Murder In America - EP. 237 - GEORGIA: FAMILY ANNIHILATOR: MARK ORRIN BARTON

Episode Date: March 13, 2026

In the 1990s, Mark Orrin Barton was aiming for the stars. He was a day trader, working in a prestigious office in Atlanta. He had a wife, kids, and a seemingly successful life. Then, in 1999, he shot ...it all to hell. Quite literally. You may have never heard of Mark or the Day Trading Massacre, but in part one of this two-part series, we’ll examine the man who took the lives of at least thirteen people in a violent, completely unexpected shooting… and who may have taken the lives of two more years before the 1999 massacre ever happened. This is a look at over a decade of unraveling, which ended in a violent workplace shooting that changed Atlanta forever. - Sources:https://docs.google.com/document/d/1eTYeCoYyxm58DXXdoFbHQyWHlWbcH9iKGIefFcQToW4/edit?tab=t.y2yayotxnlcb Listen to our new show, "THE CONSPIRACY FILES"!: -Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/5IY9nWD2MYDzlSYP48nRPl -Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-conspiracy-files/id1752719844 -Amazon/Audible - https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/ab1ade99-740c-46ae-8028-b2cf41eabf58/the-conspiracy-files -Pandora - https://www.pandora.com/podcast/the-conspiracy-files/PC:1001089101 -iHeart - https://iheart.com/podcast/186907423/ -PocketCast - https://pca.st/dpdyrcca -CastBox - https://castbox.fm/channel/id6193084?country=us - Stay Connected: Join the Murder in America fam in our free Facebook Community for a behind-the-scenes look, more insights and current events in the true crime world: https://www.facebook.com/groups/4365229996855701 If you want even more Murder in America bonus content, including ad-free episodes, come join us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/murderinamerica Instagram: http://instagram.com/murderinamerica/ Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/people/Murder-in-America-Podcast/100086268848682/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/MurderInAmerica TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theparanormalfiles and https://www.tiktok.com/@courtneybrowen Feeling spooky? Follow Colin as he travels state to state (and even country to country!) investigating claims of extreme paranormal activity and visiting famous haunted locations on The Paranormal Files Official Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheParanormalFilesOfficialChannel - (c) BLOOD IN THE SINK PRODUCTIONS 2026 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:02:00 265 day returns. Quins.com slash America. This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. Life is a journey. I know this. I think we all know this. Some days feel good and other days feel absolutely overwhelming.
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Starting point is 00:03:46 Stop taking bad travel advice. Start comparing hundreds of sites with kayak and get your trip right. Bad advice? You talking to me? Kayak, got that right. Today's episode is presented by A24's undertone in theaters on March 13th. This is the scariest movie you'll ever hear. It follows the host of a popular paranormal podcast who becomes haunted by terrifying recordings mysteriously sent her way.
Starting point is 00:04:16 The feature debut of writer-director Ian Twasson has left critics raving. Bloody Disgusting's Joe Lipset wrote in his four and a half skull review, I can't remember the last time a movie made every hair on my body stand up, but undertone got me good. Here for yourself and experience undertone in theaters Friday the 13th. Get tickets now. Warning, the following podcast is not suitable for all audiences. We go into great detail with every case that we cover and do our best to bring viewers even deeper into the stories by utilizing disturbing audio and sound effects. Trigger warnings from the stories we cover may include violence, rape, murder, and offenses against children. This podcast is not forever.
Starting point is 00:04:57 everyone. You have been warned. When you are looking for a partner, there are a lot of things to consider. Are you attracted to them? Are you compatible? Will they help you build the life you want for yourself? For Deborah Spivy, Mark Oran Barton seemed to check all her boxes. He was charming, brilliant, ambitious. He had big dreams for himself. So Deborah took his hand, agreeing to walk through life with Mark.
Starting point is 00:05:27 by her side. In the beginning, they looked to be the perfect couple. They had two beautiful children together, Matthew and Michelle. They were wealthy. Mark had an amazing job. But soon enough, his mask began to fall. By the time Deborah got to know the real Mark Barton, it was too late. And sadly, Deborah wouldn't be the only woman to fall for his lies. So this is the story of Mark Orrin Barton. I'm Courtney Browen And I'm Colin Browen And you're listening to Murder in America Women and Gladys Barton had wanted a child more than anything
Starting point is 00:07:08 When their son, Mark Orrin Barton came into the world On April 2nd, 1955, that dream finally came true Holding their son in their arms, They saw a little boy who would be able to go wherever he wanted to in life They would raise him right, give him love, opportunity, stability, and discipline And for Truman, discipline was the easiest. one to give. You see, Truman was a career military man working his way up the ranks with the United States Air Force. Anyone who knew the family knew that Truman was what you would call a strict
Starting point is 00:07:40 disciplinarian. He could be harsh, often cruel. Now, being a disciplinarian was necessary at work, but at home it didn't turn off. In fact, it seems that it intensified. With his son, Truman believed that the harsher the punishment was, the better. What those punishments were, exactly, we don't know. But years later, Mark would write about the fears of the father being transferred to the son. Whatever happened in the Barton House, it left psychological scars on him as he grew up, scars that, by all accounts, his mother continuously tried to heal. She was the gentler parent, the kinder one. She tried to soften the blows. But in a house where Truman's decisions were law, there was only so much she could do in the shadow of his rules, offering her son,
Starting point is 00:08:29 his favorite candy after getting a talking to, rubbing his back when he was sent to his room without dinner, offering him comfort when home felt like a prison. Things were even further complicated by the fact that their home was constantly changing. Mark was born on an Air Force base in Germany, but his father's career took them ping-ponging across the United States and world on different military assignments. Finally, when Mark was 11 years old, Truman retired from active duty and took a civilian job as a contractor at Shaw Air Force Base in Sumter, South Carolina. For the first time in Mark's life, there would be no more moving, no more packing up and saying goodbye. The Bartons were staying put, and they had picked a good place to do it. If you know anything
Starting point is 00:09:16 about Sumter, you know it's a military town. Shaw Air Force Base is one of the largest military installations in the country, and it's the heart of the town. For a military kid like Mark, who had spent his whole childhood bouncing from base to base, the people of Sumter were his people. He found himself surrounded by other kids with backgrounds just like his own. It was a perfect place to put down roots, to make friends, to have a normal childhood. But there was one problem. Mark didn't feel normal.
Starting point is 00:09:49 By all accounts, he was a smart kid, brilliant even. He excelled academically, especially in math and chemistry. Teachers loved him. He was focused, driven, always had the right answer. He could solve problems that stumped his classmates. But socially, Mark was having some serious difficulties. He was described as emotionally distant, withdrawn, cold. At lunch, he often sat by himself. At recess, he stood on the edge of the playground, watching other children play, but never joining in. He didn't know how to connect with people. He didn't understand the unspoken rules of friendship. And so, while his classmates made friends, Mark didn't. His peers could tell something was different about him. And kids, as we know,
Starting point is 00:10:39 can be cruel. Mark was ostracized. Left out of birthday parties, no one picked him for teens. He became the target of the kind of casual cruelty that children inflict on anyone who doesn't fit the mold. When you're a kid and you're rejected by your peers, it plants seeds of resentment. And it starts to make you think that the world is against you. Mark's feelings of isolation and anger grew so overwhelming that heading into high school, he began to see a psychologist, Dr. Harry Taylor. Dr. Taylor heard what others had said about Mark. He was a quiet, withdrawn, socially anxious boy.
Starting point is 00:11:18 As the doctor sat in his office preparing for his final session with Mark, he expected to be met with a timid boy that had to be coaxed out of his shell, someone who wanted to be liked, who people pleased, who was shy to the point of silence. But that's not who walked into Dr. Taylor's office that day. The boy that sat in front of him, arms crossed, jaw tense on a leather sofa, wasn't scared or sad. He was angry. He shook his head and clenched his fists, as he said,
Starting point is 00:11:45 I just don't understand what the problem is with the kids at school. Why the hell can't I just fit in with them? Dr. Taylor had faced this problem a million times. It's something that many teens all over the world face. So he offered a solution. Mark, why don't you try out for a team or join a club? It could be a great opportunity for you to be a part of something to connect with people. Mark scoffed,
Starting point is 00:12:08 I'm an outcast. Why should I try to participate? Dr. Taylor gave him a simple answer. He wouldn't be an outcast if he found people with similar interests, if he made an effort to be friends with people, or be a part of something bigger than himself. In response, Mark sighed and flicked his wrist, like he was brushing away the conversation ready to move on to the next topic.
Starting point is 00:12:29 This was a common theme for Mark throughout his life, his belief that he shouldn't have to mold to the world. The world was supposed to mold around him. With every session, Dr. Taylor could see the anger in Mark growing from a simmer to a boil. At first, it was complaints about not being able to fit in. Then it was digs at the people who wouldn't accept him. And finally, it was just pure rage at society as a whole and the perceived social rules of the world. Rather than use that anger to fuel any change, Mark decided to use it to rebel.
Starting point is 00:13:00 He began confessing to Dr. Taylor that he had dark urges. In one session, looking up at the doctor with a blank expression, he confessed. Whenever I go anywhere, I size up how to break in, where the money is, and how I can steal it and get away. Dr. Taylor dug in trying to understand where this obsession was coming from. Was it a cry for help, a desire to be seen, to be understood? Or was it the opposite? Was it a need to slink into the shadows and become them, to prove to everyone that he really was what they thought he was?
Starting point is 00:13:32 There was a sense of pride in Mark as he explained that he was smart enough to get away with whatever he wanted. In his notes, Dr. Taylor wrote down that Mark fancied himself a master criminal, and in time, daydreaming and gloating about those plans didn't satisfy him any longer. He needed to act on them. It was 1969. Mark was 14 years old, a freshman in high school, and he was somewhere where he wasn't supposed to be. His watch ticked into the late night hours as he prowled outside in the dark. His eyes were locked on a local drugstore.
Starting point is 00:14:07 He scanned the sidewalk in the local homes, but it was all calm. The streets were quiet. The nearby houses were dark. There was no one watching him, no one to see what he was about to do. Now whether he broke a window in the business or had stolen a key, we don't know. But somehow, Mark broke inside. The aisles were lined with items free for the taking. In the back of the store, the pharmacy was chocked full of every drug you could possibly imagine. You have to remember this was the late 60s. Things like quailudes, anphetamines, and valium were prescribed to anyone without hesitation.
