My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark - 69 - Never A Mannequin

Episode Date: May 18, 2017

Beef down, everyone! It's a brand new My Favorite Murder. This week, Karen and Georgia discuss the Riverside serial killer and the tragic mystery surrounding Keith Warren's death.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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Starting point is 00:00:00 We at Wondery live, breathe and downright obsess over true crime and now we're launching the ultimate true crime fan experience, Exhibit C. Join now by following Wondery, Exhibit C on Facebook and listen to true crime on Wondery and Amazon Music, Exhibit C. It's truly criminal. Want a podcast? Hey, let's podcast. Hello, welcome to my favorite murder. That's Karen. That's Georgia. Hi. I'm in my element right now. I'm double fisting petting cats. And it's my dream. That's how Georgia parties. Yeah. We just got back from our the last weekend of our first tour. That's right. Thank you Washington DC. Thank you Baltimore. Thank you Philly. Ford slash Glenside, Pennsylvania. We had the best weekend. We met
Starting point is 00:01:08 so many great people. So many incredible people. They sent us home with so many lovely presents. My suitcase was crammed. And we just gave Steven many, many of the presents that you gave us to give him. Yeah. After we picked what we wanted out of his gifts. Yes. There's lots of stuff that we didn't tell him about that we're just keeping. He'll never know. Little mustache things that we get to have. But we did want to mention it was very exciting because this time it felt like and maybe it was the area that we were in. Oh, yeah. Washington. Yeah. We met. We met a forensic analyst. We met a criminal defense attorney who listened to the show, not just on the street. Right. Yes. They came to the show. They bought VIP tickets. They had a high high. How are you take a picture
Starting point is 00:01:52 with us? And it was very exciting to be meeting actual people. What was that? I don't know. My microphone. Oh my God. George's microphone is leaving. They were people who are in the business of stopping crime who listened to this podcast, which we were very, very honored by and thank you all for what you do and for listening. But the most exciting part. I'll talk slowly so that while Steven fixed George's microphone, she can still participate. Don't tell all the story without me. Steven, hurry. He did it. Wow. That was fast. The most exciting for, well, I'll say for me, I think for you too. Oh, I started crying crying when we were in Baltimore. The Rams head. Thank you everybody. The Rams said that was a really cool like rock and roll venue. It's so weird.
Starting point is 00:02:44 Like you could smell the sticky beer from decades past. Yeah. The pixies were playing the night after us, which we were freaking out about. We kept saying we were trying to, we wanted to leave something for Kim Deal somewhere in the dressing room. But anyway, these two guys walk up in the meet and greet and flip out an ID, their federal ID, and it turned out two FBI agents were at the show. And he knew to flip his ID open because we'd lose our shit. So he walks towards us like in the copious cop manner. I think he was like six foot six. Listen. Both of them were. Both of them were incredibly handsome. They were two hot FBI agents with big smiles on their faces doing a bit for us. And they looked, they looked like FBI agents, young ones that, but were cool.
Starting point is 00:03:32 Yes. Not that, you know what I mean? Yes. Well, no, they were great and they were super funny because they immediately were doing a bit about the girl that did a hometown. And Georgia, this was my favorite part is I was come immediately just like, I had no idea what to say. And I was completely starstruck where I'm like, I looked at this guy's ID. And I was like, this is fake. Yells across me and goes, move your finger, your fingers covering your face. And it was, it was just the way he flipped open his like wallet looking ID, FBI agent ID. His finger was over his own face, which is like a trick people use when they're trying to trick you into like getting into your car. Totally. I've always started laughing because she moved his finger. And of
Starting point is 00:04:14 course it was him. I did not believe him. And I was like, that's a fucking age old. Everyone knows that trick. And then it turns out it was not a trick. They were two real deal FBI agents who worked for they worked for the anti terrorism squad. I don't know if that's a thing. I doubt it's a squad gang, right? The anti terrorism gang. And then the reason the other guy was with him was because the first guy who covered his face was supposed to go with his girlfriend or fiance, fiance. She got deployed to Afghanistan. Yes. I think she was the forensic pathologist. Maybe. Yeah, she definitely worked in the biz as well. But she was also in the military because she got deployed to, was it Afghanistan? It was totally Afghanistan. And we were just like you're
Starting point is 00:05:10 the three of your rock stars. You're living a life very different from ours. And also we talk about what you do all the time as a four experts. I mean, now you're here as as like audience members. But you're actually the experts. It was the coolest experience. I asked so many of the experts who were like, I do this. I asked most of them, are you mad at us? And it turns out none of them are mad at us. Oh, and then the cop. Now wait, was that Austin, the cop with the eyeball killer? That was, oh yeah, it was that was at the moon tower, right? It was moon tower. No, I think it was DC with the pregnant chick. No, that was, no, no. Are you sure? I think it was DC because the cop, they were having a cop convention. Remember, you're exactly
Starting point is 00:05:58 right. And that's why he was there. So there was the guy with the eyeball killer that we did a couple few up long time ago. I don't know how many episodes we've recorded. And I'm like, this is number 10, right? He wanted to meet us. He like tweeted that he was in town for a cop convention. And I was like, Oh God, are you mad at us? Because I or mad at me because I have no idea what I said about you in the episode. But his daughter in law came in pregnant and was like, no, he thinks you're great. Here's a signed copy of his book. But I'm sorry, all of that is right, except it wasn't the pregnant girl that was separate. There was three pregnant girls, three girls, the eyeball, all the eyeball killers, wasn't it his stepdaughter? Yeah,
