Murder In America - EP. 244 - ILLINOIS: TIMOTHY BUSS: THE CHILD KILLER WHO WAS RELEASED… AND KILLED AGAIN

Episode Date: May 1, 2026

No one thought a 13-year-old boy was capable of such evil. But when 5-year-old Tara Sue Huffman was discovered bludgeoned to death, all the evidence pointed to neighbor, middle-schooler Timothy Buss, ...being her killer. After just 12 years of incarceration, Timothy returned to his hometown a reformed man. But not long after his release, another child disappeared. And this time, no one doubted what he was capable of.  - 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 00:00:00 This week's episode is sponsored by The Psychological Horror Nightmare, Return to Silent Hill. When a mysterious letter draws James back to Silent Hill, he finds a town consumed by a terrifying fog. As he searches for the woman he once loved, the streets begin to warp around him, filled with monstrous creatures, impossible visions, and a horrifying revelation that he may not survive. based on the legendary Silent Hill 2 and directed by Christoph Gans. Return to Silent Hill blends haunting psychological horror with surreal, nightmarish imagery that fans of the franchise know all too well. Some truths should stay buried in the fog.
Starting point is 00:00:44 Watch now on Screenbox. 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 for everyone.
Starting point is 00:01:10 You have been warned. Richard Huffman felt sick to his stomach. It was summer of 1995, and the newspaper in his lab told him something he wished wasn't true. Another child was missing from rural Canneckee County, Illinois. He scanned the article, reading deep. detail after detail, his heart racing with each new bit of information. The missing boy was 10 years old. His name was Christopher Meyer. He had vanished while fishing on a river. He was spotted talking to a man
Starting point is 00:01:41 at the water's edge, and then he disappeared. Police provided a sketch of the man, and the newspaper article urged anyone who knew him to call the police immediately. When Richard looked at the drawing, he immediately recognized the dead eyes staring back at him. They were in the same. They were the same eyes that had bore into him from the defense stand 14 years ago during the trial for the murder of his five-year-old sister Tara. This is the story of Timothy Bus. I'm Courtney Browne. And I'm Colin Brown. And you're listening to Murder in America. Bradley, Illinois, sits 56 miles south of Chicago, just off Interstate 57 in Cancackey County. In 1981 from the highway, it didn't look like much, a water tower, a strip of fast food science, a few stoplights before the road wound
Starting point is 00:03:32 through flat, open farmland. But if you drove a little further in, Bradley would open up into something else, a thriving community that felt quintessentially American, modest ranch homes and kids playing basketball in the front yard, vegetable gardens sprouting out back, block after block of working families who punched in, came home, and watched their kids ride bikes until the streetlights came on. For the most part, the town of 11,000 people ran on a factory schedule. The majority of the people who lived there worked at either the Croiler Furniture Company or the George D. Roper Manufacturing Plant. They weren't just businesses.
Starting point is 00:04:09 They were the heartbeat of the town, the reason people settled there in the first place. And like most blue-collar towns, Bradley carried a particular kind of pride, a collective understanding between the people who lived there that everyone is working hard and that everyone is looking out for one another. That's the mentality Barbara and Charles Huffman had as they cradled their newborn daughter, Tara Sue Huffman, in their arms on August 14, 1975. They envisioned a bright future for her,
Starting point is 00:04:37 long days playing outside in the nearby woods, fishing at the local creek, riding her bike through the peaceful streets with the other neighborhood kids. It was the childhood they had seen all of Tara's older siblings experience, right there in Bradley, Illinois. You see, by the time Tara came along, Charles and Barbara had already raised seven kids,
Starting point is 00:04:58 and by all accounts, they had done a great job doing it. Most of Tara's siblings were in their mid-to-late teens, but some were well into adulthood, successfully raising families of their own nearby. So she was the baby of the family, the little angel who reminded everyone of the sweetness of childhood. She was the one her brother skipped football games for, just because they wanted to take her fishing, the one her sisters took for ice cream on the weekdays, and a nearby arcades on the weekends. According to Tara's older sister, Glinda, quote,
Starting point is 00:05:30 when mom brought her home from the hospital, she stole our hearts. We all spoiled a smart, giving, and loving little girl. End quote. As a result, Tara grew up surrounded by love from her older siblings, but also her nieces and nephews. When she was four, her older brother Randy had a little boy named Nick. Most people aren't aunts before they had.
Starting point is 00:05:51 at kindergarten. But Tara took the job seriously, doting on her nephew, the same way her siblings doated on her. And listening to all the family stories passed down about Tara, it's easy to see why she was so loved. Darn was one of Tara's favorite words,
Starting point is 00:06:06 mainly because whenever she said it, her family would laugh. Every night when dinner was ready, it was her job to run into the living room and let her dad know. She did this, like clockwork, by running into the room and loudly announcing, my dad, my dad, dinner's on the darn table. Her parents weren't mom and dad. They were always my dad
Starting point is 00:06:25 and my mom. They were two titles that her parents were incredibly proud of. Because Tara wasn't just a little girl with sparkly eyes and a sunny disposition, she was a wild child at heart. The outdoors, though, was where Tara thrived. She'd run barefoot through the grass, flipping over rocks on a critter hunt. Frogs, snakes, lizards, bugs, it didn't matter to Tara. Every little wiggling, living thing was something to be celebrated. Here's what her nephew Nick had to say about that. She would always go pick up frogs and snakes. She wasn't afraid of them. She'd go chase those and then go try to go them to me. And I wasn't a big fan of frogs and snakes, you know, when I was two. But that's what I'll always remember her doing as being the girl that used to snatch those up. After Tara tried to hand Nick
Starting point is 00:07:12 her critter of the day, Nick would take off running, little legs going as fast as they could, and Tara would go right after him. By the fall of 1980, Tara was sharing that playful personality with her fellow kindergartners at Bradley East Elementary School. She made friends quick. And pretty soon, every day after school,
Starting point is 00:07:31 she was running to a new friend's house to ask them to play with her outside. It's something kids in Bradley had done for generations. They played outdoors and explored their independence and the safety of their neighborhood. For the most part, no one was worried about kids
Starting point is 00:07:47 being outside on their own. This was a town where people looked out for one another. As fall turned to winter and winter turned a spring of 1981, the worst that had happened to any of the kids in the neighborhood were some scraped knees and a few grass stains on their back-to-school clothes. No one had any reason to think that there was danger lurking in the town. That is until the day that changed Bradley forever, May 21, 1981. wine. It started out like any other Thursday morning in the Huffman household. Barbara was up first,
Starting point is 00:08:20 slinging breakfast and ushering the teens off to school. It had rained the night before, and there was still a mist wafting off the grass as the high schoolers rushed out the door to make it to class on time. Tara's day started about an hour later than the high schoolers at around eight, which gave her a little extra time to eat her cereal and gushed to her mom about the upcoming day. Because Tara's class had gotten perfect attendance, they won a trip to a local roller skating rink. Tara was excited, beaming even. When you're a kid, being able to go on a school trip is like winning the lottery. On top of that, they only had to do a half day, meaning that as soon as the roller skating was over, Tara and all our classmates would get to go home to enjoy the
Starting point is 00:09:00 rest of the day. At five years old, it doesn't get much better than that. When Tara and her classmates got off the bus at the rink. Shortly after 9.30 a.m., everyone was in good spirits. The rink was loud. The speaker is pumping out some poppy 80s tunes. Tara wasn't hesitant to lace on her skates and try out her luck on the rink, holding hands with her classmates for balance. She slipped, giggled, and fell her way around the rink, having more and more fun with every pass around. By the time she and her friends stumbled their way out of the rink, it was lunchtime. Tara sat down and dug into her lunch, a hot dog, a cookie, a small carton of milk, and a Pepsi. It was the same meal that the coroner would uncover in her stomach, hours later. At 1215 right after lunch, Tara's mom and one of
Starting point is 00:09:50 her sisters picked her up at the rink. Tara was elated, telling them all about the fun she had had. On the way home, Barbara spotted a few yard sales in the nearby neighborhoods. No one was in a rush. It was a warm Thursday afternoon, and they had all the time in the world. So, we were a little bit For about an hour, the three explored some yard sales, paging through toys, trash, and treasures to get themselves a good deal. There was a sense of ease in the car, as they made their way home that day. It had been a good day. They pulled into the driveway around 1.30.
