clown costume.
Harrison walked towards Marlene's property.
Officers who had arrived first on the scene had already cordoned off the yard with police
tape and out front they had gathered Joey, his two friends, and a neighbor who had heard
the shooting while he was out walking his dog.
Joey and his friends stood there with police, still in total shock.
Joey's hands trembled and the first thing he told Detective Harrison was that he'd
gone after the shooter, but he had failed to catch them.
Harrison did his best to calm Joey down.
He knew this young man really just wanted to go to the hospital to see his mom and Harrison
also knew that the chaos of what had just happened would just make it really difficult
for Joey to focus.
But Joey and his friends were Harrison's best witnesses, and so he hoped he could get
at least some information out of them right now.
So Harrison asked Joey if there was anything he remembered about the shooter beyond them
being dressed as a clown.
After taking a deep breath and collecting himself, Joey would say that the shooter had
a lot of white makeup on, like even more makeup than a circus clown would wear, so as a result,
it was almost impossible to tell what the shooter actually looked like.
But Joey said, you know, as far as he could tell, the shooter was a man who was probably
about 5'9'' tall and he had what looked like really big hands.
Joey's friends would agree with that description.
Detective Harrison said this was extremely helpful, and then he asked them if there was
anything else they remembered.
Joey just shook his head, and his friends said that was all they could think of,
but then Joey looked up at Harrison like something had just come back to him.
He said there actually was one thing that really stood out, but he hadn't really thought about it
at the time. Joey said when the clown came to the door, there was a part of his costume that
seemed to bit off. Instead of wearing the typical oversized clown shoes,
this clown was wearing black combat boots. This was an interesting piece of information,
but it didn't really surprise Harrison. The detective figured the shooter had planned
this whole shooting out and they knew they would need to make a quick getaway and trying
to run back to their car in giant clown shoes would have been very difficult.
Harrison thanked Joey and his friends for their help, and as they walked away, Harrison
just could not imagine what Joey must have felt witnessing his mother get shot like that
right in front of him.
Harrison walked over to the neighbor who had been out walking his dog at the time of the
shooting.
The man would tell Harrison that he only heard a single gunshot.
He also said he was sure the shooter had sped off in a white Chrysler LeBaron that didn't have a license plate. Harrison thanked the neighbor, and then he
made one of the weirdest phone calls he'd ever made in his entire law enforcement career.
He contacted the sheriff's department and asked them to issue a BOLO, which is a Be
on the Lookout message to other law enforcement agencies and the general public. Harrison
said the BOLO should let people know they were searching for a white Chrysler LeBaron
that was being driven by a clown.
Harrison made his way inside of Marlene's house and right away he was stunned at just
how little evidence there was considering a shooting had taken place right there.
There was very minimal blood in the entryway and there were no bullet casings, no weapon
and no bullet holes in the wall.
Harrison still needed to get some information from the hospital where Marlene had been taken
but based on his conversation with the neighbor and also based on what he saw at the crime
scene, Harrison's first impression of this crime was that the clown, the shooter, fired
one bullet and that bullet must be lodged somewhere in Marlene's body.
The lack of ballistics evidence and the fact that the shooter was fully disguised meant
that Harrison and his team did not have a lot to go on.
But he crouched down in the entryway and focused on the evidence he did have—the balloons
and the basket of flowers.
One of the balloons was pretty generic, but the other one was red, heart-shaped, and had
a message on it that said, you're the greatest.
For now, that balloon was the best clue Harrison had.
So he instructed his team to cover every place in the area that sold balloons to see which
of those places sold heart-shaped balloons like the one left behind at the scene.
Harrison's team worked fast and his tactic paid off.
Later that day, he learned there was only one grocery store in town that sold that particular
balloon.
So Harrison had his first major break in his search for the clown who had shot Marlene.
Members of the investigative team went to the grocery store where they believed the
balloon left at Marlene's house had come from.
And one of the clerks there remembered selling the balloon and flowers to someone about an
hour and a half before Marlene was shot.
Now the clerk could not provide a description of the person who bought these items, but
this information was still very valuable because now Detective Harrison thought there was a
strong possibility that their shooter, the clown, was somebody local that they would
have known to come to this particular grocery store to get that particular balloon and those flowers.