Starting point is 00:06:44 something like that. And they were, it was her and her two friends. Yeah. I mean, it doesn't matter or whatever. It doesn't matter, except for that. We have these great experiences with people for 45 seconds. And then another experience happens right after. It's very hard to keep them all track. But we like them all. The bummer was he was there and he waiting outside, but we had no ability, like it was the end and we didn't have the ability to get him inside. I feel like someday soon we're going to post the Philly episode. It was the last episode and it was sweet as fuck. I thought some girl that I should be able to name recorded the stay sexy don't get murder part that the crowd yells with us. And I put it on Instagram and it's just so sweet. It's like sweet as in
Starting point is 00:07:28 like sweet. It's just like this great moment. Oh, cool. I love it. I love when we do that at the end. It's so much fun. It's very fun. And all three shows were great. And all three audiences were like one was better than the next. They were just like, they were all so great and fun and excited and thank you all so, so much for being there. And yes, stop asking us on Twitter. We're going to come to your town. Yeah, we will. Yeah, there's a planned fall tour. Yeah, we just want to keep doing it. Yeah. Listen, so saying the word Australia and that's all I'm saying. That's right. And say the word New Zealand because that's also in there. And New Zealand and yes, we're coming to your California. No, your state. We're coming to your personal California. Anyways, it's what your
Starting point is 00:08:14 California is like this is my California, but maybe Texas is your California. Right. Yeah. Like what's your California? What's your California? We also thank you for sharing the news that Ian Brady is dead. That was your, your murder. That's the Moore's murder. Yeah. I thought he was dead. Who cares? He was never going to get out. I mean, whatever. He died. Okay. He died. I mean, it's great because he's a murderer and he deserves to be dead, but okay. Now he is. But the thing a lot of people were very excited about is the very recent casting of Zac Efron to play the part of Ted Bundy. They were excited, but there were some weren't some, you know, they just, you guys seem to want to know what our opinion was because you had said,
Starting point is 00:08:56 who was the guy that you said should play him? Never mind, but no recollection, even though I remember us talking about it. Okay. I'll be able to remember it. Stephen. Stephen's like, I don't listen to this. What do you think of it? I fucking dig it. Yeah. At first I was like, huh, but then I remembered, you know, he does these goofy movies, but he's also done some cool shit and he's a good actor. Seems like a cool dude. And then someone put a photo side by side of like a young Ted Bundy and like a photo that kind of matched of Zac Efron and it was just exactly what it was supposed to be. Yeah. So if he can, if he can act it, man, it'll be legit. And I tell you now he can act it because I may have, I may have been
Starting point is 00:09:42 keeping this, uh, to myself up until this point, although I can't imagine why because I, I love the movie 17 again. Yes. He was my lover in the mid 90s when he was 12. Um, the movie 17 again, I believe it's called with him and Tom Lennon, where he plays his own father. Yeah. He is so brilliant in it. That must be the one I was thinking of. Yeah. It's such good acting. It's a Disney movie and it's a body switch. You know, I'm young again. Yeah. It's Matt. It's basically Zac Efron doing an impression of Matthew Perry and it is so fucking great. Yeah. My sister made me watch it for the first time. She's like, you have to watch it. You'll like it. And I have to trust her when she says that because she's always right. And it is, it's just masterful acting by him. He doesn't
Starting point is 00:10:28 get enough credit for what a good actor he is and he tries to do interesting stuff. Yeah. My only thing was, uh, April texted me, my friend April Richardson of go base side podcast fame. She texted me. It was like, I know I'm the one millionth person to tell you this, but did you know Zac Efron? And she's like, and what do you think? And I said, you're the millionth person that's asked, but, um, I'm, you're the first person I'm answering. And I said, I'm, I believe in him 1000 percent. He just has to beef down because he's too cut right now. It's like, it's that like 70s cut, which is like super skinny, but also muscular, but there's no like sinewy. That's it. Yeah. Yeah, he definitely has to do that, but he's like a bike rider as opposed to a weight lifter. So yeah,
Starting point is 00:11:11 I'm just excited to see it. I mean, there's not really a good one at all. There's the Mark Harmon one, which is fine, but it's like a made for TV movie. So it's not like, um, real, real, elastic. Right. It's not, it's not scholastic. It's not scholastic. It's not realistic. It's not bombastic. It's none of those things. Um, I think it'll be good. Also, because I think people are just like, let's ride this fucking true crime wave as hard as we can. So people are seeing that there's so much interest. They've just combined two great things, which is like, what are girls like? True crime and Zac Efron. Totally. Let's do this thing. Speaking of, listen, next week, we're going to talk about the DD Blanchard and Gypsy Rose documentary that's on HBO. So go watch it
Starting point is 00:11:59 and then we're going to watch it and talk about it, but it's definitely something we want to chat with you about. Yes. Um, I can't wait to see it. It's called Mommy Dearest and Dead. Yes. So go to HBO. It's on HBO. I think I'm pretty sure it is. Pretty sure. Uh, go watch that. Yeah. Go watch yourself. Um, bunch of people have watched it and asked us about it. Georgia did her homework. I did not. So I didn't want to out you. Thank you. Did you hear me say that we're going to watch it? Yes. It was, that's called teamwork and I appreciate it. But, um, Karen didn't do it and I did it. Can you imagine? Oh my God, what a cunt I would be. There was some, was there something in there that really wanted to do that though?
