My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark - 230 - The Tide Pools of Your Life
Episode Date: July 9, 2020Karen and Georgia cover the Grim Sleeper.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. ...
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Hello and welcome to my favorite murder.
The professional version of our podcast.
It's the one you've been waiting for.
The good one.
You know, it's the MBR version where we're journalists, professionals.
Did you say depressional?
Oh my god, no.
That's amazing.
High spin-off.
What's up?
We're professionals.
Depressions.
Time for the depressions.
Do you have to go into the office and you're super chemically bummed about it?
We understand.
Are you wearing the same sweatpants for the past two weeks?
We get it.
We're depressional.
But typing?
The depressional.
Our new sitcom on Quibi next month.
Poor Quibi.
Poor Quibi.
No one will let Quibi.
I know.
Everyone's bullying Quibi on the playground.
I know.
I mean, really, Chrissy Teigen as a judge, I'm like kind of totally down for it.
There's no problem with it.
It's just, it doesn't...
I think it's reductive to pretend that people want to be staring at their phones all the time.
I don't think it's what any of us want.
It's just a full-on addiction.
It's like if they came out with designer syringes.
We as the addicts don't want that.
We're now doing this because we can't go anywhere else.
We're not trying to up our heroin game.
No.
And like make it a luxury heroin game.
No, I want something to look away from the phone for.
That's my dream.
These days watching TV is an escape from your phone.
It's like not any more a negative thing.
This is a little hell machine that we have to stare at in case someone's a coming,
but we don't want to.
No.
I'm having a hard time just with a little bit.
A lot of it.
I am lately on my phone.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I agree.
There's a lot of input and not a lot of positive.
You have to look for it.
Every day is negative.
Every day is a new negative.
Here's a pause that I'll give you because my sister texted this to me yesterday
and I thought you'd enjoy it.
It's an interview with Bill Gates and the person asks,
what are the skills today students need to know to thrive in the world of 2030 and 2040?
And Bill Gates said, for the curious learner,
they're the best of time. These are the best of times because your ability to constantly
refresh your knowledge with either podcasts or lectures that are online is better than ever.
Do you think Bill Gates is a murderer?
Do you think Bill Gates is a murderer?
Listen to that.
That's basically what I'm saying.
He's a murderer.
This is my favorite murder, the podcast.
Did we already say that?
That's Karen Kilgara.
That's Georgia Hardstark.
Hi.
Definitely didn't say that part.
Have we not?
Hi.
How are you?
What's going on?
Let me think.
It's been a stressful week, but lots of kind of conversations with my therapists that are like,
I'm on a boat and the boat is on high seas, but that doesn't mean they're going to be,
it's going to be wavy forever.
It's just how it is now.
A lot of that kind of shit.
These are the tide pools of your life.
And right now you're in the tide pool with like really angry fish.
These really angry, really angry small fish.
What were they called?
Parrotfish.
Those parrotfish with the teeth?
Yeah.
That are dicks.
But someday it's going to all be starfish and fucking those dicks.
Quails.
There's going to be, there's going to be whales winking at you out of the corner of their eye
because that's the only way they can look at you because they're so giant.
It's going to be helping at all.
Great.
I've, my therapist gave me homework the other last week, which I usually have like goodbye.
That'd be great.
You're like, I can't fucking do this.
What are you talking?
We've talked about my, I feel like I have a learning disability and diagnosed,
then yet you give me algebra?
Just like, you know what you need to do?
You need to find X.
You need to find the value of X.
You're the value of X, Georgia, all along.
But it actually did end up being good.
So yeah, thank God for therapy during this, this horrible, horrible time.
Would you have to give us a general idea?
Do you have to write something in a notebook?
Did you have to like?
I had to make a list of shoulds that I feel like I have, you know, like I should be this
place in my life and I should be this happy all the time.
And I should be like one, like cool, but also like feminine and like all of my shoulds.
You know what I mean?
I should know if I want a baby or not.
Like those things.
All bullshit.
It was like, what was the, what was the dog from the Simpsons?
Oh yeah.
The skate dog.
Poochy.
Yeah.
Of course you know.
Poochy the rapping.
Poochy, that's right.
Yeah.
But also feminine.
I don't know.
But feminine.
Like poochy, but feminine.
Yeah.
But then she said, then the next week after I read it to her, she was like,
okay, now look at this list.
Would you, would you tell any of your friends that they should have all these things done
already too?
And I'm like, no.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's very effective when you go like, it sounds fine to say that to me.
But I, of course I would never say that to anybody else.
I like my friends messy.
Yeah.
Well, and also it's like, no, I bet you people have three babies and don't know if they should
be having babies.
Like I don't think the baby thing ever feels like, and you know, there's, I'm sure there's
some people are like, I knew it since I was exactly young.
But I don't, I don't know that you think it's all scary.
How could anyone feel like a hundred percent about anything, especially these days?
These days.
Fuck, man.
Did you just slap someone through my pen down?
What if I slapped me?
It sounds like a good face slap right there.
Remember the guy in the big, remember all the like zoom mess ups in the beginning of
these times when people just kept fucking up on zoom and one guy like threw a cat,
his cat.
It was not just that cat.
It was his cat.
His own cat.
And got fired.
It was just a stray cat.
It was a cat he was supposed to love.
Did you see the one where the little girl was arranging the bookshelf behind her mom
while she was on the BBC News?
No, that's adorable.
It was almost like that family was like, how can we try to beat this super cute little girl
that walks in while her dad's talking?
And this little girl came in and started moving books on this top shelf kind of like in the back
of the room while the mom was like clearly talking about.
I didn't actually, I can't listen to news clips anymore.
Like I can't risk hearing the things that then will like rattle in my brain.
So I can't, well, I don't listen to the audio of anything.
So that woman could have been talking about any number of things.
She could have been like how to train your children to reorganize your bookshelves.
You got to assume whatever it is.
It's not that.
I think that'd be a good assumption.
She's like, I got this one trained in three weeks.
Watch her go.
You just need some pirates booty and a little bit of focus.
Let's see here.
Oh, I wanted to, so a couple of weeks ago when we had our episode called The Seasons in the Abyss or
whatever, right after we posted that fucking Slayer, someone from Slayer, a lovely person
named Emma reached out to us and was like, do you guys want Slayer swag?
I listened to the podcast because she's, I think she's with the management team of Slayer.
And is that right?
Yes.
So Emma, thank you for sending us fucking Slayer and even Vince got some.
It was like our birthday.
So Jay on the Friday staff Zoom meeting was like,
oh, someone named Emma from Slayer's management company reached out and asked if we wanted swag
and everyone's like, yay.
It was company wide.
Even Jay who's like a fucking dead head.
I was like, are you sure Slayer's going to fit in with your like, because he's got a lot of
grateful dead stuff.
He's like, nope, I fucking love it.
It's it's totally Slayer.
Slayer crosses all divides for the depression.
Slayer is the band, the boy who drove the van who wouldn't make eye contact and
laid to your real license because he was baked out of his mind.
That's the shirt he was wearing.
Who doesn't love that?
Let's see.
Oh, I also want to, we have a new, we have a new Phoebe friend of the podcast.
You know how we collect Phoebe's?
Phoebe Judge, Phoebe Waller Bridge.
Oh, oh, there's another Phoebe.
Would those two women declare themselves friends of the podcast or reclaiming them?
We're claiming that.
We're demanding that.
They might have mentioned us or been mentioned near us in an article once somewhere, someday.
I think we make Phoebe Judge our friend.
Phoebe Judge, I made up.
She doesn't know.
You just wanted the Phoebe to be in there.
All right.
Who's our third Phoebe of this?
Phoebe Bridgers.
Real talented gal.
She is like, she is like on the charts.
But she said she listened to us when she was making her last album, Punisher.
Yes, I fucking read this to you.
This is every conversation I have with my sister.
I told you this two weeks ago.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I've been in the not paying attention for getting things tied pool of my life.