And so with that theory in mind that their shooter was local, Harrison turned his attention to local
costume shops. If the shooter purchased the balloons and flowers in town, then they very
likely got their clown costume locally too. And later that day, a bell jangled over Harrison's
head when he walked through the door of a small
dimly lit costume shop.
He walked past shelves of masks and racks filled with all different kinds of costumes,
and at the back of the shop, he found two young women sitting behind a large glass counter
that had costume makeup displayed in it.
Harrison introduced himself to the young women and they were clearly very surprised to see
a detective in their store. Harrison told them they had nothing to worry about and that he just had a couple of basic
questions for them. Then he asked both of them if they were called selling a clown costume recently.
The women looked at each other and their eyes went wide. Then one of the young women turned
back to Harrison and told him they'd actually just been talking about a clown costume that
they had sold a couple of nights earlier.
She said the costume itself was not the weird part, it was the customer who bought it that
made the whole transaction so strange.
She said this customer had come into the shop while they were locking up for the night and
so the women had told this customer they were closed, but this person said they were desperate
to get a clown costume and they had to have it right now.
The young women could tell this customer seemed very, very anxious and on edge and so ultimately
they decided to help.
They walked the customer to the back of the store and showed them the clown costumes they
had and eventually the customer found the costume they liked and they also bought a
red curly wig, a clown nose, and a bunch of white makeup.
Harrison asked if this customer had also bought clown shoes and one of the women said actually
that was another interesting thing about this transaction.
The customer had been so adamant that they wanted a full clown costume but then when
it was time to actually get the clown costume they said they did not want the shoes that
came with it.
So Harrison asked for a description of this customer.
But both women said you know it was the strangest thing.
When this customer came in, it was like they already were in disguise because they had
a hat pulled down over their face and they had their jacket pulled up high around their
neck and they kept looking down and barely speaking.
And so, you know, the two women just did not have a clue what this person looked like.
They couldn't really even tell if it was a man or a woman, but what they could recall was that this person was maybe 5'8
or 5'9 and they appeared to have some brown hair, but they didn't know how long it was.
While this description obviously was not very helpful, it did kind of match the description
that Marlene's son, Joey, had given of the clown that shot his mother.
You know, he basically described an average-sized man, and that seemed like that's what the customer
was.
Harrison hoped this customer had bought the clown stuff using a credit card and then he
could just follow the credit card transaction history right to the shooter, but unfortunately
when he asked the women for the credit card receipt, they said that the customer had paid
in cash, and so there was no paper trail.
So Harrison thanked the two young women for their time, and then he headed back outside
and made his way back to the Sheriff's Department.
Hi, I'm Anna.
And I'm Emily.
And we're the hosts of Terribly Famous, the show that takes you inside the lives of our biggest celebrities.
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The next day, so May 27th, 1990, the day after the shooting, Detective Harrison led Marlene's
husband, Michael, into a small office at the Sheriff's Station. Michael looked dazed and like he hadn't slept in a long time.
The day before, Michael had been halfway to Miami when he got a call on his car phone.
That was how he had learned his wife had been shot.
Michael had turned around immediately and sped to the hospital to be with Marlene, and
he had stayed with Marlene the entire time until Harrison had asked him to come to the
Sheriff's station.
Harrison sat down across from Michael.
The detective knew Michael had an airtight alibi, having been on the road when the shooting
took place, but when a violent crime is committed, spouses are often the first suspect, so even
if Michael didn't pull the trigger, Harrison could not yet rule out that he was involved
in some way.
And even if Michael wasn't connected to the shooting, Harrison hoped Michael could provide
some key information that might push the investigation forward.
Harrison asked Michael if he had any idea who would want to hurt his wife, but Michael
looked like he barely even heard the question.
He just said he wished the shooter had gotten him instead of Marlene.
He said she was such a good person and everybody loved her.
Detective Harrison said he understood how hard this was for Michael, but he asked the
question again.
Did he know of anybody who might want to hurt his wife?
Michael finally slumped over and he rubbed his eyes.
He took a minute to either think or collect himself and then he looked back up at Harrison.
Michael said the only thing he could think of had to do with his and Marlene's real
estate business.
