Murder In America - EP. 37 TEXAS - The Poisoned Pixy Stix: The Halloween Murder of 8-Year-Old Timothy O’Bryan

Episode Date: October 11, 2021

In 1974 a horrific crime Houston, Texas, a murder that would spawn urban legends for years to come. A young kid had been murdered after eating a poisoned piece of candy he had received while Trick or ...Treating on Halloween... but WHO could have been responsible for this atrocity? WHO was the person responsible for "KILLING HALLOWEEN"? The answer will SHOCK you... and YOU'RE listening, to MURDER IN AMERICA. - Download JUNE'S JOURNEY and start playing along with Courtney and Colin TODAY!: Google App Store: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=net.wooga.junes_journey_hidden_object_mystery_game&hl=en_US&gl=US Apple App Store: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/junes-journey-hidden-objects/id1200391796 - - Clear up YOUR acne (and dramatically improve your skincare routine) with APOSTROPHE! Just click on THIS LINK and use code "STATE" at checkout!! https://www.apostrophe.com/pod/STATE/ - - Get 21% off your MANLYBAND order AND a free ring at the LINK BELOW!! (be sure to use our link and code!): https://www.manlybands.com/MIA Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:03:56 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 00:04:16 You have been warned. Undoubtedly, one of the best days of the year, especially when you're a little kid. You and your friends are dressing up as, princesses, witches, ghosts. You've been planning out your costume for weeks, and on the 31st of October, every year, the big day is finally here. Once night falls, you and your friends spend hours running around the neighborhood, knocking on strangers' doors, asking for candy. By the end of the night, you and your friends compare Halloween baskets, seeing who got the most candy. But the fun doesn't
Starting point is 00:05:00 end there. After trick-or-treating is over, you get to come home, empty your candy out on the floor, and eat as much as you can before bedtime. This is exactly what happened in our case for today with a little boy named Timothy O'Brien. But instead of eating his candy and peacefully falling asleep after a night of fun, Timothy starts to vomit. He starts to convulse. His dad knew that something was wrong and he called the police, but unfortunately, Timothy would never make it to the hospital alive. He died that Halloween night because there, inside of his Halloween basket, was a treat that had been laced with cyanide. This is the story of the poisoned pixie stick, the Halloween murder of 8-year-old Timothy O'Brien. I'm Courtney Shannon. And I'm Colin Brown.
Starting point is 00:05:54 And you're listening to Murder in America. 31st, 1974, in a suburb of Houston, Texas called Deer Park. Within this town is the Bowling Green subdivision, where nearly every house is decorated for Halloween. There are carved pumpkins on the porches, skeletons hanging from doors, and images of creepy witches in the windows. It's the best time of the year. Everyone remembers how exciting Halloween was as a little kid.
Starting point is 00:07:15 This particular Halloween was on a Thursday, and as the school bus drives into the subdivision to drop off the neighborhood kids from school, everyone is eager to run home and get into their Halloween costumes. Dozens of children change into their outfits for the night. Princesses, superheroes, cowboys, they're putting their tiaras on and painting their faces ready to take on the scary night.
Starting point is 00:07:36 But in one house in this neighborhood, there's a real monster, one that doesn't wear a mask or hide under children's beds. He looks like everyone else, hiding in plain sight. And as night falls upon the suburban neighborhood and children flood the streets. The monster cuts open a pixie stick.
Starting point is 00:07:54 He empties a little bit of the powdered sugar out of the long tube and puts a dose of cyanide inside. Among one of the houses in the neighborhood lives the O'Brien family. There's 8-year-old Timothy O'Brien, who is dressed up in his Planet of the Apes costume, and his five-year-old sister Elizabeth, who was dressed as a princess. The two siblings are very excited for the night
Starting point is 00:08:18 because their dad, Ronald, arranged for them to go trick-or-treating with the Bates family, who live in a nice neighborhood in Houston. Once Timothy and Elizabeth are all dressed, they grab their Halloween baskets and make their way over to Jim Bates' house. Once they arrive, the families eat dinner together, chat for a while, and then the dads, Ronald and Jim, take the kids through the neighborhood for some trick-or-treating. The group goes by several houses that evening. The dads follow close behind as the kids run door to door filling their bags with the candy of strangers.
