Murder With My Husband - 202. Who Kidnapped The Lyon Sisters?

Episode Date: February 5, 2024

In this episode, Payton dives into the case of two sisters who disappeared after a day at the mall. The case seemed to go cold until the unthinkable happened. In this episode, Payton delves into the ...tragic tale of Deborah Flores-Narvaez, a captivating dancing sensation whose life was cut short. https://www.betterhelp.com/husband Find us on twitch here: https://www.twitch.tv/themwmh More social links and AD DISCOUNT CODES: https://linktr.ee/murderwithmyhusband Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/murderwithmyhusband/ Listen on apple: https://apple.co/3sMXYum Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6GaodpBsSpBuUMhmEXhjK2?si=67c9faf80cbf4fed Case Sources: “The Last Stone” by Mark Bowden “Who Killed the Lyon Sisters” on Investigation Discovery CNN.com - https://www.cnn.com/2014/05/09/living/motherhood-now-vs-then-parents/index.html CharleyProject.org - https://charleyproject.org/case/katherine-mary-lyon WashingtonPost.com - https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1980/03/25/the-missing-lyon-sisters-not-a-trace-in-five-years/d0dffcdb-7f9c-4dc5-afa0-3b3ce115312b/ InsideNova.com - https://www.insidenova.com/opinion/kerr-the-day-we-learned-to-be-afraid/article_67ed72e4-9a6b-11e7-b5ec-238f53a5701c.html Medium.com - https://kimparr.medium.com/what-the-lyon-sisters-disappearance-taught-me-about-cold-cases-25ee5bfaa4ac Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening to an Ono Media podcast. Hey everybody, welcome back to the podcast. This is Murder With My Husband. I'm Peyton Morland. And I'm Garrett Morland. And he's the husband. I'm the husband. Here we are.
Starting point is 00:00:11 We're back another week. Another Murder With My Husband episode. I just wanted to say thanks to everyone who listens and supports us. We really appreciate it. We know there's a lot of true crime content out there, so we appreciate you guys tuning in every week and supporting us, listening, watching, however you're doing it. And again, thank you, we appreciate it.
Starting point is 00:00:32 All right, let's skippity-doodle all the announcements we normally do and just go right into your 10 seconds today, Gar. Well, I guess my 10 seconds is gonna kind of be about true crime this week. Peyton and I have been talking about well Peyton's re-listening for the millionth time the serial again and we've been talking about that case. Interesting. I know he's out of prison. He hasn't been exonerated or anything. I don't
Starting point is 00:00:57 know what's going to be happening with him. I'm just kind of keeping up on the bits and pieces that Peyton is telling me me It's just always so interesting when there was a case that and Maybe this isn't a good example, but or half of the people think he did it and the other half didn't think he did it It's interesting to see the evidence to see what different people believe. I don't know what I think again, Peyton's been telling me bits and pieces just thought I'd bring that up because I don't know, I couldn't do it. I don't think I can make that decision. And that's a pretty big one.
Starting point is 00:01:33 Well, these are the kind of things we actually talk about on our Twitch streams. And I think we're going to be talking about this one on the next stream. But, uh, yeah, definitely. Garrett's never even listened to serial. Obviously you, I talk about it and I've listened to it a lot. Um, so he knows a little bit about the case, but this, you know, this one's just so, there's so many pieces to it. So I am excited to kind of dive into it.
Starting point is 00:01:55 We started talking about it earlier and Garrett was like, wait, let's save this for the stream. So I'm kind of excited for that. Because I know I talk about how much I hate you crime and blah, blah, blah. Um, but something I find very interesting is solving a cold case. I don't know why, but I find that interesting. I think it's because I like the detective part of true crime. I don't like everything else that comes with it.
Starting point is 00:02:22 But the detective and recent figuring out like what has happened, where's the evidence, what's going on, where isn't the evidence, who's corrupt, who's not corrupt. I find that interesting. Find that intriguing. You like nonviolent true crime, I think. Correct. Yes.
Starting point is 00:02:38 Well, I'm like might be a stretch, but say I'm watching a documentary about a really gruesome murder, you won't be in the room with me. No. But if I'm watching a documentary. We just watched one,. You won't be in the room with me. No. But if I'm watching a. We just watched one American nightmare. Yeah. Say American nightmare. There's, you know, nothing super gruesome about that. You were, you watched it with.
Starting point is 00:02:51 Yeah, I was, I was definitely into it more because I was trying to figure out what's happening. Yeah. What, what's all the commotion? What is going on? I will say, although you still won't sit down and put on like a true crime show or anything. Never, never, never, never. You definitely dead before that happens. You've become more interested in the nuances of true crime, like you just said,
Starting point is 00:03:12 as far as, you know, the, you know, maybe even solving a cold case, like that, that's actually cool. You know, yeah, a hundred percent. All right. Should we get into the episode? Let's do it. Our sources for this episode are the last stone by Mark Bowden, who killed the Lyon sisters on investigation discovery, CNN.com, CharlieProject.org, WashingtonPost.com, InsideNova.com, and Medium.com.
