Murder With My Husband - 267. The Deadly Friend - The Murder of Lori Ann Slesinski
Episode Date: May 5, 2025In this episode, Payton and Garrett dive into the missing person case of Lori Slesinski. When she misses a girls' night, her friends sound the alarm—uncovering a trail that leads straight to her kil...ler. Links: Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/murderwithmyhusband NEW MERCH LINK: https://mwmhshop.com Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/themwmh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/murderwithmyhusband/ Watch on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@murderwithmyhusband Listen on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/into-the-dark/id1662304327 Listen on spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/36SDVKB2MEWpFGVs9kRgQ7?si=f5224c9fd99542a7 Case Sources: LawAndCrime.com - https://lawandcrime.com/crime/where-did-you-dump-loris-body-alabama-man-convicted-of-capital-murder-in-death-of-woman-who-went-missing-in-2006/ CBSNews.com - https://www.cbsnews.com/news/rick-ennis-murdered-parents-lori-ann-slesinski-disappearance-alabama/ CharleyProject.org - https://charleyproject.org/case/lori-ann-slesinski BasementFortProductions.com - https://www.basementfortproductions.com/crimelines-episodes/loriannslesinski SanHillsExpress.com - https://sandhillsexpress.com/cbs_national/disappearance-of-ala-college-grad-tied-to-man-who-killed-parents-as-a-boy-cbsid33758cbe/ WTVM.com - https://www.wtvm.com/2022/04/15/mother-lori-slesinski-speaks-out-after-sentencing-is-decided/ WHNT.com - https://whnt.com/news/alabama-news/man-convicted-of-murdering-auburn-woman-also-killed-mom-stepfather-as-a-boy-family-says/ WRBL.com - https://www.wrbl.com/news/jury-finds-derrill-ennis-guilty-of-capital-murder-in-2006slaying-of-auburn-grad/ Montcova.com - https://montcova.com/2024/03/01/man-arrested-in-nrv-sentenced-to-life-in-prison/ TheSun.com - https://www.the-sun.com/news/8448485/missing-lori-ann-slesinski-death-rick-ennis-murder/ FindAGrave.com - https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/252058291/lori_ann-slesinski/photo#source WSFA.com - https://www.wsfa.com/story/38832332/arrest-made-in-2006-auburn-cold-case-murder-of-lori-ann-slesinski/ WJTV.com - https://www.wjtv.com/news/regional-news/prosecutors-to-outline-case-against-lori-ann-slesinskis-alleged-killer/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Actuaries are truly global. Wherever there's risk to manage, they use their math skills to solve real world problems. The society of actuaries has the designation for any destination.
You're listening to an Ono Media Podcast.
Hey everyone, welcome back to the podcast. This is Murder With My Husband. I'm Peyton Morlin.
And I am Gero Morlin.
And he's the husband.
And I'm the husband.
Happy Monday, happy May, happy life.
Yeah, I don't know, what's the date?
What's the date this Monday?
May the 5th?
Nothing really going on in the 5th.
Not after the 4th.
That's what I'm saying, may the 4th be with you,
you know what I'm saying?
I hate that.
Yeah.
Oh, if everyone's doing good.
My hair is, my hair's coming in.
You guys might be sick of me hearing that,
but I'm gonna say it.
I played pickleball this morning and I am tired.
It's sunny outside, it's getting warm.
Peyton and I are probably,
this is my 10 seconds by the way.
Peyton and I are probably gonna go on a date night tonight.
Don't know where we're going.
We could end up at Texas Roadhouse, you know,
or we could end up at, I don't know,
somewhere else, nicer restaurant.
But Texas Roadhouse does hit sometimes.
Yeah, I like the rolls.
Hope you guys are all doing good.
We love you, thank you for buying our merch.
Thank you for supporting us.
Thank you for listening.
Thank you for downloading, reviewing,
commenting, liking everything.
We seriously appreciate it so much.
We love that we can do this and be here with you guys every Monday.