Starting point is 00:08:53 Along their route, they see a house that doesn't have any lights on, which typically means that the family isn't home, or they just don't want anyone to come to the door. But wanting to get as much candy as possible, the group decides to try the house anyways. Jim Bates waits back near the street while Ronald and the kids approach the house. The group waits for a second, but no answer. So the kids call it a loss and move on to the next house. Jim and the children run to the house next door, but Ronald stays back for a few minutes to see if just maybe the family would answer their door.
Starting point is 00:09:27 And to everyone's surprise, Ronald comes from around the corner with five huge pixie sticks in hand, saying, quote, you've got rich neighbors, look what they're handing out. End quote. The kids were ecstatic. These weren't just normal pixie sticks.
Starting point is 00:09:43 They were the 22-inch ones, which is way too much sugar, but I know that I used to love those as a little kid. When the kids asked Ronald where he got them, he tells them that it was from the house with their lights off. Someone had ended up answering the door after all. The children wanted the pixie sticks right then and there, but Ronald told them that he would give it to him when they got back because they were so large. The group would go on to a few more houses that night, but they ended up going in a little early because it's started to rain. Once back at Jim Bates' house, the kids were dying to get their jumbo pixie sticks, so Ronald handed one to his daughter, Elizabeth, one to his son, Timothy, one to each of Jim's kids, and he had one left over. Before leaving, another neighborhood
Starting point is 00:10:27 kids stopped by the Bates' house, and Ronald gave him the last pixie stick. It was a successful Halloween night. The kids had fun, everyone had plenty of candy, and now it was time to go home and call it a night. When Timothy and Elizabeth got back to their house, they begged their father to let them eat some of their Halloween candy. But Ronald knew that the kids had school the next day, and I'm sure he didn't want them up all night, so he made a deal with them. They could each pick one piece of candy to have before bed.
Starting point is 00:10:57 Elizabeth went through her bag and carefully picked out her piece, but for Timothy, that decision was easy. He wanted the jumbo pixie stick. So he opens it up, puts it to his mouth, mouth, tilts his head back expecting a mouth full of sugar, but nothing comes out. The sugar was apparently jammed inside of the tube, so he brings it to his dad and asks him to help. Ronald grabs the tube, rolls it between his hands loosening the sugar inside, and hands it back to Timothy. But when Timothy starts to pour the sugar in his mouth, he gets a look on his face. Something
Starting point is 00:11:37 about the candy tasted off. Bitter, almost. Timothy tells his dad about the terrible taste and Ronald runs to the kitchen to grab some Kool-Aid for his son. Timothy drinks it washing the bitter taste out of his mouth and goes on with his night. But instead of the sugar high that he expected to feel, Timothy starts getting sick. Almost immediately after consuming the candy, he starts complaining about a stomach ache. Moments later, he runs to the bathroom and starts to vomit. According to Wikipedia, symptoms of cyanide poisoning include headache, dizziness, fast heart rate, shortness of breath, and vomiting. Timothy was currently at this stage of poisoning, but just minutes later, he would enter into the second stage,
Starting point is 00:12:30 which includes seizures, slow heart rate, low blood pressure, loss of consciousness, and cardiac arrest. Timothy's father Ronald ran into the bathroom with his son and quickly called 911. But shortly after, Timothy would start convulsing and eventually go limp in his father's arms. The ambulance would arrive at the O'Brien household shortly after, but there wasn't much they could do. Timothy died on that fateful Halloween night in 1974, at the hands of someone evil. According to Michael Segalov in his article titled The True Story, of the notorious trick-or-treat murder. The prosecutor at the time was named Mike Hinton,
Starting point is 00:13:13 and he quickly got word about the death of 8-year-old Timothy O'Brien. And something was off about this incident. Little kids don't randomly die like this. So he placed a call to the medical examiner named Joseph A. Yehimchik. According to Segalov's article, Hinton said, quote, I told him the situation and he asked what the young man's breath smelled like, end quote. When Hinton called the morgue and asked them to smell Timothy's breath,
Starting point is 00:13:38 They reported that it smelled like almonds. After hearing this information, the medical examiner was positive that Timothy had been poisoned with cyanide. And the medical examiner was right. An autopsy would later prove that Timothy had enough cyanide in his system to kill two full-grown adults. This information was troubling to investigators because it meant that someone out there, in their own community, had set out to kill children on Halloween. After talking to Ronald O'Brien, investigators discovered that four other children currently possess the same pixie sticks as Timothy. And it was now a race against time to confiscate them so that no other children would be harmed. The authorities called the parents of one child who had a pixie stick and told them to quickly find it because it may have been poisoned.