They had several rental properties and periodically they would have to evict people from these
properties.
And because Marlene managed the real estate business, she was the one who handled these
evictions.
And people who get evicted don't like being evicted.
There's lots of opportunity for conflict.
So Michael thought it was possible that maybe an angry former
tenant who had been evicted by Marlene had attacked Marlene to get some kind of revenge on her for
getting kicked out of their apartment. That made sense to Harrison and so he made a note to have
his team look into all the people Marlene had evicted over the years. Then he asked Michael if
he and his wife had been fighting recently or if their marriage was strained in any way.
Michael said he would do anything for his wife and vice versa.
He said sure they argued like any married couple did, but it was usually just over small
stuff, and they always made up and they loved each other.
Then, Michael told Harrison that what he really wanted right now was just to be back at the
hospital with his wife.
Harrison nodded and thanked Michael for coming to the station and then let him leave to go
back to his wife.
Later that day, members of Harrison's team started tracking down the names and locations
of the people who Marlene had evicted and who might, because of that eviction, have
a grudge against her.
And Detective Harrison reached out to Marlene's friends and family to see if they might know
something that Michael was unaware of or forgot to mention.
And in doing that, Harrison got one piece of information that completely threw him for
a loop.
Apparently, Marlene loved clowns.
Marlene's parents told Harrison that when Marlene was little, she had clown decorations
all over her room and she was always drawing pictures of clowns.
And they said this love of clowns did not go away when Marlene got older.
She would still get very excited if she saw a clown or if she heard the circus was in
town.
And so Detective Harrison still thought looking into disgruntled former tenants made a lot
of sense, but this new information sparked a different idea about the case for him.
Had someone who knew Marlene really well tried to kill her dressed up as the
one thing that she loved? Who would do that? It's so dark and twisted. The following day,
so May 28th, two days after the shooting, Marlene's family made the heartbreaking
decision to take Marlene off of life support, and so Marlene passed away in the hospital.
It was Memorial Day, and Marlene's son, son Joey knew it was the kind of holiday that his mom
would have loved to celebrate by hosting another big backyard barbecue for her friends and
family.
Joey had held onto hope that his mom would survive this ordeal but now that she was gone
Joey just felt lost.
The family dealt with the shock of losing a wife, mother, and child and at the same
time Detective Harrison now knew he had a homicide case on his hands.
But at least he felt like he had a few decent leads.
For example, his team was able to locate all the people Marlene had evicted, so Harrison
pursued the idea that this could have been a grudge killing.
But Harrison found himself feeling more surprised after he spoke to each of these evicted former
tenants.
Even though Marlene had kicked them out of their apartments, they all still spoke very
fondly of her.
They said she was a genuinely good person and a decent landlord.
Some said they had even remained friends with Marlene after they had been evicted.
Harrison couldn't actually rule any of them out yet, but during all those interviews with
these former tenants,
he never felt like he was talking to a killer. Then on May 30th, so four days after the shooting,
Harrison got a major break in the case. The white Chrysler LeBaron car, the car the clown had jumped
into and sped off in that Joey had chased after and couldn't find, well, that car was found.
A little after 9.30am, Detective Harrison and county forensics investigators arrived
at a grocery store parking lot where the car had been abandoned.
The car didn't have any license plates on it, so instead Harrison called in the vehicle
identification number, or VIN number, that's assigned to every vehicle and you can find
it typically on the inside of your car door.
He called that number in to his department
so they could begin to try to look it up
at the same time that the forensics team
began to comb through this car to look for evidence.
And at some point, one of the forensics investigators
who was in the driver's side of the car
called out to Harrison,
and so Harrison walked over to the driver's door,
and the investigator pointed out red fibers on the door
and then showed Harrison that more of
those same red fibers had been found in the driver's seat. They would need to run tests to confirm this,
but everybody at the scene felt confident those red fibers must have come from the red clown wig
the shooter was seen wearing. The forensics investigators continued their sweep of the car
and they would also find two strands of brown hair.
They bagged the red fibers and brown hair as evidence and then prepared them to be sent
off to an FBI crime lab to be analyzed.
At the time, DNA testing was still in its early days and so hair analysis was also very
limited.