That's sweet.
Thanks.
That's what I got to my 10 seconds is.
All right, you guys, we are going to get into the sources for this week.
Longcrime.com, CBS news..com, Charlieproject.org,
BasementFortProductions.com, Sandhillsexpress.com,
WTVM.com, WHNT.com, WRBL.com,
Monkova.com, TheSun.com, Findagrave.com,
WSFA.com, and WJTV.com.
Findagrave.com, can you just find
anyone's grave in the world?
If it's uploaded on there, so no, you can't find just anyone's.
Interesting. I didn't know that.
So most of us have friends from all different chapters in our life, right? We have our childhood
friends, our college friends, then there's the newer adulthood friends, work colleagues, other
parents, neighbors. and the whole point of
establishing a new friendship is getting to know someone on a more personal level.
What interests do they have? What are their personalities like? What happened to
them in the past? But there's no way to know it all and even with those friends
that you've had for decades, how can you be so sure that you ever know their
full truth?
That's why I don't have friends.
Exactly.
Because while a friendship is built on honesty, trust, and loyalty, it doesn't mean that
someone has to reveal all of their secrets to you.
So today, I want you to ask yourself, how well do you really know the friends in your
life, even the closest ones?
You know what their parents do for a living?
Do you know what happened in their home when they were young?
And how shocked would you be if you found out that this long-term friend had an entire
chapter of their life that they never shared with you. One that ultimately could
save your life if you only knew the truth. Honestly, this is why you don't
trust anyone except yourself. I know some people might disagree with that,
but I love my wife. I love her very much. Do I trust her 100%?
99.
That extra 1% you just never know.
You don't, you're not them.
You never know.
I don't trust Daisy.
She woke me up three times last night.
Okay.
So today we are going to dial the clock back to 2006.
We are traveling to Auburn, Alabama to meet the 24-year-old Lori Ann Slisinski.
Now, Lori, who was born on September 21, 1981, isn't an Alabama native. She, her older brother
Paul, and her parents Arlene and, are all originally from New York.
Though by 1994, when Lori was 13, the family moved down south to a rural Alabama farm to
start a slower life than the one they lived in New York, which was amazing for Lori because
she loved animals. So Lori was more than thrilled to have an entire hoard
of new pets she could take care of.
And that happiness Lori felt in this move to Alabama
also shined through in other areas of her life.
Friends said she was always incredibly friendly, outgoing,
warm and nurturing.
She excelled in school even though she moved at 13,
so much so that she was the valedictorian
of her high school class when she graduated,
which was why when Lori got accepted
to Auburn University around 2001,
her parents offered to get her something special.
They bought her her own little mobile home
to live in right outside of campus.
Now, I'm not sure how far away Laurie's parents
were living at the time,
but I know it was far enough for them
to worry about Laurie quite a bit.
Laurie's mom Arlene would call and check on her every day
just to see how college
life was going. But Lori was thriving there just as much as she was back home.
She was getting a degree in psychology and criminology and after graduating in
2005 she actually had plans to go on and pursue a master's degree. Now around that
time Lori also adopted a little dog that she named Peanut.
It was the love of her life, after probably missing all of her pets back home.
And she got a job at the East Alabama Mental Health Center.
Now for Lori, this was just a stepping stone until she completed her masters.
She thought the job was okay.
It was a lot of work for the low salary she was being paid,
but it still left time for her other hobbies,
bike riding, recreational sports, video games,
and of course, plenty of time to just be a young 20-something
enjoying her day with her friends,
which was exactly what Lori was up to
on the Saturday afternoon of June 10th, 2006.
Now that day, Lori was hanging out with her friend,
25 year old Rick Ennis.
But that evening she had plans to meet up
with a few friends for a girls night,
just some drinks and a movie, it was nothing wild.
So around 6.30 PM that night,
Lori calls her friend, Lindsay Braun,
who was going to be hosting this girls night.
