My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark - 199 - Live at the Hammersmith Apollo in London
Episode Date: December 5, 2019Karen and Georgia cover Dr. Thomas Neill Cream and the Enfield Poltergeist. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-s...ell-my-info.
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What's up London?
Wow, oh so loud, thanks guys.
Wonderful, I kind of like this sex lighting, I don't know about you.
This is definitely some under eye lighting.
Well it's haunting, it's ghoulish, that's what we're all about.
How are you guys, is everything good?
We're so excited to be back here, this is where we were last time, I just saw you and
our name on the marquee, which we miss a lot.
Changes have been made, calls have been made, you's have been removed.
We did probably the most rock and roll thing we've ever done tonight, which is drive up
in one of those vans and take a left through our own line to drive in, yeah it's pretty
rad.
It was very cool.
It was either that or it was just people that had been kind of kicked off the sidewalk
and were forced to go down that way and were not interested in one way at all, could have
been that.
Could have been.
But I chose to see it as a kind of Rolling Stone situation.
Thanks for being here, I already said that.
So this is the second to last show of our UK and Ireland tour.
We know now those are two different things.
About two days in, my deodorant just decided to quit.
So I went to the TK Max and got the good shit.
I'm sorry, I don't understand that, I'm from America, where we call it T.J. Max.
That's the stupidest fucking, like, boot and trunk I'm fine with, T.J. Max and TK Max.
Come on, someone on one side of the Atlantic or the other, pick a, pick a letter.
Pick a different thing, like ten different letters.
What happened to TK Max?
I bought some shapewear, because I forgot that.
And it's this weird kind of where it's like the boobs are cut out, because they don't want
to flatten your boobs.
We know you just want to flatten this part and not this part.
So I kind of look like I'm wearing a cop, wearing a holster or something.
It's pretty badass.
That's dirty.
Do you think that cut out boobs are going to make you perform differently in kind of
like bolder room, where when he's wearing women's underwear he's a good pitcher?
Well, they're like, let's not flatten these out, because this is what she's got.
That's all she's got to work with.
Cut them on out.
Cut them on out.
What about your dress?
My dress?
I have some pockets.
That's not a big deal.
It's not.
It's not a big deal.
Jesus, for one second I was like, that microphone's going to drop out of your pocket.
I know.
I thought so too.
You're going to have to pay this theater 10,000 sterling.
I have to show you a photo.
So we're staying at this hotel that it's really old, it used to be like a school, and it used
to also be an insane asylum, so it's definitely fucking haunted, like Fort, Sher.
It's called the Broadmoor Arms Hotel.
Definitely haunted, and Vince and I went out for a walk last night, got home kind of late,
and the hallways are really small, and it's really dim, and you just keep turning these.
It's like a maze.
And there's urchins in the corner saying, please, sir, please, may I have some more?
Yeah.
So I was like, this is definitely haunted, if we're going to see a ghost, it's now.
And so we turn a corner, I'm first, and this is what I see.
I was really startled, because this is terrifying, are you ready?
I literally turned a corner, it's like he was waiting for us.
That's the werewolf of London.
It was so startling and yet adorable.
What's his name?
I don't know.
He wouldn't tell me.
Really?
That's not a talking dog.
Maybe it's Henry.
I don't know.
He's got his own sweet plaque.
I was so happy to see us.
What if he was like, could you please be quiet?
Trying to have my midnight tea.
Well, I also have a picture.
I heard.
Okay.
I'm nervous.
There's rumors going around.
So Georgia likes to sleep on planes and trains and automobiles, as we all know.
I can take a nap anywhere.
It's great.
She's into it.
She's got eyewear.
But I guess on this last flight that we took from Dublin to London, she left her eyewear
somewhere because I turned to see what she was doing.
I was like on the aisle over and I turned and looked and this is what I saw.
Oh my God.
Oh, it was London.
It's never been a worse photo.
It's really bad.
I'm sorry.
That's okay.
I actually texted her and said, I'm going to show a picture of you tonight.
You want me to run it by you first.
And then she went, is it bad?
And I was like, well, yeah.
I wouldn't ask if you were like, oh, cute and hot.
I'd be like, guess what?
Too bad.
You're out of this decision-making process.
But I was like, is it okay?
Vince gave me his beanie and then had to pretend not to see me like that for the whole flight.
For all of the Americans in the audience, doesn't she look like that one character from Fat
Albert?
I hate that photo.
Okay.
So sorry.
So sorry.
It's okay.
It wasn't a gotcha photo.
No.
It's a before photo.
Can you believe?
Ooh.
We have a lazy Susan cocktail table tonight.
Yes.
Now we won't know whose stories are whose.
You know I hate that.
Yep.
I'll check both.
I'll check both.
Okay.
I stayed in my hotel room all day long because my hotel room looks like a little apartment
from the Victorian times, except for all the phones and TVs and stuff, and I basically
sat by the window with like a shawl around my shoulders, riding with a quill.
It's so exciting.
It's so exciting.
It is.
I'm like, what's outside?
We have a TK Max where I like, who gives a fuck?
I'm staying in here where the fantasy lives.
It's so charming.
It's so nice.
Oh, this is my favorite murder, the podcast.
It's a true crime podcast.
Thank you.
This is Karen Kielgare.
This is Georgia Hardstar.
Ooh, I got you right on the neck.
And...
Sit down, Ty.
Should we?
Let's do it.
Oh.
Okay.
Okay.
Oh, we have a bath mat.
A nice bath mat.
Yeah.
We each get our own bath mat to take home.
Thank you.
That's really nice.
Thank you.
This is too high.
Okay, this is...
This is very high.
I think it goes down a little.
Yeah, be careful.
Is this part game show, part true crime live podcast?
Oh, God.
Oh, dear.
Oh, it's wobbly.
Oh, shit.
Okay.
I'm taller than you now, though.
Yeah.
Come down here.
I can't find the...
It's...
Oh, there we go.
Come on down.
Yeah.
This way we won't fall off.
Okay.
That's true.
Or if we do, it won't be very far.
There we go.
Just sit naturally.
This is like some fucking Beatrix Potter, like Mrs. Wibble Wobbles live podcast.
You got it?
I think so.
I want to scoot closer to the table, but I refuse to get up.
No, don't.
It's going to be a fucking...
We don't have time to reset.
We have to get into this.
Okay, it's time for the speech.
Yeah.
Do you want to tell them?
Most of you know the speech.
At this point, it's kind of...
There's really no point except for the fact that a handful of you insist upon bringing
outsiders.
Please listen to this thing I love.
No, I'm not interested in true crime.
Do it anyway.
Okay.
I guess it'll be the kind of evening we're going to have.
So you're the people I'm talking to.
We call you the victims.
Or the drag-alongs.
This is a true crime comedy podcast.
Some people are not comfortable with that combination because they immediately assume
it's disrespectful.
So we feel the need to explain up top.
George and I have loved true crime since we were very kind of dangerously young.
And parallel to that, we have always dealt with the hardships in our lives through humor.