Starting point is 00:12:38 No, I was like, how do I get around saying this? Well, that was masterful. Well, I just, yeah, pretend that I hadn't either. Thank you. You took that hit. Steven, did you watch it? Not yet. Okay. Steven. All right. So get on it. It is on HBO though. Okay. Good. Two against one. Mimi, Elvis? It's always two against one in this setup. Um, no, but I can't wait because, uh, I believe Jamie Lee did it at our New York, our live New York episode. Which we never aired, right? Did we not? I have no idea. I have no idea. You did. We did. Yeah. Okay, good. Okay. So I'm glad Steven's here to, to tell us what our life is. Yeah. But I, on that particular story, no information is enough. So the fact that someone has put together an actual documentary and has her, um,
Starting point is 00:13:27 Gypsy today talking. Oh my God. There's an interview, a prison interview. And the whole time I was just like, do I believe her? You cannot tell. And then you're like, is she crying tears or is she just sounding like she, and there's so much shit. And then I didn't know the background at the mom. So that was really fucking interesting. That's in there as well. Oh my God. And I can't wait. I know. It's, I very much liked it. And the, and the exciting part is, um, which a bunch of people told us and we discovered the director, I don't have her name handy, is a murderino. Right. Who, somebody posted a thing that said, look when the, when this, um, famous documentary filmmaker just shows up on our Facebook page. Like commenting on it. Like, thanks. I'm glad you guys liked it.
Starting point is 00:14:09 Yeah. So cool. It's so cool. So we'll tell you guys who it is next week. We'll write it down. We'll have a whole prepared thing. We'll talk. Imagine. We'll chat. Um, oh, I wanted to say, so my, in the vein of, we love it when just suddenly people like come out of the woodwork that you would never know have a murder and then they tell you about it. Like your uncle did that, right? Like, oh, I caught the fucking. Oh yeah. My cousin, Marty, uh, is the one that lifted the Richard Ramirez's fingerprints at the last breaking and entering in San Francisco where they figured out who the night stalker was. And then you were like, why didn't you tell me? And he's like, why would I tell you that ever? So I have a similar one. My cousin Nancy, who's like pretty
Starting point is 00:14:48 significantly older than me, you know, uh, I think in, I don't know. And she's just like a normal, really lovely, normal person and married with kids. She teaches old people how to use the internet. Like she's just, she's just a really lovely woman. So she then emailed me. Sounds like she's very patient. It does, doesn't it? She emailed me and says, hi, Georgia. I listened to one of your, my favorite murder podcast today. Um, one of the questions was something about someone you knew, a new and murderer, blah, blah, blah, blah. Um, well, back in the late 80s, early 90s, I worked at the Peterson publishing house in West Hollywood. One of the guys in the photo lab killed one of the models on a shoot. I knew him when I worked there, but the murder was years
Starting point is 00:15:28 after I left the company, but I was an editorial assistant of one of the car magazines and he'd come by and hand me the photos. He never smiled, but look me directly in the eye. It was creepy. And then I knew anyway, and add another relative who knows a murderer. Love Nancy. And then I, I was like, I think this is the one I know, which is such an interesting story. It's Charles Rathbun. Yes. Who killed Linda Sobek in the fucking desert, right? And he said, oh, I hit her with my car on accident when I was showing her some cool moves and I buried her body because I got scared. And it's like, no, you fucking didn't do. And then like, they found another one of his bodies close by that as well. Yeah. Was it in the desert? Was it in, um, the Angeles national forest?
Starting point is 00:16:09 Yeah. But I think it was like a open thing. I don't know. Open plane type of thing. Right, right, right. It was just far away. Like he would basically get them to come and go on, quote unquote, shoots. And maybe that was just in my imagination. I like pictured it as a desert. So yeah, that looks, that's what it looks like. It doesn't. It was what we know is it was far away. Because I don't know my, I'm pretty sure though that that was a city confidential for Los Angeles about the death of Linda Sobek. Yes. And I told, I, oops, I messaged her back and was like, I'm fucking gone into a rural, rural area with a guy who wanted to take photos of me when I was younger and didn't get murdered. And so that murder is just, I know what it's like to
Starting point is 00:16:58 suddenly be like, Oh fuck. This was a mistake and nobody knows I'm here. Yes. Yeah. So scary. And I don't know this. I thought I kind of knew this person. I don't know him at all. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Well, when you're young, you think you're friends with everybody. Yeah. It's just like, Oh yeah, my buddy, that's a photographer or whatever where it's like, where's he from? What's, does he have any siblings? How much do you know this person? And you're easily charmed. You don't bring anyone with you. Right. You, you, you do it by their dictate. This is how we're going to do it. This is where we're going to go. Cause you don't know to say, fuck no. Well, also you're so complimented by
Starting point is 00:17:33 the fact that someone's like, I think that you are a model. Right. Which I totally, I, I admit to that completely. Of course. Why wouldn't you? That's a big, that's a big part of all that. And then the shame of like, Oh, how dare you think that? I mean, it's the perfect play. Yeah. They have you coming and going. Listen, don't do it, you guys. Let's start a well populated place and you meet them there. Don't get in the car with them. Right. Right. Yes. And there's also, there was a guy that was doing this and he was actually going up to women at the Century City Mall. And he was saying he was a casting director for the new James Bond movie. Yes. And they had it on, on surveillance. Right. They have him on surveillance. And he would go to houses that
Starting point is 00:18:19 were being, he would get shown the house by a real estate agent. So he knew it was an empty house. Then he would have the women meet them at that house and kill them there. And that's how he got caught. It's so crazy. Yeah. That's amazing. Can I quickly do a podcast recommendation? Of course. And I've said, I've talked about this podcast in its first season because it was excellent. And then they, I just like listened to the second season in a fucking minute because it was so good. Yeah. It's someone knows something, which I think they're calling SKS now because no one knew anything last season. Is that the Canadian one? Yeah. With the guy with the Canadian. Lovely man. Love him. Yeah. So he, the second season is fucking great. It's really great