Starting point is 00:03:33 Trigger warning, this episode includes discussions of sexual assault and child abuse, so please listen with care. And I find this a little bit interesting because of Garrett's 10 seconds. I never know what Garrett's going to say for his 10 seconds. I'm always taken, you know, by surprise. So let me just start off this episode with some cases run cold for a good reason. Okay. It's like we're on the same wavelength.
Starting point is 00:03:58 That's crazy. There's simply not enough evidence, maybe, or all leads have dried up. No concrete eyewitness testimony. No matter what the situation is though, the longer a case is put on ice, so to speak, the less likely it is to be reopened. And the chance of a new detective taking a look is pretty slim to none.
Starting point is 00:04:21 Unless your name is Detective Chris Homrock. In 2013, he was taking a second look at a 40 year old cold case regarding two missing girls named Sheila and Kate Lyon. But then one night, by some miracle that he can't even explain, a file mysteriously appeared on his desk after he returned from a bathroom break. It was an old testimony from one witness that was never properly followed through on. How does that happen? How does it just randomly appear on his desk? No explanation.
Starting point is 00:04:59 You see it happen in the movies and you want to assume this would never happen in person or in real life, but it just didn't. So when he tracked down the teenager who made the statement back in 1975, it opened a giant can of worms leading to an entirely new investigation. One that was more twisted, confusing and frustrating than anything Detective Homrock had ever dealt with before. So that is what we are talking about today. So for today's case, we're traveling back to 1975 to a little suburban town about a half hour north of Washington DC known as Kensington, Maryland. At the time, about 50,000 people called the Kensington area home,
Starting point is 00:05:45 many of them middle to upper class citizens. It was a place where you felt safe if your kids rode their bikes to the neighbors, if they stayed out until the street lights came on, even if they forgot to mention that they'd be having dinner at a friend's house. Kensington in 1975 felt like it existed inside its own little protective bubble, but I will
Starting point is 00:06:06 say I feel like a lot of suburb areas felt this way in the 70s. But for Kensington, it felt that way until March of that year, when the bubble finally burst and the people of Kensington saw the horrors the real world had to offer. So inside that Ple pleasantville-like illusion lived John and Mary Leon. John was fairly well known for being a local radio DJ while Mary happily took on the role of a full-time mom to their kids.
Starting point is 00:06:37 It was four kids, 15-year-old Jay, nine-year-old Joe, 12-year-old Sheila and 10-year-old Catherine or Kate. They were always well-behaved, polite, and obedient. Together, they made the perfect little Norman Rockwell style family. Sheila had this bright blonde hair that she often wore in low-hanging pigtails. Her wire-rimmed glasses made her all the more identifiable. She was the quieter of the two sisters, the one who preferred to stay in and read or to just help her mom cook. But now that she was in seventh grade, she was seeing the merits
Starting point is 00:07:12 of having a social life. She had begun experimenting with makeup and had plans to try out for the cheerleading squad. Her younger sister Kate, on the other hand, was more of a tomboy. With a shorter, even blonder head of hair and freckles that peppered her nose and cheeks, Kate was the more athletic, outgoing, and daring one of the two sisters. In fact, she'd just talked her parents into getting her ears pierced for the very first time. But the girls never gave John or Mary a reason to doubt their good behavior. They stayed on top of their grades, they never lied to their parents about where they were
Starting point is 00:07:48 going or who they were with. They were always home by curfew. An unwavering trust had been built between the sisters and their parents. Particularly because they always looked out for one another and Sheila and Kate did almost everything together. They were the best of friends. So on March 25th, 1975, all of the Lion children were off from school for Easter break.
Starting point is 00:08:13 That month had been a rough one when it came to weather. The area had actually suffered two different snowfalls. But that afternoon, the climate was finally showing signs of spring. It was warm, the sun was out, and Sheila and Kate wanted to be outdoors. So they asked their mom, Mary, if they could take a walk over to the Wheaton Plaza Mall. Now you have to remember how much of a social nucleus a mall was back in the day. It was the place to see and be seen, particularly if you were a teenager. So this was kind of a rite of passage
Starting point is 00:08:45 for the two girls to get to go off to the mall by themselves. Not to mention the walk was easy for them. It would only take about 20 minutes by foot from their house. That's extremely close. So Mary said, okay, the two girls could go alone under one condition, be home by 4 p.m. to help with dinner. And the girls are like, easy. At around 11 a.m., the girls took off
Starting point is 00:09:08 for the outdoor shopping center with about $2 in their pocket. This was more than enough at the time for them to both get a slice of pizza in the food court, which was about 50 cents at the time. So in fact, Jay actually spots his sisters from a distance around 2 p.m. that afternoon at the mall. But he doesn't say anything to them
Starting point is 00:09:25 because he doesn't want to ruin their little adventure. And you know, this is like very typical. He's probably older hanging with the older kids. Letting them have fun though too. Now back at the Leon's house, 4 p.m. rolls around. Only Sheila and Kate aren't home yet. Even Jay makes it back in time for dinner saying, yeah, he saw his sisters at the mall a few hours ago,
Starting point is 00:09:45 they probably just lost track of time. But when it starts getting dark, the Leons start to panic. They start calling around to their friends' houses, thinking, did the girls end up somewhere for a sleepover and just forget to call? When that doesn't pan out, Mary and John hop in their car
Starting point is 00:10:01 and begin driving around the area, searching for their two daughters themselves. But a few hours later, with still no sign of Kate or Sheila, their parents know it's time to go to the police. And by the following day, the hunt for Sheila and Kate Leon begins in earnest. I mean, I know it's always someone, but there's so many kids at the mall, right?