It's how we were raised and how we cope.
And so now when we talk about what we believe to be the worst things that can happen to
people, that can happen to a family, that can happen to an individual, while we talk
about it, we often feel the need to make jokes during it.
And that's just our coping mechanism for dealing with the horrible shit that seems to need
to go on day after day in this fucking world.
So we just want you to know that that's how we do business.
And if you don't like it, you can get the fuck out.
Very politely get the fuck out.
And not defensively, we'd also like you to know that our last show at Dublin, we had
a pastor who came to the meet and greet.
And we're both like, hi.
And he was a humongous fan.
So if he can handle it, then your delicate sensibility is no.
No, closer to God than you are for fuck's sake.
He's fine with it.
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It's me.
It's you.
It is.
Okay.
Okay.
Parents first.
I feel like I went first last time when I did Jack the Ripper and had a nervous breakdown
on this very stage.
I had to watch you silently sweating from across the non-wobbly table all night.
I didn't think it through that the people who would know best about every fucking minute
detail of the Jack the Ripper case would be in this room with us until I was in paragraph
two going, uh-oh, like, it all felt like the whole thing was going straight into corrections
corner.
Like, it was going to be a 29-hour corrections corner when I got back.
I was fucking sweating.
It was...
The ages seemed like they go on forever.
It was like...
It was terrible.
Now, when we got backstage and we had a meet and greet that night right behind this curtain
and we met all kinds of awesome people, there was one woman who was like, oh, no, no, this
is my...
Jack the Ripper is my whole thing and you did fine.
And I was just like, oh, my God.
Thank God.
Like, I truly almost cried.
You know, you're my colonial overlords and I want to please you so badly.
It's in my blood.
It's in my DNA.
Please them.
Please them.
Do the murder right.
Or as they say in Ireland, do the murder right.
So, I'm going to do my best tonight as I do the Lambeth Poisoner, Dr. Thomas Neil Creme.
Creme?
Creme.
All right.
There he is.
Now, if we had the ability with this technology to zoom in, we'd go in real close on Dr. Thomas
Neil Creme's eyes.
Oh.
Is there a little off?
Yeah.
A little bit in the eyes.
He has a touch of that part of the jerk when it's...
Oh, yeah.
Omni-grab.
Omni-grab.
Opti-grab?
He's got the opti-grab eye cross.
And then when you think about that as like this psychotic, mad, poisoner, it's such a
bad combination.
Or just like, would you like to take this pill?
Like, me or her?
Me?
Oh, me.
Oh.
No.
Thank you.
Well, you know I have a soft spot in my heart for cross-dyes because of my cat.
So I would take Elvis.
I would take any pill he gave me or her.
I don't care.
I would take it.
They do call him the Elvis of Poisoners.
That's why.
That's where that came from.
Okay, this is young Dr. Neil Creme when he was in his prime.
But then here's old Dr. Neil Creme, which is the picture you see more often.
That's just an older picture.
That's just that same picture turned around with some fuzzy stuff.
They took that other picture and they left it in the sun for two weeks.
Now he's older and more intense.
But when I look at this picture, it reminds me of like the first and original gift, which
is my favorite of all.
Which is their dramatic chipmunk.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I beg it.
I beg it.
Right?
Yeah.
If only we had the technology to put a top hat on that chipmunk, we would be on our
way.
I see it.
Yeah.
I love it.
Next time.
Next time, when we go to ITT Technical College and get our degrees and whatever you have
to do to...
Okay.
The sources I use for this story, Wikipedia, Murderpedia, and one of my favorite websites,
the multiple award-winning blog, Murder by Gaslight, by the author Robert Wilhelm.
And he has three books for sale on Amazon that look amazing, that are all about basically
the murder from around this time.
So check that out.
Dr. Thomas Neil Creme, he's, or as I like to call him, Tom Creme, the worst name of
all time, born May 27th, 1850, in Glasgow, yeah.
The list of eight children, and then in 1854, the whole family moves to Quebec, Quebec,
Canada.
Really?
Bonjour.
It was just one girl, and she just happened to be really loud.
It's one girl who's an opera singer from Quebec.
I did that as if I could stop intimidating me, London, so...
He's very smart, grows up smart, wants to be a doctor.
He goes to McGill University in Montréal, sure, to study medicine, graduates in 1876,
after writing his thesis on chewing gum, no, kind of, chloroform.
No one thought to red tag his file after...
You know what I want to study poisoning people in like a creepy way.
So that's foreshadowing, if you've ever taken a writing class.
Hi, I'm Tom Creme, majored in murder, yeah.
Okay, so around the same time in 1876, he starts dating a woman named Flora Brooks.
She's the daughter of Lyman Brooks, he's the owner of a hotel just outside Quebec City,
and early in the relationship, she becomes pregnant.
Not alone, he has something to do with it.
He gets her pregnant, I should have written.
So medical student Tom Creme tells her, I'm going to give you an abortion.
In secret, of course, because back then, they were illegal.
Can you imagine the fucking dark ages, anyway?
He botches the abortion, almost kills her, so of course she has to go to the hospital
when her father finds out that she is really sick and something's wrong with her.
He takes her to the actual, he goes there, finds out that the reason she's sick is because
of a botched abortion, and then he basically makes Tom Creme marry his daughter at gunpoint,
literally.
Yes, walks him right down to the church.
One way to do it.
So soon after the wedding, Tom Creme decides he wants to pursue his medical studies in
London.
Oh, that's weird.
So he leaves his young Canadian wife, Flora, behind, but not before.
He gives her some pills that she needs to take to get better.
So once he's here in London, of course, the party starts, ring comes off, it's Tom Creme
party time.
Where's that mustache at?
He rips his mustache off and runs into Piccadilly Circus.
Yelling, I love the circus.
He parties, cheats on Flora constantly, never tells anybody he's married.
Meanwhile, back in Canada, Flora's been taking the pills that he prescribed to her.
And in 1877, she comes down with what her doctors think is bronchitis.
And then in August of that year, she dies of consumption, which is just a generalized
way of saying they died young.
So back, so I wrote, I can't find any information about Tom Creme going back for the funeral.
So I assume he just sent a telegram that said, thoughts and prayers, stop, stop.
So in London, party Tom Creme fails med school, of course.
So they send him up to the Royal Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons in Edinburgh, where
I guess the failed Londoners go to make their way.
Oh man, you really gave it to them.
Who in God's name would start fights with the country of Scotland?
What am I doing?
What am I even saying?
Stephen, can you mark this entire section, please?
He's not here.
He's in the ceiling.
Okay.
So there, he gets his license from what I read, which definitely could be inaccurate.
But one of the articles I read said there he got his license for midwifery.
So he's starting to be like an OBGYN, I guess, which is, can you imagine that fucking goofy
bastard popping up between your knees as you're going into labor?
Like, take that hat off.
Stop looking at me so intensely.
A year later in 1878, he moves back to Canada, this time London, Ontario.