Starting point is 00:14:30 The parents frantically looked through their son's basket and to their horror, it's nowhere to be seen. They run up to their son's bedroom as fast as they can, praying that he's still alive. And when they open his door, they find him fast asleep, with the pixie stick unopened in his hands. Apparently, whoever tampered with the candy poured the cyanide in and then stapled it back shut. The little boy had tried to open it, but he couldn't because of the staple. Luckily, none of the other children had eaten their pixie sticks that night. Only Timothy. News spread quickly about the poisoned Halloween candy, and many parents turned their kids' Halloween baskets over to police.
Starting point is 00:15:13 If Timothy O'Brien's candy was poisoned, how many other kids had poison in their candy? Investigators inspected many bags checking for cyanide, but the five pixie sticks seemed to be the only candy that had been tampered with. It later came out that the top two inches of Timothy's pixie stick were filled with cyanide. Hey guys, I have to tell you about this really fun game that Colin and I have been playing on our phones for the last few weeks. It's called June's Journey, and you can download it for free on your mobile device. This game literally hooks you instantly. Seriously, I love phone games, and once I started playing June's Journey, I literally couldn't stop. Who doesn't love a good mystery? In the game, June's Journey, you play as June Parker, an amateur sleuth trying to solve the mystery behind her own. own sister's mysterious death. Since this is a true crime podcast, you know that both Colin and I
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Starting point is 00:16:58 Apple App Store or Google Play. Family was grieving, but investigators needed to take action and find who did this. So they ask Ronald O'Brien where Timothy got the pixie sticks. He tells investigators that they got them from a house in Jim Bates' neighborhood. But when they drive Ronald around the neighborhood asking for him to point out the house, he can't seem to remember where it was. When investigators asked him what the person looked like, he told him that he never saw their face. They just handed him the pixie sticks and shut the door. The only characteristic that Ronald could recall was that this person had hairy arms. Investigators, were not able to get many leads from this and ended up bringing Ronald back home.
Starting point is 00:17:42 His son had just died and he was going through a lot, so investigators decided to give him some space. A few days later, though, they would pick up Ronald again for another ride through the neighborhood. And this time, he was able to find it. It was the house at 4112 Donorail Drive. The man who lived there was Courtney Melvin. Did Melvin have a sinister side? Did he have a motive to murder kids on Halloween? The police weren't so sure.
Starting point is 00:18:10 And when they knocked on his door, they discovered that he wasn't home. He was at work as an air traffic controller at the Hobby Airport in Houston. So they headed over to pay him a visit. When they questioned Melvin, he adamantly denies poisoning any candy. In fact, he claims he wasn't even home on Halloween night. He was there at the airport working a shift. Investigators were able to confirm this alibi, and Melvin was quickly drawn. from their suspect list.