Starting point is 00:10:24 And so many people. So I know you always think, what are the chances it's going to happen to me? And that's horrible. So it certainly helps that John is a radio personality because the case gets a lot more attention than it might have otherwise. And in the first three days of their disappearance, police received more than 300 tips from people claiming to have seen the girls at the mall before they vanished. On top of this giant stack of leads, police are also combing every square inch of the Kensington area, from the woods to storm sewers to vacant houses in the
Starting point is 00:10:58 area, but nothing pans out. That was until April 7th when investigators get their first real lead in the case. And I mean, it's devastating whenever we're talking about a missing kids case. And the next phase of the investigation is three days later. Yeah. It's like, well, shoot, we already passed 48 hours, which were crucial time period. Yeah, I was gonna say that you said in the first three days and I was thinking, freak. Yeah. Yeah. So on April 7th, a witness calling from Manassas, Virginia, about a 50 minute drive from Kensington,
Starting point is 00:11:32 says that that morning at around 730 AM, he saw something disturbing. A beige 1968 Ford station wagon with Maryland plates was stopped at a light in front of his car and in the back seat There appeared to be two little girls fitting Kate and Sheila's description bound and gagged The caller had jotted down the license plate number But couldn't get the last two digits because as soon as the car in front of him saw that he'd taken notice of the girls
Starting point is 00:12:03 They bolted through the red light at full speed. So they just took off. The police go to their system and run the digits they have, only they can't seem to find a match without the full plates. However, there's a few other tips on potential suspects coming in, and police take notice when they start to repeat a pattern. For example, several of the callers claimed to see a young man about 140 pounds, 5'10 or 11, following the girls
Starting point is 00:12:32 through the mall that day. So several people noticed this man. They said he was a teenager, maybe early 20s at most because he had acne scars around his cheeks. One eyewitness said a person fitting this description was waiting and watching the girls through his store window. It seemed like he was ready to pounce once they came out. Is it interesting to you that people always say this after something bad had happened? Like, oh yeah, actually I did see him
Starting point is 00:13:00 and he was kind of creepy and looked like a stalker. But in that moment, apparently not creepy enough because no one said anything or did anything. You know what I'm saying? It's probably pretty common actually to not to maybe subconsciously notice. I'm going to be like, that guy's a little creepy. But then once you hear two girls went missing, you're like, okay, that guy was definitely creepy. You know, you probably put two and two together in your head, I'm assuming.
Starting point is 00:13:24 Yeah, I can see that. Then there's a second suspicious character that was repeatedly identified at Wee in Plaza that day. It was an older gray haired man carrying a tape recorder who kept stopping kids to interview them. Now, this description happened to fit one man who'd been on the police's radar before, and his name was Ray Molesky. Now, Ray had lived only a block or two away from the police's radar before, and his name was Ray Molesky. Now Ray had lived only a block or two away from the Leon's residence at the time of their disappearance. So chances were he'd definitely seen the girls around before.
Starting point is 00:13:54 He had charges on his record for petty crime and pedophilia. There were also rumors that Ray had been a part of a child sex ring and was known to scout for victims down at the Wheaton Plaza Mall. Plus, he'd inserted himself into the investigation twice after the girls disappeared. Once he called to suggest to police that they grant the kidnapper immunity if he brings the children home safely, and then he offered his own description of the person he allegedly saw the girls leave the mall with that day. So police did their best to look into Ray as a primary person of interest, going as far as to excavate his backyard in 1982.
Starting point is 00:14:34 This was after he murdered his wife and son and was sent to prison. So Ray goes on. I know I just dropped a bomb. Wait, wait, wait, wait. Say that again. So Ray's a suspect in this case, but as we know, this case is going to girl cold, right? Uh-huh. Um, and then after the girls go missing, long after he murders his wife and son on a completely
Starting point is 00:14:59 like unrelated. So they just happened to find the guy that murdered his wife and son through another case that he wasn't even related to? No, no, it's a completely unrelated case. They catch him for murdering his wife and son years later. And then they're like, well, he was a suspect in this girl's case. So maybe we excavate his backyard and see if we can find anything. I see, I see, I see. Yeah, you following me now? I'm following you now, but he's not in prison.
Starting point is 00:15:21 He isn't in prison. I mean, he's in prison, obviously. Yes, yes. So, okay, so he doesn't live there. I see what you're saying now, got it. But there was never enough evidence aside from him fitting the vague description of the tape recorder man.
Starting point is 00:15:34 So the Ray Molesky lead fell between the cracks over the years, as did all the others. I mean, and what are the chances that he murdered, I guess high chances that he murdered his family that also murders another girl or a couple girls. The girls before, and you know, he was at the mall that day. Yeah. But I mean, it's just, it's really sad.