So when I was reading the research that Jay sent me, I got to this part, and it was like
at one o'clock today.
And I immediately assumed that I'd picked the wrong murder.
And this was a London, Ontario murder, not a London, England murder.
That fucking feeling when you're like, I can't do this.
And I'm texting him, we've got a serious problem.
I'd sent him like six texts in a row and then read one more paragraph and I was like, oh,
sorry, we're back in London now.
Everything's fine.
We're back.
We're back.
That was literally three in the morning for him.
He hates me.
So, okay, so he's in London, Ontario.
He sets up his practice six months later in May of 1879, one of his patients named Kate
Gardner is found dead in a wood shed behind his medical practice.
And she smells like chloroform.
What does chloroform smell like?
It's really chloroform-y.
It smells like every Uber you've gotten into in your whole life, essentially.
Oh, I could, I could smell that.
CK1.
Yeah.
Oh.
From the past.
Yeah.
Whatever CK1 used to be made out of.
Or the designer imposter of CK1.
Debbie Gibson's electric youth.
So Dr. Cream is immediately called in for questioning, a formal inquest is held, Kate's
roommate Sarah Long testifies that Kate was pregnant, and she went to Dr. Cream to get
an abortion, and he testifies Dr. Cream, yes, that did happen, but he claims that he refused
to conduct the procedure, and that he says he just treated her for senescence, which
of course I had to Google.
Yeah, what is that?
It means aging.
So he's doing Botox?
Essentially.
He basically tells, testifies at the end quest that it must have been a suicide, because
he didn't do anything.
Another doctor weighs in saying no one could possibly hold chlorofoam over their own face
long enough to kill themselves.
And also that the scratches on her face would indicate there was violence during that time,
also not indicative of someone trying to kill themselves.
I mean, check and check.
Right?
But there's not enough evidence to indict him, so Kate's death is ruled a, quote, murder
by persons unknown, but don't worry, because this trial ruins his reputation in Canada,
and everyone hates him, well done, to your grandparents, your great-grandparents, and
he does what anyone in that situation who's hated in Canada would do, come on down to America.
So in August of 1879, he sets up a new practice in Chicago, Illinois.
I can't, I just, hold on, I can't, I need to move this, I'm sorry, okay, and then I
need to just simply, okay, okay, and then if you lean on this, it's gonna grasp it, just
grip it.
Just strive it like a bus.
Double-decker.
Oh, that's mine, don't look at it.
Okay, I'm better now, okay, okay, no problem.
In Chicago, he opens a practice right in what was at the time in Chicago, basically their
red-light district, and he becomes basically, secretly, an abortionist for the sex workers
that are in the area, and also women who, you know, it was illegal, but of course, it
got done constantly, so most doctors, he wasn't the only one, lots of doctors did it after
hours for just cash under the table.
I feel like he should have known that, he wasn't very good at it, and maybe should have
quit.
I think that's what he was into, okay, because you're gonna be disappointed when you learn
Dr. Neil Creams, not a very good guy.
Prepare yourself, I know, I don't want him to be disappointed, but his mustache says he's
good.
Stephen, so...
No, not here, still not here.
He comes running in from the back, I just keep lying.
In 1880, police start hearing rumors that Dr. Cream is performing abortions, so they
keep an eye on him and his part-time medical assistant, a midwife named Hattie Mack.
So apparently, back then at the time, to get an abortion, you had to have like a contact,
and they would set up, you know, they would be called midwives sometimes, but they would
basically set up the deal where the doctors would meet them at a tenement apartment that
no one lived in and perform the abortion in a very unsanitary, disgusting, you know, back-alley
style abortion, and the doctor would just come and do it and leave, and there would
be no trace of anything.
So that's what Hattie Mack was helping set up, God bless her soul.
But in August of 1880, police discover the decomposing body of a woman named Mary Ann
Faulkner in this tenement apartment, and they trace it back to Hattie Mack, who's the one
who rented it, and when she's arrested, of course, she's immediately like, I did it for
Dr. Neal Cream, and she tells police Mary Ann Faulkner, she met her there because she'd
brokered the deal, and Dr. Cream came to perform the abortion, he botched it, and then left
her to die.
But of course, when Dr. Cream is tried for the murder of Mary Ann Faulkner, his defense
is that actually Hattie is the one who performed the abortion, that she botched it, and he
came in, he was called to try to save her life, Mary Ann's life, and because Hattie
is a black woman, and Dr. Cream is a white doctor, the jury takes his word over hers,
and he walks free due to lack of evidence.
So in December of 1880, another patient of Dr. Cream's named Ellen Stack dies, after
taking medicine, the Dr. Cream designed himself.
So spoiler alert, Dr. Cream is super into strict nine, that's his thing, and apparently
at a certain point, I'm sure when he was partying in London in his early days, he started taking
a pill that he had put together himself that was strict nine morphine and cocaine.
Wow, that'll pack a punch.
It explains the eyes.
So he, I guess, tried to start doing that here in Chicago, so basically Ellen Stack
dies after taking this medicine, because this pill that he put together for her had a lethal
amount of strict nine in it, but Dr. Cream accuses the pharmacist, a man named Frank
Piat, of tampering with the medication, and Frank Piat says that he's innocent, the case
is never solved, nobody goes to jail.
In April of 1881, another patient of Dr. Cream's named Alice Montgomery dies of strict nine
poisoning after she gets an abortion from Dr. Cream, and that's treated as a murder case,
but again, there's no hard evidence, and the case remains unsolved.
So then Dr. Cream starts putting together what he tells people is epilepsy medication.
Oh my God, this guy's a dick.
He's not a good doctor.
So some people actually swear by it, one person it works for is an elderly railway worker
named Daniel Stott, and Daniel Stott had a wife who was 30 years younger than him and
quite beautiful named Julia, and sometimes he would send Julia to go pick up his medication
at old Dr. Cream's office.
And so Daniel notices that Julia's like, hey, you need any more medication, or do you
want me to go check on your medication at Dr. Cream's office?
That's right, they're having an affair, and then soon they decide it would be better if
Daniel Stott wasn't around to ruin their good time.
So Daniel Stott is poisoned with strict nine.
He dies on July 14th, 1881, and when this case goes to trial, Julia Stott entirely turns
and she's like, this guy did it all, it was all his idea, it was his plan, and finally
this time, Dr. Thomas Neil Cream is found guilty and sentenced to life in prison.
Come on, we're 10 minutes in, that's not how it's going to go, and you know that.
He's rich, so his brother bribes the authorities and he gets out of jail 10 years early, yes.
Their father died, I guess, in 1887 and left them a shit ton of money, so he gets released
in July of 1891, he's only served 10 years.
So basically they say, after Julia Stott turned on him, he had always had a very obviously,
a very problematic love-hate relationship with women, and after that, like Debacle,
his hatred of women is just off the charts, and an acquaintance of Dr. Cream says this
about him, quote, women were his preoccupation and his talk of them far from agreeable.