Hey, that's a tough one.
That's a real, that can be a real, there's a real undercurrent in that tied pool.
Yeah, because it went, it was an article that was in pitch for, I believe.
And our logo was in the image of all the things.
Yeah, yeah.
You're like, yeah, okay.
I've met her before.
She was on a podcast that I used to record with Moonsappa and she was a guest on it.
She so good and played a song and I saw her open for Conor Oberst and it was amazing.
Yeah, she opened for someone else huge recently.
It was the 1975.
Oh wow, that's awesome.
She's a big deal.
Well, I'm the last to know everything.
No, she's great.
She's a real Townsend gal.
One more Phoebe to the pile.
I bet you there's more out there that we can get.
Keep your eye peeled.
Did you see that thing?
You know how we said like enough with the McKenzie's and the Brooklands and the,
there was one other one, one other name.
McKenzie, Brooklyn and Madison and then some gal tagged us in her Twitter and it was herself
and her two sisters and their names were McKenzie, Madison and Brooklyn.
Swear to God.
And it was an I feel attacked.
Yeah.
They're like, we don't listen to you anymore.
Fuck off.
How dare you.
Hi, Mackenzie and McKenzie, Madison and Brooklyn.
Sorry.
Okay, let's do merch corner real quick.
Let's do it.
Yeah.
Is there some good stuff?
Yeah.
We have like, we're finally updating the, our merch page.
It's at my favorite murder.com the store and we have a puzzle.
We have a puzzle.
It's, are you so happy?
Honestly, it looks way too hard for me.
It's what I love is people are already sending because we haven't,
I don't think we've talked actually on the current podcast about the puzzle.
Have we plugged it yet?
I think we like mentioned it.
But so people are now sending pictures of them starting it or doing it,
right, which is my favorite.
And somebody sent a picture saying this thing's going to be hard.
And I was so excited because it is not easy.
It's not a bait.
It's not for babies.
No, this is an advanced professional puzzle.
And I'm proud and all my dreams are coming true.
Thank you, Georgia.
Thank you, Steven.
Thank you, America.
It's all about America and Phoebe's and the Depressionals have made it real and happen.
It looks hard.
I don't want to do it.
Well, you don't have to.
But let others do it for you.
No, it's exciting.
It's so exciting, though.
I mean, but I guess for me, we have koozies of that really cool thumbprint design that I love too.
So that's, I'll take the koozies.
You take the puzzles.
Yes.
Well, also, I like the puzzle because it shows a map of the United States that then has icons
that show every city where we've done.
It's like a bunch of the murders that we've covered.
Right.
It's like a little bit of drawings and stuff that have to like this and that.
It's a little yearbook.
It's a little three, four yearbook of all the things we've done so far.
Yeah.
It's very kind of fun and, you know, of course, about us.
So that's exciting.
The puzzle, of course, was made by Jade Young, who did our merch or like the really cool poster
for our UK tour, super talented and like obviously a puzzle freak because it's super hard.
I mean, she didn't hand cut the pieces or anything.
But yes, she designed this puzzle.
She designed the heck out of it.
And she did it really fast.
So it was awesome.
Great.
Thank you, Jade, for enabling us to have our own puzzle.
You're our enabler, go to myfavorimurder.com to the store.
Yeah.
And get your art puzzle for your lake house.
You know it needs it.
Also, now we have murdering of sweat pants and like sweat, what do they call them?
Lounge suits.
They want to call them a lounging or a jogging set.
But that's fucking.
Okay.
Sweat outfit.
It's a sweatsuit for those who aren't that into sweating.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
Should we do exactly right?
News highlight corner while we're here?
Every do it all.
Read off that.
Do you want me to do it?
Okay.
Sure.
I'll be, I'll be here with you.
What do you mean?
What paper?
This is off the cuff.
You know, I memorized this monologue last night.
So murder squad this week, they're doing the recent case of specialist Vanessa again,
which is a really, I mean, we've been following this on our own.
A horrifying case out of Fort Hood, the U.S. Army base.
It's so sad.
Yeah.
And Dolan sister, her family and friends.
So Billy and Paul are looking into that.
And other unknown causes of death cases there, which is very interesting and like,
yeah, I can't wait to hear, I can't wait to hear that.
That's right.
Bananas has Arden Mirren on who's a really funny comedian.
This podcast will kill you.
They, Aaron and Aaron are covering radiation.
I mean, the best.
Who doesn't fucking love radiation?
It's so good.
Also the per cast.
This is so beautiful.
Steven, you guys, they're, they're covering the story of Elijah McClain,
who was a young black man who used to volunteer his free time playing the violin for local
shelter cats.
And he was murdered by police in 2019.
You've seen his face and like the calls for his case to be solved.
And so Steven and Sarah are raising money to help, to help that cause.
Yeah, it's, we're essentially just wanting to shed a little bit more light on the case
because there's so many cases.
And so we just wanted to take an opportunity to step, you know, step back, talk about it.
And, you know, encourage people to donate to the families, go fund me.
And yeah, that's, you know, simple, but I think it was important to tell his story
because he's such a, he was such a sweet person.
That's so beautiful.
He was a cat lover like you guys.
And I love that you're, I love that direction you're going.
And that's so beautiful.
Cause you're right.
It's like all of these unsolved or, you know, these, these cases of violence or whatever
are coming to the fore.
And it's just lovely that people are taking the time to kind of focus on them and help
people focus in specific ways.
I think it's, it's really good.
Are you guys still doing the fundraising thing?
Yeah.
The fundraising just started basically today.
So essentially, if you go listen to the episode, there's more details, but if you
donate to the families, go fund me and, you know, show that you donated, you basically
get entered into a, into a random drawing where you can win a copy of stay sexy, no,
get murdered signed and just some other per cast stuff and everything.
And, you know, it's, it's not, it's not an incentive to donate, but it's more of like
a thank you, you know, we, you know, for us, you know, we, for our listeners to, you know,
just give back a little bit, which that's beautiful.
So thank you so much.
Thank you to you and Sarah for doing that.
And yeah, I love keeping the attention on this and that the police who murdered him
need to be brought to justice.
It's really important.
And then the fall line always doing incredible work.
Their new series starts this week.
It's about the Atlanta Ripper, amazing, really important.
And then I said no gifts with Bridger Weinerger is our friend, Karen, friend of the podcast,
Karen Gilgarith.
What I think my gift might be the best one he's been given so far.
Check it out.
You tell me what you think.
I think I won the gift competition.
It's not a competition.
It wasn't until you showed up.
That's for sure.
Hey, now it's on.
That's right.
That's a good one.
Yeah, we've got a nice, there's a nice lineup on exactly right this week.
Lots of entertainment, all different kinds.
What do you need?
Lots more to come.
We're working on it.
Oh, so much to come.
Yeah.
Going to be so exciting.
Um, are you watching anything right now?
Well, we both talked about, so we're obviously watching All Be Gone in the Dark.
Right.
With our, with friend of the podcast, Karen Gilgarith making an experience, making a,
Karen Phoebe Gilgarith.
Yes.
She's such a Phoebe.
Can we make Phoebe be the like positive?
You know how everyone's saying Karen's a negative?
How about Phoebe?
Is like the friend.
For a second, I honestly thought you meant Phoebe from friends.
And I was just like, okay, yes, I'm liking this because Phoebe,
remember when we met her at that party?
Yes, I was going to say that.
We saw and met her at a party.
She was so nice and so, um, you know, like just standing by the,
where people were getting drinks and somebody,
I can't, we were talking to another person and then she just basically said,
what are you guys talking about?
Yeah.
Lisa Kudrow.
Lisa Kudrow comes up to our stupid conversation.
It's just that it was you and me in a corner.
Just us talking about each other to ourselves.
And fucking Lisa Kudrow walks up to our, our other Phoebe.
So we have so many Phoebe's.
That's what I'm saying.
I was like, that's the first thing I went to because she was like in a bent over.