Starting point is 00:15:54 Two sisters go missing basically in broad daylight from the mall. And no one has any idea the case can go cold that fast. Yeah. With no bodies, no more leads, and absolutely no concrete evidence to point detectives even in the right direction, the Leon sisters case hit a wall. It was passed down through several generations of investigators, all of whom would open the case file, take one look at it, and realize there were just no more blocks left to build with. And it continued this way until 2013, when that detective Chris
Starting point is 00:16:30 Homrock took over those files. But unlike those before him, he couldn't put this case back in the freezer. Something about this abduction haunted him. It kept him from sleeping at night, particularly the feeling that police had to have missed something back in 1975. And maybe when it came to their best potential suspect who would go on to murder his wife and son, Ray Molesky.
Starting point is 00:16:56 So Chris did everything he could to revisit the Molesky lead years later. But it wasn't going to be easy considering that Ray had died three years earlier in 2010 So he's still pretty confident that it's Ray. He's like I feel like this is the best thing we have to go on Yeah, and I mean if the guy lives two miles from them and then goes on to murder his own wife and son It's kind of like Well, I feel in cases that are a little up and down and a little iffy,
Starting point is 00:17:26 it's always the person that isn't the obvious answer. Oh, so you're saying not Ray? I don't think so. It seems like in a case that we do where it's black and white, I mean, open and shut, like this guy did this, he was caught on camera, this of course. But in cases where they're not a hundred business isn't sure, it seems like evidence is everywhere. They don't have anything. Everything's up
Starting point is 00:17:48 and down. It's always the person that they're not looking at. Right. You know what I'm saying? I do. So as Chris is going through the evidence, he realizes that there were a lot of stones left unturned when it came time to kind of dig through this evidence. For example, Chris learned that Ray had purchased land in Lancaster County, Virginia, before Sheila and Kate disappeared. So Chris decides now, years later with Ray dead to go out there and he spent weeks living in a motel while he oversaw a dig on the property,
Starting point is 00:18:21 thinking he might uncover the girl's remains. But there was nothing. Chris then revisited the old Molesky house, combing every inch, even tearing through the concrete in the basement, thinking it might lead to something. But then eventually Chris also hit a wall. One night in the summer of 2013, Chris realized it was probably time to pack the case up. Like so many detectives before him, he felt like he had failed the Lee and family. But by this point, he'd pulled at every single thread
Starting point is 00:18:50 he could think of. It was late in the evening when Chris took a trip to the bathroom to splash some water on his face while working on this case. He then went back to his desk, prepared to put those case files in their boxes one final time. That was when he spotted something.
Starting point is 00:19:06 On top of his folders was an eyewitness report from 1975 that it was one Chris didn't remember seeing before. It was a six page transcript dated April 1st, 1975 from an 18 year old kid named Lloyd Lee Welch. Chris was baffled by how this ended up here on top of his stack of files and how he'd missed this statement after scrutinizing them tirelessly
Starting point is 00:19:33 over the last few years. I mean, this guy has moved and tried to dig up property after property. Okay, yeah. I don't know how that happens meant to be. But how it got there was nowhere near as important as what was inside. The witness claimed he saw the two girls leaving the mall
Starting point is 00:19:49 with an older man who fit the exact description of that tape recorder man. But Lloyd's account included another critical detail. One the others didn't have. He mentioned that the tape recorder man walked with a limp. And guess who also walked with a limp? Ray Molesky. Oh, man, I might be wrong. Okay. Who Ray had been shot in the leg when he was robbing someone's home years before the Leon case, which is why he had a limp. So
Starting point is 00:20:18 now Chris is certain the tape recorder man and Ray Molesky have to be the same guy. Like this is just now almost concrete. But here's the thing, back in 1975, when Lloyd Lee Welch gave that statement, police dismissed it outright for a few reasons. One was Lloyd waited a few days to report what he saw. It wasn't until the Leon family offered a reward that he finally came forward with this information. I don't think that's a huge red flag to me
Starting point is 00:20:45 because I think a lot of people are just, I don't wanna get involved, I don't wanna stay out of it. This second one also isn't a huge red flag to me. He agreed to take a polygraph test and failed it. Then he admitted to the police, it was all a lie. He was just going off the information that he had seen on TV.
Starting point is 00:21:02 All right, well that part's a red flag. Yeah, that's a big red flag. So police actually could have arrested Lloyd right there, but being he was still a teenager, they let him go and dismissed his statement as bogus. But now in 2013, Chris was looking at this file and going, wait a second, this person could be the key to identifying Ray once and for all. Let's see if Lloyd Lee Welch is still around. And it turns out he was
Starting point is 00:21:26 How how would that be you're not contacted for something and then 40 years later? So detective shows up at your door. I feel like in a lot of this series Podcasts that I listen to this happens all the time. Okay, where? They were somehow in the first couple days after the investigation saw something and then no one ever talked to them again until this journalist comes out of nowhere and is like, hey, I'm researching this case. So at this time, Lloyd was now in his mid fifties serving time in a Delaware prison for child molestation charges.
Starting point is 00:22:01 And he was coming to the end of his 33 year sentence, which meant he'd soon be up for parole, which meant if Chris and his team wanted to speak with Lloyd, they should probably need to work fast. Like it's safer with their witness in prison. So a little background on Lloyd, he had a rough upbringing in Hyattville, Maryland, about a half hour drive from Kensington. He grew up in a home with a physically and emotionally abusive father. He dropped out of school in seventh grade and before he turned 18 had left home to fend for himself.