He carried pornographic photographs, just like it's the late 1800s, hey, you want to
see this huge cardboard thing, it's dirty.
She has all her clothes on, but she's winking at the camera, showing an ankle.
Do you want to see the hottest ankle I've ever seen?
He was in the habit of taking pills, which he said were compounded, strychnine, morphia,
cocaine, and of which effect he declared was aphrodisiac.
In short, he was a degenerate of filthy habits and practices.
Not popular.
So now Dr. Cream is a free man slash murderer, and he decides to take his inheritance and
come on back to London, England.
Right?
You don't know how to feel about it.
It's already happened.
There's nothing you can do.
Why boo?
He arrives on October 1, 1891.
He finds himself a place to live on Lambeth Palace Road.
So on October 13, 1891, he meets a 19-year-old sex worker named Nellie Donworth.
And witnesses see her walking with a topper, and that's a gentleman wearing a top hat.
And the next day she's found slumped in her bed, apparently drunk with terrible stomach
pains, but she's able to tell witnesses that a tall, dark, cross-eyed man gave her something
to drink.
Yeah.
Quote, twice out of a bottle with white stuff in it, or it's like, Nellie, after the first
time.
Don't drink.
She dies on the way to the hospital, and the cause of her death is found to be strychnine
poisoning.
Okay.
So this is, later on when this gets in the paper, there's all kinds of hilarious drawings.
So basically, they did drawing, once he was caught, they did drawings of him handing
out pills to gals, like they were fucking lining up for it, oh, hi, neat.
And also, they actually had, oh, that's after he gets caught.
I don't know.
Okay.
I thought you winked to the audience and showed me your ankle.
Okay.
Okay.
So no one could connect Dr. Cream to Nellie's death, but he can't leave it alone.
So he decides he's going to anonymously write a letter to the coroner to say that he could
name the murderer for 1,500 pounds.
I bet it doesn't work.
It doesn't.
It actually is the thing that gets him caught.
He anonymously also writes to a local business owner, a man named W. F. D. Smith, three initials,
must have been very rich, and he accuses him of the murder, demanding money in exchange
for his silence.
So these people who had nothing to do with anything that was going on are like opening
these letters like, okay, put that in the inbox.
So Dr. Cream strikes again on October 20th when a 27-year-old sex worker named Matilda
Clover, there she is.
She leaves her room at 7 p.m. to meet a man that introduced himself by the name of Fred.
And at 3 a.m. when she's back in her room after going out with him all night, she wakes
up screaming in pain and telling people Fred had given her pills that she now knew were
poisoned.
So in spite of this, because of her background, and because they find alcohol in her system,
they decide that she actually has drunk herself to death.
And she had been prescribed a sedative from a doctor earlier, so that some of that was
in her system.
So they're like, basically, like, eh, she was all fucked up.
Let's not look into it.
It's not treated as a murder.
It's not investigated.
So then, of course, once again, Dr. Cream's got to get in there.
He's gotten away scot-free, but he needs to write another anonymous letter.
This time, too, a very well-respected doctor named Dr. William Broadbent.
He accuses Dr. Cream, accuses Dr. Broadbent in the letter of murdering Matilda, and he
demands money for her silence.
Dr. Broadbent immediately takes it down to Scotland Yard and is like, this will probably
interest you in some way.
So after Matilda's death, Dr. Cream takes a vacation back to Canada so he can buy himself
500 more strict nine pills.
Holy shit.
Yeah.
And then he comes back to London in the spring of 1892 and basically goes on a poisoning
spree.
On April 2nd of 1892, Dr. Cream meets a young woman named Louise Harvey.
Now, as you can tell by her illustration, Louise Harvey is not having it.
Not in any way.
Uh-uh.
Is that a hair hat or a hat hat?
I think it's a hat.
Okay.
Although it could be like real swoopy hair.
It could be.
I really relate to Louise Harvey.
She had to sit for that picture the whole time like that.
She was just like, are you done yet?
It's been seven weeks.
Okay, Dr. Cream offers Louise some pills that he tells her will, quote, put the blush back
in her cheeks.
But she senses that something is off with this traumatic chipmunk in the top hat.
So instead of taking these, she's just like, why don't you take these pills?
Keeps bringing it up.
So when he's not looking, she acts like she took them and really she just throws them
in the Thames, which is my favorite.
If you are ever drinking at a bar and you have a drunk friend who keeps insisting you
do shots, do what Adrian Cavanaugh does, call the same.
And just pretend you drew the shot, but just throw it over your shoulder.
Just throw it behind you.
Make sure there's no one behind you.
Or make sure there's a broke drunk who wants to squat behind you like, uh-uh, tequila.
She ditches those pills into the river, which I fucking love her for.
And basically goes on her way.
So on April 11th, 1892, two more women, 21-year-old Alice Marsh and 18-year-old Emma Shrivel, they're
both sex workers that he meets when he's out.
He laces both their beers with strict nine pills and they live in the same boarding house.
And so that night when they're home, they both, it's the same thing.
They wake up screaming in pain in the middle of the night and they both die days later.
So at this point the police are like, we think there might be a serial killer on the loose.
And it was Jack, the whole Jack the Ripper thing had only happened four years before.
So they're like, it's happening to us again.
So this time the newspapers nicknamed them a serious killer, the Lambeth Poisoner, which
was that picture I showed you.
So they questioned both of the doctors that those anonymous letters got sent to.
And of course, they're both cleared of any suspicion.
And then they take the letters because they're like, who wrote these letters?
Those are very suspicious.
Especially since the second letter refers to Matilda's death as a murder, even though
she was, the coroner decided that she died of drinking, her cause of death was due to
drinking.
So in May, I said that perfectly.
In May of 1892, Dr. Crane happens to be a friend, an ex New York City detective named
John Haynes, who's living in London.
He is following the Lambeth Poisoner murders really closely because it's, you know, what
he used to do for a living.
And he and Dr. Crane start discussing it one night over dinner.
And the doctor tells Haynes that he can take him on a tour of the city and show him where
all of these women lived and where it all happened.
He's an idiot.
Right?
You can't keep his fucking crazy mouth shut.
And while he gives this tour and talks about the details, like really specifically of what
happened to these women, he includes Matilda Clover and Louise Harvey in the stories.
So John Haynes is like, all right, this is kind of suspicious.
So he goes over to Scotland Yard and tells his best friend, Inspector Patrick McIntyre,
about the whole evening.
And he said, quote, he knew the places, the times, the whole commotion, even their conversations.
Of course, he said he was merely conjecturing, but I watched his expression when he spoke
and, well, I know this sounds dotty, but, well, I swear he was there.
Like he'd known those poor girls intimately.
Wow.
So Inspector McIntyre is like, all right, let's take a look at this guy.
And then they start following him.
They realize that he constantly frequents sex workers.
He's kind of in the mix with them all the time.
And then they contact the U.S. authorities and find out about Creme's 1881 conviction
for murder by poisoning.
And that little thing.
So they have enough evidence to arrest him.