Starting point is 00:10:23 The rain that had peppered the town overnight had mostly dried out, and the sun was now shining. It was the perfect weather to be outside. So as soon as Tara stepped inside, she swapped out of her school clothes and into something comfier shorts and a t-shirt. As quickly as she changed, she darted for the door, eager to get outside. But Barbara stopped her, asking where she was going in such a hurry. Tara replied, excited, quote, to play with the Smith kids. Now the Smiths lived just down the alley, right behind the Huffman home. Tara had been there more times than anyone could count. So Barbara smiled at her daughter and told her to have fun, but not to be gone too long. Tara waved goodbye and ran out the door.
Starting point is 00:11:05 barefoot into the sunny afternoon. The back door closed behind her. And just like that, she had left her mother's life forever. When Tara reached the Smith's home, she did what she always did. She knocked and Mrs. Smith came to answer. When she finally did, Tara asked if her kids could come out to play. But Mrs. Smith gave her a sympathetic smile and told her that today, the kids were staying in to watch TV.
Starting point is 00:11:31 Tara glanced behind her at the sunny afternoon. The idea of sitting inside when it was this nice out didn't even feel like an option to her. So she thanked Mrs. Smith and continued on her way. There were other kids on the block. When Tara couldn't hang out with the Smith kids, she always managed to find more friends to spend time with. Likely, she figured this time it would be no different. She was in a good mood. She wanted to be outside where she felt at home where there was sunlight to mask in and frogs to catch and games to play.
Starting point is 00:11:59 So she made her way deeper into the familiar neighborhood. She had no idea that back home, her older brother Richard had a surprise waiting for her, a surprise she would never get to experience. Around 2.30 p.m., Richard pulled into the family driveway. That morning, he had spotted a small painted turtle in the road. Knowing how much Tara loved animals, he decided to bring the turtle home for her to keep as a pet. He carefully placed the turtle in the back of his truck. By the time he got home, he was so excited to present Tara with her new pet.
Starting point is 00:12:31 When he told his mom his plan, Barbara called the Smith house to see if they'd send Tara back home. But on the other end, Mrs. Smith had bad news. She didn't know where Tara was. She hadn't stayed to play. Now, initially for Barbara, this wasn't as much of a concern as it was an annoyance. After all, Tara was friends with half the neighborhood. She had probably met up with another classmate, gone to their house to play, and not even thought anything of it. So Barbara set the phone down,
Starting point is 00:13:01 grabbed her purse, and left to go find her. She knocked on a neighbor's door to see if maybe they had seen Tara, but they hadn't. Undeterred, Barbara moved on to the next house, and then the next and the next. Each time a neighbor opened the door, they had the same news for her. They hadn't seen Tara.
Starting point is 00:13:21 Barbara kept moving from one neighbor to the next, but with every passing house, her steps got a little faster. That spark of annoyance that ignited in her when she spoke to Mrs. Smith began to turn into something else, an all-consuming, rapidly growing panic. She scanned every yard, every alley, every park, as she passed from house to house. But there was no sign of her little girl. She started to call out for Tara as she moved between homes. A few neighbors came out onto their porches, curious what all the fuss was about. One of them asked Barbara if she was okay. And that's when she said it,
Starting point is 00:13:58 it for the very first time, the reality that she wanted so badly to deny, but couldn't any longer. My daughter is missing. By the time Barbara got back home, her hands were shaking, and she was forced to face the truth. Her daughter was really missing, and she needed help. At 5 o'clock p.m., Barbara called the police. She gave them all the details they needed. Tara's height, wait, what she was last seen wearing, where she was going, what her last known location was, but saying the time she was last seen out loud made Barbara terrified.
Starting point is 00:14:30 The last time anyone on the block had seen Tara was 130. It had been at least three and a half hours since she vanished. They were behind. Barbara could have shut down completely. She could have panicked, but she didn't. She hung up and immediately went back outside to lead a search for her daughter. Meanwhile, Tara's father, Charlie, who was on leave from work due to a broken ankle, stayed at home manning the phone.
Starting point is 00:14:53 Tara's brother Richard and her sister Sandra are some of the first two on the scene, helping canvas the neighborhood. It didn't take long before the entire east side of Bradley was flooded with searchers calling out Tara's name. No one had to be asked. Neighbors raced outside when they heard the news and immediately got to work.
Starting point is 00:15:10 It was what people in communities like that did. One person's missing child became everyone's. And within a few hours, over 200 people were searching the streets, woods and streams for Tara, including her own friends and classmates. For some of the kids, at first, it was almost like a game. For Michael Boyd, one of the neighborhood kids,
Starting point is 00:15:31 all of the panic felt a little silly. Here he is speaking with director Drew Gadboys in the Kankakee tragedy documentary. As a kid, you just thought, oh, they're going to find her and everything's going to be fine because it's quiet here. Nothing bad ever happens here. And we thought that, okay, it's a little girl.
Starting point is 00:15:49 She's sleeping in some. Someone's backyard. She's at a friend's house, whatever. Others didn't carry that same sentiment. Tara's brother Richard raced through the streets, desperately screaming out his sister's name. On a street near the family home, he paused to catch his breath and felt a wave of unease passed through him. He lifted his gaze to see a boy sitting on a porch,
Starting point is 00:16:11 staring at him. I had noticed this young boy sitting on a porch, and he was looking at me, and he had said this, you know, just an odd expression on his face. I can remember thinking to myself, you know, who is that kid? You know, why is he looking at me like this, you know? Richard shook off the feeling the shaggy-haired 13-year-old gave him, and from there he pressed on, continuing the search, as the sunset on Bradley.
Starting point is 00:16:38 He had no idea that behind him, that boy had stood up, walked to a group of nearby adults, and joined them on their search for Tara. Richard hadn't recognized the boy. He had no reason to. but those who lived closer to his home and who had kids who went to middle school with him knew the boy as a troublemaker. His name was Timothy Buss
Starting point is 00:16:58 and shortly after joining the search he made a startling, far too convenient discovery. The search through Eastern Bradley expanded to a nearby creek. It was one that Tara had caught her fair share of frogs in and spent plenty of time near. There was some fears they approached the water that maybe Tara had fallen, hit her head, and managed to drown in the creek.
Starting point is 00:17:19 The searchers scanned the creek warily, all of them except for Timothy Buss, whose eyes were locked on something different, a makeshift dump obscured in the underbrush. If you've lived in a small town or rural area, you've probably seen your fair share of these. Old spots in the woods where, decades ago, farmers offloaded their old, rusted equipment, tires, and bottles. Spots that, over the years, have transformed into a sort of neighborhood secret, a place for people to get rid of things that'll cost too much to drop off at the dump or take too much effort to get there. After approaching the pile of junk, Timothy slowly stripped away the outer layers of the pile, construction debris, pieces of foam, plastic, and then he came to another length of foam rubber,
Starting point is 00:18:03 and another, and that's when he saw it, part of an arm. He kept going, pulling pieces of trash away until finally the full picture came into view. A little girl. Her face was covered in blood. Several wounds edged purple, black, and red to cross her head. And her eyes, surrounded by the dried blood, were open, staring up at the sky, but seeing nothing. The little girl was dead.
Starting point is 00:18:30 The only clothing on her body was a t-shirt, which had been pushed up around her armpits, exposing her chest. Her pants had been removed by whoever put her there. And tragically, that same person had stuck a branch into her rectum that was still protruding from her body. The sight was utterly disturbing, the kind of stuff and nightmares.
Starting point is 00:18:52 But 13-year-old Timothy Bus didn't flinch. Instead, he wrapped his arms around her, hoisting her up by her armpits, and called out. I found her. She's dead. Fellow searcher Alan Kaufman was the first to respond to those horrible words. He bolted towards Timothy,
Starting point is 00:19:10 the late evening sun blazed from the west, obscuring his vision as he reached the young boy. When the scene in front of Alan finally came to light, it felt like he had been punched in the stomach. There was Timothy, holding up the dead girl with a blink expression on his face. Later, Alan would describe the scene as, quote, the most pitiful sight I've ever seen, end quote.