Starting point is 00:22:30 In the 70s, he met a 16 year old girl named Helen who he traveled around the East Coast with, working odd jobs while getting into trouble with drugs and the law. Since the time he'd filed that report with police back in 1975, he'd acquired a long rap sheet, including everything from sexual assault to battery to grand larceny.
Starting point is 00:22:50 So when Chris Homrock first met with Lloyd on October 16th, 2013, he was coming in with a theory. If Lloyd did see something back in 1975 and happened to just go to police after the family announced a reward. Maybe he wasn't an innocent bystander in the whole thing. Maybe he knew Ray and was even working with him in some capacity. It was possible that Ray was grooming young men around Lloyd's age at that time to lure his victims for him. I mean, he was in prison for child molestation too.
Starting point is 00:23:25 Yeah. And this was a rumor about Ray grooming young men to help him get his victims. This had been circulating since Ray was first pegged as a potential suspect. I mean, he killed his wife and son, so. Yeah. Now, Chris wasn't alone when he first sat down
Starting point is 00:23:38 with the incarcerated Lloyd in 2013. He was joined by fellow Montgomery County detective, Dave Davis, for the perfect good cop bad cop matchup. And immediately upon entering the interrogation room, Lloyd shows he's a step ahead of them. He says, quote, I know why you're here. It's about those two missing kids, isn't it? So after reading Lloyd, his rights, they get to talking and what Lloyd says is this, back in 1975, he was at a liquor store when he saw a man put two girls in the back of his black Plymouth and drove away. That's when
Starting point is 00:24:10 they whip out a photo of Ray Molesky and Lloyd nearly jumps out of his chair screaming, yeah, that's the guy, that one right there. But the circumstances sound a little different from that original statement he gave, right? There's no mall, no tape recorder man, no limp. So Chris thinks, okay, this is a little weird. So he says to Lloyd, originally you said you were at the Wheaton Plaza Mall. But Lloyd insists, no, no, no, I'd never been there. So they pull out his original 1975 statement. And Lloyd is a deer in the headlights, clearly caught in a lie. What will be the first of hundreds over the course of this investigation?
Starting point is 00:24:45 Oh, so this doesn't sound, that would not be fun for a detective. Just lie after lie, trying to sift through what's the truth. That sucks. So still Lloyd decides to keep up the charade. He says he doesn't even remember going to the police station and reporting this, let alone taking and failing a polygraph. And that's when Dave shows him a sketch. Remember the teenager some witnesses said was stalking the girls, the kid with the acne scars? This fits a very younger description of Lloyd Lee Welch. So Chris and Dave feel pretty confident. Lloyd was involved in some way,
Starting point is 00:25:16 especially if he's still lying all these years later. And while he's not a suspect yet, because they don't have any evidence, they keep pulling at this thread. And like I said, it's not like he's not a suspect yet, because they don't have any evidence, they keep pulling at this thread. And like I said, it's not like he's sitting at home with a wife and two kids and goes to work every day. No, he's in prison. We were literally, Garrett and I were just discussing
Starting point is 00:25:36 this in the car, but very rarely do you get the squeaky clean suspect. I mean, if someone's going to murder someone or kidnap someone, there's usually signs, red flags, a history of violence, something. 100%, almost always. Yes. So when they ask Lloyd his theory
Starting point is 00:25:56 on what he thinks happened to those girls that day, he says something that sends a chill down their spine. He mentions that they were probably sexually assaulted, killed, and then burned. Who says that? Right. Burned feels oddly specific to the detectives. It's not a theory you just kind of pull out of thin air. Like, sure, maybe the sexual assault and the kill, but to burn the bodies? Stuff free. And Lloyd's behavior that day leaves them without a shred of doubt. Between the constant lies and his repetitive requests for protection and immunity, they know there's something he's hiding. He didn't just
Starting point is 00:26:30 watch a stranger kidnap two girls that day. So the detectives figure the next steps are to hook Lloyd up to another polygraph to see what he caves to. That's so strange to me they keep doing that. I mean, what else do you have to go on? Is it just like intimidation at this point? So if he fails, then maybe he confesses. Because polygraphs don't do anything in court these days. Well, I mean, that's how they got Chris Watts to confess. True, yeah. So in February of 2014, Lloyd is back in the interrogation room
Starting point is 00:26:57 hooked up to a lie detector. And after answering a few questions about that day, back in 1975, he fails pretty miserably again. But once the polygraph is over, he tells Dave he has a confession to make. He actually did no Ray Molesky. He wasn't some stranger to Lloyd after all. They used to do drugs together. And there was one time when he went over to raise to party and he actually saw the Leon sisters there. Lloyd claims they were tied up in his basement
Starting point is 00:27:25 when you could only get to him by going around the back of the house and down a flight of stairs. But Lloyd says he got so scared after seeing the missing girls that he ran away. Now this would be a huge piece of testimony if it were true, but you're going to start to see a pattern here with Lloyd. And the problem is he's lied about everything else.
Starting point is 00:27:44 It'd be impossible to know if he's telling the truth or not. Get caught in one lie, make a sharp left turn until you arrive at another. And this is actually going to be pretty hard. Remember how we talk about, if you're guilty, one of the safest things, and there's no body that's found, one of the safest things you can do is just deny, deny, deny, deny.