I was just like, what are you guys talking about?
I'll always love her for that.
And then we just, we, she and I chatted for like three minutes,
kind of about just, it's just like that thing where everyone,
you have to remember this for people who hate going to parties.
And we will go again someday.
And if you're going now, truly go fuck yourself for real.
You're killing people.
Don't go to parties.
I mean parties, are you, are you a fucking child?
Like please.
No.
Please.
Anyway, we, you have to remember when you, no one wants to go to a party.
Everyone feels like they're the one that doesn't belong no matter who you are,
what you are, whatever.
But if you're the kind of person that can just be like,
Hey, what are you talking about?
People will always be like, I'll tell you anything I'm talking about,
because that's such a brave, fun, vulnerable thing that you just did.
Yes.
Of course, on top of that, you're Phoebe from friends and everyone loves you.
Yeah.
But still, it's such a great move to make.
I mean, you're opening yourself up.
Right.
You have to keep in mind that there's someone at that party who's more uncomfortable than
you are.
So chances of you going up to someone and being like, hi, I'm being open and like vulnerable,
you're going to make someone have a better time.
Yes.
And if they do some weird snobby 90s thing where like they make a face at you,
then you can, you're allowed to slowly touch their face.
I'm not yet, not right now, not in this climate, but I'm just saying in the future,
because it's not a salt if you just weirdly rub your palm, your kind of salty palm right
down their face or the back of your hand, like the back of your fingers, like slowly
down the side of their face, like you're a strange Letharia walking through the party,
trying to seduce people and that's on them that their face just got touched.
If you're bored during quarantine, there is no reason you can't make up fights to
have when we're all out of quarantine, make them up, practice them, go over them a time
or two.
These are the tide pools of your life.
And sometimes you're in the imaginary future fight tide pool.
I'm going to stick with the stupid tide pool metaphor.
Well, it's very visual.
I'm seeing, oh, you don't want to.
I like it.
Can I keep going?
Okay.
I just kind of violent starfish and really scratchy rocks.
Starfish is our band, the backup band for Phoebe Ridgers.
The backup band for Phoebe Ridgers us is now violent starfish.
The violent starfish.
One, two, three, up.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
The tide pool of your life.
The tide pools of your life.
I just want to say this and I actually, I'm almost positive I've told the story on this
very podcast before when I spotted, I was with bananas boy, Scotty Landis actually
when this happened.
I spotted Colin Farrell.
I'm not kidding from probably 80 yards away.
I could feel him coming toward me.
It was magical, but one sided.
And then I was like, I've had the full wave of like, oh, my fucking God is Colin Farrell.
And I turned to Scotty and I'm like, it's good.
And he was already nodding very tiny at me.
Just like Scotty's like, Scotty's the most incognito person I've ever met.
So he'll not give away your bullshit.
No, no, keep it like a secret.
He didn't even turn his head.
He was just like, hmm, that's already you know that.
So I did.
I tell you, I saw Keanu Reeves at the new that the what's the the mall on the corner
of La Cienega the Bev's Center the Bev's Center in like 98 at the like height of my
cuteness.
You know what I mean?
Like it's all been downhill since then.
But we were come on past each other on the escalator going up and down and I saw
And I swear to God, he gave me sexy eyes.
Yes, he did.
Well, 18 year old.
Well, 18 year old?
Sure, with your little choker and your bangs
and your barrettes.
God, he was so...
He, it was like, it was a dream.
He was so...
How long was his hair?
It was like, at the time.
It was like early matrix.
So it was like, it was like long short, you know?
Like, slick, flowy.
Floppy on top, but then short.
Yes!
Yes!
He was so gorgeous.
I'm sure he was like,
I'm gonna ruin the next five years of this girl's life
by giving me sexy eyes.
That's just like, oh, why don't...
Okay.
Okay, see, later I'm gonna be,
I'll be up at Sephora.
If you need me.
No, there was no Sephora.
It was 98.
Pre-Sephora.
It was a wet seal.
I'm gonna be at wet seal.
You're gonna be like,
I'm gonna be in the Macy's Estee Lauder section.
That's how backwards this society is that I have to buy.
Makeup that doesn't match my skin.
Where is Mac?
Okay, here's something just while we're here.
Because I just had this thought.
When Mac makeup came out.
I remember, yeah.
This came to me.
It was 1990 or 1991.
I lived in San Francisco.
My roommate, Christy Ward,
who was also my roommate in Sacramento,
she was there for me the good times,
but mostly for the bad times.
And Christy, she was very hip
and she was very into knowing all the new stuff.
Thank God for her.
She fucking was like,
I was at Stone's Town today
and I signed us up for this thing
and it was a Mac tutorial that weekend.
And it wasn't like out on the floor.
We were in a separate conference room
and the person I think either who started Mac
or was one of the main early people was there
and like, this is studio fix.
And showed us this makeup
that was not liquid makeup that covered all of my zits
and all of my ruddy skin,
but like in five pats and all the, it was,
I will never forget that day.
I was like, and the spice lip liner
is like the nineties kicked off.
They were like the first people that were like,
oh, you live in Sacramento?
Doesn't matter.
You can look like a fucking candy raver from.
Yes.
And my club kid from New York,
even though I live in Sacramento.
And like, here's how it goes.
You're like, shit, I live in Sacramento,
but I can look like a fucking candy raver.
Here I am with my super powdery face,
very brown lipstick for no reason.
And a very dark brow.
And here we go, let's get into it.
It was, I just think that was such a,
it was a pivotal moment.
Mac makeup was the reason Christy Ward made it happen.
Now, do we have a photo we can put
on the Instagram of this episode?
Probably.
I think I have one of a raver day candy,
Candy Georgia I can post, do you have a candy, Karen?
Yes, but see, my look was never anything like that
because I'm older.
But you had the skin of like a girl
who had on a lot, like the skin.
Oh, hell yes.
Yeah, yeah.
Let's get that to Steven.
And lots of lipstick.
Okay.
Even though it's a Wednesday night right now,
and Steven has been working all fucking day
and he's exhausted.
Steven, will you make sure that we,
that we get these fucking photos
that are probably in our basements and give them to you?
If you could come over and look through my basement
and I'm gonna stay upstairs wearing a mask.
Please wear a mask the whole time.
Please wear two masks.
You'll be responsible.
Well, you shared the Sacramento photo with your,
I think it was your friend and your roommate.
That's right.
During those live shows, which was really great.
Yeah, that's true.
People love that step.
Patty Riley, that was a Patty Riley special.
She listens to every episode.
Patty.
Patty?
Oh, and also she's the one that had the Nick Terry shirt
and got stopped on the street in San Francisco
by another murderer, you know, who freaked out.
Was like, how did you get that shirt?
And she was like, they're online.
I keep seeing on TV things happening.
And then just going, ah, the old days.
I was fucking four months ago.
Or like, would you see on TV people like sitting near each
other and being like, be careful.
Don't touch each other.
And you're like, no, that's not real.
It's not real.
It's not real.
And yeah.
Yeah.
It's so crazy.
Stay home, everyone.
Wear masks no matter what.
It's not political.
It's so, we're at this such a strange time.
This is such a historically significant time.
There's so many things kind of coming to a head
all at the same time.
We're probably yelling.
We're preaching to the choir right now.
I like to think we're yelling at people
that actually are wearing masks in their own homes alone.
All their pets have masks on.
They're like, please stop yelling at us.
We couldn't be more worried.
But just in case there's some people on the edge
or they're like, look, I just need to get to this party
or whatever, it's like, there's much more to it
than just you.
God, for fucking bid, you consider that every once in a while.
We know.
We're the depressionists.
We're the depressionists who are also narcissists.
We're original partiers.
Like all we want to do is go to a Target and a party.
Fucking, we do our best work at parties.
We met at parties.
We destroy parties.
We left so many parties early.
Oh, that's so right.
All right.
Member.
There's some party.
It's like a birthday party.