Starting point is 00:18:40 And now investigators can focus on the person who they really suspected all along. Ronald O'Brien, Timothy's father. All while investigators were running around testing candy, interviewing witnesses, checking alibis. They were also looking into the O'Brien family like they do in any investigation. And what they found definitely made them suspicious. Ronald O'Brien was an optician who had a hard time holding down a job. In fact, within the last decade, he had been fired from 21 different jobs,
Starting point is 00:19:19 and he was on the verge of being fired at his current position because his employer suspected him of stealing. According to David Scall in Death Makes a Holiday, Ronald was about to get his car repossessed, his home had just been foreclosed on, and he was behind him. behind on several bank loans. When investigators looked a little further, they discovered that Ronald was $100,000 in debt. In today's time with inflation, that equates to around $55,000.
Starting point is 00:19:52 But being in debt doesn't make you a murderer. However, taking life insurance policies out on your children right before they are killed sure does raise some red flags. That's right, Investigators found two life insurance policies taken out on both Timothy and Elizabeth on October 3rd by Ronald O'Brien himself. The policies equaled about $60,000. When investigators looked through Ronald's things, they found a list of all of Ronald's bills added up. And the total cost of what he owed was almost exactly $60,000. It was suspicious to investigators that Ronald never took life insurance policies out on he or his wife, only his two children.
Starting point is 00:20:43 And if that isn't suspicious enough, Ronald called the insurance company the morning after his son passed away, wanting to claim his payout. For most innocent grieving parents, the insurance money would be the last thing that they're thinking about after the death of their child. But not for Ronald. Many family members would go on to say that Ronald acted very strange after Timothy's death. He didn't seem to be as sad as everyone thought he would be. Now, we obviously can't judge people on how they grieve, but it is strange that Ronald talked to many people about using the insurance money from Timothy's death to take a nice vacation. Investigators also found out that in the weeks prior to Halloween, Ronald had been talking to several people around town
Starting point is 00:21:30 about cyanide. One person was Ronald's professor at his community college. Witnesses claim that Ronald had asked the professor a series of strange things like, is cyanide the most lethal of all poisons? In another instance, Ronald had asked a coworker who was knowledgeable about poisons if he knew how much cyanide it would take to kill someone. And although these encounters could be summed up to mere curiosity, this next instance definitely raised some red flags. Skin care, it can be absolutely frustrating at times.
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Starting point is 00:24:34 they did have cyanide, but it was only available to purchase in large quantities. The man ended up leaving the store because he only wanted a small amount. When investigators asked the employee to identify the man, he couldn't tell whether or not it was Ronald O'Brien. All he could remember was that the man was wearing a blue or beige smock, kind of like doctors would wear. Now, this isn't the best evidence, but it is interesting to note that Ronald was an optician who wore that exact same attire to work every day. Investigators would later bring Ronald's wife, Dainin, in for questioning to see if she knew anything, or worse, to see if she could have possibly been involved herself. The authorities
Starting point is 00:25:19 asked her if she was aware of the life insurance policies taken out on her children, and she told him that she only knew of the $10,000 policy that had been taken out earlier that year. Dainin didn't want the policies taken out on her children, but Ronald, instead of her. Then, the investigators told her that just weeks before Timothy's death, Ronald had raised the policy another $40,000. When Dainin heard this news, an absolutely horrified look came across her face, and she immediately broke down crying. Investigators were eventually able to determine that Daineeen did not have any involvement
Starting point is 00:25:54 in the murder. I can't imagine the grief of losing a child, but to then find out that your spouse was responsible for the murder is something that I can't even even. and begin to wrap my head around. And investigators were thinking the same thing. How could a man who on the outside look like a good father poison his own child? So they decide to bring him in for questioning. Investigators interrogated Ronald for hours, catching him in many lies throughout the process.
Starting point is 00:26:24 They pointed out the fact that Courtney Melvin could not have been the man to give him the poison candy. He had a solid alibi. But Ronald had no other explanation. They also pointed out the suspicious life insurance policy. But again, Ronald said it was all a coincidence. No matter how many times they poked holes in his story and laid out all of the evidence that was against him, he still proclaimed his innocence. But it didn't matter. Law enforcement didn't need a confession.