And she tells Lindsay,
Hey, I'm just gonna swing by the store in a few minutes,
pick up some drink mixes,
and then I'll head over to your house.
Lindsay's like, great,
yeah, we'll see you at girls night soon.
7 PM rolls around and Lori's a little late,
but not by much.
Though that's when Lindsay gets another call
from her.
It rings once, so Lindsay doesn't even get to the phone in time to answer it, but she
does see it was Lori who called, so she calls her back.
Only there's no answer now.
In fact, it goes straight to voicemail.
And then an hour goes by.
Lori never shows up.
Another hour, another hour.
Lori does not come to girls' night at all, despite calling and saying, I'm picking up
drinks now and on the way.
So the whole thing is weird and definitely out of character for Lori, which is why the
following day, June 11th, Lindsay, her friend, starts calling her
and leaving her a bunch of voicemails
on her home answering machine.
Now the day after that, Monday, June 12th,
Lori doesn't make it to work for her shift
at the mental health center.
She's a no call, no show.
Same thing the following afternoon, Tuesday, June 13th.
Now from what I can tell,
Lindsay also used to work at this mental health center
with Lori.
So when she hears from one of her former coworkers that,
hey, Lori literally just like didn't show up to work
and didn't even call.
Lindsay's like, oh my gosh, she never came to my house.
She's not answering my phone.
She knows something is up.
Something is not right.
So Lindsay drives over to Lori's trailer home that day.
And when she gets there,
she finds that her friend Lori's car is gone.
So she doesn't expect her to be home,
but her door to her trailer is unlocked.
So Lindsay lets herself in. She walks around hesitantly, not knowing what
she's going to find feels a little weird. And while she doesn't see Laurie in the trailer home,
she does find Laurie's dog, Peanut, there. He's locked away in his crate, but he's wagging his
tail. He seems to have been fed. His crate isn't soiled, which to her says, someone has been letting him out and taking care of him.
Maybe that's a good sign.
Like maybe Lori actually has been around.
But there's a few other things
that definitely make Lindsay question the situation.
For example, Lori usually has three little rugs
on the floor of her kitchen
because Peanut would slip on the tile,
so she put it down to make it easier,
but now they're gone.
As was Lori's trash bin outside her home
and a bin Lindsay knew Lori kept all
of her gardening tools in.
And then even stranger, Lindsay had left Lori
a lot of messages that weekend.
Like first she just skips girls night, never says why, she's not answering the phone.
But when she goes to the answering machine,
Lindsay notices that the machine has been unplugged.
So none of her messages have been saved.
So as Lindsay is doing her own little investigation
in Lori's trailer, Lori's mother Arlene
is also getting a call from Laurie's boss at work saying,
hey, we're a bit worried. We haven't seen or heard from your daughter in two days.
So Arlene hops in her car and races to Auburn to Laurie's house. And when she
gets there and finds Lindsay there, Arlene also finds something else that's
a bit unsettling. The phone in her bedroom, in Lori's bedroom,
is missing its cord.
So this is definitely scary enough for Arlene
to call the police that day
after learning everything Lindsay knows as well.
You know what's kind of funny?
I bet there's people, I mean, I don't know, maybe not,
that are younger that are listening
that probably have no idea.
Like why is it a big deal to call?
What's the cord?
That a phone even had a cord.
Or like the charging cord?
Like what?
And that like that is a big deal that the cord's unplugged
and the answering machine's unplugged.
Home phones.
It's kind of crazy that that's just not a thing anymore.
I know.
Bring it back.
I know.
It was so fun.
I love just going in my dad's office, picking that phone up,
calling my bestie.
Ha ha. Can you play? I love just going in my dad's office, picking that phone up, calling my bestie.
Can you play?
So Arlene calls the police her mother, and when they arrive at the scene, the police
notice a few other things that Lindsay and Arlene had actually missed.
For one, they point out that Lori's front door looks a little splintered and broken,
and they find a small amount of blood
on Lori's front door as well.
So police bag a bunch of other evidence while they're there,
including Lori's bedsheets.