The FBI had greater testing capabilities than the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Department,
but Harrison knew there was still no guarantee that these hair samples would actually lead
him anywhere.
Still, they had a car that matched the description of the one that had been seen speeding away
from the crime scene, and they had red fibers that could match the description of the red
clown wig, and Harrison believed the shooter had brown hair based on the description he'd
gotten from the two young women at the costume shop, and they had those brown hairs that were found in the car. So it seemed clear to
Harrison that they had found the shooter's car and he wouldn't have to wait for the FBI's test
results to find a connection between that car and the victim. Police ran that vehicle identification
number and they discovered that the LeBaron was a rental car, and about a month earlier it had been returned to the used car dealership that Marlene's husband Michael owned.
Harrison left the grocery store parking lot and quickly went back to the station, but
when he arrived he discovered that the story surrounding the LeBaron was a lot stranger
than he'd imagined. It would turn out the LeBaron had not originally been rented from Michael's company.
Instead, the couple who had rented this LeBaron had apparently accidentally called Michael's
company and asked where they should drop the car off when they returned it, and somebody
at Michael's company, who was used to cars getting returned all the time, and so did not think to ask this couple, hey, did you rent with
us or did you rent somewhere else? They just told the couple, okay, yeah, just leave the car at this
specific location and leave the keys inside. Harrison didn't know what to make of this.
He thought it would have been a lot more cut and dry if the car simply belonged to Michael's company,
but now he needed to figure out if this was all just some bizarre coincidence that, you know, the killers happened to drop off the car at
Michael's company by accident, or if Michael, or one of his employees for that matter, had
taken this opportunity to get ahold of a car that they thought would not be traced back
to them.
So Harrison went to interview some of Michael's employees, and he thought he found another
potential suspect when he spoke to Sheila and Richard Keene, the young couple who had been at Marlene's barbecue,
who had walked up to Marlene when she was at the grill and they had asked her if she was doing okay.
Also, the same couple that Marlene's mother-in-law had sort of warned Marlene about, saying that,
you know, Sheila was young and pretty, so be cautious of her, but Marlene was actually
thinking, you know, Sheila's not the problem, it's Richard. You know, he's this big intimidating repo man guy. Harrison and his team
dug into Sheila and Richard's background and they would discover that Richard had a criminal record.
And in virtue of him being a repo man who worked all over the area, he would know his way around
the neighborhood and he could have easily figured out a route to quickly escape Marlene's neighborhood
and he probably would have had a good idea route to quickly escape Marlene's neighborhood,
and he probably would have had a good idea where to abandon the getaway car where it
wouldn't be found for at least a few days.
But after actually meeting with Richard, Harrison couldn't find anything linking him directly
to Marlene's shooting, and there was no evidence that Richard was the employee at Michael's
company who had taken that call about returning the LeBaron and then told the renters where to leave it. So over the next couple of weeks, Harrison continued to pursue
leads connected to Michael and his business, but he started to feel like the answers to this case
were just out of his grasp. He had a strong hunch that either Michael or someone who worked for him
was behind the shooting, but the evidence just wasn't coming together, and news from the FBI did very little to point Harrison in the right direction. Test results did show that
the red fibers found in the LeBaron were most likely from a wig, but the two strands of
brown hair that investigators had also found could not be analyzed fully enough to identify
who they belonged to. And so after all this work that Harrison and his team had done,
they still basically had
very little to go on.
So Harrison decided to keep digging into Michael's used car dealership because he still thought
the abandoned white LeBaron was the strongest clue they had.
Detective Harrison and his team spent the months following Marlene's murder delving
into her husband Michael's business practices at his used car dealership, and they found
significant evidence of illegal activity.
Now it was nothing that tied Michael or any of his employees to Marlene's murder, but
still there was way too much evidence of these other crimes for Harrison to just overlook.
So on October 26, 1990, exactly five months after Marlene's murder, Michael was arrested
on multiple charges including racketeering, auto theft, and filing false insurance claims.
Michael's attorney argued that the only reason police made the arrest was because they were
frustrated with their own inability to find Marlene's killer.
Michael would eventually be sentenced to four years in prison, but during all that time, Detective Harrison did not get any closer to identifying the person who had murdered Marlene.