We're like literally texting the whole time,
like, are you going seriously?
Because I'm going to go, but I'm going to be mad
if you're not there.
And we got there, stood in the living room,
and I was like, I got to leave.
Was it your party?
It could have been your party.
Like at a bar?
Was it one of those bar parties?
Maybe.
Or I was just like, you know what?
I'm just too old to be doing that.
I can't stand around with the kids anymore.
I just love that.
You have your close friends who are like, yeah, OK, goodbye.
Or don't even, they don't judge you for it.
And not like, no, I didn't see you at the party.
Yeah, it's like, no, no, I know.
Yeah.
But no, man, I'd kill for a party to be in a fucking dank
sticky bar with a bunch of fucking arrogant comedians
who just want to talk shit on other more successful comedians.
And like, please.
Mother's milk.
What a dream.
I'd love nothing more.
Is he has a podcast about murder?
Yeah, you said the podcast was about murder.
Here's what I think we should start looking forward to
is how this podcast is going to begin
to meld and merge out of a true crime podcast
and into us tracking our own mental decline.
OK.
Right?
All right.
Yeah.
What if I just stopped taking all of my meds today?
What if I start taking all of your meds?
Oh, my god.
Med switch.
We don't recommend it.
But we're going to do it.
We switched Karen Kale-Gareff's non-medication
for Georgia Arts Turks medication.
And then you're like, is this Folgers?
And you're like, what are you talking about?
That's not coffee.
You're drinking fucking pond water.
It's not coffee.
No, it's not pond water.
It's my tide pool water of insanity.
I have to.
These are the tide pools of your life.
God help me.
Who's first?
OK.
It's me, right, Stephen?
Shit, I didn't look it up.
Oh, so don't you care.
I'm off this week, too.
What do you want, my meds?
Yeah.
Oh, because it was a live episode.
Yeah.
Karen is first.
Yeah.
She's on it.
Guys.
Guys.
Also, I wanted to mention that I saw Scotty Landis
at a Shania Twain concert.
We ran into each other.
This was like two years ago.
Not nerd.
Not you.
It's fine.
It's so perfect.
Was he wearing a cowboy hat?
No, he wasn't.
I should have said yes for the story.
Was he with a girl wearing a cowboy hat?
Was he wearing a Shania Twain shirt?
I think so, yeah.
Like a Shania Twain belly shirt?
I swear to God, if you haven't listened to Bananas,
those are two friends you're going to be excited to have met.
Totally.
Scotty.
Good people.
Love them.
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Goodbye.
Hey, I'm Aresha.
And I'm Brooke.
And we're the hosts of Wondery's podcast Even the Rich,
where we bring you absolutely true and absolutely shocking
stories about the most famous families and biggest celebrities
the world has ever seen.
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Georgia, this week, I'm going to do the Grim Sleeper.
No, you're not.
Yes, I am.
Damn.
Karen.
It's been so long.
Coming in with a fucking heavy hitter.
Why not, right?
But the thing I will say again, which is what I've said before,
if you haven't seen Nick Broomfield's documentary,
Tales of the Grim Sleeper, it's absolutely
for any true crime fan.
It's such required viewing, because it tells the story
of this serial killer that was in basically
South Central Los Angeles for 30 years.
It's told by the people who live there.
It's told by his neighbors.
It's told by the local activists that were the first ones
to get out there and say, what the fuck is going on?
It's told by the people who lived it every day.
And it's such a direct, it's such a beautiful way of doing
that, basically letting the people who it happened to
and it happened around tell the story.
And there's no filter.
It's really cool.
And you meet these amazing characters
that literally Nick Broomfield just
walks around different neighborhoods in South Central
and introduces himself to people and lets
them tell him the story.
It's amazing.
And it's how it should be done.
I love that.
But for now, I'll tell it this way.
And the source is, of course, it's
Tales of the Grim Sleeper, which is an amazing documentary
by Nick Broomfield.
Also, articles from the LA Times and the LA Sentinel.
There's a couple articles from Buzzfeed
that were written by a writer named Claudia Corner.
And then there's information that I got from this 2008 LA
Weekly article by a writer named Christine Pelesek.
That's amazing.
And I'll talk about it later.
Very cool LA Weekly moment.
You know, from growing up here, the LA Weekly
used to be this kind of stalwart local free paper that
did amazing coverage on really big, important things.
They were in the book.
In our book, I talk about how the LA Weekly are the ones that
did the kind of like the cover story on Scientology
and the Scientology.
Maybe I took this part out.
But the Scientologists came around
and took all the free papers and threw them away
so no one could read their expose on the church.
And this was in the 90s when the church was kind of growing
in popularity.
And it used to be the LA Weekly used
to be this amazing independent newspaper.
It got bought.
I feel like every town had this great alternative newspaper
in the 90s where you could find out
about cool artists and cool things happening
and bad things happening and shows.
And it just doesn't exist anymore, which is such a huge.
Ascorts in the back and the green pages.
It's right, party in the front.
It's a real bummer.
Really good stories in the front.
And then you could get, if you wanted a little company
that night.
OK, so let's start.
It starts November 19, 1988.
It doesn't start here, but this is where
we're going to get in.
Because that's the night that 30-year-old in Nitro, Washington
is walking down the street in South Central LA
on her way to her friend's house.
They're going to meet up, get ready,
and go to a party together.
Again, don't you miss it.
So as she's walking, this orange Ford Pinto
with racing stripes, fancy rims, and high-end tires
pulls up alongside her.
So Nitro later will remember that the car looked like she
told someone it looked like a hot wheels toy.
The drivers talking to her through the roll down passenger
window.
He asks her where she's going, what she's doing.
He tells her he can give her a ride.
She just says back to him, you can't just quote,
holler at me through car windows.
You have to get out and talk to me.
So he does.
He parks the car and hops out.
And again, offers her a ride.
She remembers she said he is a short black man,
probably in his 40s, and that he looked very clean cut, almost
geeky.
And so again, he offers her a ride,
and he's being very insistent, and when she says no,
he fires back and says, that's what's wrong with you black women.
People can't be nice to you.
And when she hears this, it makes her feel really bad.
So that manipulation works on her,
and she gets into the car.
Oh, man.
Because she's like, oh, I'm being too.
He gets her.
He knows how to manipulate.
So he gets her kind of where she lives.
So she's in the car, but once he starts driving,
she realizes he's not going in the direction where
she said her front lived.
He explains he has to stop at his uncle's house
to pick up money.
He makes that stop.
He goes into a house for a little bit, comes back out,
gets back into the car.
They get back on the road, and they're driving again,
and then she hears him say something to her,
but she isn't quite sure what it is.
So she turns toward him to hear it better,
and suddenly everything goes quiet.
And then that's when she notices that somehow she's
bleeding from the chest.
So she panics, she reaches for the car door.
He stops her saying, don't touch that door,
or I'll shoot you again.
And that's when she realizes that she has been shot
in the chest.
Fuck.
Yeah.
So she's obviously in shock, and the whole thing
processed in the weirdest way.
So she then asks, why did you shoot me?
He said, because she was disrespecting him,
when she tries to say, I don't even know you,
he talks over her and is just blathering, rambling,
and coherently.
At one point, he calls her a different woman's name.
Then she blacks out, and when she comes to,
he's on top of her, and as she drifts in and out
of consciousness, he's raping her.
And at one point, when she comes to,
she sees the flash of a camera, and she realizes
he's taking her picture.
God.
Yeah.
She has no idea how much time passes,
but at some point, he starts driving again.
So she kind of comes back to consciousness a little bit,
and she reaches for the door handle again.
And this time, he lets her open the door,
and when the door opens, he pushes her out of the moving
car.
And so he basically leaves her for dead on the street.
So she's laying there in the street,
and then this voice in her head says, you have to get up.
You have to get up.
So she basically manages to crawl over to the curb,
and slowly push herself up using the parked cars around her.