So on July 13th, 1892, Thomas Neil Creme is charged with the murder of Matilda Clover.
His trial begins on October 17th.
And the star witness is our girl Louise Harvey.
Yeah.
That's right.
And look on her face as she sits in the box, testifying that a man in a top hat tried to
make her take pills.
And when the prosecution asks if that man is in the courtroom that day, Louise Harvey
points at Dr. Creme and says, there he sits, sir, big as life.
I could not do the accent.
Just four days later on October 21st, 1892, after 10 minutes of jury deliberation.
Guilty as fuck.
They're like, do we have to leave the room or can we just say it now?
Just have us all say it out loud.
Dr. Thomas Neil Creme is found guilty.
So he's sentenced to hang, sure, take a moment.
He's sentenced to hang on November 15th, 1892.
And the story goes that he's standing there with the new surrounder's neck on the gallows
and the bag over his head and his last words were, I am Jack.
And then they pull the lever and he goes down mid-sentence.
No.
Right.
Easy, Inspector McIntyre, easy.
Some believe this was him admitting to being Jack the Ripper and that actually birthed
some theories that he was so rich he had to double go to jail for him because he was in
jail in 1888.
There's no way it could have been him.
But they were like, but he could have paid so who would get paid to go to fucking jail?
I'll sock it away and then in the bank it'll make interest.
Yeah, 10 years, I'll get out.
I will have made $5,000.
But others say since this was a private execution, there was a hood over his head.
There's no way anyone overheard what he was saying from there.
And that basically that whole theory was a way to, it was made up to sell newspapers.
But either way, Dr. Thomas Neil Creme was the Lambeth Poisoner.
And that is the chilling story of Dr. Thomas Neil Creme.
Great job.
Wow, I never heard of that before.
Really?
Shit.
Right?
What a dick.
I mean, not cool.
Not cool at all.
Phew, I'm glad you were able to do that.
Me too.
Instead of having to change it mid for London, Ontario.
When I saw the words London, Ontario, I almost killed everyone around me.
All right, great job.
I thought that this would be fun to do since, as I've said before, everything here is haunted,
including this theater probably.
So...
Loch Ness Monster.
No.
This is the story of the Enfield Poltergeist.
Oh.
It's here tonight.
Oh my God.
Do you see this?
It's one of the most famous supernatural cases in history.
Oh, yeah.
Hadn't heard of it.
Hi.
I'm great at everything.
And it's known for inspiring the 2016 movie, The Conjuring, too.
First showing 11 a.m., showing at the theater, the earthquake.
Really?
Yes.
So do you know about this?
I'm all about The Conjuring, the entire franchise.
So I got information from Wikipedia.
There's an article in People by Jody Guggleyemi.
Sorry.
Yes, I fucking did.
Shit.
Stephen.
Stephen, can we get...
Let's get a little room tone.
Stephen, you have to stick this in at the top of mine.
Great.
Sorry.
We got it.
Sorry.
I got info from Wikipedia, an article in People by Jody Guggleyemi.
People Magazine?
Uh-huh.
An article from a website called History vs. Hollywood.
The PSI Encyclopedia, or PSI Encyclopedia, The Dark History's podcast.
And also, as I was getting ready tonight, and showering and dyeing my hair, I listened
to the episode of Lost Podcast on the Left about this.
It was a laugh.
So...
Those boys are doing good.
They really are.
It's really nice.
So, let me tell you about this story.
Peggy Hodgson.
There you go.
She's a 47-year-old divorcee.
She's a single mom, and she lives with her four children in Enfield.
It's a quiet...
It's like 15 minutes, I mean, 15 miles from here, but it's about three hours.
Really?
Probably, because...
Oh, my traffic.
Traffic.
Yeah.
Traffic's crazy.
And we're from Los Angeles.
We're known for that.
We know our traffic.
So they live at 284 Green Street.
She's known for being a quiet and strong woman.
She works really hard to keep her family afloat.
It's hard financial times.
She's just been divorced, and her husband's like, seeing a new woman, and she's hot, I
guess.
So the oldest kid is named Margaret.
She's 13.
Then there's Janet, who's 12.
She's lively and extroverted.
John is 11.
They don't explain why he got sent away to boarding school, but he's just kind of not
in the story.
They like doing that, though.
Sending away kids from school.
You don't have to...
It's not like America where you have to be really bad to go to boarding school.
Sometimes you just go.
It's like, do you like little jackets?
I'm going to wear a little...
Do you want to wear a little jacket and shorts all the time?
Oh.
Then we're going to send you away.
I just...
I know this is so silly, but I just think of haunted castles when I think of boarding
school.
Oh, like a picture, which is great.
And then there's little Billy, who's seven.
Here's the family.
That's yours.
Oh.
There it is.
There's his sample case, everybody.
There might be another one.
I think there is another one.
Oh.
Wait.
Sorry.
Sorry.
There's another one after this.
Do it.
Do it.
Do it.
It's just that they drew him...
Oh, he's so cross-eyed in that.
Go to the next one.
They drew him cross-eyed.
I'm so sorry.
I don't care.
Sometimes we have to turn our pictures in before we're done writing our murder.
So you just go like, yeah, this order seems fine.
And then as I was writing it, I was just like, oh, all these newspaper articles are coming
before the murders are taking place.
Guys, this is a really hard job.
Guys.
There's another one.
There he is admitting to being Jack the River.
He's whispering it right into that guy's ear.
No, that's the hood that blocks his mouth and makes it that whole thing a lie.
Right.
Okay.
Sorry.
My story is officially over.
So this is them.
Now, one in the corner looking sullen is Jenny.
She's the one that this kind of revolves around for the most part.
So that's them.
I've been watching family.
What year is it?
Sorry.
This is 1777.
Nope.
This is 1977.
America has just declared independence.
It's very difficult to be a divorcee with the colonies having broken off.
But they have photography.
It's crazy.
Actually, the way that picture is taken, they look like in really awesome bands.
Yeah.
I don't know why it's crooked.
It looks like more haunted that way, maybe.
They're like, ooh.
Their new single, You're Haunting Me, is out this weekend.
Yeah.
He definitely looks like he was in a Britpop band later.
One, two, three, four.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Okay.
All right.
Stop it.
Okay.
Get serious about this.
Guys, the first time anything strange is noticed is on the night of August 31st, 1977.
Got it.
Around 9.30 p.m., Peggy, the mom.
She hears a shuffling sound coming from the John and Janet's room, and she's like, God
damn it, those fucking kids.
Probably.
I need to go shut them up.
But the night before, the children had complained that their beds were shaking up and down.
And I'm sure she was just, like, blew them off as most adults blow children off.
Especially in the 70s.
Right.
Where you're like...
Oh, you guys are being gross.
Oh, no.
Oh, my God.
Do we have like a bus full of seventh graders in here?
Is that what you guys say, blew someone off?
I wish everyone else could see the front row.
It's a bunch of adults going like this.
I thought you guys loved sex.
This is the old, should I just say it?