And in the meantime, they learned from Lindsay
that Lori was actually with someone
before she failed to come over that night
a few nights ago on girls' night.
Remember, it was her old friend, Rick Ennis.
Now Lindsay knew Rick was the last person to see Lori that night, but to her that wasn't
at all alarming when Lori went missing because Lori and Rick had a good friendship.
They met back when she was still a student at Auburn University, but not through school. Lori actually went to the bowling alley where Rick worked and the two got to know each other
that way and became friends.
Now the friendship was always just platonic between the two of them though.
Even in December of 2005 when Lori asked her mother, hey, can I invite my friend Rick over
for Christmas dinner?
He doesn't have any family.
And Arlene told her, yeah, of course.
So even her mother had met Rick. Arlene said Rick was polite Christmas dinner. He doesn't have any family. And Arlene told her, yeah, of course.
So even her mother had met Rick.
Arlene said Rick was polite and friendly that she also had no reason to question him or his intentions.
But when Rick is called in by police for questioning, he tells police about
another side of his missing friend, Lori, one that seemingly her mother and her
best friend, Lindsay, were not aware of. Rick tells police, yeah, yeah, Lori. One that seemingly her mother and her best friend, Lindsay, were
not aware of. Rick tells police, yeah, yeah, yeah, I understand what you're saying, Lori's
missing. And we were actually growing marijuana together. And that on the night of June 10th,
Lori left him to go to Lindsay's, but first she had to make a drop. And it was to a few
shady characters that definitely
might have had something to do with her disappearance.
Now that's crazy.
I don't.
Police, like Garrett, are a little hesitant to believe the story, but only because they
find zero evidence that Lori's been growing or dealing weed out of her trailer.
But before they can even fully look into Rick's claim, there is a major break in the case
the following afternoon on Wednesday, June 14th.
Now that day, around 441 in the morning, police get a call that a car has just exploded in
a cul-de-sac outside of a construction site.
And when they ask about, okay, what's the make and the model, they hear it's a 2005
Mazda Tribute.
Now police know, hmm, Lori, who's missing, drives a 2005 Mazda Tribute.
So they rush over to the scene terrified of what they're going to find inside of the
vehicle.
And they are somewhat relieved to discover that Lori is not inside of it, but it is 100% her car. So now the question is, who would do
this? Did Lori blow up her own vehicle and flee the scene? Likely not, but police
find a few clues near the car as well. First, they find a hand-rolled cigarette,
which they collect as evidence.
And second, an empty gas tank in the woods close by. Now remember, just a few hours before this
explosion, police were questioning her good friend, Rick Ennis. Now all of a sudden, they are standing
in front of Lori's torched car.
To them they're like, we pull them in, we put on the pressure and now her car comes
up burnt.
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Which is why that day they actually decide to get Rick back in for another interrogation
Especially because Laurie's parents tell police when they report back to them what Rick had said
There's no way their daughter was growing and selling weed. She's never even been into drugs. She was valedictorian
She's going on to get her masters to them Rick's gotta be lying and police are starting to suspect that too because this time
They noticed something they didn't before
Rick has some scratches on his arms and hands.
And when they ask him about them, like, Hey, what happened?
He doesn't really give them an answer.
He also changes some of his stories from what he had told the police the day before.
I think that if he is lying, telling the police that they grow marijuana
together is far fetched. Yeah. It's grow marijuana together is pretty far-fetched.
Yeah, it's kind of crazy.
That's not a great lie.
But if you're trying to make it seem
like she was around dangerous people,
you would have to tell a lie that shady.
They're growing marijuana,
and so they're doing like, oh, like.
We deal it.
We deal it, or I don't know, we smoke a lot.
I don't know, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah, I think he, if it's fake, in his mind,
he just needed to get her around shady people.
Yeah, we just, yeah, yeah, yeah, I get it.
So at this point, police are like,
we're not sure about this Rick guy.
We're gonna get a warrant to search his car.