And when she finally gets to a slightly standing position,
she realizes she is on the street where her friend lives.
So she looks around.
Just by coincidence?
Well, I think he, quote unquote, dropped her off
where she said she needed to go.
Oh, god.
So then she's like, oh, so she walks to her friend's house.
She makes it all the way there with having
been shot in the chest.
She gets there, gets up onto the porch,
knocks on the front door, no one's home.
So she turns around and realizes, OK, now the street is empty.
I'm going to have to walk down to the main street
and flag down help down on the main street,
like half a block away.
So she starts down, she's like, I'm going to make it.
I'm getting it.
She starts walking down off this porch and a car pulls up.
It's her friend and her friend's husband.
They finally came home because she hadn't shown up.
So her friend gets out of the car and is like,
we were waiting for you.
What's going on?
And she's kind of like almost yelling at her for being late.
And she comes up on a nitra and realizes all of her clothes
are covered in blood.
Her friend starts screaming.
She's hysterical and they call 9-1-1, an ambulance comes,
takes a nitra to the hospital.
She's immediately taken into surgery
and she ends up in the hospital for the next three weeks.
But her life is saved.
And after about a year of procedures and treatments
and physical therapy, a nitra makes a miraculous recovery.
A year after a year.
I mean, she got shot point blank in a car.
It's so, it's an amazing that she lived at all.
And that after that happening to her, clearly fully in shock,
she got herself to this front porch.
It's insane.
It's incredible.
So it's a year later, it's 1989.
And she's outside of her house in Inglewood
and a man walks up to her and asks her if she knows him.
And she says, am I supposed to?
And he doesn't say anything.
He just turns around and walks away.
And as he's walking away, it slowly dawns on her.
The night she was shot, her purse went missing.
And inside her purse was her driver's license
with her current address on it.
That was the man who was her attacker.
What the fuck?
Yeah.
So now we have to go back to the early 80s and South
Central and what is famously known
as the correct cocaine epidemic that hit that part of town.
And this whole thing is a story in and of itself.
And it's mind-boggling and horrifying.
And many people believe, and there's
lots of proof to believe, that crack cocaine was introduced
into these neighborhoods intentionally.
It's really horrifying.
And that's a different show.
And I'm sure there's plenty of podcasts out there.
So we'll just keep it simple.
And basically, by 1985, crack cocaine is a full-blown
epidemic in this part of town.
And addiction ravages South Central.
And families are torn apart.
The communities are, I mean, people, as drug dealers
are fighting over their turf, addicts
are committing petty theft to be able to feed their addiction,
crime rates rise, and especially murder.
So when the bodies of Black sex workers
start being found around the South Central area,
in alleyways, on roadsides, in parks, even in schoolyards,
these deaths are written off as being either drug or gang
related.
Or basically, they're written off as collateral damage.
So basically, the crack epidemic,
it becomes the perfect cover for one of Los Angeles's worst
serial killers ever, if not Americas.
So through the mid-80s, more than 20 murdered women,
the bodies of more than 20 murdered women are found.
But many, many more go missing.
And many more murders happen.
These are just the ones that basically are all
connected to each other and eventually connected
to this killer.
But that doesn't mean that Black women, and especially
Black sex workers, were showing up dead constantly.
So among these victims is 29-year-old Deborah Jackson.
Her body is found on August 10, 1985,
in an alley near West Gage Avenue in the Vermont Slossin
area, South Central.
She has three bullet wounds in her chest,
and ballistics will later determine
that they have come from a 25-caliber handgun at close range.
Almost a year to the day later, August 12, 1986,
the body of 34-year-old Henrietta Wright
is found in Hyde Park.
And then just two days after Henrietta's body is found,
on August 14, Thomas Steele's body
is found in the middle of an intersection.
And they believe his death is connected to Henrietta's
murder, but police never find solid evidence
to actually back that up.
That's just what people nearby believe,
and that know.
Essentially, all of this is kind of feeding that idea
that these Black communities are simply quote unquote
prone to illegal or criminal activity.
Right, dismissed.
Right, and just all kind of piled together.
Like, it's the same kind of crime
that's happening as gang shootings or drug dealing.
Instead of clearly a series of murdered women
with the exact same MO every time.
And that basically gives the LAPD a free pass
to turn a blind eye to these horrific murders.
It's later discovered that the LAPD
would classify these murders as being NHI, which is short
for no humans involved, because they're women of color,
because they were sex workers, or and because they were addicts.
They're not even human to the officers of the law
who are supposed to serve and protect.
Yeah, I mean, it's unimaginable.
And it's the kind of thing, again, in this documentary,
and you have to watch it, because there's
people that speak on this where there's
this woman who is a local activist,
and she's talking about that people were talking about why
didn't this guy get caught, and why wasn't anything reported.
And she's like, you can't, as a Black person,
just walk into your local police station
and say, I have something I'd like to talk to.
She's like, 99% of the time, that's
going to end very unpleasantly for you.
People don't, that's years and years
of that kind of hideous treatment that obviously they're
not going to be running to the police
to say we need protection, because they're not getting it.
I mean, this is the epicenter of Rodney King and the riots.
This is, yeah.
Which actually gets covered, and we've
talked about this in the O.J. Simpson, 30 for 30,
that's incredible, that kind of links all this up
of what was happening down here, and the way this town has
been segregated, and the systemic racism that
went into all of that.
So there are leads in these cases.
There are pieces of evidence that when these bodies are
discovered that are running throughout each case.
So for example, there's reports of a 1984
dark-colored Buick Regal, reports of a late model
Plymouth Station wagon, and reports
of an orange-colored Ford Pinto.
But if they're followed up at all,
I mean, they're barely followed up.
Nothing is really ever chased down.
And even though they question a number of suspects,
they end up, the theory becomes that there's something
called the Southside Slayer, which
was more of like a, quote, evil force
than it was one specific killer, which
that doesn't even make sense.
And it's basically just kind of saying,
bad stuff is happening over there.
There's not a lot we can do about it, which is totally insane.
So Margaret Prescott, who is a local radio host,
she has a radio show called Sojourner Truth,
and she's outraged.
She knows these victims, because these victims are black women,
most of whom are sex workers or struggle with addiction,
that the LAPD is just blatantly neglecting their cases,
and she refuses to let them get away with it anymore.
So in 1986, Margaret joins forces
with other local activists, and she
forms the Black Coalition Fighting Back Serial Killers.
Like she knew.
It wasn't like it's a force.
She's like, we're fighting a serial killer.
Everyone fucking knows.
She said, and there's an amazing, she's
in the Nick Brunfield documentary.
She's incredible.
And at one point, she says, in the 80s,
at one point, we had a count of 90 women,
but only 18 of them made it onto the book.
So this wasn't the story that was actually,
when the story even got told at all,
the numbers were reduced so much.
But she was like, yeah, this is outrageous.
So they start printing up flyers and handing them out
in front of grocery stores.
And you see, there's footage from the 80s of this coalition,
the Black Coalition Fighting Back Serial Killers.
They're just going around, flyering and saying,
did you realize these women were found dead?
Did you know there was a serial killer in this neighborhood?
They're just going and telling other women you need to be aware.
And they just had to do it grassroots by themselves,
because, of course, it wasn't on the news.
Nobody was talking about it, and nobody
was treating it seriously.
So together, the coalition hands out flyers,
and they inform the community about the serial killings.
They demand that the police and city officials prioritize
the investigations of these murders.
They fight for more resources in South Central,
and they fight to get the media to stop
dehumanizing the victims just because of the jobs
that they hold or the addictions that they have.
So despite the coalition's best efforts,
the LAPD negligence enables this killer
to continue murdering vulnerable Black women
for the next two years.
So on January 10, 1987, the body of 23-year-old Barbara
Ware is found inside a trash bag in the Central Alameda area.
And Barbara Ware was the third official victim that they knew.
So at that point, because she also had gunshot wounds,
at that point, they knew it was a serial murderer.