Starting point is 00:19:33 Timothy called out to him again, saying he needed help because she was too heavy, but Alan couldn't make his feet move towards the girl. Instead, he told Timothy to see. stay there and keep everyone else away while he ran for the police. As soon as he saw the uniforms, he called out to them. We found her. She's dead. But he hadn't realized who was standing nearby, who was leading the search with police. When he blurted out those words, he hadn't realized that Barbara Huffman was within earshot. The heat hit Barbara first, then a wave of nausea. Her vision
Starting point is 00:20:07 went. Her legs collapsed out from under her. And there in the forest, Barbara fainted. Nearby Tara's brother Richard stumbled to his mother's side. He pulled her close as she came into a world she no longer wanted to be in. They held each other and cried, shaking, sobbing, and mourning the loss of the girl who had been the sunshine of their life. As Richard held his mom, he knew neither of them would ever be the same. No one in their family would ever be the same. But maybe, just maybe, he could diminish the pain just a little bit.
Starting point is 00:20:42 Remember Charles, Tara's father was at home, manning the phone and waiting for news. Richard was shattered, but he didn't want his dad to find out from a stranger, or a neighbor. He wanted to be there. So he got in his car and he drove to his childhood home, where his dad sat at the phone, listening to people call out for his daughter, hoping that soon she'd be walking in the front door. When Richard walked in instead, Charlie asked, did they find her? Richard responded that yes, they had found her, then there was silence. Silence that they both understood could only be broken one way.
Starting point is 00:21:20 Richard told his father, Dad, she's gone. From that moment on, Charlie was never the same. Tara had been his baby girl. She had been, admittedly, an unexpected surprise at the greatest one of his life. When Barbara learned she was pregnant with Tara back in 1975, she had joked with the doctor, Richard's going to lose it. With seven kids on one salary, their financial situation had been less than ideal. The last thing they needed was another kid.
Starting point is 00:21:48 But according to Tara's siblings, when Barbara told Richard she was pregnant, he beamed. He smiled and laughed and hugged his wife like he had won the lottery. And when Tara came into his life, he knew he had. She quickly became his little shadow. In the weeks leading up to her death, she had even waited on her dad, serving him snacks on a tray and pretending to be a nurse when he was bedridden with his workplace injury. She had been his little bunny, his best pal, his frog-catching, snake-rangling princess. And now she was lying dead in a pile of trash with police surrounding her body.
Starting point is 00:22:23 Back at the scene, Lieutenant Green Street of the Bradley Police Department secured the area around Tara's body, and he began to process it for evidence. Waiting through the sea of trash, they managed to find Tara shorts and underwear. In addition, they found a broken off piece of a stick. that matched the one that had been inserted into Tara's rectum. An autopsy would later determine that the stick had been inserted post-mortem and that her cause of death was a blow to the head. There were several abrasions on her forehead and all throughout her skull, painting a picture of a young girl who was struck repeatedly
Starting point is 00:22:59 with a blunt object until she took her final breath. But the lack of blood at the scene indicated to detectives that she had likely been struck and killed elsewhere. Now how someone brought her to the same, the scene without anyone noticing, that was a mystery, at least until one detective peered inside a fiber barrel at the edge of the dump. There, spattered all throughout the interior were specks and pools of rapidly darkening blood. The lid, which lay nearby, had a palm print on it. Whoever had brought Tara here had done it using that barrel. Police didn't even get the chance to ask the
Starting point is 00:23:34 public about the barrel before they got a call regarding it, a call that changed everything. Because while police were processing the scene, nearby homeowner Judith Wilkins paced in front of her window, watching as cop after cop raced down the usually quiet street. By then, news had already spread that the little Huffman girl was dead and that it was no accident.
Starting point is 00:23:56 It was becoming all too clear, there was a killer in Bradley. It was something that would make anyone on edge, but Judith was unsettled by something else, her husband, a former cop, asking her what was bothering her. At first, she downplayed, her fears telling him it was probably nothing. But slowly she told him what had happened that
Starting point is 00:24:14 afternoon. Sometime after two, a teen had come to the door and asked if he could borrow a wagon that was sitting in her front yard. He looked nervous. He was sweating profusely, and he didn't make eye contact with Judith, as he explained why he needed it. He said that he had cleaned out his father's garage and had gathered the junk he was throwing away in a large fiber barrel, but the barrel was just a bit too heavy for him to carry, so he needed a way to get it to the dump. Despite his nervous demeanor, there seemed to be nothing wrong with his request,
Starting point is 00:24:47 so Judith obliged. From there, she watched as he made his way down the road, with the barrel resting in the wagon. The boy returned the wagon a little bit later, and then he went on his way. It seemed like nothing at first, but now, as the town of Bradley cowered in the flash of red and blue police lights, the encounter had a whole new meaning.
Starting point is 00:25:06 Mr. Wilkins told his wife, call the station right now. Within minutes, a squad car pulled up outside the Wilkins' house and took the wagon for evidence. One of the officers handed Judith a form and told her to fill it out with every detail she could remember. Quickly, Judith did just that, and she and her husband hurried to the police station
Starting point is 00:25:27 to deliver the completed form. Judith felt like she had done her duty and that maybe, just maybe, this would put an end to the mystery that was consuming the town. Maybe it would bring peace to the poor Huffman's who were dealing with an unimaginable loss. At the same time, however, she was worried. What if the boy really was just dumping trash? What if she was sending an innocent teenager to the wolves?
Starting point is 00:25:50 Those are the thoughts that were swirling in Judith's head as she made her way into the police station. But the instant she opened the door, all of her thoughts were silenced. Because there, sitting in the lobby, was the boy, the teen who had asked to borrow the wagon. She was so stunned that she didn't even greet the police officer standing nearby. Instead, she turned to him and asked who the boy was. The officer responded, he's the one who found the little girl. He found the body. But Judith didn't say a word.
Starting point is 00:26:19 She wasn't sure enough. So she handed over the form, thanked the officer, and walked back to her car. It was only once she was sitting there, away from Timothy Bus, that she felt confident enough to tell her husband. That was him, she said. said, that was the boy who came to the door. Now, it wasn't until later, when they were safely home, that Judith called the police to tell them. At the time of her call, Timothy was being led into an interrogation room by juvenile officer Catherine Bergen, and by his side was his father David. Before he even opened his mouth, Officer Bergen had a list of observations about him growing longer by the second. There were hairline scratches that covered his face. On his pants along his thigh, there was a dark brown stain consistent with blood. She also noted that before he left, she'd have to gather his clothing for evidence.
Starting point is 00:27:11 But first, she had to get his story. As the officer asked Timothy to walk her through his day, he didn't hesitate. And he told her a story that went like this. Timothy hadn't gone to school that day because there had been a field trip scheduled and his family didn't have the money to send him. So instead, he left his aunt's house, where he had been staying, and walked to a home next to the Smiths. If you can recall, the Smiths were the family that Tara visited just moments before she vanished.
Starting point is 00:27:38 When he got to the Smith's neighbors, he helped the man who lived there wash his car. Afterwards, Timothy said he went back home, had hamburgers with his cousin, and watched some TV. At around 2.30, he visited a friend, Gary Klo, and at about three, he came back home. Afterwards, his grandmother, Alice Bus, picked him and his siblings up and brought them to her house to play softball. When he returned to his aunts at about 6.30, he learned about Tara's disappearance and decided to help in the search. Then, by chance, he found her body. That was Timothy's original story. But there was a problem with it. As you just heard, Timothy claimed that he had been hanging out with his friend Gary right around the time Tara had been killed.
Starting point is 00:28:21 But Officer Bergen knew Gary, and she knew that he had moved to Florida with his father several weeks prior. So this Gary kid wasn't even indefinitely. town, but she kept a straight face. She thanked Timothy for his time, asked him to wait around for a moment, and she stepped outside to make a phone call. When Gary's mother answered the phone, she was confused. She told Officer Bergen what she already knew. Gary wasn't home. He wasn't even in Illinois. He was over 1,000 miles away living with his father in the Sunshine State. So there was no possible way he had been with Timothy bus at 2.30 that day. When Officer Bergen returned to the she was calm, friendly even.
