My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark - 303 - The Lansburys & The Greystones
Episode Date: December 2, 2021This week, Karen and Georgia cover the deadly green arsenic dresses of Victorian England and the recently solved cold case of Kaitlyn Arquette. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privac...y and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hello.
Hello.
And welcome.
This is my favorite murder.
That's Georgia Hardstar.
Thank you.
That's Karen Kilgariff.
Welcome.
And we're here to podcast with you once again.
Yeah.
Week after week, we do it.
Week after week.
I think that they don't, they should know and don't know that right before we start, there's
like a moment of quiet while we get ready.
And then the most insane hand gestures happen between the two of us, which we're pretending
to be classical music conductors, trying to cue the other one that, yes, I'm ready to
start.
I'm going to say it now.
Yes.
Because we're still strangely obsessed with the unison concept.
It just works for us.
It works for us.
It's a great way to start out, you know, as one.
Yeah.
And I think, so like if we are cracking up in the very beginning of the episode, it's
because of just, you just had, you just had some really great ones.
So that's why I was cracking up.
Yeah.
I was trying to put a little extra spice into my opening, you know, like, let's do this.
Yeah.
It was like, let's do this kind of energy.
There was a lot of wrists.
But just with the wrists.
Yeah.
It's like, I like to speak, you know this about me.
I like to speak through my hands and then of course connected to that or the wrists.
That's right.
That's part of the hand gesture.
You can't have one without the other.
Talk to the wrist.
You know, I say that all the time throughout the 90s.
You do.
You do.
How was your Thanksgiving?
Oh, thank you for asking.
It was surprisingly well and non, you know, dramatic.
Great.
Yeah.
How was yours?
Fun times.
Yeah, fun.
It was great.
And you hosted and Vince cooked.
That's right.
Oh my God, man.
An amazing turkey.
And this year we didn't spill the turkey juice all over the rug like we did last year.
There's always got to be something though, right?
Yes.
I was trying to think of what happened.
Well, it was a pre Thanksgiving, you know, drama with my mom that ended up being she
ignored it like it never happened and like she likes to do and so everything was fine.
And I did the same.
You know what?
It's like, that's the senior improving with her.
So you have to match what she's giving you and go with it.
Which is nothing.
No, I mean.
Which is zero.
Zero.
No, it was really, it was lovely and I'm done with the holidays for like family stuff.
Hosting is hosting is big.
Hosting is suddenly there for me, my family was down all of a sudden it's like, how come
I don't have that many blankets?
Like suddenly I'm judging myself in the weirdest ways or it's like my couch isn't that comfortable
and I don't have very many blankets.
So yeah, who am I to even invite anybody over?
Your dad.
So I came up with Vince and I were and Cookie were so generously invited over a couple nights
for Thanksgiving for to celebrate just life with your sister and your niece and your dad
and your dad got so mad at you for not having a pizza cutter that I have and then he got
mad at me for not using it.
I was using a fork to cut my pizza and it's like really bothered him.
And at one point he goes, George, I use that night like got mad at me, which is I realized
how annoying I was being because the pizza wouldn't cut, you know, but this is what makes
me laugh is that to a normal person, yes, it seems like he's mad, but literally that
or doing a funny voice are the only two choices you get.
So yeah, there's no other way he would say like, Oh, I'm sorry, you can't cut that very
well here.
Do that.
Like, right?
There's a there's a whole process going on and it's like, it's a shame on our ancestors
that you can't cut your pizza correctly.
So he's not mad at you.
It's just it's the insanity.
Also he cannot hear.
Oh, right.
Right, right, right.
Of course, everything seems a little bit more ratcheted up than if he had fully attuned
hearing.
Yes.
Okay.
It would be it would be much lighter, but then I think he's like a couple beats behind
and it's an irritating position for him to be a yes.
But when he, yeah, the way he yelled at me about not having a pizza cutter, a pizza
cutter where I was like, I don't own a pizza cutter.
I'm not quite at the Peltrow.
Yeah.
What are you talking about?
First of all, they cut mine at the fucking pizza parlor, right?
Where I as any other red blooded American get my pizza, like my sister's the one that
took it upon herself to make homemade pizza for all of us.
God bless her soul.
It was really good.
She's such a good cook.
She's a really good cook, but yeah, it doesn't mean I have the tools to bring most of the
stuff that she was cooking with with her to bring so much, including a turkey pan for
Thanksgiving.
Who the fuck has that?
If you don't ever cook an entire bird, we just happen to have events and joys doing
that thing.
Yeah.
But it's good to have.
Yeah.
It's pointless.
You know what a pizza cutter is?
What's that?
A knife.
You know what a knife is?
A pizza cutter.
A fork.
For you.
It was embarrassing because I was like, oh yeah, I have been sawing away at this fucking
slice of pizza for like an hour with a fork.
And he probably also was like, who the fuck kind of like princess eats a fucking pizza
pizza with a fork?
No, chances are what was happening was whatever this sound was that your fork was making was
like he could hear because that's the other thing is hearing aids.
You can hear certain things way louder than other things, especially if they're high pitched.
Yeah.
It doesn't like it doesn't it's not selective of like, oh man.
So making like to you a kind of quiet squeaky fork noise on your plate to him, it's like
blowing his ears out.
I mean, who knows that man is in hell.
All I will say is every night so he would watch sports in like the afternoon, the evening,
but then every night around like 7 30 he'd be like, what movie are we watching?
So then you had to like play it really carefully because Nora's there.
So it has to be like a family movie, right?
But you still want everyone to like it and be into it.
So nobody likes it and nobody gets to watch what they want to watch.
That's normally what happens, but I will tell you that we night after night picked winners.
So the first night we watched King Richard, which is the Will Smith movie about the William
sisters and the way their dad.
Yeah, basically raised them to be tennis champions.
It's an unbelievably great movie.
If you ever watched the William sisters, which my roommate in my college and then young life
roommate Dave, who I talk about all the time was did played tennis, very intense about
tennis and watch tennis obsessively.
So I knew about those girls as they were coming out basically through him or he would he would
be like, you have to watch this girl.
She's amazing.
So to watch the background of how Richard Williams basically got his girls from Compton
to like, you know, Wimbledon, is that what it's called, Wimbledon to Wimbledon.
Exactly.
It's it's amazing.
It's amazing.
And it's really.
It's inspiring.
It's beautiful, inspiring.
Okay.
Yeah.
And they were executive producers of the movie.
Right.
They got to tell their father's story.
There's times where it's super intense, but it's just it's so well done.
Okay.
It's so it's great.
Really good.
I love that.
Okay.
Then Jungle Cruise, which nobody thought was going to be good, but we were like, oh, it's
just a Disney movie.
It'll be fine.
Completely delightful.
Okay.
Cute.
So good.
The Rock and everybody's best friend, Emily Blunt, a magical combination of darlings.
So good.
Really good.
And our friend, Paul Giamatti makes a special Italian cameo.
Yes.
Paul Giamatti.
Then one night we watched Moana, which I cry the whole time in that movie.