Starting point is 00:14:45 We don't know exactly what Mark stole, but given what happened in the next few years of his life, it's not far-fetched to imagine that the shelves in the back of the store were the ones that peaked his interest. Though, his theft didn't go exactly as planned. Before he knew it, the red and blue lights of cop cars
Starting point is 00:15:04 flooded the dark store. Mark's heart raised. It was the first time he was surrounded by a police, but it would be far from the last. Now, we have no idea what came of this incident. There doesn't seem to be anything about it on Mark's record, so it's assumed that the cops gave him a slap on the wrist and sent him back home. However, what we do know is that the punishment he received from his father was severe. Yet, it wasn't enough to stop him from pushing further and further into a life of crime and danger. In 1972, Mark was 16 years old, and he had developed a new obsession. Gone were the days spent dreaming of ways to break into buildings. Now, Mark was using his analytic, scientific mind, for something else, synthesizing drugs. In a book, he discovered that the
Starting point is 00:15:55 Seeds of Morning Glories, a flower found from Maine to California, could have a hallucinogenic effect with some processing. The effect was meant to be similar to other drugs that were becoming wildly popular in the counterculture movement at the time, LSD and mushrooms. And, like the rebel Mark wanted so desperately to be, he decided to try going down the rabbit hole himself. Mark ground hundreds of morning glory seeds in a small bowl. Then, using chemicals he researched, he strengthened the psychedelic compact.
Starting point is 00:16:25 pounds in the seeds. When he took his first dose, he expected a sense of freedom and escaped from reality, a profound experience or epiphany. Instead, he got the most frightening experience of his life. The floor was drenched in a thick, slithering fog. Mark's heart pounded so loud that it felt like he was going to burst out of his chest and paint the room red. His mind raced in circles that didn't make any sense. Where was he? What was he doing here? And what the hell was the creature that was staring at him. Just feet away, a figure was emerging from the river of fog in front of him. Hollow eyes bore into him. Something primeval in the depths of his mind responded, telling him what it was. It was a demon. More and more emerged from the floor until the room was covered in them.
Starting point is 00:17:12 Shadowy sunken eyes full of malice glared at him and voices hissed. You're one of us, one of us. It was a horrible hallucination, but to Mark, it was real. There were demons. coming up from the floor, threatening him, taunting him. Now who he went to for help, or if he even did, we don't know. Was he ranting and screaming so much that his parents called the police? Did they pick him up and take him? Or did he run out of the house, terrified for his life, until some stranger called an ambulance to come get him? Regardless of how, just a few hours after Mark took the drugs, he was lying in a hospital bed, his mind fried, and his body exhausted. Dr. Taylor described it as an overdose. He suspected that the chemicals Mark mixed in,
Starting point is 00:18:01 with the toxin, exacerbated the effects. Essentially, he had poisoned himself, and the effects seemed to follow him for years to come. Dr. Taylor wrote, quote, it did something bad to him, end quote. He also noted that after this experience, Mark would never be the same again. From that point on, he turned into a frightened, paranoid, and obsessive young man. He was plagued by visions of demons emerging from the floor, and he believed that the only way to rid himself of them was to worship God. He became devoutly religious to a disturbing degree. He carried a Bible with him everywhere he went. He would interrupt people in the middle of conversations to preach to them, and he would rant on and on, telling people frantically that he was, quote, working on finding all of
Starting point is 00:18:50 the answers, end quote. By the time he graduated high school in 1973, Mark had fully cemented himself as a different kind of outcast, not the one that people made fun of, the one that people avoided. Dr. Taylor relayed in the book Murder at the Office, quote, he didn't make any sense. The drugs blew him away, end quote. Throughout all of this, Mark's parents were devastated to see their son's descent into drugs. He was their only son. He got straight. days, he was a semi-finalist for the National Merit Scholarship, and he had gotten accepted into Clemson University. They didn't want to see him throw all of it away. They hoped that moving to Clemson, three hours inland, would force Mark to make better decisions. Maybe the change of
Starting point is 00:19:35 scenery would help him make new friends, find new interests. His parents felt there was nothing they could do but trust he would turn his life around. But as the saying goes, wherever you go, there you are. Mark's first semester at Clemson was soured by his mental decline. At the semester's end, he was hospitalized in the midst of a psychotic episode. He heard voices, saw things that weren't there, and was unable to separate reality from his hallucinations. Thankfully, after being hospitalized, he finally got on medication and intense therapy to combat the psychotic symptoms he was experiencing.
Starting point is 00:20:11 And it seemed to keep delusions and paranoia at bay. But there was still a problem at the base of it all. His fascination with recreational drugs. a fascination that only exacerbated his mental health struggles. After his stint in treatment, Mark decided to try college once again, this time a little closer to home at the University of South Carolina. There, he pursued a bachelor's degree in chemistry. In his apartment near campus, he took practicing chemistry seriously,
Starting point is 00:20:44 though it wasn't for class. Soon enough, Mark's fascination with synthesizing drugs progressed from psychedelics to more dangerous substances, in this case methamphetamine. Now, initially, he wasn't manufacturing it for his own use. He was making meth to pursue a goal that would follow him all of his life. Wealth. The higher the risk, the higher the reward. And Mark was all about chasing that reward. He began to make a name for himself around campus and on the streets for selling meth. He was also earning himself a good chunk of change doing it.
Starting point is 00:21:25 Eventually, though, just selling the meth wasn't enough. Mark began to dip into his own supply. Maybe he was trying to silence the demons that he had started seeing years prior. Or maybe it began out of curiosity. Whatever it was, when he picked up that pipe for the first time and took that first inhale, He was swept away by the euphoria.
Starting point is 00:21:49 That instant, the rush of pleasure and elation he felt kick-started an addiction that he was helpless against. He began using more than he was selling, holing up in his apartment for days on end, skipping class and disappearing from the world entirely. By the end of 1975, Mark's money from selling meth had dried up. Anything he made, he was keeping for himself. And soon, he closed.
Starting point is 00:22:14 He couldn't even afford to buy the chemicals he needed to create the meth. So that's when, once again, Mark found himself staring in a darkened drugstore after hours. The details of this break-in are as foggy as the first break-in back when he was in high school. But this time, the consequences were much more severe. As Mark tried to pile drugs into his backpack, the red and blues of police cars flooded the pitch-black store. Unbeknownst to him, he had triggered a silent alarm. Within minutes, police descended on him, throwing him to the cold tile and handcuffing him behind his back. Once again, Mark found himself sitting in the back of a cop car.
Starting point is 00:22:54 As a result of this robbery, Mark was placed on probation. If he made any more missteps, he would be put behind bars. And to many people's surprise, Mark actually got his life together. In 1979, he even graduated from college with a Bachelor of Science degree in Chemistry. And somewhere along the way, Mark met someone. While working part-time as a night auditor at a local hotel, he crossed paths with a young woman named DeVris Spivvy. She was a fellow student, and she saw something in Mark Barton.
Starting point is 00:23:26 Now, with what you've heard about Mark so far, it might be hard to imagine what there was to see in him. But that might be the most unsettling thing about him. Mark was charming, likable. People close to him claim that there were two versions of him. an incredibly calm, kind man, who was quick to joke and make everyone around him feel special. And then there was the other mark. A cruel, callous, selfish person, unafraid of hurting anyone, as long as it meant he got what he wanted.
Starting point is 00:23:58 At first, he only showed Deborah the warm side of him. He showered her in compliments, made her laugh. He showed her how much potential he had. He was brilliant and hardworking. He could give Deborah. a good life. So, after over a year of dating, Deborah's Bivie became Deborah Barton.
Starting point is 00:24:19 On the outside, it seemed like the drugs, crime, and mental health struggles were a thing of the past. Mark was a good man, and together, he and Deborah were on a path towards the American dream. After their wedding, the pair moved to Atlanta, Georgia, where they tried making a living in a big city as fresh graduates. For a while, they both jumped from job, to job, hoping to make their big break in their career field. And in the mid-80s, that break
Starting point is 00:24:48 finally came. Mark landed a job at a chemical manufacturing company called TLC Manufacturing. Starry-eyed and excited the couple moved to Texarkanda, Texas to pursue the opportunity. Finally, Mark was going to be putting his brilliant mind to good use. And by all accounts, it seems that's exactly what he did. He began working there as a chemist, but within five years, he'd climbed the ladder up to a general manager. His salary was about $86,000 a year, and remember, this was the 1980s. $86,000 is a great salary now, but back then it was serious money. With it, the couple bought a nice house, and Mark was at the top of his career ladder. To anyone watching, Mark Barton had completely turned his life around, and then came the kids.
Starting point is 00:25:36 In 1988, Deborah gave birth to their first child, a son who they named Matthew. A few years later, they welcomed a daughter, Michelle, two beautiful children, a successful career, a loving wife. If the Bartons lived in your neighborhood, you might be a little jealous looking at them from the outside. But beneath the surface, Mark's mask was starting to slip. The control he had maintained over his darker impulses was beginning to crack. and Deborah was the one who saw at first. Slowly, Mark became paranoid, not just a little suspicious, obsessively paranoid. He started accusing Deborah of cheating on him, a flirting with other men. He questioned her constantly, where have you been, who have you been talking to? What have you done?
Starting point is 00:26:28 He monitored Deborah's every move, like she was a suspect in a crime. She wasn't allowed to leave the house or even used the phone without his permission. When they did go into public, Mark tried his best to make her feel small. He didn't call her darling or babe or even by her name. Instead, he constantly referred to her by the nickname he had given her, stupid. Every time Mark and Deborah went on a trip or visited friends, he would call her that, right in front of everyone. He would say things like,
Starting point is 00:27:01 Stupid and I will be over at five. he'd say casually, come on stupid, we're leaving now. Stupid, what are we having for dinner? It was relentless. It made the people around them uncomfortable. Deborah was a very capable woman, an intelligent one. But bit by bit, Mark was tearing her down. To make matters worse, she was hundreds of miles away from her friends and family,
Starting point is 00:27:26 and she was pregnant again. But sadly, at some point after having Matthew and Michelle, Deborah suffered from a miscarriage, losing a child that she wanted so desperately brought her unimaginable pain. But instead of comforting his wife through her grief, Mark made it worse. He belittled Deborah. He even blamed the miscarriage on her. But why? Why was Mark so cruel to the woman who loved him so much? Well, later on, Mark would admit that Deborah was smarter than he was, and he hated that. He said he felt. felt like he had to be perfect around her, that if he was anything less, he felt emasculated.