And this is where things in the case really take a turn.
Inside of Rick and his car,
the last person that they know of to see Lori alive, they find a knife,
a pair of fuzzy handcuffs, tiki torches, flare bottles, air fresheners, a scrub brush, and
a giant box of cleaning supplies.
Now, when Rick is asked about some of this stuff in his car, he says, I can't explain
the brush and cleaning supplies
because his dog has her period once a month
since she isn't fixed.
So, you know, he's like, she's always in my car.
I got to clean it up.
Anyone knows animals, dogs do not have their periods
once a month.
Yeah, they go into heat.
Twice a year.
So police are like, bro, this is definitely lie.
That does not add up.
But the more Rick talks, the more he just keeps digging himself into a hole.
And the more police begin to talk to other people who know Rick, the worse he looks.
So remember that empty gas can police found close to the burnt car?
Yeah.
Well, they speak to a friend and coworker of Rick's
who also worked at the bowling alley named Jeremy.
And Jeremy tells police this,
on June 9th, the day before Lori went missing,
Rick called Jeremy at his house to ask him for a favor.
He says, hey, my car ran out of gas.
Could you possibly run some over to me?
I am parked at a local church in Auburn. So Jeremy, being a good friend, was like, hey, my car ran out of gas. Could you possibly run some over to me? I am parked at a local church in Auburn.
So Jeremy, being a good friend, is like, yeah, sure.
He grabs an empty gas can, he sees lying around behind the bowling alley, gets it filled,
brings it to Rick.
Rick says, hey, can I keep the empty gas can?
And Jeremy tells him no.
He's like, I borrowed it from the bowling alley.
It doesn't belong to me.
But that's not even the strangest part.
Jeremy watches Rick start his car
with zero troubles after this.
And Jeremy knows cars.
So he knows that when they completely run out of gas
and then get a boost like this,
it kind of usually takes a few revs of the engine
to get it back going again.
Jeremy doesn't really think too much of it.
He brings the can back to where it goes about his day, but a day or two later, he realizes,
oh, that gas can that he had dropped off to Jeremy
and brought back is now missing,
which makes him really suspicious of Rick
when he hears about missing Lori's car exploding
on June 14th, especially because he knew something
about Rick that not a lot of other people knew. And what was it? on June 14th, especially because he knew something
about Rick that not a lot of other people knew.
And what was it?
I don't know.
Rick was in love with Lori.
Okay.
He'd written her a letter and had given it to her
just a few days before Lori vanished.
And when Jeremy asked Rick, hey, how did it go?
He didn't offer up much, but Jeremy could tell
it didn't seem to go the way Rick wanted.
It seemed like Rick had finally confessed
the secret love to his friend
and Lori didn't return his affections.
This is a statement which was also validated
by Lindsey Braun, remember Lori's best friend.
She said Lori had told her about the letter
but wasn't at all interested in being romantic with Rick. That she really just wanted to keep
it platonic. And seemingly, Rick had accepted that since the two were still hanging out on the night
she vanished. Or maybe Rick wasn't accepting it. Here's what's interesting though. If you recall,
Laurie told Lindsay she was going to pick up some mixers and then head over
to Lindsay's house right before she went missing.
And Lori has found on security camera footage at Walmart shopping shortly after making that
call to her friend.
And even more interesting, she appears to be alone.
So she was with Rick when she made that call, but then she's alone in the Walmart after telling her friend she'll be right over.
Almost like, yeah, I said goodbye to one friend, went to Walmart, but then she disappears.
So police have to consider the possibility that maybe Rick wasn't with her when she vanished.
And while Rick does appear to have a motive and definitely some shady circumstantial evidence,
the scratches, the things in his car, the gas can story.
Police think they just don't have enough
to build a case against him for trial.
So what happens?
Rick is not arrested.
Instead, Rick begins trying to sell off
a bunch of his things, his motorcycle.
And then less than a week after Lori's car is found,
he moves.