But they didn't, and they talk about this in the documentary,
they didn't tell anybody, and they didn't treat it that way.
Therefore, she could have been the one,
and they talk about this, like if this was some blonde girl that
went to UCLA, the media would have been all over it.
But nobody talked about it at all,
and so those murders continued.
But if it had gotten any press or any kind of traction
as a story, maybe those other girls wouldn't be dead now.
But instead, it all just got swept under the rug.
Four months later, 26-year-old Bernata Sparks
tells her mom she's going to go out to buy a pack of cigarettes.
She never comes back.
Her body is found on April 16, 1987,
and she'd been shot to death with a 25-caliber handgun.
On Halloween of that same year, a 26-year-old Mary Lowe
says goodbye to her mother as she heads out for a Halloween
party.
Her body is discovered the next day,
and she'd been shot to death.
On January 30, 1988, the body of 22-year-old Lucretia Jefferson
is found in the Westmont area.
And seven months after that, the body of 18-year-old Alicia
Monique Alexander is discovered on September 11 of 1988.
And both of these young women have been shot
by a 25-caliber handgun, and it's the eighth murder in three
years with the exact same MO.
So in the case of Monique Alexander's murder,
eyewitnesses tell police they saw her get
into an orange-colored hatchback on Normandy Avenue.
And that's the same type and color of car
that witnesses tell police Mary Lowe got into the year before.
The lead is never followed up on.
Monique's father, Porter Alexander,
told the LA Weekly that the investigation of his daughter's
death was, quote, a big mess.
They didn't put forth any effort,
and they didn't show any aggressiveness about it,
which, obviously, they started a task force
to work on the cases that the task force actually
calls this series of killings the strawberry murderers,
because strawberry is slaying for somebody who does
sex work for drugs.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah, that's what they call.
I mean, the level of just a total lack of care or respect
or anything is just monstrous.
So aside from determining that all eight murders were
committed with the same 25 caliber gun,
nothing comes of establishing this task force.
Until 1988, when the killer meets Inetra Washington
and the eight victims before her, the eight known and on the book
victims, we should say, she shot with a 25 caliber handgun
after getting into an orange hatchback.
But because Inetra survives her attack,
she's able to provide police the first eyewitness
description of the killer.
She tells him he's a black man who
looks to be in his 30s with short hair
and a geeky, clean cut appearance.
And she also describes his car in detail.
It's an orange Ford Pinto with racing stripes, rims,
and high-end tires.
After Inetra's survival and her identification
of her attacker, the murders of black women in South Central
committed with a 25 caliber handgun suddenly stop.
But that's not because the serial killer has stopped killing.
He's just changing his MO.
Shit.
So for the next 14 years, LA undergoes some drastic changes.
While drug addiction does remain a public health issue,
the crack epidemic begins to subside.
And crime rates begin to go down.
And LA becomes the second safest city in the United States.
But that has a lot to do with the intense police violence
and police brutality and the tactics
that they used, which, again, is a whole different show.
But essentially, the crack epidemic
is waning a little bit.
So because the crime rates are coming down,
it's more obvious when strings of murders happen now.
So in 2002, a 15-year-old girl named Princess Bertha Mew
is living in foster care.
And she often runs away and makes money for herself
through sex work.
When her foster mom reports her missing on December 21, 2001,
she is not seen again until her body
is found strangled in an Inglewood alley on March 19, 2002.
A little over a year.
It's so tragic.
A little over a year.
I think of all these crimes like in the 80s and early 90s,
but it's like that's so recent.
And she's 15.
15 years old.
So for about 14 years between those crimes in the 80s
of women just getting shot in the chest
and having her body stabbed, things calm down.
And then he comes back in 2002 with this horrifying.
And a 15-year-old, I mean, she's a baby.
She's a baby.
A little over a year later, a crossing guard
finds the body of 35-year-old Valerie McCorvey
in a Westmont alley on July 11, 2003.
And she's also been strangled.
When the LAPD tests the DNA samples taken
from both of these murders, they are
found to match eight cold cases from the 80s.
The murders of Deborah Jackson, Henrianda Wright, Barbara Ware,
Prenia Sparks, Mary Lowe, LaCrestia Jefferson, Monique
Alexander, and the attempted murder of Netra Washington.
So newly appointed police chief Bill Bratton
considers making a task force in 2004
to investigate these connections and these cold cases.
But an unnamed colleague allegedly
dissuades him from doing that.
The connections and the potential leads in these murders
and the proof of the existence of an active serial killer
in South Central are basically ignored until 2007.
It's New Year's Eve, September 31, 2006.
Laverne Peters gets a call from her 25-year-old daughter,
Janesha.
Laverne's babysitting Janesha's four-year-old son
at the time, and they're visiting other family members.
And Janesha calls to tell her mom that she's finally
got a place to live.
She's really excited.
She really loves the place.
She feels safe there.
The next day, January 1, 2007, a homeless man
who's looking through a dumpster on Western Avenue
finds Janesha's body wrapped in a garbage bag
and sealed with a twist tie.
She had been shot with a 25-caliber handgun.
Fuck.
So despite the obvious connection,
Janesha's death goes almost unnoticed.
Few news stations that actually cover her death,
they don't even report it correctly.
They say that she was stabbed.
But while the media and the LAPD failed
to inform the public of the return
of the 25-caliber killer, a detective named Dennis Kilcoin
finally convinces Chief Pratton to form a task force
to investigate these murders.
And it's dubbed the 800 Task Force,
named after the conference room that the force initially
gathers in at the police station.
Finally, it's not a fucking derogatory name.
Jesus.
Yeah, for real.
Ridiculous.
So the 800 Task Force is made up of six officers,
no outsiders are allowed, no press, no other police people
that are working, just the people that
are on this task force.
And basically, the existence of it is totally kept secret.
So here's where the LA Weekly Intrepid Reporter comes in.
In 2008, a reporter for the LA Weekly named Christine
Pelisak learns about the existence of the 800 Task Force
and begins to investigate.
Christine.
Christine publishes an article on August 27, 2008.
And it's the first anyone in Los Angeles
reads in the general sense in the mainstream media, which
is a free, the LA Weekly, the free local paper,
about the fact that a serial killer has been on the loose
in South Central since 1985.
I mean, it reminds me of Michelle McNamara so much.
Completely.
Well, listen, along with her thorough details on each murder,
Christine also delivers a scathing critique
of how poorly the LAPD and newly appointed mayor, Antonio
Villagrosa, has handled the entire ordeal.
She writes the following.
There has been no big press conference
by Bratton who recently weighed in on Lindsay Lohan's love life.
The camera-loving Villagrosa recently
beseeched the public to eat nutritiously.
Unlike city leaders who decried the BTK killer near Kansas City
and the Green River Killer who terrorized Seattle,
Los Angeles City Hall is either unaware or has kept
news of California's longest operating killer under wraps,
thanks to the extraordinarily poor diplomacy extended
by Villagrosa and the Villagrosa administration
and the LAPD brass to the victim's mostly working class
Black families.
The Weekly also was able to first inform some families
this month that the murders are known
to be the work of one sick man.
Holy shit.
So the families didn't even know because no one even
informed them.
And so no one knew to look out and be careful
and don't take rides from neighbors and be on the lookout.
It was just not, they weren't even warned.
Nope, there was no word on it.
And in fact, it's Christine herself,
not the police who coined the killer's nickname,
the Grim Sleeper, because of his very abnormal 14-year hiatus.
Damn.
OK, so now we have, we will go to an email sent
to us by a murderer now.
Hi, Karen Georgia and your cult family of pets, Ann Stephen.
I'm a longtime listener, first time writer.
Karen, you mentioned the Grim Sleeper in the last episode
and I've been waiting for you to cover this murder.
My aunt, not by blood, but by being my mom's best friend
since I was a kid and helping my mom raise
my brother and I on her own, which was not easy
as we were the brattiest kids in North America,
is a badass female journalist who's
been covering crime in Los Angeles
since the Rampart police scandal of the 90s.