Starting point is 00:28:09 That insecurity he felt wasn't just in his marriage. Mark Barton was insecure about every aspect of his life, especially work. His long-term secretary remarked, he thought people were out to get him. When you got on his bad side, you stayed there. And it's here where Mark began to unravel at work. He was convinced that his colleagues were plotting against him,
Starting point is 00:28:29 and to prove it, he recorded all of his phone calls with them. We're talking thousands upon thousands of recordings over his time working at TLC manufacturing. For the most part, no one knew about his obsessive recordings aside from his secretary, but soon it was impossible to hide his escalating behavior. When Mark had been climbing the ranks of the career ladder at TLC, he was known for being a calm presence and a good problem solver. But in 1989, in the role of manager, he became anything but.
Starting point is 00:29:00 Any problem that he struggled to solve would throw him into a problem. a rage. Those forced to work beneath them were subjected to his anger. In murder at the office, by Brent C. Dunin, he writes, most of his coworkers thought of him as not necessarily mean or rude, but as having an attitude similar to a spoiled child. According to these co-workers, there were several occasions where, in the midst of a dispute, Mark would pick up the item closest to him and throw it across the room. His colleagues would scatter into different offices, knowing that there was nothing to do at that moment but to avoid Mark. There would be no convincing or talking him down from whatever he was upset about.
Starting point is 00:29:37 The only thing they could do was get away from him, let him cool down. So, over time, Mark went from being a beloved, dedicated member of the team to a leader who unsettled the people around him. But like any job, there were some co-workers who Mark butted heads with more than others. One, who we will refer to as Tom, filled Mark with paranoia. For some reason, Mark was thoroughly convinced that Tom was planning his demise. He would always rant to his secretary that Tom was, quote, out to get him. On the stressful days at the office, he'd pace in front of her desk, hissing.
Starting point is 00:30:13 He's trying to get me fired. He's trying to ruin my life. Everyone sees it. The panic in him was palpable, but it was completely misplaced. His secretary had no idea what Mark was talking about. Sure, Tom butted heads with him on occasion, but that's normal in any workplace. In reality, Tom hardly even thought about Mark, but Mark was certain that Tom was coming for his job. So, wanting to come out on top, he decided to sabotage Tom first.
Starting point is 00:30:45 Tom had no idea what was happening. He paced on the loading dock of TLC manufacturing, heart racing as he waited and waited and waited. TLC depended on chemical deliveries every few days. Those chemicals allowed them to create the compounds that they sent off to their own clients, clients who depended on them. The entire work pipeline hinged on the deliveries being on time. But this delivery truck was late, and Tom was panicking.
Starting point is 00:31:16 He was the guy in charge of scheduling the orders. He never missed any. It was his top priority to not only get things on time, but well ahead of time. But that day, the truck never came. It didn't come the next day either, or the next. Tom's superiors were upset, but he was certain that he had submitted the paper on time, with the correct delivery date listed.
Starting point is 00:31:40 Yet, when he contacted the company, the date was different. He figured it was a one-time fluke, but then it happened again and again and again. Week after week, the deliveries were late, and all lies were on Tom. But surprise, surprise, he wasn't to blame. In reality, Mark had been taking the order forms that Tom carefully put together, and behind everyone's back,
Starting point is 00:32:07 he changed the dates, making every single delivery late. Soon enough, the people at TLC began to realize what Mark was doing, and when they found out, they were done with him. On September 13, 1990, Mark was officially fired from his position. The paperwork stated he was fired due to a, quote,
Starting point is 00:32:28 deficit in his management capabilities, end quote. Upon learning of his termination, Mark burst out of the room and furiated. He was convinced that he didn't do anything to deserve the firing. In his mind, as he suspected all along, the people there were out to get him. And in his rage, he decided to get back at them. Mark's breathing pulsed in the cool night air.
Starting point is 00:32:54 All was silent, aside from the crickets in the woods around him. He shouldn't have been where he was, but he didn't care. To him, what he was about to do was justified. So, he took the first step and broke into the loading dock of his former workplace, TLC manufacturing. From there, he slipped into the break room, moved to fridge, and then shimmied through a window to access the executive suites. He sat down at the computers owned by the same people who had fired him. He worked his way through the files, downloading every confidential piece of information he could get his hands on, formulas, client lists, and financial documents. Then, with them safely downloaded on a floppy disk, he wiped the hard drives off the computer.
Starting point is 00:33:37 Everything the company needed to run was gone in the blink of an eye. But Mark wasn't done yet. He rustled through the filing cabinets, taking every hard copy of the documents. He had just deleted off of the computer. Then, armed with what he needed to destroy the people he felt had betrayed him, Mark slipped out the same way he had come. Cravings aren't just about nicotine. They're about the habit, the hand-to-mouth motion, oral fixation, the momentary pause. And when that loop is broken, cravings spike.
Starting point is 00:34:07 I quit vaping about seven months ago in May of 2025. And let me tell you, having a fume device with me when I quit vaping was, in my opinion, one of the key things. that helped me break the habit, break the loop, and start a whole new journey into a healthier life. Fume is a flavored air device designed to help people quit vaping and smoking by breaking that hand-to-mouth pattern. I know how hard that is to break. It's simple, natural, and honestly kind of genius. No nicotine, no batteries, no vapor, just a weighted, twisty, fidget-friendly tool that gives your hands something better to reach for when cravings show up. Like I said before, I know the feeling. I know how hard it is to quit. Not only have I quit vaping, but I've also
Starting point is 00:34:49 quit using pouches. So quitting nicotine was a major struggle for me. A lot of listeners online know that I've been sober for about two and a half years now. I went to rehab. I got completely clean, got my act together. But even coming out of rehab, nicotine was something that I was still using. And when I decided to quit, having a fume device with me was an absolute game changer. So this recommendation comes from an honest, earnest place where I truly believe if you want to quit, well, you have to want to quit yourself. But if you're at that point, having a device like this with you, especially a fume device, can be extremely beneficial. When you grab a journey pack, you'll also get a free gift just for using R-Code America. So Fume has already helped over 700,000 people take steps toward better habits, and now it's your turn. Use R-Code America to get a free gift with your journey pack.
Starting point is 00:35:41 Head to tryfume.com, that's t-R-Y-F-U-M-com, and use code America to claim your free gift today. And now let's get back to the show. Growing up, my mom was always the best at handling sticky, stressful situations. I mean, we have so many crazy family memories, so many things that stick out to me, so many trips that we took and just funny moments. I mean, I remember specifically one just crazy time when we had jet skis and we took them out. We had rented them for the day and we took them out on this lake. And somehow something got on the engine of the jet ski, mine stalled, my dad stalled, and my mom and sister had to come rescue us because we floated to shore on the other side of the lake. We've got some hilarious pictures from that day. But it's just one of
Starting point is 00:36:34 those memories that I don't want to let die. And aura frames can help keep those moments alive. So basically an aura frame is like a virtual frame that can display photos and videos from anywhere. You can upload to the frame. You can share in new photos. You can constantly change the library. and it's really a perfect gift for a family member because you can personalize it at any time. And the aura frame is the perfect Mother's Day gift to capture the chaos that you might have put your own mom through and the memories that came with it. With free unlimited storage, you can add as many photos and videos to your aura frame as you want. And something that I love is that you can actually preload the aura frame with photos before it ships.
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Starting point is 00:37:52 Support the show by mentioning us at checkout. Terms and Conditions Apply. When employees arrived at TLC the following morning, they were stunned. But immediately, they knew who was behind the burglary and theft. They contacted local detectives and told them all about Mark's erratic behavior over the past few years, including a chilling statement he made when he was forced to turn in his keys the day he was fired. According to his ex-supervisor, as he placed the keys in his hands, Mark scoffed, there are ways to get inside the building without using keys.
Starting point is 00:38:31 Everyone, including police, believed that he had proved that statement right. But when they confronted Mark about the burglary, he claimed he had no idea what they were talking about. Exasperated, he snapped. I don't know what you're talking about. Anyone could have broken in through the loading dock. But there was a problem with that statement. Police hadn't mentioned that the suspect had snuck in through the loading dock, which meant either Mark was the one who had done it or he was the one who had sent someone to do it.
Starting point is 00:39:01 The detective shared a knowing glance and dug deeper. As the questioning grew more and more intense, Mark's wife Deborah came home from work. She stood in the doorway, stunned to see two detectives sitting in her living room. Eyes narrowed at her husband. Deborah asked them, what's going on? Angry, Mark told her, I think I stole the formulas from work. Right there was yet another slip-up.
Starting point is 00:39:27 Police hadn't mentioned what documents were stolen. And right then, they had no doubt that Mark was behind this. Now, rather than tip him off any further, detectives walked out of the Barton family home, determined to get a warrant for his arrest. Just a few days later, they returned with one in hand. That day, Mark Barton was arrested on charges of felony burglary, But within hours, he was released from jail.
Starting point is 00:39:53 Evidently, he and his ex-company TLC had made a deal. They would drop the charges against him, only if he returned all the files he had stolen. Mark agreed. And from there, he was released back to his life without serious legal repercussions. But his reputation was destroyed. No one was going to hire a guy who got fired
Starting point is 00:40:15 and then burglarized his former employer. So the Barton's packed up and moved again. Back to Atlanta. While there, Mark found a new job as a salesman at a chemical company called Lintech. It wasn't $86,000 a year, but it was something, a paycheck, a chance to start over. But it was at Lintech where Mark Barton met someone who would change everything, the receptionist at his new office, a 21-year-old woman named Leanne Ling. She was beautiful, hardworking, and humble. In her kindness and patience, Leanne made Mark feel powerful. Now, Leanne was married, but her relationship with her husband had been crumbling for quite some time. So, just three days after meeting, Mark and Leanne kick-started a world-win affair. Mark was 38, married, with two young kids at home. He should have known better, but he didn't think of his wife or kids.