Starting point is 00:26:57 With all of the evidence piled against him, an arrest warrant was issued. and on November 5th, 1974, Ronald O'Brien was arrested for the murder of his son, Timothy. One of the worst parts of this story is that Ronald didn't just try to kill Timothy. He also tried to kill his daughter, Elizabeth. And he knew that if it was just his children that died, it would look suspicious. So in an attempt to cover up his involvement, he slipped cyanide into five pixie sticks and handed them out to the children of the neighborhood, knowing good and well that five children were going to die that night at his hands,
Starting point is 00:27:38 just so he could get $60,000. Ronald would end up being indicted for one count of capital murder and four counts of attempted murder, and he would plead not guilty. Ronald's defense team relied on the urban legend of the mad candy poisoner, who was allegedly a man that would lace Halloween candy with poison or put sharp objects inside of candy bars to hurt the trick-or-treaters. They claimed that that night, the urban legend had come to life, and that the man responsible was still walking the streets.
Starting point is 00:28:09 But in the end, the jury saw right through his lies. There was indeed a mad candy poisoner in Houston that night, but it wasn't some random guy. It was Ronald O'Brien himself. Law enforcement was never able to prove where Ronald had bought the cyanide, but it didn't matter. They had plenty of evidence, and after 45 minutes, the jury convicted Ronald O'Brien guilty and sentenced him to death.
Starting point is 00:28:36 There was a ton of news coverage on this case. I mean, a father of two that tried to kill his children and three others by poisoning their Halloween candy is obviously big news. And the press named him the Candyman, a name that seemed to stick with him throughout the years. Ronald O'Brien would spend his last days on death row at the correctional facility in Huntsville, Texas. His execution date would be postponed many times until finally the date was secured for March 31st, 1984. On the day of his execution, a crowd of hundreds gathered. Some screamed trick-or-treat, and others threw candy at death penalty protesters. Everyone wanted to be in attendance when the
Starting point is 00:29:24 Candy Man took his last breath. According to murder Ronald's last words were, What is about to transpire in a few moments is wrong. However, we as human beings do make mistakes and errors. This execution is one of those wrongs, yet doesn't mean our whole system of justice is wrong. Therefore, I would forgive all who have taken part in any way in my death. Also, to anyone I have offended in any way during my 39 years, I pray and ask your forgiveness, just as I forgive anyone who offended me in any way.
Starting point is 00:29:55 And I pray and ask God's forgiveness. for all of us respectively as human beings. To my loved ones, I extend my undying love. To those close to me, knowing your hearts, I love you one and all. God bless you all. And may God's best blessings be always yours. Guys, for the better part of their lives, our better halves have been fantasizing about the perfect wedding ring.
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Starting point is 00:32:04 Anyways, y'all, let's get back to today's Erie Halloween tale. And with that, Ronald O'Brien received his lethal injection and took his last breath. With the Candyman dead, the people of Texas could finally feel a sense of relief, knowing that their children were safe. But Ronald O'Brien's decisions that Halloween night left a mark on society, a mark that is still seen and felt today. My parents were actually living around Houston at the time that this all took place, and I reached out to them because I was curious if they remembered this story. My mom and dad were both born in 1969, so they would have been around five years old when this story unfolded. My dad told me that he definitely remembered it. He even said that in the years following the murder of Timothy,
Starting point is 00:33:04 my grandma would go through his Halloween basket, making sure nothing was tampered with. And he said that she would always throw away his pixie sticks, just to be safe. It's crazy to think about how this crime had such an impact on society. No one ever suspected that on Halloween, one of the best days of the year, A true monster would be walking among the streets, praying on innocent children.
Starting point is 00:33:31 But after this event, everyone was overly cautious, because they learned that evil is constantly among us. Ronald O'Brien wasn't dressed like a monster. He looked like you and I, enjoying a nice Halloween with his children. But this story proves that monsters are everywhere, that anyone can be their victim, and you never know when they will strike. It could even be on Halloween. But Ronald O'Brien wasn't the only person to have the idea that it would be pretty easy to kill with candy.