Starting point is 00:29:02 She told Timothy and his father that they needed to get Timothy's clothing for processing. Throughout the interview, she couldn't help but glance at the stain on his pants. A stain that she was certain without even running any tests
Starting point is 00:29:14 was blood. And if that blood matched Tara's, she'd have the key to put him behind bars. Timothy handed over his clothing without any issues. He posed for a photo of the scratches on his face.
Starting point is 00:29:28 And finally, he was fingerprinted. At 5 in the morning on May 22nd, Timothy Buss and his father walked out of the Bradley Police Department, but it wouldn't be their last time speaking with police. And surprisingly, despite being just 13 years old, it hadn't been Timothy Buss's first time either. In his short life, Timothy had landed himself on the Bradley Police Department's radar several times. In looking at his history, there had been plenty of signs that things weren't quite right with Timothy Buss. Timothy Dwayne Buss was born on October 4, 1967 in Fort Hood, Texas, the oldest of four children. His parents, David and Rosemary, moved to Kankakey, his father's birthplace before Timothy started
Starting point is 00:30:14 kindergarten, and unfortunately, their relationship didn't last. In September of 1973, when Timothy was five years old, his parents separated, and his mother, Rosemary, went to the court and voluntarily gave up her parental rights. Just like that, in an instant, she severed herself from her kids forever. Timothy was in kindergarten, and he didn't understand at the time why his mom had vanished. All he knew was that she hadn't wanted them.
Starting point is 00:30:40 And also that shortly after she vanished, she started a new family. She had a new husband, new kids, a new life, and she never looked back. Timothy never got a phone call, a birthday card, a letter, nothing. He and his four siblings were essentially dead, to their mother. His grandmother, Alice Bus, watched what that did to him. After Rosemary left,
Starting point is 00:31:02 five-year-old Timothy would go out to the driveway and just sit there all day long, just sitting, waiting for his mother to come home. But she never came back. His father, David, was still in the picture technically, but by his own admission, he was barely there. In 1996, he confessed to a court that he was a terrible father. He admitted that his social life and his work came before his children, and whenever his kids got in the way of things that truly mattered to him, he didn't hesitate to hit them with a belt. Alice, as well as one of Timothy's aunts, tried their best to take care of him and his siblings
Starting point is 00:31:36 to give them the love they were so desperately missing, but it wasn't easy. Timothy alone was a handful. At just 12 years old, he stole a neighbor's motorcycle and took it for a joyride through the streets. When officers discovered what he had done and tried to pull him over, Timothy doubled down and went full throttle, accidentally crashing the bike.
Starting point is 00:31:55 When police raced to his side to see if he was okay, he ran, leading them on a foot chase through the neighborhood until, finally, an officer was able to take Timothy down. For that incident, he was put on probation. But that was just one of many, many incidents. Timothy was known for being a bully. Shortly before Tara's disappearance, he actually choked two boys at a local church
Starting point is 00:32:18 by leaping behind them and wrapping a wire around their throats. The image is chilling. What's even more chilling is that, despite that incident, Timothy was still wandering free, as if he had done nothing wrong. But he kept doing things wrong again and again and again. A neighbor reported that Timothy had defecated on his car that was parked in his driveway.
Starting point is 00:32:41 Other classmates reported that Timothy liked to brand himself and others with hot metal. He frequently got into fights at school, smoked in front of adults, and ran away from home. By 1980, his home was no longer with his grandmother, but with his aunt, who happened to live just down the road from the Huffman's. The Huffman family had no idea that there was a budding criminal just down the street. However, the Bradley Police Department did. In early May, just before Tara's murder, Timothy was pulled aside by a police officer after a violent altercation with another student. Now what the argument was over, no one knows.
Starting point is 00:33:20 but during it, Timothy pulled a boy off a bicycle, beat him on the pavement, and then burned him repeatedly with a cigarette butt. However, the most police could do was warn each other to keep an eye on the kid. And on the morning of May 22, 1981, they really took that mission to heart. The morning after Tara Sue Huffman's murder, the east side of Bradley awakened to police cars lining the streets. Officers went door to door, the same door as Barbara had knocked on the evening before looking for her daughter. But this time they weren't asking if anyone had seen a little girl. They were asking what people had seen that afternoon, who was on the block, who was walking
Starting point is 00:34:00 through the alleys. What they noticed. The neighbors had one thing to say. One unnamed witness claimed to have seen a boy carrying a large fiber barrel south down the alley that afternoon. Another had watched him pulling a wagon with that same barrel toward the dump. Another had seen him coming back with the wagon empty. And one neighbor who would watch him.
Starting point is 00:34:20 watched him going through their yard, noticed him crouching down, etching something into the gravel with a stick, a stick roughly the same size and shape as the one that had been found in Tara's body. All of these statements, as well as circumstantial evidence, enabled police to get a search warrant that very day for Timothy's aunt's home where he had been living, and inside the doors of that house, police found the mother load. There, investigators discovered blood on the doorframe of Timothy's bedroom, as well on the tile below it. Eventually, that blood was confirmed to be consistent with Tara's blood type. Just like the stain that was on Timothy's pants, Timothy had Tara's blood on his pants,
Starting point is 00:35:00 the same blood that was on the walls inside his home. His alibi for the time of her murder, that friend Gary he was hanging out with, was actually in Florida. Investigators went back through everything Timothy had told them, and the more they looked, the more his story fell apart. Now, no one could place him anywhere near where he said he was, between 2.30 and 3 o'clock in the afternoon. But multiple people could place him somewhere else in the alley with that barrel, heading south towards the dump. The evidence was building. A few days after the murder, investigators brought Timothy back in. This time, it was for a lineup. The first juvenile lineup Canneckee County had ever seen. Witness after witness picked him out.
Starting point is 00:35:45 Judith Wilkins identified him as the boy who had come to her door that afternoon and borrowed her children's wagon. Police knew it was incredibly likely that Timothy was their killer. But the court of public opinion, well, they had no doubts whatsoever. Word spreads fast in small towns. And Bradley, during the wake of Tara's murder, it traveled at lightning speed. Tara's older brother Richard couldn't contain himself. He went looking for Timothy more than once, canvassing the neighborhood, asking around, trying to hunt his sister's killer.
Starting point is 00:36:19 Police sympathized with him. They could see the pain he was enduring. But time and time again, they had to step in and stop him from looking. Another murder was the last thing this town needed. They believed that the law and justice would prevail. And on May 28, 1981, it seemed like maybe they were right. Just one week after Tara Sue Huffman walked out her back door barefoot and disappeared, Timothy Buss was arrested.
Starting point is 00:36:46 But there was no fanfare, just confusion. Because although a suspected killer had been caught, that killer was just 13 years old. How was anybody supposed to reconcile with the fact that a child was capable of such evil? For those close to Timothy, the notion was impossible. His father, David, did not believe it.
Starting point is 00:37:08 Neither did his grandmother Alice. As far as both of them were concerned, Timothy had nothing to do with what happened to Tara Huffman, and nothing was going to convince them otherwise. The police, however, were convinced. Timothy Buss was charged with the murder of Tara Sue Huffman. Because of his age, his case began in juvenile court, but following a hearing under the Illinois Juvenile Court Act, it was determined that the severity of the crime warranted
Starting point is 00:37:34 Timothy being charged as an adult. He was formally indicted by a grand jury in Kankakee County for the murder of Tara Sue Huffman and his bond was set at $100,000. At first. But when his family managed to pull together the $100,000, the judge called an emergency hearing to raise the bail. Ultimately, his bail was increased to a million dollars. So Timothy remained at Kankakee County Detention Center awaiting his trial.
Starting point is 00:38:02 And now for a brief ad break. Anyways, y'all, let's get back to the show. When the trial began on November 30, 1981 in Wilk County, the prosecution wasted no time laying out the evidence against Timothy. The palm print on the barrel's lid came back as a match for him. The blood in his home and clothing was a match for Tara. He had been seen taking that barrel to the spot where her body was found. Now, the defense hammered back, arguing that all of the evidence was circumstantial.