Starting point is 00:28:01 Don't talk, don't talk, don't talk. Cause then it's like, what do they really have on you? True. Well, another thing you could do is just deny, deny, deny, deny, don't talk, don't talk, don't talk, don't talk. Because then it's like, what do they really have on you? True. Well, another thing you could do is just lie and lie and lie and lie and change your story so much that the truth becomes so hard to see because it's like, which one is it? So distorted. So this happens countless times in the next several months to the point where I won't even waste your time with some of the more ridiculous claims that he mentions.
Starting point is 00:28:22 But Chris and Dave are already catching on to this, so they're taking every statement with a grain of salt. Yet they know that somewhere, buried in all of these lies, is the truth, so they just keep pressing. And sure, if they wanted to arrest Lloyd at this point, they certainly probably could, because he'd already admitted to knowing the supposed kidnapper and seeing the girls without then going and reporting it, so in some sense of the matter, he's an accessory. But that's not what the detectives are after.
Starting point is 00:28:50 They want to get to the bottom of what happened to Sheila and Kate and maybe find their remains if they can. So for now, they let Lloyd think he's helping them out. And the next time they meet, Lloyd offers them another major twist in the story. It wasn't Ray Moleski who he saw take the girls that day and keep them in his basement. Lloyd was lying because he's scared of the real person who actually took the girls and it was his cousin, Teddy Welch. Now this accusation is absurd to the police for one major reason. Teddy would have
Starting point is 00:29:20 been 11 years old at the time of the disappearance. Oh, come on, man. But again, they figure if they follow Lloyd down this rabbit hole, it might get them to a different rabbit hole that gets them closer to the truth. Dude, I don't have the patience for this. I'd be so frustrated.
Starting point is 00:29:33 So annoying. But they bite. After all, the Leon family always said the girls wouldn't have gone willingly with a stranger. But maybe someone closer to their age, that could be a different story. However, Lloyd says Teddy didn't work alone, he was with someone else that day. Their shared uncle named Dickie. So he claims that Dickie was using Teddy to lure the girls into the car and back to his
Starting point is 00:29:57 house. In fact, Lloyd now claims he saw the girls shortly after the kidnapping, only it was in Dickie's basement, not Ray Maleski's. Now police look into Uncle Dickie just to rule out any false leads. And what they find is he owned a beige station wagon. Now remember that random tip that came in back in 1975, that man in Virginia who said he saw two girls bound
Starting point is 00:30:20 and gagged in the backseat of a beige station wagon, only they couldn't match the plates. Police now wonder could that have been Dickie's car and maybe Ray had nothing to do with this all along. And although Dickie was local to Maryland, Lloyd and Dickie had family in Bedford, Virginia. So it maybe his car could have been there. It was actually up in this pretty creepy area called Taylor's Mountain. It was a local rumor that a lot of bad things went down on Taylor's Mountain. Families who isolated themselves from the rest of society, reports of incest, disappearances, murders.
Starting point is 00:30:55 It was so off the grid, so out of hand, that police rarely bothered even dealing with the people on Taylor's Mountain. But this time there was no ignoring it, particularly because at the top of the hill was a home belonging to a woman named Lizzie Parker who was Lloyd Lee Welch's aunt right next to a plot of land that belonged to Uncle Dickie, who's now been dragged into this case. So police investigated the area and discovered there's a large cemetery with several unmarked graves at the top of Taylor's Mountain. And when locals are asked about anything unusual happening there back in 1975,
Starting point is 00:31:29 several of them mentioned the same thing. They can never forget the massive bonfire near the Parker house that seemed to last for days and reeked of human flesh and hair. Remember what Lloyd said back when he was asked what he thought happened to the girls, how maybe they were burned? The lies are starting to come together with little seeds of truth. Knowing all of this, the local Bedford police, the Montgomery police, and the FBI all joined forces at this point to
Starting point is 00:31:56 scour the mountain for evidence for the sisters, which keep in mind up to this point, there's been nothing. Zero physical sign of Sheila or Kate after the mall that day. So this feels like the closest they've come to something. They also begin reaching out to other members of Lloyd and Dickies family to see if they have statements to offer and they find a pretty explosive piece of testimony from Lloyd's cousin, Lizzie Parker's daughter, who lived in that house back in 1975. Her name is Connie Akers.
Starting point is 00:32:27 Now it's October 2014, almost a year since Chris discovered that case file on his desk that led to all of this and they go meet up with Connie. Connie, who was a teenager back in 1975, says she doesn't remember Uncle Dickie or Teddy coming to the house that spring with any young girls. remember Uncle Dickie or Teddy coming to the house that spring with any young girls. But she does remember Lloyd coming with his pregnant girlfriend Helen and a massive green duffel bag which stunk to high heavens. When they opened it, Connie noticed there were bloody clothes inside. But Lloyd tried to say that he had bought a bunch of hamburger meat to cook that night and that's what was in the bag. So that evening, Connie remembered that Lloyd had recruited the help of her brother
Starting point is 00:33:08 to build a bonfire and after that, they tossed the entire bag he brought up with them onto the flames keeping the fire raging for the next several days, which is why all the neighbors knew about it. So you're saying that all day and all night they just stayed there and- Kept this fire going.