I love it so much.
Have you seen Moana?
I haven't.
Take the time, please.
Okay.
I'll get a nephew over.
I'll put it on.
Then on the last night, School of Rock and we were like, I was like, my sister and I were
like whispering in the kitchen like, is there going to be swearing?
Is he going to get mad or blah, blah, blah?
It's the most perfect family movie.
It's adorable.
Jack Black is just giving his all in the most wonderful, hilarious musical way.
And then those kids are magical.
Out of control.
So cute.
It's the best.
Those are good Christmas movies, I think, like around with the family because I've only
been watching Game of Thrones, so that is not family, which I am in, by the way, now.
Okay.
Where are you?
Give me a sense.
I'm in like the end of season three, I think.
Oh, shit.
The dragons are happening, fucking, just so much going on.
The little boy King's being such a douche and playing it so well.
He's scary, right?
Oh, he's so cocky.
I hate him.
And then I'm always like, wow, I hate him.
He's a great actor as a douche.
Yes.
I'm in it.
Is Arya gone to training?
Arya, like they escaped.
And then the man who helped them escape is like a different man's face and he and they're
like, yes.
And she got a coin that's going to mean something one day, probably.
Okay.
And yeah, I'm into it.
I'm into it.
And then the older sister, what's her name?
Sansa.
Sansa, like she's getting away from him.
I'm so bad at this.
Let me write, let me read you my review I wrote.
She's getting away and is she but or is she and I really love her nursemaid or whatever
it's called.
Who's really the girlfriend of?
What's his name?
Character.
No.
You're just, you're just holding a prance almost like a hand puppet.
I am.
Like when she puts up a different hand, I can see the people that she's thinking of.
This is this character on this hand and I'm this character, I should do like a puppet
show of my my interpretation of Game of Thrones.
Yeah, you absolutely should with that.
You can just do the real simple lunch bag puppets.
Oh, yeah.
Put your hand in.
How about one lunch bag is for like this family and then the sock is for this other
the other family, the landsbaries or whatever their name is and then then Greystone comes
along and Greystone is what a shoe.
That's where he mans.
That was the guy I was talking about Theo Greyjoy, he's turned out to be a jerk.
Yes.
Many of them are jerks.
I kind of at this point, I'm not sure what, wait, is the Super Tall Lady Knight, the one
who's guarding Sansa, you're talking about her?
Okay, no, that was a spoiler.
I think I'm only in season two, but the Super Tall Lady Knight who's the coolest is two
taking the brother.
What are they?
What are they called?
Oh, forget it.
Yes.
No, I know what you mean.
Who are they?
The the it's the Lenthiams.
The Lenthiams.
Yes.
What'd you say?
The Lenthiams.
Who are they called?
The Lithium Battery Family.
That's right.
Taking the brother over that like to the back to the King's Castle.
Yeah, because he's in trouble, right?
Yeah.
She has to take him.
Okay, but now I know that she's going to guard Sansa.
So that's exciting to know.
Okay, don't hold me to that because I thought that's what you were telling me.
I'm like, oh, I remember that, but it could be any number of variations of because she's
on behalf of Lady Stark, right?
Taking what is he's the hottest guy?
Um, no, you don't think classically hot guy that sleeps with his sister is hot?
He's a little too surfery for me.
Like that's not, you know what I mean?
Like he's very Orange County and even though he's from England, clearly, I'm just not
interested in that.
He's so Orange County, but he's in King's Landing or the Crow's Nest, no, that's a
comedy club in Santa Cruz.
Um, but it's a delightful journey, right?
I'm having fun.
Yeah.
I'm having a good time so far.
Yeah.
Uh, what else?
Um, oh, well, if we're going to do some wrecks, I am so thrilled that on Hulu, the TV show
The Great is back.
Did you watch The Great with Elle Fanning and Nicholas Holt?
No, I saw it just now though on, on like the channel, Changer.
Okay.
Well, guess what?
And I can't, I'm pretty sure I must have recommended this in season one, but, but it
also was, I think the last time I was visiting my sister, so she and I were binging it may
have been last Christmas, but anyway, it's now season two.
So there are two seasons to watch of this insanely excellent show, The Great, and it's
based on the life of Catherine the Great, who took over Russia when she married her
husband.
Mr. The Great.
King.
Yes.
King the Great.
King.
Is that right?
Um, he was also kind of a surfer of the time, but no, um, you have to watch it.
So they're such, the two of them are carrying the show.
The whole ensemble cast is mind bogglingly great.
And usually if a show is so good, you binge it and you never stop watching it for season
one, then when season two comes around, some snob like me is always like, hmm, we'll see.
Yeah.
It's falling down in this way and that way.
And that's the thing we love to do is be, we're so good at TV that we can spot when
something isn't as good.
Can't do it on this show.
It is solid as a rock.
My faith.
You got to find something else to be smug about, I guess.
Yeah.
Cause this thing is just giving their, you know, the outfits, it's like the richest Russians.
So like the whole place they're in, the outfits they're wearing, the food they talk about
eating.
It's hilarious.
It's amazing.
All right.
I'm going to apologize to you because Cookie peed on your rug, brand new rug, but also wanted
to say that Frank and Cookie got along so fricking well and their best friend, the best time.
Cookie ran Frank around that house.
He was like, Oh, are we doing this?
Okay.
Great.
I guess I'm not elderly anymore.
Yeah.
He had the time of his life and I, it doesn't surprise me because I think Cookie needed
to find a corner to just very lightly make her mark.
Yes.
And, you know, that's what rugs are for.
But your rug held up.
It was like, Oh, I'm not taking this on.
It's like how we should be, how our therapists are always telling us to be is like, don't
take that on.
No.
Scotch guard yourself against the pee of life.
That's right.
That's right.
Listen, puppies will pee on you.
That's just how life goes.
We know it's coming.
Therefore we put the Scotch guard around us.
That's right.
Of self care, of awareness, of presence.
And remember that this holiday season, when you're hanging out with family members and
it's like hard and they're getting to you that you are a rug, everything that happens
that your mom says is puppy pee and you're not going to let it, you're not going to absorb
it.
No, you don't have to absorb it and you're not seven years old anymore.
So what, so it is a different track.
You can change brain tracks and be like, oh, that's right, none of this is actually coming
in here.
Right.
It's just reminding me of things that are already in here.
But that's okay.
But I'm a grownup now.
I'm a grownup.
And if I don't have a fucking pizza cutter, then I guess that's fine.
I haven't failed in this life.
You haven't.
You haven't.
Just because you don't have a utensil that does one thing, which nobody even wants.
You know, my dad has the kind of kitchen where you would be, you could go on like a scavenger
hunt and name any obscure thing.
And of course it's that kitchen's been sitting there for 40 years with everything's in there.
Once you live there for 40 fucking years, you're going to have like skewers for fucking
kebabs and shit.
Yes.
Of any size.
Of course you are.
You don't have, you don't have chopsticks?
Yeah.
Well, I might left over from, no, you don't have your own chopsticks.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It is that.