Harrison had a strong hunch about who he thought had done it, but he didn't have the clear-cut
evidence to back it up. And as more time went by, stories of the killer clown in the upscale
Florida neighborhood seemed more like a strange urban legend than an active,
actual homicide investigation.
And eventually the killer clown case went cold, and it would stay that way for decades.
But 23 years after Marlene's murder, so in 2013, the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Department
received a federal grant of $125,000.
The grant money was to be used to help solve cold cases, and one of the very
first cold cases the department reopened was Marlene's murder. The new investigators started
by reviewing all of the evidence and putting the case back together piece by piece. They located
and re-interviewed past suspects and witnesses, and they also tracked down Marlene's husband,
Michael, who was now living in Tennessee with his new wife, a blonde woman named Debbie.
But early on in the new investigation, police still could not find any evidence that pointed
them in the right direction.
But like Detective Harrison before them, the new investigative team could not shake the
connection between Michael's used car dealership and the white Chrysler LeBaron that the clown
had used as a getaway car.
And they were convinced if they kept looking into that connection, they would eventually
discover something that would pay off.
It took a few more years, but they were right, their method did finally pay off.
In December of 2016, so over 26 years after Marlene's murder, detectives from the Palm
Beach Sheriff's Department traveled
to Tennessee and they would follow local police to an establishment called the Purple Cow,
a fast food burger place that Michael and his new wife Debbie owned.
The investigators spoke to current employees about the couple and everybody talked about
what incredible bosses Michael and Debbie were and what a great place the Purple Cow
was to work.
So the detectives left the fast food restaurant and met up with former employees of the Purple
Cow thinking maybe they would be more candid about their experience with Michael and Debbie.
And inside of a small house in Tennessee, the Florida investigators met with a former
Purple Cow employee who said he had all the details from an insane conversation Michael's
new wife Debbie had had with a
friend of his.
The information this former employee provided about this drunken conversation led investigators
to dig through photos that had been taken at the Purple Cow.
And one of those photos leapt out at the investigators and they were sure they had finally found
proof of who killed Marlene.
Still investigators were not willing to put an entire case on the line with a single photograph,
especially for a case that dated back almost 27 years.
They wanted scientific evidence to back up their claims.
So they reached out to the FBI.
DNA testing and hair analysis had taken massive leaps forward since Detective Harrison's
initial investigation into this case back in 1990.
And so this time, when the FBI tested the two strands of brown hair that had been found
inside of the abandoned white Chrysler LeBaron, they were able to find a clear match.
And the person those tests pointed to was the same person investigators had seen in
the Purple Cow photo.
And that person was Marlene's killer.
Based on those DNA tests, the infamous Purple Cow photo and evidence collected across 27
years, here is a reconstruction of what investigators believe happened to Marlene Warren on the morning she was killed. May 26, 1990.
On that day, so May 26, the killer dipped a small triangle-shaped sponge into a container
of clown makeup. The killer then ran the sponge across their face over and over again, painting their face
white.
The process took a while, but they wanted to be sure that any of their recognizable
facial features disappeared under all their makeup.
When they were satisfied with the makeup, the killer took a clean sponge, dipped it
in red makeup, and gave themself big red dots on their cheeks and also a wide red smile.
The killer fitted a red curly wig on their head and tucked their brown hair underneath
it.
Then they added the final touch, a clown nose.
The killer then looked in the mirror.
They were sure nobody would know who they were.
Finally, they picked up two balloons and a basket of flowers off the floor, they grabbed their.38 caliber handgun off the makeup table, and they headed out the door.
At around 11am, the killer clown drove a white Chrysler LeBaron past the mansions in Marlene's
neighborhood.
The killer was nervous, but they told themselves they had the perfect disguise so there was
nothing to worry about.
The killer eventually pulled up in front of Marlene's house.
There was a car that was already on the long circular driveway, so the killer parked the
LeBaron on the street.
The killer glanced in the rearview mirror just to make sure their costume and wig were
all in place.
Then they stepped out of the car and they opened up the back driver's side door.
They reached inside and grabbed the balloons and flowers in one hand and they grabbed the
gun with the other.
The killer clown then walked up the driveway towards the front door, hiding the gun behind
the basket of flowers.