Starting point is 00:33:25 Kept the fire going. Which is why it stood out to all the neighbors. Just, okay, got it. So investigators follow Connie's lead to the exact spot where the bonfire happened. Now imagine being Connie and it's this long later and the police show up at your family's property, or to you and say,
Starting point is 00:33:42 hey, back when you lived on your family's property, was there anything weird with your uncle Dickie? She's like, not my uncle Dickie, no, but my cousin who you, who brought you to all of this, he did show up with a bag that smelt really bad. And he said it was hamburger meat. And then they started a fire through the bag in the fire and kept it going for days. That would just be so strange. So they follow her lead to the exact spot where the bonfire happened. They begin digging around the area,
Starting point is 00:34:09 looking for any sign that the girls might've been there. And for the first time in the investigation, they actually find something. Along with several human bone fragments, they discover a small piece of wire that appeared to be a match with the wire framed glasses Sheila used to wear.
Starting point is 00:34:28 Crazy. What a break in the case. And also it's interesting what like a fresh pair of eyes will do. Right. You just leave the case for a bit. Let's relook at it in X amount of years. It sucks that it couldn't have been solved before, obviously. Well, they did talk to him, but he said he lied.
Starting point is 00:34:45 So they just said, okay, nevermind, let's bogus. Craig, I mean, he was so, how old was he? He was 18? Yeah, he was a teenager. It's so- That's so young too, right? I think you're not thinking, oh, this 18 year old kidnapped these two girls. Right, I mean, those witnesses did come forward
Starting point is 00:35:01 saying that he was watching them. Yeah, that's true too. I think everyone was so focused on Ray. So I'm telling you. Ray's not innocent in this. He did go on to kill people. So it is- Oh no, but not in this case.
Starting point is 00:35:12 But not in this case. And that's what I was saying is sometimes they get so focused, I mean, I probably would do it too, on the person that it's usually somebody else, especially in cases like this. So they also discover a piece of a beaded bracelet that was just like the kind Kate was wearing the day she was taken. Unfortunately, though, they weren't able to extract any DNA from the bones to conclusively say whether they belonged to one of the sisters. Still detectives were certain they were making progress.
Starting point is 00:35:39 So at this point they had eliminated the then 11 year old cousin, Teddy, primarily because they learned he had two giant casts on his arm during the time the Leon sisters were taken and like he's 11. And that certainly would have come up in some eye witness testimony. Like if you see these girls walking with a kid with two casts, you're gonna notice it.
Starting point is 00:35:56 They also sat down with the elderly uncle, Dickie, who insisted he never played a role in the girls' kidnapping. So knowing all they know now, Chris and Dave, full circle back to visit Lloyd again in May 2015. Which, how ironic, because Lloyd probably agreed to talk to them in the first place because he knew it would look good so he could come out on parole, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:19 It would look good for him. But he's also incriminating and screwing himself over at the same time. It's the AIA. I mean, but he did it. Soating and screwing himself over at the same time. It's the AIF, I mean, but he did it. So that's a good thing. Right. But it's super interesting that if he didn't talk, he probably would never got caught. Yeah. Although they circle back to him and they're like, okay, we're pretty sure we
Starting point is 00:36:36 know what happened. Like you've been leading us on this. You sure? Yeah. But it's back to you. I'm going to tell you how author Mark Bowden put it. He still acted like a fairy tale troll, guarding a treasure,
Starting point is 00:36:48 one who would only respond to the detective's questions in long form riddles. So this is where we're at now with our prime suspect. This was now the seventh time detectives had met with Lloyd. So you can imagine how frustrated they have grown with him, particularly with his eagerness to blame everyone else in his family For what was looking more and more like his wrongdoing. But this time he offers up a new name for the police.
Starting point is 00:37:13 His father, Lee. Still insisting Uncle Dickie was involved. Lloyd says that Dickie, who'd been holding the girl's captive in his house, recruited the help of Lee to kill them. And then they left the remains under a bridge in the Anacostia River, just a block or so away from Dickie's property. So Dave, expecting this to be just another riddle, follows the tip, just in case. He goes to Hyatesville to the area where the Anacostia River runs through and he checks out the scene. But surprise,
Starting point is 00:37:42 things are not adding up. The water is so shallow that a body would immediately surface. Plus, the space is wide open, so anyone dumping a body would certainly have been seen. So Dave leaves there feeling somewhat annoyed with himself for even wasting his own time. He's like, come on. Yeah. This is until he realizes.
Starting point is 00:37:59 He's at the intersection of Baltimore Avenue. And 4714 Baltimore Avenue was an address that he'd seen dozens of times on Lloyd Lee Welch's original police statement back in 1975, that one that showed up on his desk. 4714 was the house Lloyd grew up in. He and Lee were the ones who lived next to the river, not Dickie.
Starting point is 00:38:24 Impressive that he's remembering all of this. Right. And that he's like somehow piecing it together. So Dave takes a walk to Lloyd's old house, knocks on the door and gets permission from the current owner to take a look around. And around the back of the house, he sees something Lloyd has described multiple times throughout his interrogations. Perhaps one of the few details that he even stayed consistent with.