Starting point is 00:38:57 Defense attorney Lawrence Dirkson even went so far as to call the state's case, meaningless and incompetent, pure-ass nonsense. He claimed that no one had seen Timothy hurt Tara. Sure, the blood on his pants matched Tara's blood type, but plenty of people had the same type of blood. There was no way to say for certain that it was hers. Ultimately, however, it didn't take the jury long to determine that the evidence was enough. After just six hours of deliberation,
Starting point is 00:39:23 Timothy Buss was found guilty of the murder of Tara Sue Huffman, and the 13-year-old was sentenced to 25 years in prison for her murder. When the verdict was read, defense attorney Lawrence Dixon slammed his hand against the table in front of him. Behind him, Timothy's father, David Buss, began to sob. All the while, Timothy sat in his chair, motionless, staring at the judge with a blank expression. His defense attorney pointed at the jury and yelled out, I don't know how in the hell 12 people, 12 goddamn hypocrites, but before he could finish, the judge cut him off, threatening to charge him with contempt of court.
Starting point is 00:39:58 The decision had been made. The evidence was overwhelming. Yet still, according to the Edwardsville intelligentser, as Timothy was led away, he said to swarming reporters, I don't know why I have to go to jail, I didn't do it. For him and his family, the sentence was dumbfounding. 25 years was inconceivable, but the prosecution knew that it wasn't likely he'd serve that whole term. He was young, and if he behaved himself in prison,
Starting point is 00:40:25 he'd likely be given a second chance. But as we know, good behavior wasn't exactly Timothy's strong suit. Initially, he had to begin his sentence at a juvenile, facility due to his age. At the Illinois Youth Center, he garnered a reputation for his odd behavior, pathological lying, in desperation to escape the consequences of his actions. During required therapy sessions, he showed no interest in improving himself, or even taking responsibility for what he had done. Consulting psychologist Marvin Zipporan wrote in the 1982 report, quote, He hates everything and everyone without prejudice, and he is ready, willing, and able to vent his spleen on any available object.
Starting point is 00:41:08 End quote. Now, that same psychiatrist indicated that he had sociopathic tendencies, but he made it clear. Tim was not psychotic. He showed day in and day out, he knew exactly what he was doing. Now, at some point during his incarceration there, guards raced to his cell after hearing a loud, repetitive thudding, and sighed. They discovered Timothy using a dumbbell he had been given to exercise to chip away at the stone walls of his cell. He was trying to, quote, dig a hole to escape. The dumbbell and many of his privileges were taken away.
Starting point is 00:41:44 But over the next eight years, he tried to escape seven times, four times through group efforts with other inmates, and three times through suicide attempts. But when he was 21 years old, he was officially moved into the adult prison system. and while there he seemed to settle down a bit. There were no more escape attempts, but also no real growth. He continued to tell anyone who would listen
Starting point is 00:42:08 that he had been wrongfully convicted. In his eyes, he was the victim. But in the eyes of the public, he was a monster, which only made his release in August of 1993 more distressing. Despite being sentenced to 25 years, after serving just 12 and a half years, Timothy Buss walked out of prison a free man. At first, he returned to live with his father in Cancackey County,
Starting point is 00:42:32 but word quickly spread, and residents were not happy to have him back, especially the Huffman's, who were crushed that he had freedom while Tara was six feet underground. Randy Huffman, her brother, told the state journal, We feel the judicial system has failed us, and many others in the community felt the same way. Timothy's father started receiving threatening phone calls. They claimed to be terrified for their safety. So, within weeks of his release, Timothy packed his bags and moved to Sarasota, Florida,
Starting point is 00:43:02 to live with one of his childhood babysitters and longtime family friends, Sarah and her husband Tim. At that point, Timothy Buss was 26 years old. He had spent nearly half his life in prison. Tara and her husband Tim knew him as a little boy, the child they had looked after years ago, the one they had stayed in touch with through everything. But little did they know, the boy and this man were not the same person. Now, for a while it seemed like it might work. Timothy was under their roof.
Starting point is 00:43:30 He had structure. He had people around him who genuinely cared about what happened to him. But steady employment was a problem from the start. He moved from job to job, unable to hold any of them down for very long. And soon, the company that he kept began to worry Sarah and Tim. Several days a week, they'd discover Timothy bringing underaged girls into their home. At 26 years old, he was hanging out with 13, 14, 14, 15, 15-year-old. They began to suspect that not only was he having inappropriate relations with them,
Starting point is 00:43:59 he was doing drugs with them as well. So, after just six months of living there, Sarah and Tim told him it was time for him to get a place of his own. It was then that the guard rails came off entirely. Timothy stopped working. He began selling crack to fund his life. And he began a relationship, if you can even call it that. The girl he was dating was 15 years old.
Starting point is 00:44:22 Sadly, she had been forced into sex trafficking at an even younger age. But after they started dating, the two began to steal from local Walmarts, pawning the merchandise to fund their drug habit. Timothy was in a free fall of his own making. As May of 1995 approached, it was clear that things in Florida were not working out. So he and his girlfriend packed their bags and decided to try their luck in Illinois once more. Initially, Timothy's grandmother Alice took them both in. Then, after some time, they found a place of their own.
Starting point is 00:44:54 Given the age difference, their addiction, in Timothy's history, the relationship was doomed from the start. He was reportedly controlling of his underage girlfriend. Eventually, she reconnected with her family and went back to Florida to begin her life anew. Meanwhile, Timothy stayed behind, living in a town that hated him, and growing more and more disconnected from the family members he had left. In 1995, he attended his sister's wedding. He later disclosed to a psychologist that it was there, he realized.
Starting point is 00:45:27 He felt like a stranger, even around the people he had grown up with. Perhaps those family members knew that he was dangerous. And they were right. Timothy Bus was essentially a ticking time bomb. And the residents around him, many of whom had just moved to Kanaki County, had no idea what was ahead. Mecca Moulton was one of those people. In August of 1995, she settled into a new home in rural Aroma Park, just southeast of Bradley.
Starting point is 00:45:57 She had been drawn to the area by its safety and its access to nature. A river wound around town, and there were lush parks on nearly every street. It was perfect for her three children, James, a 13-year-old, 10-year-old Chris, and 2-year-old Cameron. Chris, her middle child, had a deep love of nature, one he had carried with him all his life. and despite being just 10, Chris had already experienced more than many people do in their lifetime. He was born on January 5, 1985 to Jim Meyer and Mika Moulton. Jim was a U.S. military pilot and Mika was in the Air Force, which meant that the early years of the family's life was spent hopping from base to base in Europe.
Starting point is 00:46:35 During his time there, Christopher learned to speak German, not just a word here and there, but actual full-on conversations. He was comfortable speaking with shopkeepers, teachers, and friends in German. Herman, despite his own parents not knowing the language. And that independence is something that followed him all his life. In a lot of ways, Chris grew up more quickly than most kids. You see, despite his brother James being three years older than him, Chris often took on a caretaker role with him.
Starting point is 00:47:03 James had autism and often needed help with daily tasks. But Chris was always happy to help his older brother. The two were inseparable, a constant steady force for one another, which was needed. Because after moving around Europe for a few years, the family made their way back to the U.S. And settled in Walla Walla, Washington. While there, they had Cameron, who was eight years younger than Christopher.
Starting point is 00:47:25 And saying Chris loved his brother would be an understatement. Very quickly, Cameron became his best buddy. He'd spent hours pushing him around the house in a laundry basket, dubbed his race car, while he made engine noises, and warned his little brother about make-believe obstacles. From the outside, the family seemed perfect. but sometime around 1994 their traditional life began to crumble.