Starting point is 00:19:01 storytelling. He has so much empathy, which is, you know, hard to find sometimes in these stories. His name's, his name is David Reagan, Reagan, Reagan. And he's like, helped solve murders in the past. He's a documentary from like, it's, it's fucking heartbreaking. It's really well done. I highly recommend it. He has the most charming Canadian accent. He's so charming. And that first season, even though there were no hard answers, it still is such a great series. It's so good. It's hard. It's also heartbreaking is, but it's also, it never really was solved. So it's still so interesting because you don't know if someone knows something or not. Right. And it also shows what these detectives are up against when these homicides come in. It's like, because, you know,
Starting point is 00:19:46 I do have a lot of guilt about how much shit we talk about detective or police work, where it's such armchair quarterbacking. And we talk about that a lot, but it going through it that way, especially that was, that one was from the 70s, that first season murder of that little boy. And it's just like, it's you're, they're going on nothing. They have strands. They have basic bits of information. And we don't think about the fact that they don't have time. It's not like they have the next three months to look into this case. They have, you know, a bunch of other cases going as well and more adding up and they don't have the time to unfortunately give to it by no fault of their own. Right. You know, the fact that they haven't hired enough detectives, they don't
Starting point is 00:20:26 have the money to at the department. Yeah. So it turns into all that red tape stuff. Yeah. That's such a, it's such an interesting, like the fact that politics affect so many of these murder cases and how much time and attention they get, which then folds in the whole thing of when sex workers are involved and they get dismissed or when it's, or did she disappear and did she just run away? Maybe she just ran away. Yeah. That, that old kind of 70s, like I don't want to do the paperwork, she's a runaway, the, the sex working. And then also just the like, when it's a white, blonde, teenage cheerleader that's in high school, all of the political power goes behind it as opposed to anybody of color, a person that's a sex worker, person that was a drug addict. Well, what I love
Starting point is 00:21:10 about this, this episode or this season of someone or something is it's not a fucking perfect blonde cheerleader. She had been into drugs. She was an exotic dancer. You know, she was, had a temper. She wasn't, she, but she still deserves to, she still deserves to, you know, her mother is like the most heartbreaking character you've ever heard Odette, which I love that name. But I got to listen to that. Yeah. But yeah, it's not until, and then there's the thing too, of like at the time of the murder, friends and family might not want to talk, you know, they know things, they're scared, but he's, he's looking into it like 20 years later, and he's such a empathetic guy and he's just trying to, to solve it. He's not trying to,
Starting point is 00:21:52 you know, fuck with anyone. Right. And so they talk to him. Right. I mean, he's fucking great. Yeah. He's so good. So watch someone know something second season and first. It's podcast, right? Yeah. Yeah. Hi. Hi, how are you? I'm great. How are you? I'm really good. Is there anything else we wanted to? I guess my only, the one, and I can't remember if I've said this already, but I've gotten on your recommendation so into the, now I can't remember the name of it. Which one? What's it about? The, the guy, the Australian guy. Oh, crime. A mysterious wonders. Oh, honey. Yes. Mysteries abound. Mysteries abound. Oh, it is the, just the most beautiful. It is so beautifully presented. He, at the top of every
Starting point is 00:22:39 story, he cites his sources. That's the, the first thing I noticed where I'm like, ah, yes, that's what we're, that's what we're doing. But for someone who's just reading articles about mysteries throughout the internet, it's so good. It's so good. It's not his stories. He's doing no research. He's, well, he's reading articles, but he's, it's performative and it's also, he gets why certain things are interesting. I don't know. It's just, I've listened to now probably 20 of them because we've been doing so much traveling and it's just the perfect podcast. And it goes all over the place. Like seven interesting facts about urine. Or like, you know, why the like mysteries about the moon, which is my favorite fucking one. It's
Starting point is 00:23:23 like these things I never knew about. But then also he's the most droney, like a most comforting voice. So I fall asleep to it every fucking night. I thought, yeah, I was falling asleep on the plane. But then there's this one thing he does where like, he'll tell the story and then have music in between the next ones. And for some reason that music is super loud. So I keep waking up when the story's done. It's scary. But I love it. Mysteries bound. Okay. Mysteries bound so good. Okay. So do we do ours? Do we go first based on our tour or do we go first? We did Q and A last time, but then we did the live show after, no, wait, we did the live show before Q and A. Steven. Yeah. Is this like a reset or do we go from the tour? Should we flip a coin? Yeah. Flip the
Starting point is 00:24:07 flip the coin, the FBI coin. Yes. The FBI, they gave us. So wait, what side do you want? Like, the FBI guys gave us these commemorative coins that are so cool looking. Yeah. I mean, they even brought us presents. Hot FBI agents brought us presents. So it's like the best time. It was. Oh my god. I rarely get like, dumbstruck or I'm like, can't figure out one good thing to say. And I just kept laughing and going, really? Really? And like, and yeah, I almost started crying, which I don't usually do. And then every like the next 10 people who we met, I was like, those guys were at the FBI. And they were like, so what? All right. So are you pick, pick gold or blue? That's blue. That's gold. This says, Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of