Starting point is 00:41:18 Instead, he thought only of how Leanne made him feel, powerful, desired, important. Mark wanted to hold on to that feeling for as long as he possibly could, regardless of what it could cost him. And he wasn't subtle about pursuing Leanne and trying to impress her. As their relationship grew, he started going to a tanning salon. He bought new clothes, started dressing nicer, acting younger. He was listening to music he had never been interested in before. He was a 38-year-old man desperate to impress a 21-year-old woman, and everyone noticed, especially his wife Deborah. One day, Deborah was doing Mark's laundry when she discovered a strand of blonde hair. There was a problem with that. Deborah's hair was brunette. So, whose hair was it? What woman was getting
Starting point is 00:42:11 so close to her husband that her hair would end up on his shirt? When Mark came home that day, she asked him that very question, whose hair is this? But once again, Mark blew it off. It's the dog's hair, he said. You're being paranoid, stupid, he told her. Mark later told anyone who would listen that Deborah was the jealous type. He claimed she was insecure, which is a bit ironic,
Starting point is 00:42:37 considering that it was Mark who didn't allow Deborah to have friends, to go places, or even to make phone calls without his permission. yet here he was, painting her as the paranoid crazy spouse when she actually had every reason to be suspicious of him. In reality, Deborah knew that something was wrong. She knew her husband was lying. She just couldn't prove it. Meanwhile, Mark was making plans.
Starting point is 00:43:05 In June of 1993, he and Leanne took a trip to Charlotte, North Carolina, a romantic getaway, one where Deborah was left at home, caring for their two babies, wondering where her husband really was. He had told her he was on a business trip. Really, he was meeting some of Leanne's childhood friends for the first time. At dinner one night, they all toasted and indulged in a nice long meal together. After a couple drinks, Mark confessed to them.
Starting point is 00:43:31 I've never loved anyone more than Leanne, and by October, I'll be free to marry her. At the table, everyone awed and marveled at the couple's love. What they didn't know was that Mark was still married. Debra was alive and well, and he was sitting at a dinner table telling people he would be free to marry his mistress by October. That was just four months away. Around the same time, Mark did something even more troubling. He took out a life insurance policy on Debra, a big one, $600,000. He had originally wanted a million dollars, but he couldn't afford the premiums.
Starting point is 00:44:09 So, he settled for $600,000. The insurance agents were curious why Deborah wanted such a big policy. Mark replied, quote, It's her idea. I used to be the president of a company and my wife began to enjoy it. She felt as time went on. She became as important as I was. She developed an extreme sense of self-worth, end quote.
Starting point is 00:44:32 And it gets worse. Around the same time that Mark was taking out life insurance on Deborah, Leanne took out a $250,000 policy. on her own husband. Two policies on two spouses, taken out within weeks of each other by two people who were having an affair and talking about getting married.
Starting point is 00:44:54 Clearly, that's not a coincidence. But at the end of August 1993, Leanne left her husband. After that, she moved in with her sister, waiting to start her new life with Mark. Now, all that stood in the way was Deborah. Meanwhile, Deborah was completely unaware of what was ahead. Sure, she knew that her husband had been acting strange.
Starting point is 00:45:18 She suspected that something was going on, but Mark had convinced her that she was just paranoid, that everything was fine. Plus, Deborah and Mark had children together. They were a family with a picture-perfect life. By then, she had dedicated 14 years to this man, and she wanted her marriage to work. So she continued forward. On Labor Day weekend of 1993, Deborah was incredibly excited to spend some time with her mother.
Starting point is 00:45:44 Deborah's parents, Bill and Eloise Spivvy, had recently purchased a lot at Riverside Campground on Weiss Lake in Cherokee County, Alabama, a peaceful spot along the lake where they could go fishing, relax, get away from everything. Deborah's mother, Eloise, loved to fish. It was her passion, and she wanted to share that with her daughter. So on Saturday, September 4th, Deborah and Eloise drove out to the campground together. Just a mother-daughter trip, nothing fancy. They'd stay in the camper that sat on the family's lot, spent some time together, and make a few memories. Meanwhile, Mark stayed home in Georgia with the kids. At the time, Matthew was five and a half, and Michelle was just two.
Starting point is 00:46:26 They weren't used to their mom being away. Mark knew that. But based on what happened next, it seems his kids' feelings didn't matter to him. The campground was packed that weekend. It was Labor Day after all. Families everywhere. There was even a country music concert at the campground that Saturday night. People were drinking, laughing, and having a good time.
Starting point is 00:46:48 The music was loud, loud enough that you probably couldn't hear much of anything else over it. Deborah and Eloise were seen around the campground that day. They were friendly, chatting with neighbors, enjoying themselves. nothing seemed out of place. The concert went late that night. Neighbors returned to their campers around 11.30 p.m. Some of them continued to sit outside at picnic tables. But no one had any idea that by morning,
Starting point is 00:47:18 this fun campsite would be swarming with police. The next morning, Sunday, September 5th, 1993, many of the campers at Riverside went to a church service at a pavilion across the road. Around noon, after the last hymn was sung, two campers emerged from the church and noticed something strange. Eloise's Red Thunderbird was still parked outside her camper. This was odd. The night before, Eloise told them that she planned on leaving early the next morning to take her grandkids to six flags.
Starting point is 00:47:52 So, she should have been gone by then. Concerned, the two women walked over to check on her. They knocked on the camper door. No answer. They tried again, still nothing, so they opened it. At first, it was the smell. Thick, metallic. For a moment, they worried that maybe there was a carbon monoxide leak.
Starting point is 00:48:16 Eloise had mentioned something about how her stove had been giving her trouble. They called out her name and stepped inside the doorway. But that's when they saw something that'd be etched into their memory for the rest of their lives. It wasn't Eloise. It was her daughter Deborah. She was lying just inside the entryway. For a moment, the woman stood there frozen. Then one of them let out a scream.
Starting point is 00:48:41 Hearts pounding, they ran to get help. And within an hour, the campground was swarming with sheriff's deputies. Some began to work the scene. Others were tasked with something even harder. When Bill Spivvy answered the phone at his home in Lithia Springs, he expected it to be his wife, telling him why she was running late. Instead, there was a gruff, emotionless voice on the other end. Bill Spivvy, we need you to come down to Riverside Campground immediately.
Starting point is 00:49:11 A million thoughts flooded Bill's mind. He begged the police to tell him what had happened, but they refused, telling him they just needed him there as soon as possible. He contacted his son, John, and his son-in-law, Mark, and together they made the long, tense drive to the campground. When they pulled up to the RV, Detective Danny Smith was waiting outside for them. Getting out of the car, Bill had to hold on to Mark and John to steady himself. His knees were weak. Every step was wobbly. All the color had been drained from his face.
Starting point is 00:49:41 Yet, a gentleman, he shook the detective's hand and thanked him for calling. As Mark took Detective Smith's hand, he remarked, seemingly out of nowhere, I've never been here before. And with those five words, Detective Smith had a person of interest. Mark didn't ask about his mother-in-law and wife. He didn't even seem concerned. In fact, there was a pep in his step. Meanwhile, Bill Spivvy stood beside him, growing more pale by the second.
Starting point is 00:50:09 He knew he was facing the most horrific moment of his life. He had to walk into it, had to look up at the detective and ask, what happened? Detective Danny Smith later recalled that Bill was so unsteady. He was sure he was going to fall. So he put his hand out. bracing the man's shoulder. His eyes were heavy. He was taking big, gasping breaths to try and calm his racing heart. Detective Smith squeezed Bill's shoulder and told him, your wife and daughter are dead. Then came the crying. The pain in its most human display. Well, at least from Bill and his son John.
Starting point is 00:50:49 Mark, however, showed very little emotion, which immediately raised red flags for detectives. And that That small interaction they had, they knew that they needed to look into Deborah's husband, Mark Barton, because what they found inside the camper pointed not towards an attack by a stranger, but to someone close to the women, someone who had finally snapped. Inside the camper, detectives found Eloise in the back on the bed. She had been hit around ten times with a heavy clawfoot hammer. Wounds covered her face, torso, and arms. Her blood painted the floors, walls, and the bed.
Starting point is 00:51:28 It wasn't a quick or clean attack. It was an attack fueled by pure uncontrolled rage. But the worst of it, the most savage brutality, had been directed at Deborah. She had endured around 20 strikes to the face with the same hammer. Her skull was completely split in two, exposing her brain. Her long brown hair was matted with blood, sticking to the wounds that marred her face.
Starting point is 00:51:55 In the book Murder at the office, the author recalled that both women appeared like, quote, miss-shaped lumps of raw hamburger, end quote. Detective Smith later stated, quote, to stand there and beat someone to death with a hammer, bam, bam, bam, 15 or 20 times, you have to be pissed off, end quote. But Deborah and Eloise were lovely women,
Starting point is 00:52:18 kind, smart, members of their community. Neither of them had a mean bone in their body. They had never done anything criminal or shady throughout their entire lives. So why would someone kill them in such a violent way? Are you ready to have your mind blown? I want you now to imagine that in front of you was a locked door, symbolizing all that you know, everything you've been taught in your time on earth,
Starting point is 00:52:43 the lies your government has fed you. With my podcast, the conspiracy files, I now give you the door's key. And once you've listened to the show, you finally unlock this door and step inside. Beyond the door is another dimension, a dimension of false narratives, a dimension of hidden evidence,
Starting point is 00:53:00 a dimension of truth, lies, and murders. You're moving into a land of both shadow and substance of deadly secrets and explosive ideas. You've just crossed over into the conspiracy zone. I'm your host Colin Brown. Join me now on this journey into the world of secret pedophile rings, government cover-ups, and suspicious suicides.
Starting point is 00:53:19 On my new show, The Conspiracy Files, available now on all streaming platforms. Deborah Spivvy Barton was 36 years old. And the truth is, sadly, we don't know much about who she was. All of the news coverage focused on Mark. And Deborah, she became a footnote in her own murder. But she deserves to be remembered. So here's what we do know.
Starting point is 00:53:45 She grew up in Lithia Springs, Georgia, alongside her brother John. Her mother was her best friend. They did everything together. exploring the outdoors, fishing, shopping, and above all laughing. She met Mark in college, married him in 1979, and had two children with him. And for the sake of those kids, she stayed with him, even when things got bad. Through it all, her mom was her confidant. Deborah's mother, and Louise Powell Spivey, was 59 years old.
Starting point is 00:54:14 She had been married to her husband, Bill, since they were young. She and Bill had two children together, John and Deborah. He would later say, My wife was my best friend. I'd known her since she was a little girl. Bill was a retired FAA supervisor. He had been an Air Force fighter pilot during the Korean War, then spent decades as an air traffic controller.
Starting point is 00:54:35 When he retired in 1985, he and Eloise had finally reached the stage of life where they could do whatever they wanted. And what Eloise wanted to do was fish. The girl loved to fish more than anyone I ever met, Bill chuckled to reporters. So they bought a lot at Riverside Campground on Weiss Lake, a little slice of paradise where they could spend their weekends casting lines and sitting by the water. That's all Eloise wanted.