It is that.
It's just Jim going, how is your house different than my house?
Sometimes that makes parents upset.
Sometimes it makes them furious.
How much do you think?
How much do you want to bet you're going to get a pizza cutter from either your sister
or your dad for Christmas this year?
We literally bought one the next day.
Oh, you did?
And then held it up in front of it.
Oh yeah.
Because this is the thing about information about our family is then that becomes the
joke of like, oh, we better get a pizza cutter.
Dad's going to be mad.
Should we do some exactly right corner time?
Yeah.
Let's, let's talk through a little business.
We've got some exciting stuff.
Our friend Kate Winkler Dawson over on Wicked Words is talking to guest author Aisha Sasei
to discuss the hashtag bring back our girls.
That was a social media campaign that alerted the world to the kidnapping of 276 school girls.
So they'll be talking about that.
And on lady to lady, we're having a little, another exactly right crossover with guest
Dave Holmes, host of the exactly right podcast, Waiting for Impact.
And so those are so many funny people.
You should check that out.
Also because it is, it is basically the beginning of the holiday season.
Happy Hanukkah to everyone who celebrates.
Georgia.
Yes.
You included.
So we decided, George and I decided we wanted to give back this holiday season.
We know it's hard for a lot of people out there.
So we thought it'd be a good idea to focus on some of our favorite charities to give
through all throughout the end of the year, basically.
Yeah.
So this first week, which is the first of five, we will be donating 10 grand to Toys
for Tots, which of course everyone knows and loves and we're so excited about.
Just a great kickoff for the holiday season, helping people get toys, you know, for kids
in need.
Yep.
Families in need, providing a bigger and better Christmas.
If there's any way that you can give back in your community, then yeah, you should do
that too.
Yep.
If you can.
Yep.
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Are you ready?
I am ready.
All right.
Well, this week, I'm going to tell you, Georgia, about the deadly green arsenic dress as a Victorian
England.
Oh, I love it.
Do you know?
Have you heard anything about these?
Oh, vaguely, but this sounds fun.
And I'm really freaking excited about, you know, I love a good poisoning.
So the sources used for this story this week, the history of green dye is a history of death
by Jennifer Wright for wracked.com.
The arsenic dress, how poisonous green pigments terrorized Victorian fashion by Allison Matthews
David.
That's on Jezebel.
There is a article by Jessica Charlotte Halsam for Rez Medica, the Journal of the Royal
Medical Society.
There's a National Geographic article by Becky Little.
There's some quotes from the British Medical Journal of 1862.
And there is a Bust Magazine article called These Dresses Could and Literally Did Kill
by Effia History.
I guess that's a byline.
Okay.
So we're going to start in 1861, and a 19 year old woman named Matilda Shurer is working
as an artificial flower maker for a man named Mr. Bergeron in central London.
So artificial flowers, I guess, were like all the rage.
They were on hats and they were on head pieces and headdresses that women wore because, you
know, back then, hats were.
There's way more hats and gloves in the mix.
Yes.
Proper ladies were hats.
Proper ladies you were required to.
You had to have all those coutrements.
So Matilda's duties include arranging the flowers and leaves to look their most realistic,
as well as painting the arrangements with various colors, including a very vibrant green
that had very recently become popular throughout Great Britain.
So Matilda does her job diligently with thorough attention to detail, hand painting these flowers
and then hand arranging these flowers.
But by fall of 1861, she begins to fall ill and her symptoms are not normal.
So her fingernails turn green, then the whites of her eyes turn bright green.
So, she also begins vomiting green liquid and then when she goes to see her doctor,
she admits to him that her vision is completely green.
Everything she sees has become green.
Holy shit.
So as the doctor tries to diagnose this problem, Matilda's illness progresses.
She starts convulsing every few minutes and filming at the eyes, mouth and nose.
Filming at the eyes?
No.
Well, but Gigi, you know what, I would normally argue that.
But if her eyes are green, we don't know what's going on with those eyes, so I won't argue
it.
We are not Victorian doctors.
No.
But she's filming at the mouth and nose and something horrible is happening in her eyes.
And on November 20th, 1861, Matilda dies.
So when the autopsies performed on her, it's revealed that she's been poisoned with massive
amounts of arsenic to the point where it has saturated her stomach, her liver and her lungs.
It doesn't take long to figure out where the arsenic exposure occurred.
The green dye she's been using to make the artificial bouquets look realistic with is
made of a deadly combination of copper and arsenic trioxide, aka white arsenic.
So basically, we'll talk about how this dye got invented.
In 1778, a Swedish chemist named Carl Schiele, formulates a new green pigment made from
copper arsenate, which is the copper and the arsenic trioxide.
And it's officially dubbed Schiele's Green, and it's hailed for its beauty and its relatively
low production cost.
So in 1814, a manufacturing company in Schweinfurt, Germany, named the Wilhelm Dien-White-Led
Company, becomes the first to mass-produce Schiele's Green dye for use in clothing.
So the resulting garments are dyed of rich, vibrant emerald green, and these dresses and
gowns become fast favorites for the women of Great Britain's high society.
So what's interesting about this is part of the reason these green dresses got so popular
was because it had very recently happened that they had switched to gas lighting, indoor
gas lighting.
So instead of the usual dim candle lighting at night, that people would go to dinner parties
or balls or whatever, and it would all be candlelight.
Now it's gas lighting, and so there's, you know, it's much brighter in the room.
And so anybody wearing a Schiele's Green dyed gown has an even more eye-catching and dazzling
kind of effect on the room.
So this becomes like all the rage.
So women are buying these new bolder dyed gowns whenever they can.
And this green color becomes so popular that people start using the dye in wallpaper, on
carpets, in home decor, and of course, in these artificial flowers.
And soon Victorian Britain becomes bathed in Schiele's Green.
But it isn't long before the dangers of wearing these garments show themselves.
So the earliest known report of suspicion about the Green dye emerges in 1839.
When a German chemist named Leopold Gmelein notices a mouse-like odor coming from rooms
decorated with green wallpaper.
Did you just say mouse-like odor?
Mouse-like odor.
Yeah.
So he's like, there's this is a very distinctive smell that like, I'm sure, you know, rat catchers
or of vermin hunters or whatever.
There's like a very certain smell.
And he could smell that with this green wallpaper.
Because the dresses were really popular for the upper class.
But then suddenly you could buy wallpaper in the Schiele's Green color and put it in
your house no matter where you lived around London town.
But this chemist is like, this don't smell right and this isn't good.
So he believes the odor is caused by dimethyl arsenic acid contained in the wallpaper.
And he expresses his concerns about that acid's presence to a local paper in Germany.
The paper publishes Gmelein's warning.
But it does not affect the production of that wallpaper.
And then just a while later, four kids in a working class district of Limehouse in London
make the news for mysteriously coming down with sore throats and having trouble breathing.
And the doctors diagnose them as having diphtheria.
The kids' families don't understand how they would have gotten it because the disease,
which is normally highly contagious, hasn't spread to anyone else in the neighborhood.