Starting point is 00:47:48 Jim and Mika went their separate ways. Mika moved to Aroma Park, Illinois, and not wanting to uproot the kids entirely, she and Jim made a decision. They would spend the school year with Jim and his new partner, Terry, and Walla Walla. But during the summer, they'd fly to Illinois and spend their entire break with their mother. It was untraditional, but it seemed to work for everyone. Quickly, Chris found his rhythm in Aroma Park and made a big, group of friends. People who knew Christopher described him the same way. Beautiful blue eyes,
Starting point is 00:48:19 blonde hair, dimples, always laughing, always sun-kissed and freckled from long summer days spent outside. It seemed like his sweet personality just radiated from him. He paid attention to the people around him and showed them that he cared. In the summer of 1995, before his family friend's birthday, he remembered she liked butterflies and got to work all morning drawing her the perfect birthday card with a big beautiful butterfly on it. Butterflies were her favorite, but they were also his. Chris loved being outside. He loved wildlife. If he saw an animal that had been hit on the side of the road, he'd beg his mom to pull over so he could see if there was a way to save it. He loved to fish, but he refused to keep or kill anything he caught. For him, fishing was just a way to get closer to
Starting point is 00:49:04 the animals he loved. He spent almost all summer fishing at a boat launch near his house, as well as a part of the river nearby, affectionately dubbed the bayou by local kids. Throughout the summer of 1995, Chris was there nearly every day, playing with kids, swimming, catching and releasing fish, coming up with new games to play. But as June turned to July and July turned to August, those long summer days seemed to be getting shorter and shorter. Chris knew it wouldn't be long before he was back in Washington, back to school, back to his usual routine.
Starting point is 00:49:37 He was eager to get every last bit of joy he could out of the rest of his summer. So on August 7, 1995, despite it being early in the afternoon, Chris begged his mom to let him and James go down to the bayou. At first, Mika was hesitant. It was already about 1 p.m., but Chris was hard to deny. She described him in Moms of the Missing by Stefan Hugh as quite a character. He was one of those jokesters that always knew how to get you on his side. That day, Mika smiled at her son, who was looking up at her with begging eyes and she told him that he could go. But he was, had to be back by five or he would miss dinner. What happened after that is a blur to her. In Moms of the Missing, she disclosed that the most important detail for her of that afternoon is still
Starting point is 00:50:21 hazy. I don't know for sure if he knew how much I loved him. I just wish I could remember if I told him that when he left to go playing. Chris grabbed his stuff, hopped on his bike with his brother James, and made his way towards the boat launch. The heat hit them the moment they pushed off. 97 degrees, not a cloud in the sky. Miko watched them leave the driveway and peddled down the street towards the river. It was a sight she had seen more times than she could count, but this was the last time she'd ever see it.
Starting point is 00:50:52 James and Chris made it to the river sometime after one. They spent the afternoon doing what they always did, playing with the other kids in the neighborhood, fishing and splashing around. At about three, James was ready to go home, but Chris stayed. there was still time to play, so he sat at the edge of the riverbank, throughout his line, and waited for a fish to bite. That's where he was when around 4 p.m., a man walked over. He had dark hair, a mustache, and was wearing a turquoise tank top and blue jean cut off shorts.
Starting point is 00:51:24 He puffed on a cigarette as he talked to the boys on the dock. He mentioned he grew up in Aroma Park, that he had family there and was looking to fish. but when the boys glanced at his tackle box, they noticed the lures were far too large for river fishing. Chris asked him why he had the wrong lores, and the man told everyone that he had just come from Florida, so his lores were all for saltwater fishing in the ocean. But he'd make do. He had a pole, he had a tackle box,
Starting point is 00:51:54 and on his hip he had a filet knife. So the boys assumed he was just there to fish, like he said. But around 4 o'clock, Christopher and the man were seen walking along the path towards the parking lot. Christopher leaned his bike against a nearby tree and walked over to the car, where he and the man talked for a few minutes. Then Christopher jogged down to the water's edge and washed the mud from his shoes. Some of the other boys who were still down on the dock tried to get Chris to play for a little longer, but he shook his head. He had to be home soon. One of the boys told him
Starting point is 00:52:29 he still had time to play, but Chris was resolute. He had to go. nearby in the parking lot, the strange man's car moved slowly, circling. It pulled towards the exit, heading in the direction of Harry's bait shop. At the same time, Christopher got on his bicycle. He rode out of the parking lot quickly in the same direction as the car. The other boys watched him go, and just down the road at home, Mika waited for Chris to pull into the driveway. Five o'clock came and went. Mika still waited.
Starting point is 00:53:01 She checked the time. 505, 515, 520. By 522, she felt a surge of annoyance. Chris knew better than to be late. In fact, just a week prior, when he had lost track of time and come home after dinner, his mother made him sit down and write a list of all of the reasons she wanted him home on time.
Starting point is 00:53:22 In Moms of the Missing by Stephen Hugh, she stated, quote, I never told this before, but his answer shocked me. He wrote on the paper it was important because if he was not home on time, I might worry that someone had taken him. It was almost like he knew what was going to happen, like he read the future and foresaw his own fate.
Starting point is 00:53:41 End quote. As 522 turned to 5.30, and 5.30 crept towards six, Mika's frustration turned to fear. Eventually, as night fell, she drove down to the boat launch and walked along the stretch of the river, a flashlight guiding her way. Some of Chris's friends were still there.
Starting point is 00:54:01 She asked them one by one where her son was. Each kid responded that he had left to go home around 4.30. Now, by chance, a police officer happened to be in the area. When he saw Mika calling out Chris's name, he approached her and asked what was wrong. She blurted out that her son was missing. And immediately the officer called for backup. Within minutes, the boat launch was transformed. Search teams, canines, police cars, fire departments from Aroma Park,
Starting point is 00:54:31 Kanaki. There were boats going into the water, volunteer citizen showing up to help. But at first, the officers were fairly resolute in what they believe had happened. The speed of that river would have a lot of drownings. A lot of people fall in and disappearing that river, so that makes it dangerous in itself. A couple of times that night, Mika heard searchers asking around, did they find a body? She lost it each time. There's not going to be a body. She told them they're going to find Christopher. She couldn't let herself think otherwise. she couldn't let herself feel that he wasn't coming home. But as searches of the river continued and detectives spoke with witnesses,
Starting point is 00:55:08 that worry was only further cemented. Two boys said that there had been a man at the dock that day. He had dark hair and a mustache, and he had been talking with Christopher. According to the other kids, when Christopher left the boat launch, the man had gone with him, but nobody had seen either of them or Christopher's blogging since. However, the next morning, August 8th, the first few pieces of things, physical evidence came to the forefront.
Starting point is 00:55:33 While looking near the Cancackey River, searchers found a shoe floating near the boat launch. They pulled it from the water carefully, and it only took Mika seconds to identify it as one of Christopher's Chicago Blackhawks high tops. Later that same day, searchers found his bicycle thrown into the brush of a wooded area on the opposite side of the boat launch. Chris had no reason to go over there, and it was clear to detectives that someone had carried it there and left it, trying to hide it. All the signs were pointing to something much more sinister than a drowning.
Starting point is 00:56:05 In Moms of the Missing, Mika disclosed, I kept saying to myself that this did not mean he wasn't okay. They found his bike, not him. I forced myself to believe he was coming home. Mika didn't know what to do. She didn't know who to call or what came next or how any of this was supposed to work. The days blurred together. She struggled to eat.
Starting point is 00:56:26 People constantly bombarded her with questions she didn't know the answer to and told her information she didn't want to hear. Desperate for some solace, she reached out to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. She was looking for anyone who had been through this before, anyone who could tell her what to do next. Meanwhile, investigators worked with witnesses
Starting point is 00:56:45 who had been at the boat launch to put together a composite sketch of the dark-haired man with the mustache, who had been seen with Christopher. Copies of that sketch went everywhere, to neighboring law enforcement agencies, to the local media and into the hands of anyone
Starting point is 00:57:01 who might recognize the face. One of those people was Tara Huffman's older brother, Richard. He was still living in nearby Bradley at the time. And when he saw the sketch in the newspaper, his world collapsed for the second time. It was about the day after Christopher disappeared when there was a police composite in the newspaper. And instantly, when I seen the picture,
Starting point is 00:57:26 I knew it was Tim Bus. Richard had no idea that Timothy was still in the area. No one did. The realization that he was back in their community and may have committed yet another crime was absolutely crushing. As the days passed, it became clear that Richard wasn't the only one
Starting point is 00:57:44 who believed Timothy Bus was the man in the sketch. Witnesses started coming forward. A man named Charles Henry had been driving home from work on August 7th when he noticed a car parked along the road near the river. A man was standing behind it, the trunk open. As Henry drove past, the man turned, and the two of them made eye contact. Charles said the man had a fillet knife in a leather case protruding from his back pocket.