Oh, I don't know what you're going to say.
This is the thing we're in our country, it's no big deal to say fanny.
Yeah.
We wear fanny packs, or at least I do sometimes.
We all do.
I mean, guys.
That's shit.
Seriously.
Okay.
This is about ghosts.
Please have respect for ghosts.
So she ignored their behavior?
Which adults like to do to children, ignore behavior of children, especially in the 70s.
Oh, now I get what all the cringing was about.
I don't know what's worse, when they start booing and you don't know what they're booing
or they start laughing at you.
And you don't know what they're laughing about.
Yeah.
It's a really surreal experience.
Don't wish it upon anyone.
So Peggy goes into the room and Janet is complaining about the chair and it's making
noise.
So Peggy takes the chair out of the room, but when she goes back to the kid's room
to turn the light out, the shuffling sound starts again.
The sound that she said the chair was making, it keeps happening.
And Peggy later describes the sound as if someone was walking across the room wearing
slippers.
So like a shuffling noise.
I know, they're being haunted by a lazy person.
Peggy turns the light back on and the sound stops.
It happens again.
And then this is when the knocking starts.
There's three knocks followed by a heavy oak chest that's on the wall.
It starts moving across the room towards the door as if pushed by an invisible force.
She sees this.
And Peggy is like a normal woman.
She's not like a, you know, I don't know, like my mom.
Like a, you know.
Like a bit of a hysteric.
Right.
Yeah.
She's not like that.
She's one of those low-key people.
Yeah.
Exactly.
I saw her sweater.
I know.
Peggy pushes the chest back to against the wall and once again it slides back out of
the room as if trying to like block the doorway and like block the kids in the room.
It's super creepy.
She tries to push it back again and it won't move.
So she freaks out, grabs the kids, they go over to the neighbor's house, which I think
is what most people would do, right?
Yes.
The Nottingham's.
The Nottingham's quickly dismiss their story, but they say, okay, we'll come over and listen
to odd, poor odd noises.
They enter the home and they all start hearing the knocking sound.
And it's coming from all over the house.
And I guess the noise is like, you know, when it's like us doing it, it's not, it's just
coming from here obviously, but it sounds like it's coming from the whole house.
It's almost like the knocks are following them around the house.
They don't know what to do, so they just call the police, come and rust these ghosts, please.
And the police constables arrive at around 1 a.m.
So they tell the police about the haunting.
I'm sure the police are like, oh, these alcoholics or whatever.
Minutes later, PC, Carolyn Heaps and her co-worker, they start hearing tapping coming from the
walls and they check the walls, the attics, the pipes, but there's nothing to explain
these weird noises.
And they go into the kitchen to investigate the refrigerator pipes, thinking maybe that's
the problem.
Carolyn watches with the Hodgesons as a chair in the living room wobbles slightly from side
to side and then slides across the floor about three to four feet before stopping.
A fucking police person sees this.
Like that.
So did you see Coronation Street last night?
I feel like that's like, and she later signs an affidavit saying that this is exactly what
she saw and she's not fucking around and she's not an alcoholic or whatever.
Over the next few days, the Hodgesons and the Nottingham's witness legos and marbles
fly across the room.
Standard.
Standard ghosting.
One of the Nottingham's picks up a marble after it lands and it's burning hot.
Ew.
I know that's so ghosty.
On September 4th, Mrs. Nottingham calls the Daily Mirror because the police are like, that's
super weird and scary.
And we totally saw it, not our problem, see you later.
So these families are like trying to get someone to take them seriously and help them.
Demons are not in our jurisdiction.
I'm sorry.
I'm getting the fuck out of here.
So they call the Daily Mirror just to be like, someone come over here and you guys love it.
So they're hoping to get some help through the press.
So a journalist and photographer come to the house and the next day, they see the legos
flying around the room and it even hits the photographer in the head and gives him a bruise.
Is that fucked up?
Yes.
Or is it funny?
It's funny.
Well, just like, you want some proof?
It's just like, what kind of asshole ghost is this?
Yeah, and they're all standing there and like, they're all, it's a bunch of people who, they're
coming from nowhere.
It's like, you would have seen if the kid were like secretly like, you know, sliding it.
It's not happening.
Right.
So they send another reporter, a senior reporter and photographer to do a follow-up visit because
they're like, there's a fucking story here.
And the senior reporter hears the knocking.
It's all like legit people who hear these crazy things.
And they contact the society for psychological research on behalf of the family.
So the society is from Kensington and it's one of the oldest paranormal investigative
bodies in the world.
Ooh.
They're founded in London in 1882 by a group of scientists, philosophers and other academics.
I don't know.
It's the first...
Nerds.
Yeah.
It's the first scientific organization ever to examine claims of psychic and paranormal
phenomena and it remains today as one of the most legitimate research bodies that investigate
supernatural activity.
So in 1977, two society members, Maurice Gross, he's played by Simon McBurney in Conjuring
and Guy Lyon Playfair, played by Tom from Succession, aka Matthew McFadden, aka Mr. Darcy.
Mr. Darcy's in the Conjuring.
Yeah.
They are like, we're going to figure this out.
We're like, we're the like, people, I don't know why they have these hats on, but they're
like...
Ghost hats.
Ghost hats.
Ghost hats.
So objects continue to fly and move around for weeks, but by October, there's like furniture
and cutlery and household objects that isn't nailed down start to disrupt various rooms
of the house.
So it just keeps happening.
And one night, the investigators clear all the objects that can be moved out of Janet's
room and they're like, we're going to have a test and see what happens.
They get all the furniture from her room and they report that sometime after, they hear
a tremendous vibrating noise coming from the now empty room.
Don't.
Guys, like someone was drilling a hole.
You can have that one.
They go back into the room that had nothing and no one in it and they find that the Victorian
fire grate that weighs like 60 pounds had been torn from the wall.
So not something a little kid could do.
And most of the haunting is around Jenny, the daughter who's 12, and I guess that's
kind of a normal thing for a prepubescent or little girls going through a puberty to kind
of...
Get that energy going.
Yeah.
Yeah.
A lot of drama.
A lot of drama.
Seriously.
Yeah.
I blame one direction.
Okay.
Let's see a photo.
Oh, Harry Styles.
Oh, that's...
Oh.
That's the home.
Looks super creepy and haunted.
Oh, that's her supposedly levitating.
No.
Right.
Who the fuck is that guy?
I don't know.
I was going to ask you.
I don't know.
My glasses on.
It looks like a fat Steve McQueen from here.
It does.
Do you know who the poster is?
Starscan Hutch.
No.
All right.
Someone got it right, but I don't know who.
Okay.
You want me to go back?
No.
You don't think that's her?
No, no, no.
I'm looking at the posters.
Pay attention to this willing story.
So sorry.
I'm so easily distracted.
Okay.
And the pipes that supply the fireplace have been ripped in half, so clearly this little
12-year-old girl hadn't done that, probably.
So Maurice Gross and Playfair are convinced at this point that the haunting is legitimate,
but many members of society aren't so quick to believe it.