No one has heard of anyone around having it.
And yet suddenly all four kids have diphtheria.
But as the children are recovering, a public health officer named Henry Leatherby examines
their bedrooms and finds all of their bedrooms have the green wallpaper inside.
So when he tests the paper in each room, he finds that it contains three grains of arsenic
per square foot.
So the grains is like the way they measure arsenic.
And it's like a grain per blah, blah, blah, millimgrams or whatever.
I cut that part out because it's so specific and hard to relate to.
But essentially, three grains of arsenic per square foot of wallpaper is enough to kill
a child, one child of this children's size.
So the evidence against the poisonous wallpaper starts to mount in the winter of 1856 when
a couple and their pet parrot start feeling weak.
The couple has sore throats, eye swelling, terrible headaches any time they're inside
the home, but then when they leave and go take in the sea air and go for a walk, all
of their symptoms go away.
So they realize the wallpaper is to blame and they remove it and within a week, all
of their symptoms go away.
Damn.
And because it's winter, they probably have all their windows closed and we're indoors
a lot more, right?
Yep.
And the heat probably and like stuff pulling out, if you're just like poison sitting in
the wallpaper, just like whatever might use, somebody puts on some water to boil and it's
drawing stuff out of the air.
I mean, it's horrifying.
Also imagine there's four kids, how much kids touch the wall.
Oh, right.
Like especially if they just put up the wallpaper, it's like, that's new, don't touch it.
They would be all over that, totally.
So as for this green dyed clothing, the artificial flower wreaths worn as ladies' headdresses
are starting to leave rashes and even scabby sores on the heads of some of the women who
are wearing them.
Dresses, shoes and gloves sometimes are having the same effect causing blistering sores and
even hair loss.
In some cases, the green dyed clothing has been treated and sealed so that the arsenic
is not bleeding out onto the skin and the customer doesn't experience any poisoning symptoms.
But in other cases, when the green dye is just brushed or dusted on with no sealant,
the buyer is fully exposed to the poison.
So the people who are most severely affected, though, of course, are the laborers who are
making these pieces and this clothing.
In addition to the blistering scabby sores and the ulcers, the powder form of arsenic
is so fine that when coating an object with it, the laborers are unwittingly inhaling
it as they're coating it.
Or if their hands are covered in the dye, when they go to eat their lunches, they wind
up ingesting arsenic and then they have internal as well as external poisoning.
And for male workers preparing the dye, using the restroom, then it's on their hands.
They go to urinate.
The sores appear on their genitals and they're inner-sized.
They're misdiagnosed with syphilis.
They're not treated properly.
That can lead to gangrene and recovery can take up to six weeks of bed rest at a hospital
or lead to death, especially if you can't afford to be in a hospital for six weeks.
And then the women who use the dye to paint garments or the artificial flower arrangements
experience a wide variety of terrible symptoms themselves.
They include feeling a lack of appetite as well as nausea, diarrhea, anemia, pallor,
and consistent headaches that made them feel as if their temples were being pressed in
a vice.
That was a quote from the Jezebel article, yeah, horrifying.
The telltale sign of arsenic contact on the skin is the sores and as they worsen, they
become open wounds that allow more arsenic to get into the bloodstream of the laborers.
More and more workers start experiencing symptoms like hair loss, headaches, vomiting blood,
and liver and kidney failure.
At one London textile workshop, a young girl quits her job after conditions there grow
worse and worse.
The women she works alongside are always bleeding from their open sores, and she herself has
handled the green dye so much that her face has become quote, one mass of sores.
And it's caused her to nearly go blind.
Holy shit.
Yeah.
So arsenic is cheap and it's easily accessible substance used for many things besides green
dye, and people are very aware of its poisonous properties because it's commonly used as rat
poison in many British households.
It's very common to just have a box of arsenic around, but it's also used for ingestible
items like food, beer, and medicine.
It's so accessible that any child can go buy it at their local pharmacy over the counter.
So it's just kind of around.
So as the side effects of the green arsenic based dyes become apparent, countries like
Scandinavia, France, and Germany ban the arsenic containing dyes.
Great Britain passes a couple of regulations to limit the amount of arsenic an individual
can buy, but these initiatives only apply to private citizens.
There's no regulations, of course, that restrict large scale arsenic usage for commercial industries
in Great Britain.
So the rules are only for the small guy that they're not the ones responsible for everybody
being poisoned.
Right.
Despite the news of poisoning throughout Great Britain, which one British doctor, Arthur
Hill Hassell calls wretched in the extreme, heads of manufacturing companies argue that
there's no reason to be concerned about the dyes.
Their businesses are booming and as long as their profits are high, they'll fight tooth
and nail to keep green dyed products on the market.
A famed designer, William Morris, goes so far as to say, quote, as to the arsenic scare,
a greater folly is hardly possible to imagine.
The doctors were bitten as people bitten by which fever?
Damn.
Denial.
Yep.
That's flat denial.
Yep.
So it's also easy for Great Britain to not take action over these deadly arsenic dyed
products because arsenic is one of the many poisons that consumers were concerned about
in this era.
Of course, there's, we've all heard of the lead based makeup that damages the nerves
in women's wrists, disabling them from being able to raise their hands.
So we've, right?
We've all heard about that where it's like the makeup that, you know, like people were
piling on and then the scabs were making them need to put on more makeup.
Horrifying.
Haircombs made of celluloid that would explode when it got too hot.
What?
You've never heard of that one?
No.
Aniline dyed socks that caused swelling in men's feet and bladder cancer in the laborers
who made the socks.
Oh my God.
And most notably, there's mercury poisoning caused by men's hats, hence the Alice in Wonderland
character, the Mad Hatter.
That's actually based on facts.
So the felt hats commonly worn by men back in Victorian times are primarily made of rabbit
fur.
And in order to slick the fur down and hold the hat together, the hatters would brush
the fur with mercury and the lining of the finished hats usually prevented the wearers
from experiencing any negative side effects, but the hat makers had no such protection.
So when mercury poisoning sets in, the first sign is usually neuro motor issues.
So long time hatters would lose control of their motor skills and very often tremble.
This symptom becomes so common in the American town of Danbury, Connecticut, which was known
for its hat making that tremor-afflicted hatters are said to have had the Danbury shakes.
Fuck.
That's terrible.
And the next most common side effect of mercury poisoning is extreme paranoia.
Alice in Matthews David, who wrote the book Fashion Victims, the dangers of dress past
and present, says that when doctors examined these poison hatters, the hatters began to
think that they were being observed and they would throw down their tools, get angry and
have outbursts.
Like they would just freak out when doctors would come and say, something is going, something
wrong.
Oh my God.
As the illness progresses with increased exposure to mercury, the hatters would start experiencing
cardio respiratory issues.
They would lose their teeth and sometimes their lives.
But because the demand for fashionable hats remained high, the mercury use continues.
The combination of capitalist greed and the fact that the wealthy men actually wearing
the hats aren't really affected leaves the lower class laborers desperate for money to
accept the known dangers of the job and continue exposing themselves to the mercury.