Oh my god.
Growing up, she was always my idol
because she was funny, pretty, bought me smoothies,
and would talk to me about her stories.
Now we bond over murder stories because murdering knows a bound.
In 2008, she ferociously began to hunt down
stories of nine murders of sex workers in South Central LA
that had gone unsolved and cold since 1988.
She discovered two new murders in 2002 and 2003
that had been DNA connected to the murders of the 80s.
When this murderer resurfaced, LAPD
wasn't paying attention or adding manpower to the case
because it wasn't going to win them any political points.
And my aunt, Christine Pelisak, wrote a huge expose
calling them out for the lack of attention
paid to what appeared to be one of the worst serial killers
in Los Angeles history.
Christine dubbed this murderer the Grim Sleeper
because of the 14 years he had seemingly spent not actively
killing in Los Angeles.
She pointed out that these cases had these cases
been in Westwood or Brentwood, white, wealthy areas.
There's no way police would have ignored a serial killer
striking again.
She humanized the stories of the residents
of the South Central community who had their family members
murdered, and she called the fuck out of the mayor.
She also pointed out the need to use DNA testing on old cases.
Like Michelle McNamara with the Golden State Killer,
Christine's articles brought the attention to the case
and put pressure on the city to do something.
This led to a break in the case with DNA.
I'll get to that in a second.
She wrote a book about her experiences called
the Grim Sleeper, the Lost Women of South Central, which
was published in 2017.
And they even made a cheesy, great lifetime movie about it.
No.
I had no idea.
I'm so proud of her and her work to shine
a light on a community of people whose safety wasn't valued.
My dad passed away last September,
and when he passed, Christine told me
how he'd been her editor and had seen her talent
at the LA Weekly in the 1980s.
I like to think about his legacy in me,
so I want to brag to the world about her amazing talents.
Love, Kelly Murderino Cole.
Did that get you?
Yeah.
Sorry.
So suddenly now, because of this article,
there's real pressure to solve this case.
But when the DNA samples are taken from the victims
and run through the state, offender, and federal crime
databases, there's no matches.
So they turn to familial DNA testing.
I remember this is 2008, 2009.
Early.
It was still super early.
And familial testing is the kind where
the sample has at least 16 markers matched
to another sample in the database.
So it's enough to implicate a close relative of a person
in that database.
So if there's someone with similar DNA who's already
been convicted of a crime, there's
a good chance that that person's relative
could be a viable suspect.
Now, familial DNA testing is controversial.
And at the time, the attorney general
was Jerry Brown for California.
And he was up for reelection.
So he didn't want to attract any negative attention.
So he didn't do the familial DNA testing
until a little bit late, till after he was elected.
Or till after he was reelected.
So eventually, he does rule that familial testing
can be used if other avenues have been exhausted
and if the criminal presents a clear and present danger.
So finally, in 2009, familial DNA testing
is conducted on this cold case, and they get a hit.
A close familial match is found in a man named Christopher
Franklin, who had just been convicted of a felony weapons
charge the year before.
And this leads police to a new suspect, Christopher's father,
57-year-old Lonnie Franklin, Jr., a former garbage
man for the city of Los Angeles.
Such a good cover, because you can get rid of bodies so easily
that way.
And he was a garbage man in the 80s
when it was still the system where it was the city dumps.
And there was no, the technology was not there in any way.
And he had had access to basically the huge dumping
ground that where no one would ever find someone.
How many bodies were just never found?
Well, they start following Lonnie Franklin, Jr.
And they realize he frequently drives along streets
that are known, where sex workers are known to walk.
And so they need to be certain that it's him.
So an undercover cop poses as a busboy
at John's Incredible Pizza in Buenavar.
Fuck yeah.
It's the name.
That's not my opinion.
That's the name of the pizza place.
And they know Lonnie Franklin, Jr. is going there
for a birthday party.
The undercover cop takes Franklin's pizza crusts,
utensils, like all the stuff that he used to eat that night.
And they put it in their little evidence bag.
And the investigators extract his DNA.
And when forensic runs their analysis,
they find a perfect match.
And on July 7, 2010, police finally
arrest Lonnie Franklin, Jr. When they search his home,
they find the 25 caliber handgun that
was used in many of those killings in the 80s.
It's just there in his house.
Yes.
He still has it.
That's how cocky he is.
He didn't even try to get rid of it.
Yeah, because no one had ever even, like it didn't come up.
Even more chilling than that, though,
they find over 1,000 Polaroids of women,
both conscious and unconscious, often nude,
including the photo of Anitra Washington
from the night of her attack.
Basically, they have 180 photos that
remain of missing unidentified women
from that stash of photos.
Oh, my god.
That they're still trying to work through to identify
who the women are, because they're just missing
and the bodies weren't found, or they didn't.
They might be Jane Doe's somewhere.
They just don't know.
So after a series of delays, Lonnie Franklin, Jr.'s trial
finally begins in February of 2016, he pleads not guilty.
2016?
Jesus.
Yeah.
In her opening statement, Deputy District Attorney
Beth Silverman explains that survivor Anitra Washington
will give testimony about her attack that
will provide a blueprint to the fate of the 10 other victims
who have no voice.
Then Anitra takes the stand and tells
the story of her attack and survival
in full detail to the court.
When she's asked to point out her attacker in the courtroom,
she identifies Lonnie Franklin, Jr.
and when Beth Silverman asks her,
are you sure Anitra says 100%.
Oh, my god.
The prosecutor also reveals that in the 70s,
Lonnie Franklin, Jr. was stationed at an army base
in Stuttgart, Germany, where he was dishonorably discharged
for participating in the gang rape of a 17-year-old German
girl.
Oh, my god.
And then that girl, now a grown woman,
takes the stand and testifies against Lonnie Franklin,
Jr.'s character.
She flew in from Germany to testify.
Holy shit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
On May 5, 2016, the jury finds Lonnie Franklin, Jr. guilty
on 10 counts of first-degree murder
and one count of attempted murder.
He sentenced to death on August 10, 2016, exactly 31 years
after the body of Deborah Jackson was found.
He is on death row at San Quentin until March 28 of this year
when he is found unresponsive in his prison cell.
And Lonnie Franklin, Jr., the grim sleeper,
is found dead at 7.43 PM.
He was 67 years old.
So while investigators were able to confirm that Lonnie
Franklin, Jr. did indeed murder Deborah Jackson,
Henrianda Wright, Barbara Ware, Pranita Sparks, Mary Lowe,
Lucretia Jefferson, Monique Alexander,
Princess Bartholomew, Valerie McCorvey, and Janisha Peters
and attempted to murder nature Washington,
they unfortunately could never confirm beyond a reasonable
doubt that he murdered Thomas Steele.
But it is widely believed that he did.
Because of the gross negligence of the LAPD
and their blatant disregard for Black lives
in South Central Los Angeles, we will never
know for sure how many people were murdered
by Lonnie Franklin, Jr. It's possible
that he could have murdered as many as 100 women, if not more.
In December of 2010, the LAPD released 180 Polaroids
to the public in hopes that someone
might be able to identify the women in them so far.
There have been no additional confirmed identified victims.
And that is the story of Los Angeles serial killer,
the Grim Sleeper, Lonnie Franklin, Jr.
Wow.
Yeah.
Great job.
Great job.
Thank you.
So necessary.
Thank you, Jay Elias, for helping me with that research.
He did an insanely great job.
And he found that murder in a letter.
That is so great.
Amazing.
It's so great.
But please, please watch Nick Broomfield's documentary.
Those are the people you need to hear the story from.
It's amazing.
Pam, who is the woman he meets on the street,
that basically becomes his sidekick in the movie.
She is such a best.
She is the greatest person.
And it's just such a way better way
to tell the story of this, of the people that
lived in that community that knew him, his neighbors.
And also, when they finally did, like, you see a map.