Starting point is 00:24:52 Investigation, counter, counterterrorism, terrorism division and gang. It says, no, it doesn't. The counterterrorism gang. Yeah, you do it. The one in the middle is blue. You know what I'm saying? And that one's gold. Yeah. So Karen, you call it. I'll be blue. Can we flip a coin to see who calls it? I'll be blue. You be gold. Okay. Gold. Wait, are you blue? I'm. Oh, wait, but we didn't say what we're flipping to go first or last. Oh, you get it. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Oh, so you get to pick. Do you like going first or do you like going last? I don't know. I guess it depends on the story. Yeah, it does. Do we flip to whoever gets it gets to choose what who goes first? Elvis is suddenly really interested in what's happening. Georgia won that. So do you want to just pick
Starting point is 00:25:36 what you want to do? I like going first. Do it. Is yours a real big bummer? I mean, yes. So is mine. Oh, fuck it. I mean, it's a murder. It's like, no, mine's super light-hearted. Yeah, there's nothing. It's not like an old one or whatever, but it's a good one. Okay. So you just do what you want. Okay. Mine's pretty short. Okay. And what? I just love it. Like, we can't even do a coin flip correctly. No, we're talking. We like recommend these investigative journalism, like fucking, like next level pieces of journalism podcasts. And then we're like, flip a coin to flip a coin. Steven, did we, who went first? It's just slop. It's so enjoyable. It's slop in a charming rapper. Yes, for sure. You know what I mean? I mean, let's hope. Like what kind of candy is really gross?
Starting point is 00:26:27 And then you're like, Oh, it looks so good. Remember Rocky Road, which was dark chocolate covered marshmallows and like some weird nut, maybe a walnut chocolate. And oh, fuck those were good. Do they not have them anymore? Oh, I was, I was naming it as a bad one. Oh, I guess there's no candy. That's bad. Really? Yeah, I guess you're right. Let's talk about candy for a half an hour. I actually, when we were leaving the airport, I fucking will talk about candy skippers. When I was leaving the airport, it was in that place where we had traveled so much. I was so tired. I was so tired when we got back on Monday. And I was supposed to do a show that night, right? And bailed on it because I was like, by the time the show was going to start,
Starting point is 00:27:05 it would have been two a.m. my time. And I had been traveling all week. I was like, what was I going to do another podcast on the way home? Were you? I did. We did my other podcast. Do you need a ride? I recorded one on the way home. Honey. Then I got home when I laid down all of my limbs turned to cement. But when I was leaving the airport, I walked by a seized candy cart. And I was like, I can have seized candy. I got this voice in my head that was like, it was my birthday. I don't even know what I was thinking. But I walked up. And as I walked around the cart, I was just like, we'll see what you're going to take a pound of candy home and eat it. Don't they have the singles? They have like smaller boxes. But I got around. I walked
Starting point is 00:27:48 around the whole thing. And then I met a lady on the other side. And I said, there were little tiny boxes of things. And I go, do you have tiny boxes of nuts and chews? And she was like, oh, no, only one pound. And I was like, okay, bye. I walked away before anything else happened. Don't they, why don't they give samples in there like they do at regular seize candies? Because it's like a weird kiosk. And they don't, you know, next time their lollipops are super satisfying. Yeah, those are good. Except for there's too many flavors I don't like of the lollipops. Is there a butterscotch? I think I like that one. Yeah. Or coffee. There's coffee. There's butterscotch. I mean, listen, when you guys come to California, that's our fucking
Starting point is 00:28:25 seized candy. You just bring it to whenever I see one. I'm like, am I going anywhere soon that I need to bring a box of seized candy? I know, you know, that's our Christmas thing. We're like, that's our Hanukkah thing. Really? Yeah. That's all we do is like, you're going to go somewhere, you grab one of those two pound boxes of nuts and chews. And that's like the gift. I like the soft center as well. Do you? This is perfect with our like dark meat, white meat, turkey thing. We could share a chicken and a box of chocolates. And everybody's going to be satisfied. And what was I going to say? Yeah, we do that too. Just like a table. And there's Jewish cookies. And these boxes of candy and everyone just sits around and talks and eats too much. And it's
Starting point is 00:29:04 the best. So good. Shout out to Rugalah. Which is the best. Is it weird that I just shouted out a cookie? I love it. Look. Shout out to Rugalah. Shout out. Just plain Rugalah? Rugalah cookies. Oh, Rugalah is the lettuce. Oh, yeah. I'm not randomly shouting out a lettuce. It wasn't that random. It was Jewish cookies. Rugalah. And that's the one that you got at Michael's, the diner we went to after the show, right? No, that was, that was... Baklava. Get it straight. I don't care. Where are we? Shout out. I'm not sure. Do you want to start? Sure. All right. Shout out, Mary C. You really made some good candy. Is that Mary? Oh, I love her. Yeah. I meant the little little
Starting point is 00:29:53 lady with the glasses in the shawl. Yeah. Was that made up? I just recently found out that what's the cookie woman? No, wait, that's not right. Lorna Dune? No, one of those people are made up. Oh, probably Betty Crocker. That's it. Yeah. My friend's reading a documentary on her. Is that a thing you can read? She told me that. Yeah. Me. Wait. It's just created by a company. Yeah, which I think is not fair. It is pretty fucked up. Okay. Looking for a better cooking routine? With meal planning, shopping, and prepping handled, Hello Fresh has you covered. Hello Fresh makes home cooking easy and affordable so you can stay on track and on budget in the new year. Hello Fresh meals are convenient, seasonal, and delicious. Stay cozy all winter long with
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Starting point is 00:31:22 go to hellofresh.ca slash murder20 and use code murder20. Goodbye. Hey, I'm Mike Corey, the host of Wondery's podcast against the odds. In our next season, three masked men hijack a school bus full of children in the sleepy farm town of Chowchilla, California. They bury the children and their bus driver deep underground, planning to hold them for ransom. Local police and the FBI marshal a search effort, but the trail quickly runs dry. As the air supply for the trapped children dwindles, a pair of unlikely heroes emerges. Follow against the odds wherever you get your podcast. You can listen ad free on the Amazon music or Wondery app.