Starting point is 00:55:01 Peace with the people that she loved. They pictured spending the sunset years of their life sitting on the dock, listening to the call of birds and the lapping shoreline. But now, all their dreams for their life came to an end. Police needed to figure out why. Surprisingly, no one around the campsite heard a thing the night before. The camper next door was so close, you could practically reach out and touch it. But whatever happened inside was somehow silent. No screams, no bangs, nothing.
Starting point is 00:55:33 But throughout the investigation, there was something that stood out to detectives. As we mentioned, Deborah's murder showed clear signs of an overkill. Whoever took her life seemed angry, passionate. But the killer tried to make it look like a robbery. Eloise's purse had been dumped out. Two rings were taken from the bodies, but everything else was left behind. Other jewelry untouched. Credit cards still there. There was even an envelope on the counter, which had $600 in cash inside. The bills were poking out, practically begging someone to come and take it. Eloise's 32-caliber revolver was also laying right there in the kitchen, completely untouched. What kind of robber
Starting point is 00:56:19 leaves behind $600 in cash and a loaded gun. Even further, there were no signs of forced entry. The door wasn't kicked in, the windows weren't broken. Investigators started asking questions. Who would want to hurt these women? Who had motive? Who had opportunity? And one name kept coming up over and over and over again. Mark Barton. Detectives were confident that he was their guy. They were even more confident once they learned about his affair. That was his motive. As they began to look into things even further, they learned that Mark stood to gain $600,000 from Deborah's life insurance policy.
Starting point is 00:57:01 They also learned that he was going around telling people that he would be free to marry his girlfriend by October. So by then, Mark Barton quickly became their prime suspect, the only suspect. And eventually, police showed up at Mark's husband, wanting to ask him some questions. When Mark sat down with them in his home, they asked him to describe his whereabouts on the day that his wife and mother-in-law were killed. I was home all day with the kids. So you never left the house? No, I never left.
Starting point is 00:57:33 But as the detectives pressed further, Mark's story changed. Actually, I did leave the house. I went to a movie that night and then ate at a restaurant. But police wanted proof of this alibi. They asked him, do you have any receipts from that night? But of course, Mark couldn't give them anything. He would later change his story again, saying that he was job hunting around town, but he couldn't prove that either. In his final story to police,
Starting point is 00:58:02 Mark claimed that the only people he was with that night were his kids, but he couldn't prove that either. The children were young. They would have been asleep. Investigators knew the campground was only a two-hour, drive from his house. He had plenty of time to make the trip and back before anyone noticed he was gone, but they couldn't prove it. That day, as the police left Mark's home, they decided to peek into the windows of his car sitting in the driveway. It was an old beat-up Toyota, but when they did,
Starting point is 00:58:35 they discovered a shocking sight. There appeared to be blood soaked into the floor mats, and because they were visible without entry into the vehicle, police were permitted to take them for testing without a warrant. Mark watched, cold and detached, as they removed the mats from his car. But detectives were faced with a dilemma. They needed to search the car for more evidence. They needed to use luminal to see how much more blood was hiding inside. However, they couldn't do that without a warrant. They would have to come back for it. There was nothing they could do but sternly tell Mark not to touch his vehicle until they came back. Well, the police were zeroing in on Mark.
Starting point is 00:59:18 Deborah's loved ones were focused on laying her to rest. She and her mother Eloise were buried at Sunrise Memorial Gardens in their hometown of Lithia Springs. Mark was there, so was Detective Jerry Wynne. Wynne tried to stare Mark down from across the cemetery, but Mark wouldn't meet his eyes. At the funeral, there was an overwhelming feeling of unrest because Deborah's killer was still out there.
Starting point is 00:59:40 But unbeknownst to everyone, something big was coming. Just hours after the funeral, investigators showed up at Mark's door with a search warrant. Finally, they'd be able to spray the car to test for more blood evidence. Now, if you don't know what Luminal is, it's a chemical that reacts with blood. Even if you've cleaned a surface, even if you can't see anything with the naked eye, luminal will make blood glow in the dark. The investigators sprayed Luminal inside Mark's car. and immediately they started to see a glow.
Starting point is 01:00:13 Positive reactions on the ignition switch, on the seatbelt, on the steering wheel, on the console, on the gear shift, on the driver's side door. Blood everywhere. But there was a problem. The car had been cleaned. The stains remained, but the DNA evidence that the blood contained no longer existed. Investigators confronted Mark, asking him why he had cleaned the car when they told them not to.
Starting point is 01:00:37 He shrugged and told them, I spilled a soda. When investigators asked if he knew what Luminol was, he said no. But then he added, with a dismissive laugh, I've seen it on one episode of Colombo. Mark Barton had a degree in chemistry. He had worked as a chemist for years. And he was claiming he'd never heard of Luminol, one of the most basic tools in forensic science.
Starting point is 01:00:59 When confronted with the blood evidence in his car, Mark had no real explanation. He just shrugged and said, If there's a ton of blood in my car, why aren't you arresting me? Why aren't I in handcuffs? He was taunting them, seeing how far he could push. And soon he decided to take things even further. A few days later, Mark claimed to have suddenly remembered something. He contacted Alabama investigators, and he told them that he had cut his finger to the bone the summer before his wife's death. If there was blood in the car, he said,
Starting point is 01:01:31 it was his own blood. Not Debra's, not Eloises. Just a simple accident. But if that were true, all Mark had to do was provide a blood sample. Now, police couldn't test it against the blood they had discovered with the luminal, because Mark had compromised it. But they could still test it against the floor mats they had taken into their possession. If his blood matched the mats, he'd be cleared. It was simple, but Mark refused. He wouldn't give up blood samples.
Starting point is 01:02:03 He wouldn't give a saliva sample. He wouldn't take a polygraph test. When his own father-in-law Bill, the man who had just lost his wife and daughter, was treated as a suspect, he immediately offered to take a polygraph. He told investigators, quote, whatever it takes to get you off my back and look for who did this, let's do it. But Mark, he refused, telling police this. First of all, I've taken a lie detector test before whenever I sought employment at the 7-11 convenience store,
Starting point is 01:02:34 and afterwards I felt raped. I felt violated. For whatever reason, investigators weren't able to get a warrant for Mark's DNA. And from there, police found themselves at a dead end, one that they had made themselves. Georgia investigator Jerry Wynne was appalled by how Alabama handled the case. He believed there was enough evidence to arrest Barton. He said investigators failed to follow up on crucial leads. Like, for instance, there was a witness who told police that, on the night of the murders,
Starting point is 01:03:03 a man who looked like Mark Barton stopped him and asked for direct. directions to the lake where Deborah and Eloise were staying. Investigators never followed up with this witness. They also tipped Markoff on the fact that they were going to come back and search his car, and they truly thought that warning him not to clean it was going to work. And because of all this, despite the circumstantial evidence piling up, despite the changing alibis and the destroyed evidence and the massive insurance policy and the affair, Alabama investigators didn't make an arrest. They couldn't place Mark at the campground that night. They had to be. no fingerprints. The murder weapon was never found. And without physical evidence directly tying him
Starting point is 01:03:42 to the crime, the district attorney wouldn't press charges. But to everyone who looked at this case, it was very clear what had happened. The story that investigators came up with looked like this. On the night of September 5, 1993, Mark made the two-hour drive to the Riverside Campground in Cherokee County, Alabama. Perhaps he left the children at home by themselves. Perhaps he left the children at home by themselves. Perhaps he had someone, like Leanne, watching them. We don't know. But by the time he arrived at the campsite, it was late. Most of the people there were sleeping, including Deborah's mother, Eloise. But Deborah was still awake. She was still winding down inside when she heard a soft knock on the camper's door. Deborah opened it to see her husband Mark. She was confused
Starting point is 01:04:29 as to why he was there, but she let him inside. However, soon after, He raised a hammer over his head and brought it down onto her skull. The attack was so brutal, so violent, that Deborah didn't even have the chance to scream. No one around them ever reported hearing any sort of struggle. And right there, within that small trailer, Mark continued attacking her until she was dead. For Mark, Deborah was the woman standing between him and the life he wanted. So all of his rage, all of his hatred, was like, fled out right then and there. But at the end of it all, with his wife dead on the floor,
Starting point is 01:05:09 there was still one thing standing in his way. In the other room was Deborah's mother, Eloise. From what he could tell, Eloise was still asleep. If she had woken up, she hadn't come out of the room yet. But Mark couldn't take the chance. So he stepped over Deborah's body. He walked the narrow hall towards the back bedroom. And there, while Eloise slept, He attacked her as well. She never got up, never screamed, never even made it off the bed. Following the murders, investigators suspected that Mark ransacked the place, making it look like a robbery. Then, he got into his car, leaving traces of blood all throughout.
Starting point is 01:05:55 From there, he made the two-hour drive back home. Now, if investigators would have done their jobs correctly, they likely could have proven the story we just told you. But sadly, that's not what happened here. Mark got to continue living his life. In fact, everything seemed to be going absolutely perfect for him. Deborah was no longer in the picture. The police didn't have enough evidence to arrest him. And within a week of Deborah's funeral,
Starting point is 01:06:23 his mistress, Leanne, started spending the night at his house. She was sleeping on Deborah's side of the bed. She was helping raise their children. And they weren't even trying to hide it. A month after the murders, Leanne's divorce from her husband was finalized. Six months later, she and Mark officially moved in together. Leanne's sisters were terrified. Police had told them that Mark was a suspect in his wife's murder.
Starting point is 01:06:49 The sisters begged Leanne to be careful. Police told Leanne's mother, get your daughter away from Mark. He'll hurt her. Many members of Leanne's family never had a good feeling about him. Her sister, Dana would later say, quote, I could tell he was phony, just the way that he acted. I felt that he did have something to do with his wife's murder, end quote. But even with her family's warnings, Leanne didn't listen.
Starting point is 01:07:16 She loved Mark. She wanted a life with him. So she stayed, hoping for her happily ever after. After Deborah's murder, her two children, Matthew and Michelle, really struggled. They were still very young, but they had just lost their mother. They were trying to navigate life without her. And now this other woman had taken their mom's place. Michelle Barton was two and a half years old.
Starting point is 01:07:40 She was in daycare. The workers there said that, for the most part, Michelle was your normal kid, toddling around, playing with toys, making friends and exploring the world more and more every day. She was a bright kid, a happy kid. But one day, she told a daycare worker something disturbing. She had no idea just how important what she was saying was.