He moves out of Auburn, Alabama.
That's so annoying.
To South Carolina.
Come on, guys.
But the following year, so the case has grown cold.
They think they know who did it.
They have no evidence.
Rick's former roommate from Auburn
decides to randomly go into the police station one day.
I don't know what took him so long,
but he has some pretty interesting evidence.
He says, hey, like this whole thing happened a year ago,
all this drama, Rick gets up and leaves, sells everything,
but he left behind three rugs when he moved out.
And I think they might be of interest to you.
Lo and behold, those three rugs were the ones Lindsey
and Arlene noticed was missing from Lori's kitchen floor
at her house.
The ones she had so Peanut could walk on the tile floor.
Why would he leave them behind?
That's insane.
Well, the former roommate says Rick told him
they were a gift from Lori, but this is really
just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to Rick Ennis because the more police keep
digging the more they realize Lori clearly had no idea who she was friends with.
So I'm going to jump back into Rick's past now.
It's 1993 in Montgomery, Alabama.
On March 5th, a police dispatcher gets a call from a random driver saying a car appears to have driven off the highway.
It struck a fence, so they should send someone out to make sure everyone's okay.
And then a state trooper named John Clark is sent to this scene.
And as he gets there, his headlights shine on what appears to be a boy, like not much more
than 12 years old.
So the state trooper Clark gets out and asks the 12 year old if he's okay.
And the boy says he's fine, but then tells the state trooper, I've actually stolen my
parents' car.
So Clark searches the kid's backpack, which the kid is cooperative about and that's when Clark finds a kitchen knife and
some loose ammunition in the kids backpack
Now Clark's like, alright kid, you're gonna have to come down to the station with me so we can call your parents
Like you drove the car off the highway
That's when the 12 year old
Looks Clark dead in the eyes and says, you can't call my parents.
I killed them both.
And something about the way this kid, this young kid says it, like something about the
way he says it tells Clark that he's not joking.
He's not messing around.
So they immediately send police over to the boy's home address.
And sure enough, they find the dead bodies of his mother, Dolly Flowers, who had been
shot and beaten to death with a baseball bat.
Oh my gosh.
As well as the body of the boy's stepfather, Eddie Flowers, who had also been shot in the
face.
And he's not in prison for the rest of his life?
Well apparently the bodies at the house had been dead
for at least two days by that point,
which according to witnesses,
didn't stop that little boy from going to school
in the meantime.
So he shot and killed his parents,
kept going to school,
and then two days later stole the car
and ended up driving it off the highway.
Who's this little boy?
Rick.
12-year-old Rick Ennis.
Rick told police he did it because his parents had been wanting to move and he didn't want
to switch schools.
But the police find something else chilling inside of this house.
It's a hit list and on it were the names of Rick's three stepsisters as well, who luckily Rick did
not get to in time to kill.
Now under Alabama law, Rick was only sentenced to nine years in a juvenile detention center
for this crime.
That is absolutely insane.
It actually happens a bit.
I don't understand.
I know some people might disagree and their children and yeah that child's a demon
Needs to go back to where he came from. So when Rick turns 21, that's in 2002. He is released
It was around this time that he moved to Auburn with this huge secret that he had served a prison sentence for murdering
His parents. I just I'm sorry. I just don't understand how the system thinks
that this 12 year old boy brutally killed two people.
And had a hit list for more.
Okay, if we put him in prison for nine years
and we let him out,
he probably won't do it anymore, right?
Like, I think we'll be okay.
Blows my mind.
Blows my mind.
He moves to Auburn.
He starts a new life.
He gets a job at a bowling alley and happens to meet Laurie and.
Oh, what a nightmare.
So here's what's wild though.
As police are investigating Laurie's case, they know this about Rick and they still don't
think they have enough evidence to prosecute him.
And a big part of that is the fact that they don't even know if they have a murder case.
There is no body.
Lori's body is still missing.
And I hate this so much, but this department is really operating on a no body, no crime
mentality here.