Starting point is 00:32:09 Hey, speaking of fucked up, yeah, this one's a bummer. Okay. So on July 30th, 1986, or in 1986, when I can see the outfit I'm wearing, we're in an affluent community of Silver Spring, which is located in Maryland. And 19 year old Keith Waddell Warren was found hanging from a tree two days after he was reported missing by his mother. Keith, who's an African American, had been accepted into North Carolina Central University and was set to go in the fall, but he was currently home for the summer making money and saving it up to go away. Handsome, bright. Everyone said he was a good kid, a good kid in school. He did have some depression issues, but in his recent past,
Starting point is 00:33:01 his parents had divorce, but he had a bright future. So on July 30th, 1986, a woman walking her dog found Keith in a wooded area near his family's home. His body was hanging from a small tree by his neck and the tree was bent double with his weight. The cord was elaborately hung and anchored around the base of the tree, and it was 25 feet then to a small sapling. So it was like this elaborate kind of hanging mechanism. And then I encircled the sapling's trunk, arched through a fork. The first paramedic who arrived on the scene said that he immediately knew it was a staged hanging. And so he didn't touch the body at all. He was waiting for the place to arrive. Nice. But the officer and detective who arrived at the scene released that
Starting point is 00:33:48 paramedic. The officer stated that this was interfering with his lunch break. And they didn't cordon off the area and the scene was trampled. And I of course looked up his name and warning immediately crime scene photos come up. But you can see in the background of one of them just some fucking shirtless dude hanging out staring at the body. So they hadn't even taken it down yet. And there was a guy, you know, maybe not even 10 feet just hanging out. Whoa. Yeah. Okay. It's like some hippie dude. So this was before they understood how. But didn't I don't think so. It's just it was just yeah. I think it when we read about a lot of these fucked up crimes that happens. But I don't think that that was a normal procedure. I can't
Starting point is 00:34:37 imagine. Yeah. Let us know cops from 86. Yeah. When did they when did they really know that you had to lock down a crime scene and no one got to come look be near it? Like a whole like what do they call that establish a perimeter like I want to know as well when did they start wearing gloves and stop smoking at the crime scene? Yeah, cops. You know what I mean? Yes. It had to be in somewhere in the 90s because even OJ Simpson's crime scene was handled without gloves, which they definitely should have known by then. Yes. Right. Anyways, it gets worse. Okay. Despite the obvious discrepancies, authorities didn't see anything wrong with the scene. And after a brief visual inspection, the county's the county department medical examiner determined
Starting point is 00:35:23 that Keith Warren had committed suicide. No autopsy was ordered. The body was sent directly to a funeral home. The detective chose it. And this was all that happened. Oh, and his body was embalmed all before his mother was even aware of his death. What? Yeah. So that's simply not procedure. No, I can't be. Well, back then, you didn't need to perform an autopsy on a suicide. But it was definitely suspicious. The embalming that kind of thing is the parents decision. Yes. And also, he wasn't taking any more. He was taking a funeral home. I think the funeral director didn't really get any information about what was going on. So he just thought he was supposed to embalm the body. But Silver Spring, do you know a smaller place? Like,
Starting point is 00:36:12 could they use that excuse that this was like small town? They're not used to. From what I can tell, I don't know if it was just the community or what, but it was like 70,000 people there. Okay. Not huge. No. Okay. But it was like 40 minutes from Philly. It was like not far from DC. So it's not rural. It's rural. How do you say that? I can never. You're saying it right. It's just a weird word. It's just stupid. Yeah. Okay. So by the six hours after he had been found, his mother was finally told about it. And by then, he had been embalmed. I mean, that's unacceptable. I know. Okay. When the family asked for his clothing that he'd been wearing at the time, the funeral informed, the funeral home informed them that most of it had been destroyed
Starting point is 00:37:00 because of the decay of the body had ruined them. So they just got rid of the decayed body clothes. Okay. They were only given his jacket and a pair of brown boots. And from, I can say from those, from those crime scene photos that I of course looked at all of them and almost started crying because I have to look at them because I'm a fucking weirdo. He wasn't decayed at all. He wasn't decaying. Yeah. He was found two days after he went missing. Don't know how long he was up there, but he looks like he had gotten there recently. Like there is nothing about him that looks like what you would expect from a hanging, which is a lot of really grotesque things happen to you, right? There was no indication that he was decayed. Anyways, later when his mom attempted
Starting point is 00:37:52 to visit the tree to pray there because she was so fucking heartbroken, she got there and realized the tree had been cut down. What? Yeah. Okay. Taken into evidence by the police, which his mother was like, if this is a suicide and the case was closed, which it was, why are you taking evidence? That's exactly right. Yeah. You're taking in evidence for a suicide and a closed case. You're not taking evidence from the body, but you are taking the tree. Definitely. And the tree couldn't be found or maybe it was destroyed in a fire. I couldn't really, there's not, there's no Wikipedia about this. There's like not a lot of shit. A lot of the articles are just, you know, the same stuff regurgitated because there's just not a ton of