They think the girls are playing tricks and messing around, and at school Janet is bullied
because of the stuff and called Ghost Girl, so I don't know.
I would love that nickname.
Oh, my God.
So I feel like if you're being made fun of, you wouldn't keep doing this.
Right.
You know what I mean?
Yes.
By November, Maurice Gross notes that the knocking sounds around the house seem intelligent,
so he's like, let's ask it some fucking questions.
He starts out with simple questions and requests the disturbance to knock once for no and twice
for yes.
When he asks if the ghost is dead, they reply with 53 knocks.
What?
It's terrifying.
Would that be easy?
What is that?
Is that a super no?
What is that?
It's just the creepiest thing I've ever heard.
Oh, my God, I would scream and run.
Okay.
As November passes, Janet's behavior becomes more and more erratic, and at times, she's
very unsettled.
It's almost like she's possessed.
Gross says she seemed to be taken over.
As part of the investigation, cameras are set up in the girl's room, and they're remotely
operated, and they take bursts of photos every four seconds.
The images document it shows several strange things happening in the room.
The first is a pillow that appears to twist around in midair, thrown by no one, or is
it hanging off the bed?
I don't know.
That looks super creepy, doesn't it?
Yes.
What do you think?
Can you see it?
I mean, I guess it is Stursky and Hutch.
I don't know what I'm looking at.
Well, I mean, that's the problem with stuff like this, is you think, like, oh, a picture
would prove.
But yeah, you don't have the right depth here, so if it is hanging, you would need to be
taken from the other side to show that it's hanging in midair.
Well, fuck that photo.
And there's also a curtain that appears to twist around no one, like a curtain hanging
on itself, whatever.
The most extreme photos, however, are the images of Janet levitating in the air.
Are they?
And she later claims she was unaware that she went into trances until she saw the photos.
Like, she didn't even know that was happening.
Wow.
Yeah.
So, and this guy, Maurice, totally believes it, and it's just kind of sad for not, like,
their dad is gone, he stays with them, and kind of takes care of them.
And the reason he is a paranormal investigator is because his daughter died in a motorcycle
accident, and he thought she contacted him from down the grave, so he got really into
it.
That makes sense.
Yeah.
And so, you know, you have this young girl who thinks that she's being possessed or that
the house is haunted and stuff, and then this guy who is probably really, like, grieving,
and they both believe in it.
So maybe, I don't know, if you believe in energy, in that sense.
I do.
I mean, it's not like you can believe in energy or not, it's a thing, but, you know,
it's like, I believe in electricity, and starsky and hutch.
Okay.
The intelligence of the disturbance progresses even further when Janet starts to speak in
a gravelly, growling, and barking sounds.
Okay.
This is the part in any of these movies where I'm like, now I'm a believer.
When that's, like, a 12-year-old that's like, that's my favorite, where I'm like, okay,
it's the devil, everybody.
Yeah.
What more do you need?
Honestly, when I heard this, I was like, okay, yeah, I believe this.
Yeah.
It's the creepiest fucking thing I've ever heard.
It sounds like an old gravelly British fellow, and it's still British, the ghost is obviously
British.
It's not an American ghost.
No.
It's just so creepy.
If you go home and listen to it, like, fucking, there's no explanation other than she's an
incredible actress, which, I mean, she's like 11 or 12, so.
I mean, Meryl Streep was once 11 or 12, so who knows?
We can't know.
So it starts to have this low guttural voice, holds conversation with the investigators
for months.
Janet describes the experience like someone standing behind her and putting their hand
on her neck, like making her talk.
That's how my mom used to walk me through the grocery store.
Okay.
What are we going to get today?
Like I was going to like start grabbing things and go, yeah, I was actually possessed by the
grocery store.
So to eliminate the possibility that Janet's faking the voice, Mory tapes up her mouth
and fills her mouth up with water other times.
That's kind of, it's necessary, I don't know.
And she still talks like that.
Really?
Yeah.
It's kind of improvised essentially.
Can you grab that hot marble?
We're going to stick it in Janet's mouth and see if she can, if it works this time.
There was a lot of stuff like when there'd be noises at night, they'd go to check the
kids to make sure they're actually asleep and they'd like open their eyelids to check
if they're asleep.
Yeah.
It's like, well, nothing's going to wake you up like some weird investigator leaning
over your bed trying to peer into your...
Tom Whim's Gans opening your eyes.
So then at one point, the voice says that its name is Bill, and months...
That's not that scary.
Well, it's like the ghost who used to live there.
Bill.
It's me, Bill.
Hey, it's Bill.
It turns out that the people who had lived there before, the father had died of a hemorrhage
in his favorite chair in the living room, and the kicker is, his name was Bill.
Bill.
What do you want his name to be?
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um, um, um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um...
Um.
something at all. I don't believe that. Okay. It turned out she had 12 rabbits under her
bed. The disturbances continue similarly until June, July 1978 when Janet is admitted to
Maldsley Hospital for extensive psychiatric testing. Two months later she's given a clean
bill of health with no signs that she doesn't have Tourette's or epilepsy or other illnesses
that could explain some of the events. When she returns home, the disturbances seem to
calm down and almost as quickly as they had started, the strange happenings at the Hodgson's
home stop completely. And the incidents at Enfield are among the most closely recorded
in any poltergeist type situation. And all the witnesses, there's over 30 people who have
witnessed this stuff. And even people who are walking by outside the house saw Jenny
levitating in her room. Like two people who weren't involved with it said they saw that.
Shit. Yeah. And then they're like, you're arrested for being a peeping Tom.
One person was called a lollipop woman. And I don't know what that means. Is that a thing?
Is it like the ice cream man?
Crossing guard. Crossing guard. I thought she said coffee cart. Oh, children's coffee. That's
charming. Wow. I'd never heard about that before. Oh, because the sign probably looks like a lollipop.
Great job. I'm glad I didn't bother to look it up.
That was a fun discovery for us and our British friends. That's right. And the lollipop woman
on the corner. Tape recordings mainly by play fair and gross, eventually total over 180 hours.
And another thing is that other psychic mediums would come in and be like, you can make a shit
ton of money off of this. But no one made ‑‑ they were serious. Maurice and Peggy were
like not trying to build anyone out of money. Today, over 40 years later, the Enfield case
remains Britain's most famous haunting. And though it's had extensive criticism, it's never been
fully debunked. And although Janet ‑‑ so as an adult, Janet admits ‑‑ did I call her Jenny
earlier? Damn it. Sorry. Does she have your mom's name? She does. You blocked it out? I really
did. Well, she admits that ‑‑ she says about 2% of it was fake by her and her sister. She was
like, you know, at some point they were kind of egging us on and we were like getting into it.