Starting point is 01:08:00 She pointed to her genitals and told them casually, Daddy touches me there, I don't like it. Immediately, Georgia Child Welfare Officials opened an investigation. The Douglas County District Attorney's Office got involved, and as part of that investigation, Mark Barton and his daughter Michelle were ordered to undergo a psychological evaluation. And afterwards, the psychologist was so concerned about his findings, he contacted the District Attorney, David McDade, directly.
Starting point is 01:08:29 Not about the molestation case, about the murders. He said Mark Barton was, quote, certainly capable of homicidal acts and thoughts. It was on the record. The Douglas County District Attorney David McDade would later describe his reaction to that evaluation. He said, It was disturbing enough to have a trained psychologist and competent prosecutors reporting these things back to us back then. It's absolutely chilling to think about it now. But despite the psychologist's warning, despite the molestation allegations, despite everything,
Starting point is 01:09:03 nothing happened. The case was closed. There wasn't enough evidence to prosecute Mark for sexual abuse. Michelle was too young to be considered a reliable witness. And so Mark Barton retained custody of his children. In May of 1995, a year and eight months after Deborah's murder, Leanne and Mark got married. Now, he just had to wait for the money.
Starting point is 01:09:28 The insurance company wasn't stupid. They knew Mark was a suspect in his wife. wife's death. They knew the timing of the policy. They knew about the affair. So they refused to pay out. But Mark sued them. The case dragged on for years. But eventually, in 1997, the insurance company decided to settle. They figured if they brought the case to trial, a jury might sympathize with the grieving father of two young children. At the end of the day, there were no charges against Mark. If the Police couldn't even prove that he murdered his wife, then they'd have to pay him. So, in the end, they paid out $450,000.
Starting point is 01:10:10 They forced Mark to put $150,000 of it in a trust for Matthew and Michelle. But the rest? Nearly $300,000, that went straight to Mark. Blood money. Money from a woman police believed he had murdered, money he would use to fund his next obsession. After marrying Leanne in 1995, Mark tried to settle into a normal life, but things weren't going so well. I mean, she moved into the home of a woman who was just murdered. Everyone was suspicious of Leanne and Mark.
Starting point is 01:10:44 Everywhere they went, people whispered. Leanne's own family didn't approve of their relationship, and after a while, their marriage started to feel the effects of this. According to people who knew them, Leanne would leave Mark periodically. After the honeymoon phase died down, she began to see Mark's true colors. He was mean and domineering. But every time she left, she always came back. This toxic marriage was taking a toll on her. One neighbor recalled Leanne as a woman who was afraid to be herself when her husband was around.
Starting point is 01:11:16 He intimidated her. He wanted his way with her. And Mark's mental health was deteriorating too. He was becoming more paranoid, more depressed. He believed people were following him, that they were tabbyted. his phones, that the world was out to get him. Now, Mark had always had these problems, but with the weight of his alleged crimes hanging over him, his mental health was even worse. He needed something else to focus on, to distract him from the demons that had been following him all of his life.
Starting point is 01:11:44 And then, he discovered day trading. In the late 1990s, everyone was talking about the stock market, a place where regular people could make millions trading tech stocks. Mark saw an opportunity, a chance to prove to everyone that he was a winner, and he had the money to do it. In April of 1998, he signed up for classes at All-Tech Investment Group, one of the day-trading firms in Atlanta's Buckhead District. The founders of the company, Brent Dunin and Scott Manspeaker, were thrilled to have him on board. They had just started the company, and Mark was so eager to join that he inspired confidence
Starting point is 01:12:19 in the team. At first, neither of them were sure that starting all-tech was the right move. But with Mark's enthusiasm, they believed even more strongly that they were on to something. After he completed his required courses to work with them, which covered technical analysis, reading charts, and understanding the timing of the market, he was a fixture in their office. And it couldn't have come at a better time. The market was on a historic run. The Dow had just crossed 10,000 for the first time.
Starting point is 01:12:47 The NASDAQ was soaring. Tech stocks were minting millionaires overnight. It felt like free money. All you had to do was get in. So Mark sat down at a desk at Alltech, deposited $100,000, and started trading. Brent, the co-founder, thought Mark had all the energy and positivity that they needed. And truthfully, he also had the money. After welcoming Mark into the office for the first time, Brent pulled Scott, his co-founder, aside, and told him,
Starting point is 01:13:16 We seemed to really click, Scott. This guy's loaded and experienced, and he seems like a really good guy. The two sat Mark down in their office for a more lengthy, discussion on his first day, and Mark told them, I would like to trade in big blocks as I like to call them. Brent and Scott were both stunned as Mark went on to explain what he meant. While most people traded maybe 100 shares on any given day, Mark preferred to do so on a much larger scale, often trading anywhere from 3 to 5,000 a day. It was high risk, high reward. But Mark seemed like just the man to handle that. He had an air of confidence about him. And having just started their business,
Starting point is 01:13:54 Scott and Brent needed that. They happily welcomed him aboard where he became one of the office favorites. For Mark, this new way of making money was exhilarating. And in the beginning, thanks to Deborah's life insurance policy, he had plenty of money to spend. After making a risky investment, he would sit at the computer all day, watching his money go up. On the days where he would win, it seemed like he was on cloud nine.
Starting point is 01:14:21 He felt invincible. The other traders had given him a nickname, The Rocket, because when his bets paid off, he was explosive, loud, animated. He had a kind of childlike excitement to him that made the office feel less serious, which was actually needed. Brent stated that Mark, quote, maintained a sense of humor and buoyancy throughout his trading day, end quote. And even when he was losing, he would shrug, crack a joke, and say, that's just the name of the game. But there was a problem with that. While initially, Mark was lucking out, by early 1999, he was losing far more than he was earning. In March of that year,
Starting point is 01:15:05 the company's founders, Scott and Brent, realized that not only had Mark drained his entire account, but he also owed them $11,000 because he had been trading on the margin. Now by this point, Scott and Brent were friends with Mark, but they knew they needed to sit him down to have a talk. When Brent addressed the money he owed, Mark gave Brent a playful nudge on the shoulder. He told him with a laugh, don't worry, I'm good for the debt. He acted like it was no big deal. Brent believed him. Ever since he had met Mark, he had proven to be a capable guy, one who was resilient and always able to make things work. And in April, one month later, Mark seemed to prove his assumptions right. He paid off his debts and refilled his account. Where he got the money,
Starting point is 01:15:55 we have no idea. But for Brent and Scott, it was a relief. They wouldn't have to have that awkward conversation with a man they considered a friend, because Mark was back on top. However, that high didn't last long. Soon enough, Mark fell into the same trading patterns that had got him in debt the last time, and by June, he had not only drained his account again, but this time he owed Scott and Brent $30,000, triple the amount he had owed them a few months prior. So, on a simmering summer day in the middle of June, they knew it was time to confront Mark once again. Brent sat him down and asked, Mark, what happened? Mark replied, Brent, I'm so sorry, I was too aggressive again. Instead of swinging for singles or doubles, I was trying to crush some home runs.
Starting point is 01:16:41 surprisingly the conversation wasn't a very dramatic one according to brent mark was calm eager to take responsibility for his actions and he told brent that he was going to go back to work as a chemist get the money he needed to make up the losses and come back to pay his debt then he clicked off of his computer and walked out of all tech his head held surprisingly high given the circumstances in his journal brent wrote through it all barton had managed to remain strong in the face of adversity His smiling face and obvious addiction, the thrill of trading, had been evident from the moment he walked into our office a year before. In the year or so I have come to know, Mark, I don't recall ever seeing him upset. I hoped his positive outlook would help him through this tough time, and I hoped to see him again, under better circumstances. But it wasn't just Mark's finances that were suffering around this time.
Starting point is 01:17:34 His marriage was crumbling, too. His old coworkers at All Tech remember hearing the way he would speak to Leanne over the first. the phone. While he still worked there, Mark would leave voicemails where he would say, Leanne, it's me, you can pick up. It appeared to Brent that Mark only allowed Leanne to answer if it was him calling, which is exactly what he did with his first wife, Deborah. But over time, his colleague said that Mark started mentioning his wife less and less. What was happening inside their house has never been made public. But back in April of 1999, when Mark first drained his accounts, Leanne packed up her belongings and she left him. Now, like we had mentioned
Starting point is 01:18:17 before, she would leave him from time to time. But this time, she actually got an apartment of her own, a few towns over in Stockbridge. We don't know the details on exactly what happened. Perhaps she found out that he lost most of their money, day trading. Maybe he was treating her poorly like he used to treat his wife Deborah. Whatever it was, it was enough for Leanne to leave him. at least for a few months. You see, Mark may not have had money, a job, or much going for him, but he did have one thing that Leanne loved dearly, his children, Matthew and Michelle.
Starting point is 01:18:55 In June of 1999, after Mark was forced to leave Altec, Mark called Leanne and told her that he was at risk of losing his house due to his debts. She was distraught. Matthew and Michelle had gone through so much throughout their lives, and the thought of them being kicked out on the street because of their father's irresponsibility was heartbreaking. So Leanne agreed to give Mark a second chance. Soon after, he and the kids moved into her small apartment, abandoning the home they could no longer afford. The kids, Matthew and Michelle, were adjusting to yet another change. But this wasn't a fresh start. It was the
Starting point is 01:19:34 beginning of the end. It was mid-July, and for the first time in a long time, things were actually looking up for Mark. Rather than pursue chemistry, Mark decided that he had no option but to go back to day trading. Despite the fact that he owed debts to Brent and Scott at Alltech, he strolled right across the street to another day trading company, Momentum.
Starting point is 01:19:55 On the application to trade with them, he claimed his net worth was $750,000. But that was a lie. It wasn't even close. Regardless, he put down $87,500 to start trading. And this time, Mark told himself, things would be different. In the beginning, they were. The market was climbing, day after day, the numbers kept going up. On July 16th, the Dow hit 11,209, a record high. The NASDAQ was
Starting point is 01:20:23 soaring. The S&P was up over 15% for the year. And Mark, Mark was winning. Out of the 15 days he'd traded at momentum, he ended up in the black on four of them, meaning he made a profit. Maybe he started to believe this was it, that he was finally turning it around. that everyone who doubted him, Leanne, Alltech, all of them, would finally see that he knew what he was doing. Then on Monday, July 19th, the market started to fall. At first, Mark probably told himself it was just a dip, a correction. It happens.