Starting point is 00:58:08 When the composite came out, Charles recognized the face immediately. He contacted the police. Another witness came forward. A woman named Bobby Fancher had been driving to work on Route 113 at 1245 in the morning on August 7th, when she noticed a car pull out from a dirt road just west of hunting areas. 7 in Cancackey State Park. She saw the same car at the same location the following evening at 9.25 p.m. The driver had a mustache.
Starting point is 00:58:34 When she contacted police, she identified it as Timothy's car. And the damning evidence just kept coming. A neighbor of Timothy's, Candice Atkins, had seen his car at the apartment complex around 1 o'clock on August 7th, the afternoon Christopher disappeared. But by 4 and 6 that evening, it was gone. The following day on August 8th, Candace watched him sit in his car for a long stretch, completely still, staring at nothing,
Starting point is 00:59:01 agitated, telling people to be quiet, to leave him alone. He had never acted that way before. On August nights, investigators went to Timothy's father's house in Aroma Park. David Bus was shocked to see them. He told them Timothy was living with his brother and Joliette. Officers put the apartment under surveillance, but by the time they got there, Timothy was gone. That night, 30 minutes north in the town of Braidwood, a front desk clerk at BMP Motel, stood in front of Timothy Bus. She recognized him. She had seen his face in the composite sketch, but as he bought a room for the night, he told her a completely different name.
Starting point is 00:59:42 Jim Benson. Regardless, she handed over his room key, and as soon as he walked back out into the night, she wrote down his license plate number. When she was sure he was out of earshot, she called the police to tell them that she thought the man from the sketch was in her hotel. They ran the plate number and confirmed her suspicions. The car was registered to none other than Timothy bus. He was trying to hide. Unfortunately for him, it wasn't going to work. Officers got in two positions. They waited through the night, watching to make sure Timothy didn't try to flee again.
Starting point is 01:00:17 At 8 o'clock the following morning, he walked out of the same time. He walked out of his room. The officers were ready. After a long night of waiting, they were on the cusp of getting something out of Timothy. But what they weren't expecting was just how much evidence Timothy gave them. On his way to the car, he stopped at a dumpster near the entrance,
Starting point is 01:00:37 and carelessly dropped something in. Then he got in his car and he left. While one pair of officers discreetly followed him in their unmarked car, another pair approached the dumpster, And there, resting in the trash, was a pair of boots soaking wet and covered in blood. The boots were taken into evidence. Meanwhile, Timothy drove to a park in Wilmington along the Kankakee River, the same river where Christopher Meyer had spent the last afternoon of his life.
Starting point is 01:01:07 Three officers followed. They watched as Timothy spoke to an elderly man who was fishing. But just as he did, an officer approached Timothy and announced himself. He said he would like to speak with him. Timothy was visibly nervous. He couldn't stand still. His eyes moved anywhere except towards the officer in front of him. When one of the officers lifted a camera,
Starting point is 01:01:30 Timothy turned away from it and raised his hands to block his face. He agreed to go with them to the station. In just hours after arriving, Timothy signed a form consenting to the search of his vehicle. When investigators opened the trunk of his 1986 Chevy Spectrum, they found some of what they were looking for. They found some jumper cables with traces of blood. There was more blood on the dent puller.
Starting point is 01:01:54 The carpet soaked through to the padding underneath. On the floor of the back seat, there was a hammer. The mud on the claw had dried and crusted over. But they still didn't have a body. And until they ran some tests, they had no choice but to let Timothy go while they scrambled to get warrants for his arrest. Around the same time, word reached Meekas house.
Starting point is 01:02:16 The house had been full all week. Neighbors, friends, people stopping by to sit with her, to help with the phones, or to just be there with her. Someone from her work came in and said it out loud. Oh my God, they have Timothy Buss in custody. The room went quiet. Mika looked around. Nobody would look her in the eye. She asked who Timothy Buss was.
Starting point is 01:02:38 Nobody answered. She asked again and again. Still, nothing. Everyone in the county knew who Timothy was. They had seen the coverage. They had been there when Tara's mangled body was found. And with his name in the mix, it was clear to them what had happened to Christopher. And no one could bring themselves to speak.
Starting point is 01:02:59 Mika was furious. She left the house. She had a cell phone, a loaner from the phone company, one of several things people had offered her during that week. And with it, she crossed the street and walked into the woods to call her mother. Nobody will tell me who Timothy Buss is. Somebody just said they have him in custody, and nobody in that house will tell me anything.
Starting point is 01:03:20 Her mother gasped. She tried to put Mika off. Don't worry about it right now, she said, but Mika kept pushing. And finally, her mother told her exactly who Timothy Buss was, and what he had done 14 years earlier just down the road. On August 10th, Timothy was charged with aggravated kidnapping. Because Christopher's body hadn't been found yet, it was the only charge they could file against him.
Starting point is 01:03:45 The judge ordered him held without bond while the public continued to scan the forests, streams, and parks, desperate for answers. Then, finally, they got them. On Saturday, August 12th, pieces of Christopher's clothing turned up around the gravel parking lot in the Kankakee State Park. On a path leading from the parking lot, searchers found a piece of his t-shirt on the ground. His Ninja Turtle underwear was hanging in a nearby bush. Now detectives had an area to search. Day after day, they combed through brush, trees, and along the riversides. But it wasn't until Tuesday, August 15th, that they found what they had come for.
Starting point is 01:04:21 At Hunting Area 10, they found a single blonde hair. They kept going. Through Hunting Area 9, 8. And at Hunting Area 7, they parked and made their way on foot through a gap in the dense brush. And then it hit them. The smell. They moved deeper into the woods until they reached a sheet of plywood lying on the ground. Beneath it, in a shallow grave no more than eight inches deep, was the body of a young boy.
Starting point is 01:04:45 The tips of his shoes broke the surface of the dirt above him. He had been sliced four times across the shoulder, stabbed 28 times in the back, and 20 times in the chest and abdomen. It was clear that he hadn't gone down without a fight. A large contusion to his jaw led detectives to believe that, when stabbing didn't knock Chris down, the killer changed tactics and hit him with a blunt object, knocking him unconscious. Then the killer took things further. With the same knife he had used to stab Christopher nearly 40 times, he cut off his penis.
Starting point is 01:05:17 It was a brutal, horrific sight. And somehow, detectives had to tell his mother what they had found. Several miles away, Mika was startled by her doorbell ringing. In recent days, friends and family had been floating in and out. Something about the formality, though, of the ringing bell set her on edge. When she opened the door and saw a detective standing there, her stomach dropped. My doorbell rang, and when I looked at the detective, I knew.
Starting point is 01:05:48 And she came in and said a child's body had been found, but they couldn't identify that it was Chris. And I looked right at her, and I said, but there's no other children missing. The loss was all-consuming. Two weeks after Christopher was found, his family gathered at the Aroma Park Methodist Church to say goodbye. people who had never met Christopher sent flowers.
Starting point is 01:06:12 They surrounded a royal blue casket at the front of the church. Christopher's grandfather stood up and spoke. He asked the people in that church not to carry anger with them over what had happened to his grandson. He wanted to see the good of the community, the love. And as the procession made its way around town, he got to see glimpses of it. Cars pulled over to the side of the road,
Starting point is 01:06:33 construction workers who stopped their work. They took their hard hats off and held them over their hearts as the family passed by. As the young palm bearers struggled to carry his casket, a monarch butterfly was circling nearby. It landed on the shoulder of Pegg Skyberg, the family friend Christopher had drawn the butterfly for when he learned how much she loved them.
Starting point is 01:06:54 A mourner standing nearby said quietly that Christopher was there with them. For weeks, butterflies seemed drawn to Christopher's grave in Aroma Park, Illinois. In Moms of the missing, Mika spoke about an incident about a week after the funeral. She sat at her son's grave and a butterfly landed on her shoulder.
Starting point is 01:07:12 She tried to brush it off, but the butterfly wouldn't move. She stated, I ended up stroking it, and when I went back to my car, it followed me. It was like Christopher saying, hey mom, it's all okay. Today I can still go up to a butterfly, put my fingers under it, and it will just sit. I believe missing children send signs to their parents. I believe that children are much closer to angels. than we are as adults. People in the community wanted justice.