Starting point is 00:38:46 A basement, accessible only down a flight of stairs around the back of the house. The basement where the sisters were supposedly held captive. He's now found this place. A basement that didn't belong to Ray or Dickie, but clearly to Lloyd and Lee Welch. And when Dave steps into that cold concrete dungeon,
Starting point is 00:39:06 he immediately senses this was definitely the place. He knows he has to get a forensics team out here ASAP. Hours later, they're spraying the basement with a chemical that will illuminate if old blood stains have been cleaned there and one particular room in the basement lights up like a Christmas tree. There's no doubt that someone had been brutally murdered there,
Starting point is 00:39:26 which means detectives finally probably have the crime scene they've been searching for. It would still, I mean, I guess it would all still be there. It doesn't just go away on its own. I think it's hard cause he was alluding to this basement. He was like, no, it was my uncle Dickies. No, it was this, it was Ray's. When in reality it was at his house
Starting point is 00:39:44 where he lived with his father. So about a week later Dave and Chris pay one more visit to Lloyd. This time he's a sitting duck. No matter what way he tries to spin it, he's going to be facing charges for this 40 year old crime. Knowing that he's been caught red handed, Lloyd offers one final tale of how the events played out. And this might be the closest thing to the truth he'll ever offer, so here's what we have. He did lure the girls away from the mall that day, but he insists Uncle Dickie was still the getaway driver. The girls were then kept in his basement by Lee and Dickie,
Starting point is 00:40:16 his father and uncle, and Lloyd said he kept quiet because he didn't want them to hurt him as well. After they died, Lloyd said he took Dickey's station wagon to Virginia. So again, we're now getting back to the other witness's statement to dispose of a body for his dad and uncle. But key word here being a body.
Starting point is 00:40:37 Not bodies. Lloyd says it was just the younger sister Kate and that he didn't know whatever ended up happening to Sheila's remains. So take all this with a grain of salt, of course, there's no reason to believe Lloyd now, but particularly because he's still making himself out to be the victim in this scenario. Like I did it for my dad and my uncle and I kept him in the basement and then I also dumped the bodies, which again, he's been lying the whole time and also he's literally in jail from a lusting
Starting point is 00:41:08 and sexually assaulting a girl. So this crime that happened is right up his alley, per se. Right. I don't think it makes much of a difference. And it doesn't, no. In September, 2017, Lloyd Lee Welch pleaded guilty to two counts of felony murder. He likely only accepted the plea deal
Starting point is 00:41:24 to avoid the death penalty. Still, Lloyd Lee Welch will now spend the rest of his days locked up in prison with no hope for release. It's kind of crazy he went from getting out almost on parole to life in prison, which is good. While justice was served to one of the players in Sheila and Kate's murders, there's still so many questions left unanswered
Starting point is 00:41:44 in this case. Who else was truly involved in the crime? Some of the Welch family members claimed Dickie often spoke about the Leon sisters and admitted behind closed doors that he had played a role in it. Lee Welch, Lloyd's father, was already dead, so there was no getting his side of the story. Plus, the blood stains found in his basement no longer contained any DNA, meaning there was no telling whether it did belong to Kate, Sheila, or someone else entirely. It seems like from the beginning
Starting point is 00:42:09 you would just blame your dad and he probably would have gotten away with it if he stuck to that story the entire time. Yeah, if he just stuck to it, but because he ended up... Not that I wanted him to, but... And admitting that he dumped the bodies and he kidnapped the girls.
Starting point is 00:42:20 You probably could have gotten away with it. Yeah. If he said it's my dad, cause the dad's dead. Yeah. Except for there was an eyewitness who saw him at the mall. True Still it turns out that Lloyd Lee Welch had been beaten at his own game a situation that proves no cold case is ever worth Putting to bed completely because the truth comes out with time and that is the case of the Leon sisters It's sad that it took so long. I'm glad that hopefully the family
Starting point is 00:42:47 I don't even have some type of closure. If possible. If possible, extremely sad. I'm glad they solved it though. Or I'm glad that the detective ended up solving it because there's so many cool cases out there. And I think, you know. Also, come on dude, they're just in the mall enjoying
Starting point is 00:43:05 themselves having a good time and then someone sexually assaults and kills them. What is up with that? I heard people doing that man. I mean, I know that question is never going to be answered, but it just sucks. I also think like so often we see with these cases, we have the truth kind of. Yeah. But it's like these murderers take these secrets to their grave even after they've been convicted. I know you're in jail for the rest of your life, never getting out in that secret. Yeah, that secret to die.
Starting point is 00:43:38 What does it matter? You're not getting out. You don't even have to tell it to me. Tell it to her family. Like tell it to the victim's family. Give them or at least on your deathbed, write a letter like something. Yeah, I'll just I mean this. Okay. So if we want to go here, it doesn't surprise me though. I mean, they all have
Starting point is 00:43:55 huge egos. They're all so manipulative. Like they're narcissists. Like it. There's so many different words we can describe them as. It doesn't surprise me that they die with these secrets. Yeah, that's true. Alright doesn't surprise me that they die with these secrets. Yeah, that's true. All right, you guys, that was our case, and we will see you next week with a bonus episode if you're a member of Patreon or Apple subscriptions
Starting point is 00:44:15 or just another regular episode. I love it. I hate it. Goodbye.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.