Starting point is 01:20:56 The market goes up, the market goes down, you ride it out. That's what smart traders do. But Tuesday came and it kept falling. Wednesday, Thursday. The volatile internet stocks Mark had been on were dropping. and Mark wasn't the kind of trader who cut his losses. He held on, doubled down, watched the numbers on his screen turn red. By the weekend, Mark must have been a wreck, but he couldn't stop.
Starting point is 01:21:22 Day trading experts always say you have to know when to fold, when to take your losses, and live to fight another day. But Mark left his positions open. He'd go home at night with his money still on the table, exposed to whatever the market did while he slept. And every morning, he'd wake up to find out how much more he'd. he'd lost. The next week was even worse. Monday, July 26th, the market was still sliding. By now, the S&P had dropped over 5% from its peak. The NASDAQ was down nearly 8%. And Mark was drowning.
Starting point is 01:21:54 He started coming into momentum more often now, not sporadically like before, but desperately, frantically trying to dig out of the hole he was in, trying to win back what he'd lost, what he'd almost had, but it was slipping away, all of it. On Tuesday, July 27, 1999, Mark was at Momentum again. Same terminal. Same screen full of red numbers. Same pit in his stomach. And that pit was there for good reason.
Starting point is 01:22:25 At that point, Mark owed momentum $185,000. That's on top of the $30,000 he owed Brent and Scott back at Altec. In that day, momentum had enough. They walked up to him and interviewed. interrupted his trading. They told him he needed to put up $50,000 immediately, or they would close his accounts. It was a margin call. When you borrow money from a brokerage, and your losses get too big, they demand you pay up now. And if you can't, they close you out. But Mark didn't have $50,000. He didn't have anything close to that. However, he wrote them a check anyway. Maybe he thought it would
Starting point is 01:23:08 by him one more day, but he was wrong. Mark was officially completely wiped out. In a little over two years, he had lost all $300,000 of Deborah's life insurance. That's about $600,000 in today's money. Everything he had worked for, everything he had likely killed for, was gone. Mark had no income. Leanne, his 27-year-old wife, was the only one supporting their family. She was working 70, hours a week, selling cleaning supplies to bring home the $45,000 a year the family survived on. Meanwhile, her husband, the man she had trusted, gambled away their future. And now, he was determined to take that future away permanently. In his narcissistic mind, he had lost everything, which meant they had to as well. After handing over the $50,000 check at momentum, Mark walked out of the office
Starting point is 01:24:09 and started his car, a car that he could no longer afford. But that didn't matter now. Nothing mattered now. His hands tightened on the wheel as he turned out of the parking lot of momentum, heading towards an unexpected place. The local Toys R Us. He browsed the aisles, filling his cart with toy after toy. Anytime he saw something his children would like, he threw it in the cart. There were arts and crafts kits, a doll for Michelle, an army man for Matthew. Looking at his cart, you'd think that his kids were in for the greatest day of their lives. No one could have possibly imagined that it would be their last. As Mark drove home, he knew what he was going to do. He would give the kids their toys, snuggle them, laugh with them, and then do the unthinkable.
Starting point is 01:24:54 That night, he pulled up to the family's new apartment, got out of his car, and presented his kids with all the toys they could dream of. Matthew and Michelle were elated. They played with their new toys until it was time to go to their scout meetings, and at that point, Michelle went to her Brownie's meeting with a close friend and her parents, and meanwhile, Mark attended the Boy Scout meeting with Matthew. During the meeting, he smiled, he cracked jokes. He made plans for the future and acted like everything was fine, like he hadn't written a check he knew would bounce, like his world wasn't collapsing all around him, like he wasn't about to take innocent people down with him. That night, Matthew excitedly talked about the swimming badge he had just
Starting point is 01:25:35 gotten. He had plans for camping in the future, for earning more badges, going on more adventures. Somehow, his father felt nothing as he listened to his son plan a future that would never come to fruition. When he picked up Michelle from her meeting, he found her in the parking lot of a local park running alongside her close friend Natasha. Michelle was beaming. Even in the dark of night, anyone could see it, because she was illuminated by the glow of the fireflies she was chasing. She was carefree, enjoying a warm Georgia's summer night alongside her friends. And once more, her father watched her. And he felt nothing.
Starting point is 01:26:12 He knew then and there that he was going to still go through with his plans. He loaded the kids into the car and returned with them to the family apartment. Moving boxes still lined the hallways and rooms. Leanne decided to take Mark and his children in, despite the cramped space. It wasn't home yet, but they were getting there. or so they thought. Leanne came home that night like every night before it, exhausted and pushed to her absolute limit.
Starting point is 01:26:41 It was just the start of the week, a week where undoubtedly she would work the hours of two people just to keep a roof over her family's head and food on the table. Mark was supposed to be looking for a real job. He was supposed to be making an effort to pull them out of debt. But that night, coming in through the front door, Leanne just saw a man unwilling to change. A man who was digging her and the kids deeper into debt, lies, and danger, all to feed his own ego.
Starting point is 01:27:11 She couldn't take it anymore. The feelings of pure exhaustion, of anger, of betrayal, they were all simmering to the surface, and she had to let them out. Now what words were exchanged between the two will never know. What we do know is that their argument didn't stop their obligations. There was dinner to make. There were kids to be tucked in. So, swallowing her pain, Leanne helped get the kids ready for bed.
Starting point is 01:27:38 She brushed Michelle's hair and listened to her talk about her new baby dolls and toys she had gotten that day. Leanne reminded her son Matthew, who was lost in a pack of Pokemon cards to brush his teeth before bed. Then, she said good night. She kissed her babies, told them she loved them,
Starting point is 01:27:57 and then crawled into bed herself. Slowly, the weight of the argument with Mark, the weight of her long day, it all faded into the mattress. Leanne tugged the blankets up around her. She always hoped the next day would be better. She was positive that way. In spite of any challenge she faced, she chose to believe that tomorrow would be a brighter day. And with that, she drifted off to sleep. Just down the hall, her babies, her whole world.
Starting point is 01:28:26 The reason she stuck around, they were dreaming, but someone in the house was still awake, and he was kick-starting a nightmare that would last for days. As his wife slept, Mark reached into the closet, grabbing a claw hammer from his toolkit. The same kind of weapon that was used to kill Deborah, Mark's first wife. But tonight, the hammer was heavy in his hands as he crept down the hallway, past the rooms of his sleeping children. He opened the bedroom door, a flicker of light shone across his wife, bleeding in from the crack in the door. Her chest was peacefully rising and falling.
Starting point is 01:29:07 She was asleep, defenseless. Mark had a chance there, a million chances. He could have closed the door. He could have walked out of the home. He could have left Leanne to do the only thing that mattered to her, raised their children. But Mark didn't do that. Instead, he stepped closer and closer and closer
Starting point is 01:29:29 until he was standing directly above Leanne, towering over her. And then the first hit came. There was the crunch of bone, the squish of muscles and brain matter exploding into a mess. And with the sound, the blood, the horror, there was finality. Leanne wasn't dead from the strike of the hammer just yet, but there was no going back. So Mark hit her again and again and again.
Starting point is 01:29:58 He kept smashing the hammer into his wife's face, crushing her skull beyond all recognition, until finally he fell still. The bloody hammer hung in his grasp. His wife was dead. She hadn't had the chance to defend herself. She hadn't had a chance to scream, to call for help, to react.
Starting point is 01:30:20 He had done what he had always done, taken advantage of her, of the love she had for his children. And he struck when she was at her most vulnerable. Leanne was just 27 years old when she took her final breath. The only person with her was the man who vowed to honor and protect her, the man who she trusted to do just that. Instead, he delivered the fatal blows,
Starting point is 01:30:45 and then he grabbed her by her feet. He dragged her dead body out of sight, stuffing it into the closet, but looking at her there, crumbled and shoved behind the door. He realized it wasn't enough. He went to the kitchen and grabbed a trash back. He tied it around her head, so he wouldn't have to look at what he had done.
Starting point is 01:31:05 So her blood wouldn't pull into the carpet beneath her. And then, he wrapped a blanket around her before he closed the closet door. Next, he crawled into bed. The same bed he had just murdered his wife in, the same bed that was splattered with her blood and brain matter. and then Mark went to sleep. Unbothered by the fact that he just committed a monstrous act, and he was sleeping in the evidence of it.
Starting point is 01:31:33 Now, we know there will be comments about Leanne being the other woman, and there are a lot of people who speculate on what Leanne knew about the murder of Mark's first wife, Debra. But because that investigation was handled so poorly, we have no answers regarding that. We do know that Leanne did not deserve to be murdered. She started dating Mark when she was 21. Mark was 38. He was manipulative. He knew exactly what to say to get what he wanted. And in the end, Leanne is still a victim in this story. She clearly made mistakes. Most people just have the privilege of growing beyond them, of evolving, and of becoming their best selves. Leanne wasn't awarded the chance to live a full life. It was snatched away from her. Still, she was so much more than her relationship with Mark Barton. Her sister in cousins called her Goldilocks. Her father called her honey. She had grown up in Lysela, Georgia, running barefoot and wild beneath crepe myrtles and rows of peach trees. Her sister, Dana, loved seeing her become a mother, and later said,
Starting point is 01:32:35 We should have been two old ladies in a shoe, for we had a love of children, we should have had a dozen apiece. And Leanne proved just how true that was. She was Matthew's soccer mom, Michelle's Girl Scout Brownie leader. She taught Sunday school. These weren't her biological children, but she loved them like they were. She loved them so much that, in spite of her own reservations about Mark, she decided to see things out with him. Her father would later say, she couldn't separate from them. That's the reason she died. He admitted to the make and telegraph that he didn't like Mark from the start, saying, my God, my wife's got harder hands than he had, limp, and he didn't look you in the eye either. He would never address his first wife's death with me.
Starting point is 01:33:18 We were reassured, as I guess any child would do, that Mark was innocent of. I don't want to say the accusations of what he was suspected of. I never bought it. As the interview went on, he looked down at the cigarette in his hand. He paused and told the interviewer, we never had any photos of him in our home. All along, his suspicions had been right. And in just a few hours, the whole world was going to know what he had known all along,
Starting point is 01:33:45 that Mark Barton was a killer. When Mark woke up on Wednesday morning, Leanne's body was in the stage of Rigormortis, sitting in the closet just a few feet away from him. Yet, he stood up, put on his slippers, and walked out to the kitchen to start his coffee. Soon enough, Matthew and Michelle woke up and wandered into the kitchen like they always did. But instead of being greeted by Leanne, they saw their father. He made them breakfast as they played with their new toys. For that entire summer day,
Starting point is 01:34:19 those two children lived in a house with their stepmother's body, hidden in a closet. They went out for dinner that night at a nearby restaurant. One chair sat empty. I'm sure Mark told them that Leanne was out for the day, that she was busy doing something else. And once they came back home, it was time for bed. Wednesday night, July 28th.