Oh, sure. I swear only like 2% of the things, like maybe some of the writing that had happened and
maybe some of the voices were a little bit faked, but she won't admit otherwise. And she says that
she and her sister Margaret had played with a Ouija board just before the supernatural activity
started. Your favorite. Leave Ouija boards alone. I'm not fucking kidding. They are a gateway to
hell. Don't mess. A gateway to Bill. You don't want that kind of access to Bill. Can I just tell
you that in the Conjuring movie, the whole thing builds to the reveal of Bill the ghost in his
chair. And they make Bill seem like he was this total piece of shit monster in life that's coming
back to do bad things to children. It's so crazy. And I didn't remember that his name was Bill.
I bet you they didn't reveal that part. Kind of ruined it a little bit.
And the family and direct neighbors believe the font. They still to this day think it's real.
Those who knew Peggy have no doubts about her personal integrity and don't think she was faking
anything. There's books, TV documentaries and horror films made because of the bizarre
happenings. In 2016, the Conjuring 2 has a worldwide box office debut of about 320 million.
12 of those were mine. Wow. The Ingun set continued for just over a year and are
witnessed by over 30 people such as neighbors, investigators, technicians, reporters, police
officers, lollipop woman. After Peggy dies, the house is occupied by another mother of four
named Claire. She never felt comfortable in the house. And she says that she felt a presence
watching down on her and her sons. And then her sons would wake up in the middle of the night
hearing people talking downstairs. Guests. Ghosts. When she finds out about the house's history,
she moves the family out two months later. I would too. And that's the story of the Enfield
Pulture guys. Amazing. Yes. This show is, yeah, that was great. Is there any more photos? Oh,
yeah. Oh, shit. That's awkward. I don't, sorry. I ruined it. Was that the last one? I think so.
No, come on. This show is lovingly dedicated to Bill. Please don't haunt us. Do we have time
for a hometown? Let's do it. There's Vince Averill, everyone. Look who's here. Look who it is.
Vince Averill, everybody. Tour guide, husband, second husband.
Not down with the scary shit at all. I don't want to tell, I don't want to tell on you,
but the reason I never watched it is because Vince doesn't want to watch scary. No scary shit.
What a sad combination this must be for you. Thanks, Vince. Okay. I won't go through the
whole speech. We know you know it. We know you know the rules, but please, please, please.
If you can, we, you have to be from, please be from England. We, Americans who have flown over
for a nice trip to see us because you couldn't get tickets somewhere else. We love you. Thank you so
much. This isn't your part. God bless you. But so if you have a hometown murder that is from
this country and you are also from this country, we would love to hear about it. Please be sober
enough to have your story be cohesive, have a beginning, middle and end, quick and fun and
not fun. Also, at the same time, Georgia will choose now. And we've had some really good
hometowns. Keep your hand down unless it's awesome. No one's raising their hand. Okay. Yeah, let's do
it. Go that way. This way. Okay. There she goes. Where she got up and levitated over to that door.
We're like, no, it's Bill in a wig. I think we scared everyone out of home, of doing hometowns.
You're scared? Everyone else is scared. Yeah. Well, also, and polite. It's a lovely combination.
Well, you take the lights down so we don't feel judged. Thank you. All right.
Olivia, everyone. Olivia, nice to meet you. Thanks for being here. This is for you. It's
Olivia, everybody. Where are you from? I am from near Cambridge. Did you go to Cambridge?
Did I heck? No. I went to a polytechnic in Lancashire.
Does that mean you're party? Yeah. Yeah. And then I was a police officer,
then I'm really part of it. Really? Shit. This will not be a police story because I'm not quite
sure on the Official Secrets Act what I'm allowed to share. Okay. So this is a murder from Cambridge.
Okay. So this is all the way back in, I think it was New Year's Eve 2004. I, at the time,
was a forensic science student before it was cool. She did it first. I did it first. Absolutely.
And we were out. I was out of my boyfriend at the time. Definitely not together anymore.
And having, because it's New Year's Eve, a bit of a shit night because it always is. Yes.
And across the road from us was a pub that I really wanted to be in called the Avery in Cambridge.
Or the Hog's Head as I remember it. Thank you. Yeah. Finished the night, had an argument with my
boyfriend, ignored him, walked off on my own with some, not on my own, with his brother's girlfriend.
Because I like to try and do dangerous things like just wander off when I was drunk.
And we walked over to the Mill Road kind of area of Cambridge.
Yeah. They love places. Yeah. They really do. I'll try just this places. Woke up the next day
and it turned out that a girl had gone missing from the Avery pub. And she had gone missing on her
way home and had texted her friends saying, help. I think I'm a taxi, but I don't think this is a
taxi. Oh no. This isn't a fun one. Right. They never are. No. So they ended up doing kind of
like reconstructions of where she walked. So she basically walked up whatever the hell that road
is in Cambridge, turned down Parkside, walked past the police station, but then got in what she
thought was a taxi. And when they reconstructed it, she was a twin, she was a girl called Sally
Gleason, or Gheason, Sally Gheason. She was also a forensic science student in Cambridge. So I
didn't, wasn't at uni with her, but I had that kind of like, oh wow, that I literally walked
the same way home and was a forensic science student and was the same age. She was a twin and
her twin did the reconstruction, which I don't know how she did it. Her body ended up being found,
I think it was near the American cemetery on Maddingley Road in Cambridge. They worked out in
the end who it was. And he was a soldier from Water Beach Barracks, which is where I grew up,
I grew up in this little, I used to live in Water Beach Barracks. And then my dad left the army,
we lived in Water Beach. He went on the run and they found, he eventually was found in Glasgow
and he jumped out of the hotel window and killed himself. Oh my God. So he didn't see justice,
but he did end up dead. Olivia. Wow. And it turns out one of my friends got married quite young
and was married to somebody else, somebody in the army. And the murderer guy, I think he was
called David Atkinson, he's a Lance Corporal. He was friends with her husband, they used to go
running together. Oh my God. So I never met him, but it was just very like, oh, I was a forensic
science student, I walked that same way home. I was an idiot that night and walked off on my own.
And he was connected to someone I knew. Crazy. So sorry, it's a bit of a bummer.
Well, no, it's what we're here for. Olivia, thank you so much.
Beautifully done. She came on her own, you guys. She goes, I just left my phone with a stranger,
so we're keeping an eye on you. She took photos with her phone. Great. I looked through your pictures.
Oh my God, night one in London. Yes, this is awesome. Thank you.
This is so incredible. We keep like waiting for it all to end.
And so to be back in the same giant theater that we were in last time means so much to us.
Yes, you guys keep coming. Thank you. Thank you for coming.
Thank you for creating a community for yourselves and connecting with each other.
We meet people who tell us that they come to these shows alone. They do it for the first time.
They meet people, they make friends with people they're sitting near or they're hanging out with.
It's you guys are making something via our show that we are so proud of,
that it's such a beautiful thing to get to be able to see in real life.
And we just honestly want to sincerely thank you so much for everything you're doing for each other.
It's beautiful. It's really lovely. Thank you guys. We're honored to be a part of it.
We want you to stay saved and do God's missions. Always. Please. Always.
But more than that, we want you to stay sexy. Thank you London. Thank you so much.