The clown stepped onto the porch and slipped their gun behind their back, then they took
a deep breath and rang the doorbell.
A moment later, the door opened and the killer clown saw Marlene standing there.
The killer gave a huge clown smile and handed Marlene
the flowers and balloons. Marlene beamed and said, oh how pretty, and then began looking through the
flowers for a card to see who sent it. And it was at this point that the killer clown quickly swung
their arm out from behind their back, they raised their gun up, aimed it at Marlene's head, and fired.
The bullet tore through Marlene's head and she crumpled to the floor.
Screams came from inside the house and the killer turned and ran back towards their Chrysler.
Once they were inside, they hit the gas and sped off.
But not long after that, they heard a car racing down the street behind them.
The killer glanced in the rearview mirror and saw somebody was in pursuit.
So the killer turned off Marlene's street and sped through the neighborhood and lost whoever was following them in the process.
Once they were sure they were not being tailed anymore, the killer made their way across
town and parked the LeBaron in a grocery store parking lot.
Then they got into another car that they had stashed there and they drove off.
Not long after that, the killer was back at home washing off all their makeup.
The killer knew Marlene's husband, Michael, would get the news about his wife soon and
he would be very upset.
But the killer just didn't worry too much about that.
Now that she had gotten Marlene out of the way, all she had to do was divorce her own
husband and soon she and Michael could be together forever without having to hide it.
Sheila Keene, Michael's young pretty employee who Marlene's mother-in-law had specifically
warned Marlene about, murdered Marlene.
It turned out that Sheila and Michael had been having an affair.
They had done their best to hide it from Marlene and Sheila's husband, but Sheila had grown
tired of not being able to live the life she wanted with the man she loved, so she disguised herself as a clown to hide her identity and killed her romantic rival.
Early on in Detective Harrison's investigation, so the initial investigation, he had believed he
was looking for a man because of descriptions he had gotten from witnesses, but the large clown
costume and thick white makeup had made it basically impossible
for anyone to actually get a good look at this shooter, so no one really knew if it
was a man or a woman.
It was just this running assumption that it had to be a man.
But eventually, Detective Harrison had stopped thinking about the various descriptions he
had gotten from witnesses because he basically thought they were not reliable, and instead
he had begun to consider Sheila as a major suspect, because he was almost certain she and Michael were
having an affair.
But there simply wasn't enough evidence at the time to credibly tie Sheila to the murder,
so the case had gone cold.
Decades later, when the Sheriff's Department reopened the case, they discovered that Michael
was remarried to this blonde woman named Debbie.
But when police tracked down the couple's marriage certificate, they learned that blonde-haired
Debbie was actually brown-haired Sheila.
Michael and Sheila had married just a few years after Michael had gotten out of prison,
and so this was obviously a huge red flag for investigators.
It took a while, but they eventually met with that former Purple Cow employee in Tennessee
and he would say that one night Sheila, who he knew as Debbie, had gotten totally drunk
and told his friend that she had once dressed up as a clown and killed a woman in Florida.
And not long after that, investigators found that infamous photo of Sheila working at the
Purple Cow drive-thru wearing clown makeup.
And so investigators were convinced Sheila had to be Marlene's killer and soon the FBI
confirmed that she was.
They ran new tests on the brown hair that had been found in the Chrysler LeBaron and
they were able to match that hair to Sheila's hair.
And so in September of 2017, over 27 years after Marlene's murder, investigators tracked
Sheila down and put her under arrest.
In April of 2023, Sheila pleaded guilty to second-degree murder.
She was sentenced to 12 years in prison, but she could get out as early as the summer of
2024.
Some of the investigators involved still suspect that Michael must have played a role in this murder, but there was no evidence found that linked him to the crime and so he was never
charged.
Michael also maintains that despite Sheila's plea deal, she is innocent and was wrongfully
accused. Thank you for listening to the Mr. Bollin Podcast.
If you enjoyed today's stories and you're looking for more bone-chilling content, be
sure to check out all of our studio's podcasts, Mr. Bollin's Medical Mysteries, Bedtime Stories,
and Runful.
All you have to do is search for Bollin Studios wherever you get your podcasts.
To watch hundreds more stories just like the ones you heard today, head over to our YouTube
channel which is just called Mr. Ballin.
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