What ultimately saves more laborers from suffering this fate isn't government or legal regulation
as mercury use for these products is never banned in England.
Instead, it's the simple fact that wearing felt hats goes out of style and that doesn't
really happen until the 60s.
Oh my God.
Mad hatters, man.
Mad hatters, right?
Okay.
So back to the death of Matilda Shore in 1861.
So once this young 19 year old girl dies and very horribly and violently with such horrible
side effects, an organization called the Lady Sanitary Association decides to fight against
the harsh working conditions that have been harming these laborers and green dye product
consumers for so long.
One of the association members, a Miss Nicholson, has already been following similar cases at
other businesses for a while.
She even previously published a piece about workshops where she witnessed young girls
who looked half starved working long hours with their hands wrapped in bloodied bandages.
Upon closer inspection of the skin, it appeared to Miss Nicholson that many of these girls
had been suffering from some cutaneous disease, leaving them riddled with open sores.
So the members of the Lady Sanitary Association hire a highly regarded analytical chemist
named Dr. A.W. Hoffman to test the artificial flower and leaf arrangements for toxin levels
at that specific place where Matilda worked.
And they hope his report might bolster their case for safer working conditions.
The doctor's findings are alarming.
For scale, so just four or five grains of arsenic is considered lethal for the average
adult.
Dr. Hoffman finds that the typical headdress containing artificial flowers dyed with sheels
green dye contains about 80 grains of arsenic.
That's enough to kill 20 people.
And a full gown using roughly 20 yards of green dyed fabric contains about 900 grains
of arsenic.
That's too many.
It's so poisonous.
It's like poisonous dress.
It's so crazy and horrifying.
So Dr. Hoffman publishes these findings in a London Times article entitled, The Dance
of Death, and one week after the article's publication, the British Medical Journal publishes
its own piece recounting Dr. Hoffman's conclusions and echoing his concern.
So finally, like the medical association is behind this, but of course, it takes some
nosy bossy ladies at the Lady Sanitary Association to be like, huh, enough already.
As they put it, based on Dr. Hoffman's findings, a woman wearing one of these dresses, quote,
ladies in her skirts, poison enough to slay the whole of the admirers she may meet within
half a dozen ballrooms.
Damn.
But here's what I would like to say to that.
The woman is not the maker of those motherfucking skirts, so she's not killing anybody in those
ballrooms.
That's right.
These fucking companies who know full well that they're using arsenic and they're the
ones killing people are the ones killing people.
That's right.
And she's dying as well as those motherfucking admirers too.
Yeah.
Let me just talk about her.
How about the poisons on her?
Right.
So let's not start talking about, oh, that slut that keeps going at all the different
ballrooms.
Fuck you, man.
As the news gets around about the dangerous and sometimes even fatal side effects of arsenic
laced dyes, people begin to avoid these emerald green products that they once loved, but
not everybody.
Some take the stance that as long as they don't lick their wallpaper, they won't be
affected by the poison.
That's like absolutely something my dad would say.
Just don't touch it.
Just don't lick it.
Why are you licking wallpaper?
And of course, there are women who don't want to give up their beautiful green garments,
and so they just decide to take the risk with each purchase.
A one lady in 1871, for instance, who, quote, purchased a box of green-colored gloves at
a well-known and respectable house, end quote, she develops chronic cuts and sores around
her fingertips.
She's completely stumped about the cause until arsenic salts are detected under her
fingernails, so these gloves, it turns out, were not dyed and sealed.
They were just dusted with the green dye, so she was completely exposed to that poison.
So I think that anecdote is about how the rich people assume, oh, not my gloves, not
my dyes.
Of course, they wouldn't do that to me.
By 1879, the perils of this green dye reach as high as Buckingham Palace.
On one occasion, a foreign dignitary who is visiting the palace tells Queen Victoria that
he's feeling sick after spending the night in his guest room, and it turns out it's
decorated with green wallpaper.
He survives.
He turns out to be fine, and Queen Victoria has that wallpaper removed too sweet.
So now, with Queen Victoria herself expressing concern over the dyes, more Brits start to
take the horror stories seriously, and the sale of green dyed items begins to decline.
But Parliament still fails to pass any sort of regulation that might stop or even slow
the use of arsenic-based dye.
The British government's failure to act forces activists to spread awareness through the
newspapers, urging the people of Great Britain not to buy these products and even giving
them tests they can run on their belongings at home to see if they contain arsenic.
And the first of these tests is to burn strips of cloth or wallpaper, and if a garlic smell
comes out of the smoke, that's a sign that arsenic is present.
Well, light it on fire and inhale it, and what does it smell like?
Is there fucking solution?
Maybe somewhere in there, it's like take it out into the alley or something, but yeah,
it's basically like, yeah, let's get, let's get, I don't know, 10 to 15 grains of arsenic
on fire.
It's like, hey, does this smell like arsenic?
It's essentially what they're clicking to say.
Right.
Oh, Jesus.
The second way you can do it, you don't have to light it on fire.
You can also dilute it with hydrochloric acid, and if the item turns blue, there's arsenic
present.
Okay.
I thought you were going to say, put it in your mouth and chew on it.
Chew on it.
Chew on it, and if it has a mouse-like taste.
Oh, I can't get that out of my head, that visual.
But at the same time, more manufacturing companies work on synthesizing new dye formulas to be
made without arsenic, imagine.
Can you imagine?
And as these techniques improve, the quality of the colors that they produce are just as
good if not better than the arsenic-based greens that were so popular when they first
arrived.
And Jay included some pictures.
This was, this is a picture of two skeletons at a ball, like a skeleton asking a skeleton
to dance.
I can only see your nails.
Oh.
There we go.
Oh dear.
Can you see that?
That's eerie.
And it says the arsenic walls underneath it.
That's from Punch Magazine.
And then at the bottom, there's a wallpaper stamp that they had on a product that says
guaranteed free from arsenic in the little sign for it.
Can you see that?
Oh my God.
So that would be like, that's almost like your tag on your pillow that says don't remove
under a thread of government infringement or whatever.
Right.
That's the same thing of like, no poison here.
Don't worry.
In 1895, a law is finally passed that regulates the working conditions for any laborers who
have to handle arsenic.
By this time though, the arsenic-based dye has been mostly phased out between people
finally heating the public warnings and not buying it, which then leads retailers to end
sales of these products.
So yeah, obviously just demand goes down and it goes away.
It is for direct legislation banning the use of arsenic-based dyes.
Great Britain never passed such a ban.
Shut up.
Not once.
Now, without the power of public newspapers, the will of activists, and the sway of the
consumers opting for safer products, arsenic-based dyes would have never been eliminated.
And that is the crazy story of the deadly green arsenic dresses and wallpapers and assorted
flower arrangements of victory in England.
And that is why I love Victorian England.
What a hellhole.
Oh my God.
Just the smells.
Not only the mouse fucking smells.
And then the clothes are going to kill you.
The clothes will kill you.
The clothes will kill you.