Starting point is 01:07:42 Following Chris's discovery and burial, additional charges were filed for Timothy Buss. He was now facing charges of first-degree murder, aggravated kidnapping, and aggravated unlawful restraint, which made him eligible for the death penalty. At his arraignment, he pleaded not guilty. But when his trial began on June 13, 1996,
Starting point is 01:08:04 that plea was put to the test. DNA analysis of blood, found in the trunk of Timothy's car, determined that a person with that profile would occur in the population only one out of 419 million. A footprint found near where Chris's body had been located, matched the right boot Timothy had dropped in the motel dumpster, same pattern and same size. The soil caked on the hammer found in his back seat,
Starting point is 01:08:30 was consistent with the soil at the burial site. Forensic entomologists examined the insects recovered from Chris's body, and they determined that he had died before sunset on August 7th. The same afternoon, he rode his bike down to the river. The same night people saw Timothy bus speaking with Chris in that very area. The defense struggled to counter any of the evidence. Timothy's father testified on his behalf, and so did his grandmother. Defense experts took the stand and told the jury about learning disabilities
Starting point is 01:09:02 and a defect in his frontal lobe. They argued that it explained his decisions and his actions, but no one was buying it. The jury went out to deliberate, and during those hours they sent a request back. They wanted to see photographs of the crime scene. Almost four hours after closing arguments, they filed back into the courtroom,
Starting point is 01:09:22 and Timothy Buss stood up. The judge then read the verdict, guilty on all three counts. And after that, Timothy Buss was sentenced to death. Christopher's family felt a wave of relief when the verdict was read, and they weren't alone. Tarasu Huffman's siblings and parents sat alongside them, comforting them. Barbara Huffman later told the courier, Timothy Buss never should have gotten out in the first place.
Starting point is 01:09:47 Christopher should still be living. For Mika, Barbara had been a person to lean on, and as Timothy was sentenced to death, it felt like justice for both of their children. Yet, on the other side of the aisle for Timothy's family, it was a betrayal. and allegedly they decided to take it out on Mika. Within the first year after the trial, Mika received a letter. It wasn't signed, but she knew exactly who it was from. Timothy's grandmother always called him Timmy.
Starting point is 01:10:16 No one else did. The minute Mika saw him referred to Timmy in the letter, Mika knew exactly who had written it. In the letter, the person blamed Mika for what had happened to Christopher. She wrote that Mika should have known what Timothy was capable. of and that she never should have let her son go down to that river in the first place. But Mika had never even heard of Timothy Buss before Christopher disappeared. But the letter left a mark.
Starting point is 01:10:43 The question of whether she should have done something differently, whether she could have stopped it. He had been going to that boat lunch all summer, every day, with all of the other kids in the neighborhood. The guilt wasn't hers to carry. And yet she did something with it. Mika Moulton became an advocate for children's safety. She connected with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, the same organization she had reached out to in the desperate days after Christopher disappeared. Through the National Center, she became a part of a program called Team Hope. Team Hope pairs parents who have lived through the disappearance or exploitation of a child
Starting point is 01:11:22 with families who are going through it right now. Mika knows what those first days feel like, not knowing what to do, or who to trust, or how to hold yourself together. She knows what it's like to sit in a courtroom and listen to the details of what happened to your child and not be able to show a single emotion. She's been trained to help other families navigate, which she once had to navigate alone.
Starting point is 01:11:45 And she isn't the only one in her family doing this incredible work. Mika's son Cameron, who was just two years old when Christopher went missing, now works as an advocate for children, teaching parents and kids how to protect themselves. On the 21st anniversary of his brother's passing, he posted this on Facebook. Teaching communities how to protect themselves, stay safe, and telling them that they can be survivors too has become a passion of mine. The spark that ignites in people's eyes when they realize they're able to stay safe never dulls. 21 years ago today, my path was paved in a
Starting point is 01:12:19 different way than others. But I still walk it, knowing that others can be helped by a tragedy that forever changed the perspective and life of our family. Now, on this same day, Today, I walk into a conference in Dallas dedicated to child safety and well-being. Funny how this works, isn't it? Everything happens for a reason. So, thank you, Chris, for allowing myself and my family to do so much and help so many, to meet phenomenal people and create fantastic memories. Thank you for watching over us and keeping us safe, but most of all, thank you for being my brother.
Starting point is 01:12:54 Today, Timothy Busch remains behind bars at the Stateville Correctional Center and Creston. till Illinois. In the year 2000, the governor of Illinois halted all executions in the state. As a result, Timothy Buss's death sentence was commuted. Now, he's serving a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole. But even though there was justice here, it feels very unfair. At just 13 years old, Timothy Buss took the life of a vibrant five-year-old girl, Tara Sue Huffman, a girl who loved animals, who loved to play outside, and loved her family more than anything. And despite taking her life, Timothy was still given another chance, and he used that chance to take the life of another young child. For Chris's family, the pain is still unimaginable. Every time
Starting point is 01:13:45 Mika visits her son's grave, she's reminded that she's not far from the Kanaki River, where he spent his last summer. He should have finished fifth grade. He should have gone to Mika. middle school and high school, he should have kept looking out for his brother James the way he always did, right there beside him whenever James needed him. Like Tara, he should have grown up and built a life. Instead, he was 10 years old, and he rode his blue bicycle down to the river on a warm August afternoon, and he never came back home. His mom Mika later said, quote, God loaned me 10 and a half years of twinkling blue eyes, dimples, and joy. It's now time to lift up Chris and ask God to use this child as our special angel. In honor of Chris and Tara, we will be making a donation to the
Starting point is 01:14:36 National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, an organization dedicated to finding missing children, producing child sexual exploitation, and supporting the families affected by these crimes. Hey everybody, thank you so much for listening to this week's episode of Murder in America. We have a really big series coming in June, end of May, that we are excited to dive into with you guys. But we just want to thank everybody for listening. And we did have some issues recently with ad placement that is totally out of Courtney and I's hands. It has to do with our parent company and the hosting platform. So we had to talk and we figured it out.
Starting point is 01:15:14 And hopefully that will no longer be an issue. I think some of you guys have noticed already, but we heard you all and we listened, and we had to go back and forth a lot of different times with a lot of different people, but I think that we finally figured out what was happening. So thank you for bearing with us on that. Also, if you want to support what we do here on the show,
Starting point is 01:15:32 please consider joining us on Patreon. If you really don't like the ads on Patreon, you can get access to early ad-free versions of every episode of the show. So, yeah, you can get a completely clean version with no ads at all on Patreon. And in addition, on Patreon, we offer bonus episodes.
Starting point is 01:15:48 So every single month, we post at least two bonus episodes. And these are our full-length episodes of the show. Sometimes they're even longer than the episode that we release on the main feed that week. Featuring both Courtney and I, they're exactly like episodes you would hear here on the main feed, just exclusively on Patreon. Also, don't forget to follow us on Instagram at Murder in America to see photos from every case that we cover here on the show.
Starting point is 01:16:12 And be sure to leave us a five-star review wherever you listen to this podcast, whether that's Apple Podcasts or Spotify or wherever. Those reviews help and we love hearing from you guys. Anyways, y'all, thank you so much for joining us. We will be back next week. I hope you'll have an amazing weekend or a week if you're listening a few days late. And yeah, I'll catch you all on the next one. Descend into the unexplained and unimaginable.
Starting point is 01:16:40 Mom said to them, what are you here for? What do you want? That's not human! What's not human! True accounts of crimes and anomalies so strange, They defy reasoning. It was extreme violence. I've never seen anything like it.
Starting point is 01:16:53 She was forced to eat human flesh and survived the unthinkable. Welcome to the antiquarium of sinister happenings and documented atrocities. And at that moment, the feeling to survive kicked in almost like an animal instinct. I told her to run. I knew that minute something terrible had happened. Why would somebody do this to him? Why would they try to hurt my baby? Search the Antiquarium of documented atrocities on Apple, Spotify, and wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 01:17:32 A presentation of Bloody FM.

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