His house is in the center.
It's like a clock where all those,
the confirmed victims of him, it's like a clock.
It's just all around.
Well, he had easy pickings.
He didn't need to go into other parts of the fucking city.
Like, he could just drive a block away and fucking
get a victim and take 30 fucking years to be caught.
Yeah.
And it's exploit this situation that was already
so tragic and so unfair.
That's one of the first ones Vince and I watched together.
And Vince is not into true crime.
Like, he gets really freaked out by it.
But he talks about it to this day,
because it's just such a good documentary.
And so it's so good.
So we just discussed the idea that maybe every other,
every week, one of us tells a story.
Since we're already at the two hour mark on this episode.
And like, but it'd be nice if, like, next week I tell the story
and you can just sit back and listen
and react and not, you know, so let's.
And also just, I think just because they're, you know,
are whatever, we're going to do it.
We're going to see how we feel about it.
Yeah.
We can try it.
Let's try next week.
So next week I'll go.
And then, yeah, I like that.
I do too.
I think that's nice.
Cool.
Real quick, before we do the fucking hurray is
we want to take a minute.
It's really sad.
You guys have told us there's murder,
young, very young murdering has died this week.
And so we just want to take a second to talk about them.
And so Summer Taylor and Diaz Love from Seattle
were at a Black Lives Matter protest on the freeway in Seattle
and got struck by a car.
Sweet Summer Taylor and both of them are they them,
by the way, Summer Taylor passed, sadly.
And Diaz Love is still fighting for their life.
And but I believe they're awake and and getting through it.
So sending them our love.
Yes, Steven, can you do will you mind finding
there's got to be a go fund me?
Yeah, yeah, I'll find them for them.
There is, yeah.
Yeah, let's put that on the website so that people can
support and help out because that's, you know, God,
that's such an awful thing to happen.
And then on top of everything else,
then you have you have to worry about medical bills.
Right.
It's just so much for people to deal with.
And they're both big advocates for human rights.
And I know Diaz is fighting.
So send them your thoughts and love.
And then just completely this freak accident,
this sweet baby angel, Ali Davis, 21 years old,
a musical theater major at the Kentucky School of the Arts.
And she's she's from Banner, Kentucky,
just a complete freak car accident and died.
And it's just it breaks my heart.
It's so I looked at her Instagram
and she's just this bright, shiny person
who looks like the minute you meet her,
she would wrap her arms around you
and be friends with you.
And like, you know, all three of them
just look like good kind people.
And I'm more, you know, when and there when someone
in our community dies, it's just, you know,
we can't help but think of that they're our friends.
You know, like the shit that we share,
the shit that you guys share with each other,
the openness, the friendship that we all have.
It's it's our friends.
And so yeah, it really means something.
You meet people and you understand
that you all have that same interest or whatever.
Any interest, but it's like, yeah,
it is that you guys have built this into a real community.
It's a real connected community.
It's really beautiful and hearing about stuff like this
really does it's heartbreaking.
And it's also a really good opportunity
to try to feel gratitude.
You're still here.
And what do you think that person would want you to do?
Right.
In the fact that you're still here
and you're still living, what can you do?
Either to honor their memory,
if you didn't know them at all,
then to, then to, you know,
live maybe a little bit better or a little more consciously.
Yeah, because like the idea that people hit by a car
because they were out protesting
against the brutality and violence against black people
is really meaningful and really
it's it's really quite something.
And, you know, definitely.
So Summer Taylor, Diaz Love, Ali Davis,
they're all in our hearts.
Yeah.
And we're thinking about every,
their friends and family and what a huge tragic loss.
I have actually a really good one
to kick off our fucking hurrays.
Yeah.
Because it also is about some murderinos.
Okay.
With some very good news.
This was sent, this was sent by Eric Clemenson.
It said, it was to me and to my favorite murder.
It said on Twitter, this couple bonded over MFM
and as a protest got married in front of the burnt
third precinct in Minneapolis.
Oh my God.
I saw a picture of that.
What is it?
Yes.
Okay.
So Alexis Hamlin and Selena Burnt got married
and after being together for four months
and so they, there's a long article on city pages.
You can look it up citypages.com.
That's about this, but it's the cutest picture
and it says here, Hamlin and Burnt met on Tinder,
bonded over a shared love of my favorite murder
and dated for about a year
before they got engaged this Valentine's Day.
It's so sweet.
Oh.
Look at how cute.
Sorry.
Yeah, right there.
Oh.
Sweethearts with the flower crown.
They hung a flower heart.
It's a burnout police tape.
How many years is four months in quarantine?
Oh dude.
I've been going out for seven years.
Congratulations you guys.
Congratulations.
We're honored to be a part of your,
of your city pages wedding announcement.
That's right.
Invite, please, please invite us to the wedding party
when it happens and we'll.
Cabo.
We'll slip out early.
Yeah.
Okay.
Mine is from someone named Livster,
L-I-I-V-S-T-E-R-R.
And it says, I have a fucking hooray.
And then all caps.
My dad is the fucking judge on the GSK case.
Oh no.
Her dad is the Golden State killer judge.
Oh shit.
She better shut up.
This is all privileged information girl.
Do not ruin it.
Growing up, my dad was a defense attorney in Sacramento.
He says, sorry Karen.
It's okay.
And I watched.
It's too late.
And I watched as he showed me what justice really was.
Everybody deserves to have someone on their side
and he has so many stories now
he could probably fill a book.
I definitely think this is where I get my dark
and twisty passion for true crime.
Definitely.
But a few years ago he became a judge
and began trying more and more criminal cases
until today he took on one of the most prolific
serial killers still alive today.
Not only is he an A plus dad to three amazing daughters.
I'm just adding this Mackenzie Brooklyn
and Madison and Bailey.
But he is a kick ass judge
and watching him lead the courtroom
through this mother fuckers plea hearing
was inspiring to say the least.
Love you ladies and keep doing your thing.
P.S. I am a nurse in pediatric ICU
so I can confirm that yes, you need to wear a fucking mask.
And yes, you still need to distance.
Okay, love you, bye.
Holy shit.
What's their name?
Livster, L-I-V-S-T-E-R-R, that's on Instagram.
Congratulations, Livster.
That's very cool.
Amen, I feel like.
Amazing.
You're a celebrity.
You brought that up earlier.
We were like, we didn't even take the time.
We bullshitted about Mac makeup.
We didn't take the time to talk about the plea deal,
the Golden State Killer.
And I remember I was talking to somebody about this
because I was reading about it.
Oh, no, no, sorry.
Steven, it was you probably telling me
during Do You Need A Ride or whatever,
but Paul Holes sitting in the courtroom watching them,
watching this guy plead guilty finally.
Amazing.
In 2020 to these crimes that he committed in the 70s
and terrorized this entire all of California
up until very recently.
The idea that that story is winding down
and he is going to be in prison for a long time
for raping and murdering people for 40 years is.
That's incredible.
It's unbelievable.
It's surreal.
We have to talk about All Be Gone in the Dark,
the TV show.
We need to talk about Perry Mason.
We need to talk about Unsolved Mysteries,
which we didn't even talk about.
Unsolved Mysteries.
Next week, when it's my turn to tell my story,
because that's the format we have
and probably all we should have had.
Also, we need to talk about.
Dirty John is like, it's winding up
and it's gotten so good.
I am so into this season of Dirty John.
Okay, I'm gonna have time to watch it before then.
We'll talk about books.
A man beat.
I'm listening to podcasts.
I'm listening to some new podcasts I'm loving.
Guys, we didn't even get into.
Oh my God.
Anything.
We were busy talking about fucking tide pools, Mimi.
It's a real problem.
All right, thanks for listening to us still
after all this time and being here
and being there for each other,
support each other, reach out to each other.
We love you guys.
We're so fucking lucky and appreciative of you all.
Yes, thank you and stay sexy.
And don't get murdered.
Goodbye.
Mimi, want to cook it?