Starting point is 00:38:35 information out there. I couldn't believe there was an Wikipedia about this. Yeah. So I had to do a lot of work. So Mary had doubts, but it really wasn't until she heard from a friend of Keith's that she really got suspicious. Thank you. So Rodney Kendall was a friend of hers and said that he had seen a car full of black males looking for Keith shortly before his death. Rodney told them they hadn't seen Keith and they immediately left. Then several days later, Rodney had another odd encounter with a high school acquaintance of both of theirs named Mark Finley and he said he seemed pretty urgent. I thought it was strange because he acted like he needed to find Keith very quickly and I told him I didn't know where he was and he left. So all these people
Starting point is 00:39:23 searching for him, weird. The Maryland County PD refused to hand over the photos taken at the crime scene to his mother because he said they would be too difficult for her to see. So she's asking to see him and they say no. And they said that she should have a closed casket too. So April in 1992, so this happened in 86. It wasn't until 92, which would have been her son's 25th birthday exactly. Mary found a plain Manila envelope on her doorstep, anonymous. And inside there were five pictures each showing a different view of Keith's hanging by his neck. So those are the photos that I saw. Whoa. Yeah. And so it's from the back. It's, I mean, a close up of his face. It's just,
Starting point is 00:40:12 it's so heartbreaking. His face is so sweet and young. So she saw the photos and she found glaring discrepancies, including his clothes didn't fit him that he was wearing, which made her think she was, he was wearing someone else's clothes. There was no decomposition, which the funeral told her, you know, her home told her there was. And also he was wearing in the photographs. Remember he had, they had given him brown boots at the funeral home. He was wearing white sneakers in the photographs. Yeah. What the fuck? Yeah. There was a note attached to all these photos that said, don't worry, Mark Finley will be next. And Mark Finley was the kid who said that he had seen people asking for Keith. So the family hired private detective Joe
Starting point is 00:41:05 Allercia, I think, who in addition to these discrepancies also saw that, and this is the fucking point of it that always gives me chills. So Keith had on the back of his jacket, leaves and debris, meaning he and he didn't land on his back, meaning they started to think that he had been brought there and hoisted up. So the family also then hired a renowned forensic pathologist, Isidor Melakis, who exhumed Keith's body and did a toxicology report, which they never fucking did originally, which is insane. Right. Like even not an autopsy, a toxicology report is just seems like a basic, you know. Yeah. If you're just looking for information of what happened. How did he kill himself? What state of mind was he in at the time? And also just that the family would
Starting point is 00:42:03 want the difference between somebody who has hung themselves and somebody who has died under suspicious circumstances. You to give the family a story of your son killed himself is a totally different narrative and says something about your son that then you have to live with. Whereas your son being a victim of a murder is a completely different story. It's just like no answers. It's no answers. Yeah. Well, and someone, you know, there is something too about the fact that they saw a young black man hanging from a tree and immediate liquid suicide where it's like someone said it reminded me of the old South and hangings and not that old. I mean, it still happened by fucking racist motherfuckers at the time. Right. So to see him hanging suspiciously,
Starting point is 00:42:49 and I saw his legs, his feet are on the ground and his legs are kind of bent forward. So he's almost in like, if he were in a sitting position with his legs forward, then it got hoisted up a little. So he wasn't hanging. Right. And it was definitely like, you know, indicative of lynching. Yes. Is indicative the right word? Yes. I mean, yeah. Great. But, but also it's that thing of, yeah, that's to rush all of that away. Not to immediately at the scene say suicide. No. Nope. No. Yeah. Sorry. I didn't mean to interrupt you. No, no, no. That's I'm, I'm agreeing with you and going with what you're telling me. And it's very upsetting. Okay. Your gall. Yeah. I will listen to it. Yeah. Gall. No, it is. Okay. Shit, man. This is called question yourself corner.
Starting point is 00:43:45 Right. By Georgia. So, okay, toxicology report analysis reveals abnormally elevated amounts of, here we go, trichloromethane, trichloromethane. Okay. A solvent found in paints and lacquers and powerful chemicals that are usually found in glue and solvents. So according to Dr. Isidore Mahalakis, the levels found in Keith's body were more than enough to kill him. And this is a body that has already been, what do you call it? Embalmed. Embalmed. And buried. So that was the argument that maybe they came from the embalming, maybe they came from the soil where he's buried. Yeah. But it was pretty, it was pretty. The doctor felt sure that it was not that. Because they weren't chemicals used in that.