Also, that was back when, say, if you were like middle class, maybe, and I'm, you know,
again, I think we all know this about me, but I'm basing all of this on period pieces
I've seen on Acorn TV.
So I could completely be inaccurate about this.
But you would get a dress, like if you had a nice dress, you would wear that one dress
all the time.
Totally.
I was thinking the same thing.
Right?
So there was a good chance there are people who, it's like you, that was your good going
out dress.
Totally.
Totally.
It wasn't like it was in rotation.
Yeah.
Exactly.
You didn't have a closet full of clothes like us.
There's a fast fashion do now.
If the whites of your eyes ever turn green, my god, okay, imagine how scary that would
be.
Terrifying.
And you're just trying to get your like three pence of for the week, totally, totally.
Six shillings, please, poison.
Oh my god.
Hi, my eyes are green.
So fucked up.
Great job.
Fucking.
Thank you.
Love of Victorian poisoning.
Okay, so this week, my story, I think I've heard about it throughout the years.
It was a cold case for more than 30 years.
And over the summer, when we were on break, I was doing my usual late night cold case
snooze scrolling and found out that there has been an update on this one, a big one.
This is one of the most notorious cold cases in Albuquerque history, the murder of Caitlin
Arquette.
So I got information from krque.com by an article by Courtney Allen, a Rolling Stone
article by Andrea Marks, realcrimes.com, the karkette.com website, the Albuquerque Journal
by Jolene Gutierrez Kruger, a Buzzfeed article by Tim Stelow, koat.com by Maggie Krajewski,
Wikipedia, of course, and the Reddit forum on resolve mysteries.
So okay, in June of 1989, 18 year old Caitlin Arquette from Albuquerque, New Mexico had
just graduated from high school.
She had a promising future.
She was a popular honor student and described by her sister as shy and bookish.
And she had been accepted to the University of New Mexico and she planned to attend medical
school one day.
So she was a manager at an import shop and I just moved into her department with her
boyfriend of a year and a half.
I'm just going to say his first name.
His name was Yoon and she had met him at a coffee shop.
She told her parents he was just four years older than her, but he was actually eight
years older than her, which was an age difference she knew her parents would disapprove of.
But they really liked him.
He spent the holidays with them, you know, they were together for a year and a half,
which is a long time I think for an 18 year old, but the couple started having issues
pretty quickly after moving in together and six weeks into moving in together.
On July 16th, 1989, Caitlin goes to her mom Lois's house and tells her that she plans
on breaking up with Yoon and asked her mom that if he called to lie to him about her
whereabouts.
So that night, which is Sunday, she goes over to her friend's house for dinner.
She leaves there at about 1045, heads back to her parents' house.
She's driving alone in her 1984 Red Tempo, Ford Tempo.
And being a Sunday night and it's also raining, there's little traffic out.
So just blocks from downtown Albuquerque at approximately 11pm.
She reaches an intersection.
I think she stops, there's some weird information here.
Just then another car pulls up next to her and the occupants pull out a gun and begin
shooting at her car.
One bullet enters the driver's side window, shattering the window.
A bullet enters Caitlin's left temple and a second bullet punctures her cheek.
I know.
So having been shot, her car then drifts from the road approximately seven feet from where
she had been shot and crashes into a light pole.
So cut to shortly before midnight, Caitlin's mother Lois is notified that her daughter's
in the hospital.
She rushes to her side thinking she had just been in a car accident.
But let me tell you a little bit about Lois.
So Lois Duncan was born on April 28th, 1934.
She's a bookworm from a young age and started writing and submitting her stories to magazines
at the age of 10.
She sells her first story at the age of 13.
She dropped out of Duke University in 1953 to get married and start a family.
She then divorces, supports her three kids by writing.
She then remarries a man named Don Arquette and in total had five kids with Caitlin being
the baby.
Lois continues to write and publish magazine articles.
She wrote over 300 articles published in major magazines and then published her first
novel Love Songs for a Joyce in 1958.
She went on to write a bunch of books, do a bunch of badass things.
She pivoted to writing young adult suspense novels, most notably, I Know What You Did
Last Summer and Supernatural Horror Novel Summer of Fear, which was adapted into a movie
directed by Wes Craven in 1978.
So she becomes this really popular YA suspense author and spends her life writing.
Essentially, she's an award-winning, well-known pioneer of the genre and she is dubbed the
Queen of Teen Thrillers.
So when she arrives at the hospital and learns her daughter had actually been shot not in
a car accident, she of course is immediately suspect of her, of Caitlin's boyfriend whom
she knew Caitlin planned on breaking up with that very day, obviously.
So when the police go to the couple's apartment to question the boyfriend five hours after
the shooting takes place, he at the time clings to be completely unaware that she was even
in the hospital, hadn't heard from anyone, didn't know about it.
He tells them he had been out with friends and he also showed the investigators a note
that Caitlin had left him basically apologizing for the fight and telling him that she would
be home later, which totally contradicts what she told her mom.
He admits to investigators that he had argued but said he didn't know that she had been
planning on breaking up with him or that she even didn't plan on coming home that night.
Later he joins her parents at the hospital where just 24 hours after being shot, Caitlin
Arquette passes away.
Six months after Caitlin's murder, investigators announced that she had been the victim of
quote, a random act of violence.
So in Lois's opinion, her daughter knew her killer, it was like clearly to her a targeted
attack, why just randomly shoot at a loan at a girl on her own in a car, you know.
So then Lois starts looking into Caitlin's life.
She learns that two months before Caitlin's murder, Caitlin and her boyfriend had taken
a trip to Southern California where they had allegedly become involved in a car insurance
scam in which the boyfriend staged a car accident using a car that Caitlin had rented with
Lois's credit card.
So this gets very speculative and also talks a lot about Vietnamese organized crime.
So to me, and Lois kind of hones it on this and it's got some tones of racism to it.
The accident was allegedly orchestrated by an organization of powerful members of Southern
California's Vietnamese community.
There's a shady doctor who is apparently in on it with insurance claims, there's a shady
insurance adjuster and in the end, Caitlin and her boyfriend are given $1,500 for their
part in the scam and they use that money to move in together into their apartment.
So Lois believes that since she was breaking up with her boyfriend, the other Vietnamese
gang members fear that she would go to police about this huge multi-million dollar scam
they were running and that they silenced her.
Lois is convinced that Caitlin had been killed by her hired assassin because she knew too
much about the criminal activities and then five days after her death, her boyfriend attempts
to take his own life by stabbing himself in the stomach with a four-inch knife.
Oh, God.
I know.
He survives and when investigators ask him about like why he did it, he said that he felt
so much guilt over the fact that he and Caitlin had fought that day or had been fighting and
if they hadn't been, she would have never been out that night and out alone.
And investigators also compared the note allegedly left by Caitlin on the night of the murder
to known samples of her handwriting and the investigator believes that the handwriting
wasn't the same as Caitlin's.
Hmm.
It doesn't matter though.
Albuquerque police still believe that the boyfriend didn't do it and then Vietnamese
gang were not involved at all and they stick to their belief that the murder was a random
act of violence but they have no leads.