Starting point is 01:34:42 Matthew probably didn't want to go to bed just yet. He was 11. It was summertime. There were video games to play, cards to trade, things to do. But eventually, he climbed into bed. Maybe he was thinking about his friends, about what he wanted to do tomorrow, about the endless summer stretching out ahead of him. Michelle probably went to bed easier.
Starting point is 01:35:06 She was younger. She had her teddy bear. Maybe Mark tucked her in. Maybe he read her a story. Then, he turned off the lights in her room. and he left. Matthew and Michelle went to sleep that night feeling safe, in their beds, in their home,
Starting point is 01:35:25 with their dad just down the hall, ready to keep the monsters at bay. Soon, Matthew drifted off, that deep, heavy sleep, that children fall into so easily, the kind where the whole world disappears and is replaced by vivid, colorful dreams. He probably never woke up,
Starting point is 01:35:44 never knew his father was standing over him. I hope he never felt a thing, as his dad cracked the blood-soaked hammer over his head. We can only hope that he was somewhere else, somewhere without pain. But Mark struck his son again and again and again. His head was later described as, quote, beaten to a pulp. But that wasn't enough for Mark.
Starting point is 01:36:11 After bludgeoning his son, He stumbled into the bathroom and turned on the water in the tub. It wasn't to clean his child's blood off, despite the fact that he was drenched in it. It was to ensure his son was dead. Mark made his way back to the room and picked Matthew up. He then set him down in the bathtub, face down. For the next few moments, he stood over him.
Starting point is 01:36:36 He watched as the water engulfing Matthew turned pink. Matthew David Barton was 11 years old. He had a whole life ahead of him. He was a Boy Scout. He played soccer. He liked video games. He was about to start sixth grade and was slated to be the smartest in his class. People who knew Matthew remarked that while he was a kid, he had a mature, serious air about him.
Starting point is 01:36:59 He was protective of his sister. He felt responsible for her. And given what happened in his short life, that makes perfect sense. Matthew had already lived through more tragedy than most people experienced in a lifetime. He was just five years old when his mother was. was murdered at that campground in Alabama, too young to really understand what had happened, too young to know that his own father was the prime suspect. All Matthew knew was that one day his mom was there and the next day she was gone.
Starting point is 01:37:27 After Deborah's death, Matthew was raised by his father and Leanne. She became the only mother figure he really remembered. She was at every soccer game. She drove him to scout meetings. She was the one who showed up while his father, Mark, was spiraling. And now both she and 11-year-old Matthew were dead. Sadly, Mark wouldn't stop there. Back inside the apartment, Michelle was fast asleep.
Starting point is 01:37:54 She cradled her teddy bear in her arms. It was the bear she couldn't sleep without. The one that made her feel safe when mommy and daddy weren't in the room with her. She still believed her daddy would protect her from anything. Instead, he stood over her with a hammer in hand. and just like with Matthew, he struck her in the head again and again and again. But once more, that wasn't enough. He had to make sure that Michelle was dead.
Starting point is 01:38:25 So he picked her up. He walked her over to the bathtub, and he set her down beneath the running faucet. Michelle Elizabeth Barton was eight years old. She was a brownie, one of the littlest girl scouts. Michelle was about to start third grade, and she had already made a reputation. for herself. She was a known jokester. She loved to laugh to play pranks to make others crack up. Michelle didn't take things too seriously. She was just happy. She had a best friend named Tiffany who lived nearby. They went to Girl Scouts together, but that bond had been forever severed.
Starting point is 01:39:00 Inside the apartment, both of Mark's children were dead. Lying in a bathtub, their heads beaten to a pulp. When Saul was said and done, Mark picked his son up out of the water. The image of Matthew's injuries are horrible to think about, but right there in that bathroom, Mark grabbed a towel and he dried him off. Then, still wet and bloodied, he dressed Matthew one last time, brought him into his bedroom and laid him down on the bed. He tucked him in like he was sleeping. He placed Matthew's Game Boy next to him, like his son had just fallen asleep playing it. Next, Mark walked back to the bathroom, back to the tub. Michelle was still lying there, face down in the pink water. He reached in and lifted her small body out.
Starting point is 01:39:51 She was so light, just eight years old. He held her against his chest, her wet hair soaking through his shirt. He carried her down the hall to her room, laid her on the bed, pulled the covers up to her chin, placed her favorite teddy bear on her chest. the teddy bear she believed would protect her and keep her safe. He lifted the blankets around her head, wrapping it around the sides like a halo. If you had walked into those rooms, without looking too closely, you would have thought that they were sleeping, peaceful and safe.
Starting point is 01:40:28 In reality, within 24 hours, Mark Barton had murdered his wife and two young children. He spent the rest of that night alone in the apartment. his wife in the closet, his children, and their beds. Three people who had trusted him, loved him, three people whose lives he had ended with his own hands. This wasn't a man in a crazed frenzy. Mark was calm and calculated. After killing Leanne, he went about his life for another full day.
Starting point is 01:41:01 He made breakfast. He talked to his kids. He watched them play with the toys he bought. He took the men at night. And the whole time Leanne was in that closet, that kind of coldness, the kind of detachment, most people couldn't do it, most people couldn't function. But Mark did. It was as if nothing happened.
Starting point is 01:41:25 When the sun came up on Thursday, July 29th, 1999, Mark sat down at his computer. It was 6.38 in the morning. And he started typing. What he wrote on that computer was a computer. confession, an explanation of sorts, a suicide note. He printed it out and left it on the coffee table in the living room. This is what it said. To whom it may concern, Leanne is in the master bedroom closet under a blanket.
Starting point is 01:41:55 I killed her on Tuesday night. I killed Matthew and Michelle Wednesday night. There may be similarities between these deaths and the death of my first wife, Deborah Spivey. However, I deny killing her and her mother. There's no reason for me to lie to lie. now. It just seemed like a quiet way to kill and a relatively painless way to die. There was little pain. All of them were dead in less than five minutes. I hit them with a hammer in their sleep and then put them face down in a bathtub to make sure they did not wake up in pain, to make sure they were
Starting point is 01:42:25 dead. I am so sorry. I wish I didn't. Words cannot tell the agony. Why did I? I've been dying since October. I wake up at night so afraid so terrified that I couldn't be that afraid while awake. It has taken its toll. I've come to hate this life and this system of things. I've come to have no hope. I killed the children to exchange them for five minutes of pain for a lifetime of pain. I forced myself to do it to keep them from suffering so much later. No mother, no father, no relatives. Now in this next part, Mark writes something strange about his son Matthew, something he fears Matthew inherited from him, something that Mark seemed to have inherited from his. father. It read this. The fears of the father are transferred to the son. It was from my father to me and
Starting point is 01:43:14 from me to my son. He already had it and not to be left alone. I had to take him with me. Mark never elaborated on exactly what he meant by that. But according to him, whatever darkness he carried in himself, he believed he passed it on to his son. And rather than let Matthew live with that burden, he decided to kill him. At least, that's That's what Mark wanted everyone to believe. Even in killing his own son, he has to somehow rewrite the narrative to make himself the hero. But in his note, Mark went on to say this.
Starting point is 01:43:50 I killed the end because she was one of the main reasons for my demise as I planned to kill the others. I really wish I hadn't killed her now. She really couldn't help it, and I love her so much anyway. I know that Jehovah will take care of all of them in the next life. I'm sure the details don't matter. There is no excuse, no good reason. I'm sure no one would understand.
Starting point is 01:44:10 If they could, I wouldn't want them to. I just write these things to say why. Please know that I love Leanne, Matthew, and Michelle with all of my heart. If Jehovah is willing, I would like to see all of them again in the resurrection to have a second chance. After typing this note, Mark walked through the apartment one last time. He stopped at each body, and on each one he placed a handwritten note. The note on Leanne read this. I give you my wife, Leanne Vandever Barton.
Starting point is 01:44:41 My honey, my precious love, please take care of her. I will love her forever. The note on Matthew read, I give you Matthew David Barton, my son, my buddy, my life, please take care of him. And lastly, the note on Michelle read. I give you Michelle Elizabeth Barton, my daughter, my sweetheart, my life. Please take care of her. He called them his honey, his buddy, his sweetheart.
Starting point is 01:45:08 his life, and yet he killed them all. I wish I could tell you that our story ends here, but it doesn't. At the very end of Mark Barton's suicide note, it read this. I don't plan to live very much longer, just long enough to kill as many of the people that greedily sought my destruction. You should kill me if you can. That's right. The murder of Mark's wife and children wasn't enough for him.
Starting point is 01:45:36 In fact, it was just the beginning. beginning. That afternoon, the afternoon of Thursday, July 29th, 1999, Mark walked into his closet. He reached over Leanne's body and grabbed a pink pillow shirt, a pair of dark shorts and white sneakers. Then, after getting dressed, he grabbed his guns. Within just a few hours, Atlanta, Georgia would be the site of a horrific and deadly mass shooting, one that was aimed at the very firm, where Mark Barton lost everything. If you want to listen to that episode now, head over to our Patreon. You can listen to that episode and every episode of ours early and ad-free on our Patreon.
Starting point is 01:46:21 You can find the link in the description of this episode, and if not, we'll see you next week for the 1999 Atlanta Day Trading Massacre Story. For today's episode, we will be making a donation to the National Alliance on Mental Illness. NAMI is the nation's largest grassroots mental health organization. dedicated to building better lives for the millions of Americans affected by mental illness. If you'd like to learn more or make a donation yourself, you can visit namI.org. Hey guys, thank you so much for listening to today's episode of Murder in America. If you want to listen to Part 2 right now, it is currently live on our Patreon account.
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Starting point is 01:47:59 It just helps us so much if you can leave us those reviews. So, yeah, thank you guys if you've done it already. And thank you in advance to those who are. going to do it after hearing this. Anyways, y'all, I hope you all have an amazing rest of your week and a great weekend. If you're listening on Friday, my name's Colin. Thank you all for tuning in. I'll catch you all in the next one.

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