Starting point is 00:34:06 In the 1960s in New York, for example, a woman named Helen Field decided that it would be funny to punish kids that she believed were too old to be trick-or-treating by handing out odd items to them like dog biscuits and ant poison. Even though Helen thought of this as a practical joke, The town that she lived in and the authorities that kept it safe didn't find it very funny, and she was arrested. And in the 1980s, in Japan, a crime ring known only as the mystery man with 21 faces
Starting point is 00:34:34 threatened candy companies that they would poison their candy if they didn't pay them a large sum of money. Authorities pulled candy from stores across the country and checked it for chemicals, but they found nothing after the first threat. But the second time that the group claimed that they would poison the candy, they did. Authorities, after learning of this second threat against the public of Japan, once again pulled candy from stores across the country and found packages of poisoned candies and cookies laced with cyanide throughout Central Japan. And after this, the group known as the mystery
Starting point is 00:35:06 man with 21 faces completely disappeared, and to this day, the crime remains unsolved. Over Over 125,000 investigations have been performed by Japanese authorities in an attempt to hunt this crime ring down over the years, but there are still no answers. And sadly, even though no one died from poisoned candy after these threats, one chief of police from an affected region of Japan eventually took his own life because he failed to stop the crimes or bring those involved in them to justice. But, you see, you really shouldn't be afraid of poisoned candy on Halloween. One thing you should be afraid of is cars and vehicles.
Starting point is 00:35:47 Most deaths that occur on Halloween are actually due to pedestrian accidents or DUI-related crashes. It seems like, once again, the scariest monsters are human, after all. But regardless, the myth of the poisoned Halloween candy, the tail of the razor blade and the Snickers bar lives on, all thanks to Ronald O'Brien. And that fear, fear from parents, fear from kids, seems like that. like it will never truly go away. In 2009, decades after Ronald's execution, Ronald's lawyer was interviewed by the Austin American statesman newspaper in nearby Austin, Texas about the crime. And years on, this is what he had to say. As you know, my client was convicted of killing Halloween.
Starting point is 00:36:36 Hey, everybody, and thank you again for listening to another brand new episode of Murder in America. Sorry we had to break the canon of the podcast for this. This is a case from Texas. We already did Texas, but for the month of October, we're doing strictly Halloween stories. We aren't doing our typical state-to-state episodes for this month. If you liked this episode, please consider giving us a five-star review on Apple Podcasts. You can also follow us on Instagram at Murder in America, and you can join our Facebook group for free. Thank you to our patrons who make all of this possible.
Starting point is 00:37:08 We love you guys. Our new patrons this week are... Rachel Reco? Stacey Hazleton. Jocelyn Radarty. Chelsea. Brittany Bonte. Ellen McCormick.
Starting point is 00:37:20 Sorry, Braynap, I say your name right. Stefan Helferich. And Callie. Thank you guys for supporting us. We love you. Sorry if we butcher your names, y'all. But if you would like, you can support us on Patreon where we post these episodes ad free and you can get a bunch of bonus content.
Starting point is 00:37:36 Just download the Patreon app and type in Murder in America. We're posting bonus episodes on there as well. And it's a way that we can chat with you guys daily and direct. I wrote today's episode. Hope you guys liked it. You can follow me on Instagram at Cort Shan. And I'm the one who produced an audio edit the episode. You can follow me on Instagram at Colin Brown.
Starting point is 00:37:54 And you can also check out my YouTube channel, The Paranormal Files, if you like spooky stuff. Courtney and I are on there together, filming all the time. We're about to drop a New Orleans episode on Wednesday. That's really good. We investigated Zach and Addie's, the place where Zach actually, you know, murdered Addy.
Starting point is 00:38:09 That's going to be in Wednesday's video in New Orleans. But anyways, the story is crazy. think that a father could murder his own son on one of the happiest days of the year is just horrible. And it makes you wonder, especially on Halloween, when the veil is supposedly the thinnest, when the dead can roam the earth. The dead don't talk. Or do they? Thanks for listening, everybody, and we'll see you on the next one.

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