This is despite the fact that the tips against Rick Ennis keep coming into the Auburn police
department, including one from a new coworker Rick made living in South Carolina. The witness
actually called the police and says they asked Rick, oh, what made you move out of Auburn?
And Rick flat out told them, I got into trouble there. I needed to get the heck out of Dodge.
But there's more. Rick also told this coworker that he'd been talking to a woman in Auburn, but
she only wanted to be friends.
So he strangled her.
He told someone this.
He tells his coworker this.
He described this woman as a piece of quote trailer park trash, which might I add her parents had bought her that
home to live in while she goes to college.
And also just rude.
Now, once this witness does this research, they see there's a missing girl in Auburn
and an open investigation into her death, which is why they call the Auburn police
with this information.
This girl lived in a trailer park and the co-workers like, this guy's weird, he just
like confessed to murdering someone I don't know if he's true, looks into it and
is like, oh my gosh, I have to tell the police. And still it goes nowhere. Ten
years after Lori's disappearance, the case is in the same spot as it was before.
It's not until 2016 when the Alabama State Bureau of Investigations
creates their cold case unit that Laurie's disappearance gets the attention it deserves.
Special agent Mark Whitaker is the one to take the lead on Laurie's case in 2016. And
immediately he's baffled by how much evidence there is against Rick Ennis. He's like, we don't even have, like we have the guy and he's still out here living life
like nothing happened.
He and a partner are spending their days digging through old files, trying to build a case
against Rick.
When one night around one in the morning, Mark's partner calls him, says, hey, I just found
an old box of evidence and files, literally collecting dust,
and inside was an envelope that had never even been opened or read by the authorities.
It was in regards to the evidence that had been collected from Lori's trailer. And this unopened report said that Rick's DNA was found, his semen was found on Laurie's bed sheets
and in the blood on the front door of her mobile home. Got it. Which means if
Laurie wasn't interested in Rick, romantically like she told her friend,
Rick had likely assaulted Laurie and had clearly gotten into a violent scuffle with her inside
her house for the blood to be on the door.
This was a report from 2007, nine years earlier, and because someone didn't open it, nobody
knew that Rick Ennis had DNA at her house.
By the way, Mark also finds the three rugs that Rick's roommate handed over to police
when he moved.
And once he sends those through DNA analysis, they find Rick's blood on one of those as well,
but it doesn't stop there.
Lori's car was too destroyed in the blaze to gather any evidence off of it, but remember
that there was some stuff collected near the explosion. One of them was a rolled cigarette
butt. This was something they never sent out for DNA testing back at the time,
but now Mark and his team made sure to get it analyzed. Rick's DNA is all over that cigarette
butt that is found near her burnt car, which means he's now also tied to blowing up Lori's car.
Holy crap.
He's tied via blood and semen to her house and the last person to see her live and now tied to a completely
different location where her car is blown up.
I mean, duh.
So on August 6th, 2018, Rick is celebrating his 37th birthday in his new home in rural
Virginia.
He's there getting ready to cut a cake with his new fiance, the local school librarian.
How does he have a fiance now?
When their house is surrounded by SWAT teams.
That day, Rick Ennis is finally arrested and charged
with two counts of capital murder, burglary, and kidnapping.
12 years after Lori disappeared.
Glad he's caught. 12 years later, absolutely unacceptable,
but I mean, better than never.
Question.
You found out like now, like right now, all of a sudden
that I killed my parents.
I would leave.
Yeah.
Listen, I'm not one to give up on marriage.
I'm really, really not.
To me, murder is a whole new level
and like you might murder me.
You're already a danger to me.
What I'm saying.
You're already a danger to me.
And if I found out that you had murdered someone in your family before, I don't know how I
could live with you and not have one eye open all the time.
No, I agree.
I think that's-
You know what I mean?
I think it's crazy.
It would just be hard.
I think if you kill someone, okay, like first degree murder, second degree murder, I'm
not going to count like manslaughter, like DUIs.