And then six months after the murder, a man named Robert Garcia is brought to authorities
after they're given a tip by an informant who names this man.
He's interrogated for two hours and then tells investigators that he'd been in a car with
three friends on the night of Caitlin's murder.
And then he claims that one of his friends who he was in the car with shot a woman in
her car on a dare.
Police arrest Robert Garcia and the two friends he named based on this confession.
So based on Robert's confession, three men are arrested and they find out one of the
men had recently sold his car.
They connected to an eyewitness who had seen one of the men chasing a young woman in her
car and the night of Caitlin's murder an hour before it happened.
But essentially authorities discover that the dude who confessed who said he was there
that night had been in jail on the night of Caitlin's murder.
So yeah, so it wasn't, it was a false confession.
None of them were there.
All these other things fall apart like the gun he says they use couldn't have been used.
It was broken.
The case goes back to being cold after all the charges are dropped.
So critical of law enforcement's progress, Lois spends decades investigating the case
with her family.
She enlists the help of psychics and also a private investigator named Patricia Caristo.
Also Patricia Pat discovers that Caitlin's car had damage to the left rear bumper and
side panel.
So it had hit the pole in the front, but also had damage to the back, which led Pat to believe
that it had been hit by at least one other car before it crashed, which our details police
never released to the public.
Lois even suspects there's a police cover up and there's all this information about that.
But it's not that far fetched because the Albuquerque PD does have some shady shit going
on back then, which included them surveilling attorneys who were suing the department.
And also the reporters who investigated those claims.
So they're doing some weird undercover corrupt shit.
When the American Civil Liberties Union tries to get the police department to hand over
the files about these cases and about these people being surveilled, the police department
burns the fucking files.
Oh, yeah.
That's an option.
Yeah.
That's one.
They don't exist because we burn them.
We burn them.
Also another police officer is convicted of murder and bank robbery.
Oh, yeah.
All right, so and I mean, there's like decades of police corruption we could talk about in
Albuquerque, but we're not going to have alleged, but it is alleged and also it just immediately
put me back to the story, I think it was like a month or two ago that I did where the cops
in this story that took the false confession from the guy were also bank robbers.
That's right.
Like in their free time.
That's right.
Yeah.
That's right.
Yeah.
Twist.
Okay.
This is horrible.
At the time, New Mexico had a 15 year statute of limitations for murder.
15 years?
15 years.
So if you can skedaddle yourself for 15 years after you're a murder, you're off the hook.
That sounds like it's left over from the Wild West days, doesn't it?
It sure does.
It's just never got updated.
Yeah.
Oops.
And at the time, the Albuquerque Police Department cites this reason as the reason they're not
going to further investigate Katelyn's cold case.
In 1999, Detective Don Mayhew of the cold case unit told Jolene Gutierrez Krueger, the
investigative reporter, that he considered the case closed.
He said, quote, we're not going to look at it.
Oh.
Uh-huh.
Okay.
Yeah.
That's that then.
Yeah.
They just think it was a fucking random shooting.
And at the time.
Sorry, go ahead.
No, I was just going to say that's a heartbreaker because usually when we talk about cold case
detectives, they're the ones that are interested in opening things back up and getting their
hands dirty.
Exactly.
That was a bit of a like, oh, they usually, that's not usually the person that says that.
That's right.
That's right.
They're like the dogged ones.
Right?
Mm-hmm.
Well, like especially because I think in Albuquerque was a pretty lawless or was a pretty dangerous
city at the time.
So, you know, it's the cold case detectives who look at the old ones and have time to
concentrate on them because there's so much crime going on that the current investigators
don't have time to look into it.
Whatever, whatever.
Right.
Okay.
So, another nod towards Lois's police cover-up theory are the facts regarding how the scene
was initially handled.
So the first officer on the scene was a violent crimes detective who happened to be passing
by the scene at the time.
He was off duty, his name was Ronald Merriman, pulls up to the scene and had seen the car
accident and there was another car there at the time, a Volkswagen Beetle.
So he assumed it was just a regular car accident.
So he calls in the scene as an accident with no injuries.
When he pulls up and sees that her car had, there was like bullet holes in the car and
a bloodied girl in the front seat, he doesn't change that call in.
He also lets the witness in the VW bug who's at the scene, he lets him leave only getting
his name and phone number, which the phone number turned out to be fake.
And then he and the second officer at the scene fucking leave.
Everyone of course has a different story, but the ambulance drivers who showed up in
an affidavit say that they fucking showed up and there was nobody there.
That's insane.
It's insane.
I felt a girl dying in the front seat of this car.
So after her daughter's death, Lois begins writing children's picture books saying she
couldn't write about young women in life-threatening situations anymore after her daughter's death.
In 1992, she puts out a book called Who Killed My Daughter, a nonfiction account of her daughter's
unsolved murder and then follows it up in 2013 with a book called One to the Wolves,
which has a forward by Ann Rule.
On June 15, 2016, sadly, at the age of 82, Lois Duncan dies in her home in Florida of
natural causes.
Her husband knows that she had suffered a series of strokes in the years prior and she'd
never got to find out who killed her daughter, her youngest daughter.
Then in July of this year, so just a couple of months ago, 32 years after the murder of
Caitlyn Arquette, police bring in a 53-year-old ex-convict named Paul Apodaca.
He had been picked up on parole violations and tells police that he had information on
quote, murders from a long time ago and wanted to talk about them.
And that's when he begins to confess.
Not just Caitlyn's murder, but to two others from the same time period as well as a series
of rapes that he committed in the early 90s.
Oh my God.
I know.
The first murder was of 21-year-old Althea Oakley, a University of New Mexico student
who he followed and fatally stabbed to death in June of 1988 as she walked home from a
party near the university.
He also confessed to the murder of a 13-year-old girl in 1988 who he shot while she walked
with a friend.
Her name was just released a couple of weeks ago as Stella Gonzalez.
I know, he confessed to several rapes that took place in the early 90s and he confessed
to the shooting death of Caitlyn Arquette.
He was the man on the scene that violent crimes detective Ronald Merriman got a name, a false
phone number four, which detectives never, ever fucking questioned for 32 years that
the case was cold.
So he's in the Volkswagen.
Yep.
Holy shit.
Then in his early 20s, he had been driving a primer gray Volkswagen Beetle on the night
of the murder, which was mentioned as being seen by witnesses throughout the investigation.
There's so many little details about this that it's hard to name everything and every
article has some new thing, but had the investigators looked into this piece of shit, the first
guy on the fucking scene, they would have found that he had multiple convictions at
the time already had a history of violent crimes against women and girls and that throughout
the 80s, he was charged with committing multiple violent attacks against women.
And if the cold case detectives who later investigated the murder looked into him, they
would have found that a few years after Caitlyn's murder, he was convicted of raping his 14-year-old
stepsister.
Oh my God.
And when he tried to give a reason for why he did it, he said he did it so he could be
in prison with his brother who was serving 45 years for murder.