I'm going to leave those out.
First degree, second degree murder.
I don't know.
I don't, I don't know.
I guess maybe it's just something we don't know
until we're in that situation.
Oh, I hope I'm never in that situation.
But I mean, like, I don't even know if I can speak on it.
Like, I don't think I could be friends
with someone that killed someone.
I don't know.
Like first degree murder.
Yeah, but what if you didn't know?
That's why I started out this case being like, do you actually even know people?
I wouldn't talk to them because what if they kill me?
It's just scary.
Can't trust nobody.
Now, obviously it's a COVID case.
Trial was delayed for years until 2022.
It shouldn't have been a COVID case.
But on April 1st of that year, Rick Ennis was paraded into the courtroom and shockingly,
they let him testify in his own defense.
And the entire time he swears he didn't kill Lori.
In fact, he says, no, no, no, we just had consensual sex in her house the night she
went missing.
Despite the fact that all of Lori's friends were like, no, she literally told us she wasn't
interested in him.
He said, oh, the scratches on my arm came from my dog
and he maintained his story he told 16 years ago.
We sold marijuana, she went out to meet with someone
and never came home.
What's even more outlandish,
Rick claimed someone deliberately planted his DNA
at the scene of the blown up car to pin the crime on him,
which doesn't really make sense
because they never even tested that DNA.
So if back then officers or investigators planted his DNA, they then just took it and never even
tested it, which defeats the purpose of planting DNA. Dude, this guy's insane. And you know,
obviously, because he testifies, he's confronted with like, well, you told a coworker, you strangled a girl, you killed your parents.
Unfortunately, he didn't have an answer at all.
And he doesn't say what he did with Lori's body, but the jury was not going
to make the same mistake the police did for them, no body, no crime was not an
option after deliberating for two days.
The jury found Rick Ennis guilty of all charges.
After deliberating for two days, the jury found Rick Ennis guilty of all charges. So finally, after 16 years without justice, the Slicinski family had a piece of it.
After the verdict was announced, one of Rick's stepsisters, who was on his hit list,
came forward and released her own public statement. Because Rick's previous convictions could not be
included in the court hearing of Lori's case, she wanted the world to know, guys, this guy that just got
convicted also murdered my father and stepmother.
Yeah.
Initially, the prosecution was hoping to pursue the death penalty, but Lori's
mother Arlene actually said, can you not?
The reason being that it would cost them years of appeals, more legal hurdles, like he's just gonna appeal,
we're gonna have to come to more things
and we just don't want to.
So Arlene agreed, we'll just go on.
Life in prison.
Yeah, give him life in prison.
And that's exactly what Rick got when he was sentenced.
The man who had killed her daughter
was finally going to be put behind bars.
A man who's been in her house, by the way.
However, Rick continues
to maintain his innocence and because of that, he is trying to appeal his conviction.
Rick, you're a loser.
But the only thing anyone really wants to hear from Rick is where is Lori's body? To
this day, what happened in the final hours of Lori's life from the time she called her
friend and was heading to girls night and then went missing is
still a mystery.
That's horrible.
As is her final resting place.
All we can hope for is that one day Rick Ennis has a change of heart and
ounce of morality and finally shares what he did to the woman that he calls
his friend.
And that is the story of Lori Ann Slisinski.
It's sad when the parents can't have,
cause you have closure, right?
But I think, I mean, I'm not the parents.
I've never been in this situation.
I would assume having closure from the person who did it
saying, okay, yeah, I did do it.
It's just a different, I don't know, feeling.
It's like, you never even get full closure,
but you can get levels of closure
and they really only have like the bottom tier level.
You at least know you're not being lied to.
Yes, it's like someone being convicted,
someone saying, I did it, someone telling the details,
letting you know what happened, where is the body?
Like it just, you can keep adding.
And honestly, he's given the bare minimum. I want to lose her.
All right you guys, that was our case this week and we will see
you next time with another one. I love it. I hate it. Goodbye.