So just completely heartless and horrible.
And allegedly Patricia, member Pat, the private investigator, had focused on Apodaca as a suspect.
She had even located him in prison for the rape that he had committed and interviewed
him in jail in 1995.
And Apodaca was mentioned 26 times in Lois' book about her daughter's murder.
So they always suspected him.
Pat had given the Albuquerque PD, like a 75-page book of her findings, definitely focused on
Apodaca and they never heard back from the PD about it.
They probably burned it.
They probably burned it.
Just as of a couple weeks ago, Apodaca has only been charged with murder in the first
degree of Althea Oakley's murder.
He stated that he chose his victims randomly as victims of opportunity.
But hopefully more charges will be pending.
Caitlyn's sister, Carrie, told KRQE.com's Courtney Allen that Caitlyn's death shattered
her family.
She said, quote, when Paul Apodaca shot my sister, he murdered my family.
And she actually became a criminologist and she works in Denver now and says that she
got into the profession largely because of her sister's death.
Yeah.
It's pretty amazing.
Lois Duncan, before her death, also founded a research center to help investigate cold
cases, which later became the nonprofit resource center for victims of violent deaths, whose
mission is, quote, to help the survivors and co-victims of homicide deal with the aftermath
of a violent death.
Of her mother, Carrie said, she's here and she is looking down.
And that is the long time cold case now solved of Caitlyn Arquette.
Holy shit.
I know, right?
I mean, thank God it solved, but what a horrible mishandling and bunch of bullshit that would
a nightmare.
Yeah.
And what a disappointment that it's only solved because this piece of shit confessed.
It was right there for them if they had interviewed him for a couple hours and had gotten just
his statement on fucking, on record and then looked at his past, which had violence against
women.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, he didn't just have like a record or a rap sheet, but that would have been, it should
have been, if they had looked it up, that would have been a humongous red flag of this
is not just your average Joe on this scene.
No.
I just don't, I want, I wish there was video footage of like how, I just don't understand
how that detective came upon a scene like that and just kind of like, oh, are you leaving?
Oh, that's cool.
Or whatever.
And then, then comes upon the bleeding, dying girl or that before that, before that was
like, no, you can go got your info.
You can go.
No, you take them directly to the fucking station.
It's like police work one on one.
I mean, it's just, yeah, yeah, that's, that's horrifying.
It's horrifying.
It's horrifying.
And they, you know, are saying he's serial killer and looking into and serial rapist and
looking into any connections he might have with more cases.
Wow.
Yeah.
Wow.
Rough one.
Like, I love a solved old cold case.
Absolutely.
Um, well, maybe we should do a couple of fucking hurrays to end on a positive note.
All right.
My first one is, um, from the Gmail and, uh, it's the subject line is 15 year overnight
success, it says high ladies after over a decade of winging it and faking it until I
made it.
I realize I'm no longer faking.
I've quadrupled the size of my company this year, spanning from East coast to West and
show no signs of stopping.
I wanted to write in in case there's others that need to be reminded to keep putting one
foot in front of the other.
Best Emily.
Amazing.
I love it.
I love it, 15 year overnight success, it's exactly how it goes.
I love that.
You're going to be somewhere in 15 years.
See, I might as well work your ass off to get where you want to be.
This is from Twitter from Megan Lee.
My fucking hurray is that I went back to school for my second bachelor's degree after being
a stay at home mom for the past decade.
Just finished my first term and I got all A's.
Wow.
Yay.
How do you do that?
How do you get one bachelor's degree if you live on fucking two?
How do you get one A?
This is from Twitter.
It's from Camille at chr underscore C A M.
And it just says to me, I saw my first in person real life sinkhole and I just had to
tell you about it.
Hashtag fucking hurray.
That is special.
Nothing like a sinkhole in real life.
I'm proud of you, Karen, for finding something you love and making people tell you about
it.
I have to say it's one of the most satisfying things about this show for me is when you
and I sit here and we're just racking our brains trying to be interesting or tell some
sort of anecdote, something to fill the air.
And then those are the things where I just go, oh, I always think like this, like I can
tell you what happened in the half an hour that led up before my friend Laura and I went
to look at that sinkhole in San Francisco.
I know everything about that day because it was so such a massive experience and such
a like a like an unbelievable like like feeling, which I understand some people get when they're
like, I want to see the Rolling Stones in real life or whatever.
And that's how they feel there, but it's like for me, this sidewalk was 30 feet in the ground.
That's the Mick Jagger of Karen's life.
That's my Mick Jagger.
They're real.
And now other people understand like you got to slap your eyes on it to really appreciate
it.
Slap your eyes on it.
That's disgusting.
All right.
Here's someone from the email.
Hello.
My fucking hurray is this.
After two plus years of paperwork and waiting, I finally had top surgery.
And I love my sexy new body.
And by sexy, I mean my flat chested pandemic belly body.
Even though I now have the physique of a well fed four year old, I couldn't be happier.
So hurray and cheers to no tits.
Abby from Baltimore.
Congratulations, Abby.
Abby, you did it.
That's awesome.
That's awesome.
That's great.
Yeah.
So much to celebrate if you have a fucking hurray, little or big, you can have, you can
have gotten all A's, haven't gone back to school.
You can, you can just witness a sinkhole in real life or anything and everything in between.
That's right.
We'll hear about it.
We love it.
We're happy for you guys.
Fucking hurray.
Thanks for listening once again.
And guess what else?
It's the holiday season.
You know, when I first heard a Christmas song over the weekend, I got legit excited.
Yeah.
We need it.
Yeah.
We need it this year.
Oh, yeah.
That's great.
There's a, there's a way, you know, sometimes the holiday season immediately makes you think
of like what you have to do or what you can't do or what you should do or blah, blah, blah.
I think this year especially, because this 2021 has been hard.
Yeah.
It has been hard for everybody in all different ways, all different contexts, but genuinely
for the human experience, we don't even understand how fucked up we are because of how fucked
up we are from zoom alone.
So this holiday season, take care of yourself, be your own Santa, make sure you're okay.
Do the things you can do and do not fucking engage with the shit you can't deal with because
you don't deserve it.
You deserve to have a nice holiday season, whatever that means for you personally.
Yeah.
And I love that.
So that's a really great message.
Right?
Definitely.
Definitely.
And stay safe out there, everyone.
Oh, and also stay sexy.
And don't get murdered.
Goodbye.
Goodbye.
Oh, Dottie.
Why are you sitting down right now?
Elvis, do you want a cookie?
Yeah.
This has been an exactly right production.
Our producer is Hannah Kyle Crichton, associate producer Alejandra Keck, engineer and mixer
Steven Ray Morris, researchers J. Elias and Haley Gray, send us your hometowns and your
fucking heres at myfavoritmurder at gmail.com and follow the show on Instagram and Facebook
at my favorite murder and Twitter at my fave murder.
And for more information about this podcast, our live shows, merch or to join the fan cult,
go to myfavoritmurder.com.
Thanks for watching, and don't forget to like, comment, and subscribe.