Starting point is 00:44:38 Okay. And they weren't, you know, they were high enough levels that it wouldn't have been absorbed if it was in the soil. Okay. So, you know, it's the, it's the argument. Isidore, isn't it? You know. But the doctor saying, I'm fine. I know what I'm looking at. I know what the situation was. And I'm finding these chemicals there anyway. And that's highly suspicious. Yeah. But the other side probably we're just as sure that it wasn't true. Well, the thing is once you embalm a body, you can't fucking say anything for sure, which is why you don't rush to embalm a body. I mean, that one is the biggest glaring thing of that's the biggest fuck up. Yeah. What do you, or cover up? Yeah. Okay. For sure. Okay.
Starting point is 00:45:22 Okay. Based on the high levels of this chemical in the victim's body, the doctor concluded that severe mental confusion would have resulted in impaired decision making of routine actions. So he couldn't even decide to kill himself if he wanted to. Okay. Outside investigators claim that the way he'd apparently hung himself was practically impossible due to the small tree and the fact that two ropes were used in the suicide. Try not to totally understand because you can still, if you want to kill yourself and you need two ropes, you can still do. I guess they were, what they were saying is the way that set up and what it sounded like is they were using one tree against the other like that was a, yeah, that basically you can't do that by
Starting point is 00:46:03 yourself. So all he would have needed to hang himself was one rope and one tree, not, and there was nowhere for him to jump off of either. Yeah. So I don't, I think it's probably, you know, they were like, well, you can, you can hang yourself any way you want, but I feel like in the same way that you, when people try to drown themselves, you, you just can't allow yourself to do that. There's some, something deep in you that stands up or gets out of water. Yeah. There's the fight in instinct inside of you. Right. So there's that. And then he said, I do not believe that he would have the ability to hang himself. And for that matter, he would not have the ability to make the decision about hanging himself. And so he ruled the death,
Starting point is 00:46:42 that the death must be investigated as a homicide. The family appealed to the Maryland County PD and eventually the United States Attorney General Janet Reno for criminal investigation into the death as well as the subsequent actions of the police department. All requests have been denied. Oh, yeah. So here's what I wrote. So how did Keith die? And these are kind of taken all over the internet of ideas. Did he overdose on solvents found in that were found in his body? He was at a party with friends. Maybe they were huffing. Maybe they were doing drugs. And he overdosed and his friends panicked and staged his death to look like a suicide to avoid police, which would make sense of his clothes being changed because maybe he vomited
Starting point is 00:47:27 all over his clothing. Maybe there was blood on that. And so that's why they changed his clothes, including his shoes. And they just wanted to make it look like a suicide. Or did someone come from behind with a rag and that's why he had the solvents inside of him. So it wasn't his choice. His backpack had some of his favorite tapes in it, which points to him maybe going to a party. That's just in my opinion, like, you know, when you're going out with friends, you're like, I'll bring some music, we're going to hang out. Right. Because back in, I will say this, in the 80s, you didn't, you didn't travel with tapes. Like you would make one mixed tape maybe and bring it somewhere. But like, you usually left that either at home or in your car because
Starting point is 00:48:11 they were just such a pain. Yeah. So he had his backpack, favorite tapes in it, which makes me think that someone, he was going to visit someone he knew and that what just that I was thinking about, it's like party plan. If it was a party, you were about a mixed tape. Yeah. One or two tapes. If it was his friends, he'd be like, I want you to hear this tape, this new one, this one's great. Right. Does that make any sense? I think so. That's off the top of my head and clearly just speculation. We're just speculating. Yeah. So, okay, some people thought that he may have been, and this is on like, you know, wiki, what's it called, Reddit and shit, that he may have been an informant to the police and he was found out by the local drug dealers, which might have been the
Starting point is 00:48:55 guys in the car. And they were looking for him and killed him, which makes sense that the cops would cover it up because they don't want everyone to know that they caused a murder. Yes. Which is actually, I keep trying to find this murder that I found out about a long time ago. There was this girl, it's kind of small town. The cops found all this LSD on her and said, you're going to jail forever or you need to be our informant. And the guys, the drug dealers, she went over their wire, they found out shot her in the fucking head. Yeah. But it took them a long time to find out about that. I can't find that one. I think I remember you telling me about that one. It sounds familiar. It's always stuck with me. It's like the sweet hippie, you know, in the 90s hippie girl. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:36 Okay. So was it a hate crime? Very well could have been. Did he actually somehow commit suicide? I mean, that's always an option too. It's not, it's not gone. Yeah. So in a final disturbing twist, the one person who may have been able to answer those questions turned up dead under suspicious circumstances. Mark Finley? Mark Finley. Oh shit. When he was one of the guys who came looking for Keith a few days before he died and his mother had received the package that said, Mark Finley's next, she told him and he said to her that he would be bi to see her soon. And she said, he said, I need to unload. So maybe he was one of the friends at the party. Maybe he knew something. So one month after she received those photos and talked to him, he was dead.
Starting point is 00:50:32 According to police, he died accidentally when he was struck, when he struck a curb on his bike and was thrown off in what was described as a freak accident. However, according to paramedics who were on the scene, his wounds were not consistent with a bicycle accident. His wounds were more consistent with being hit by a car or being hit with a baseball bat. Oh, man. His wounds were greater than, than that could have been, than that falling would have caused. Right. Especially in the location where it allegedly took place. Yeah. So his mother, Mary, Mary Cooey died suddenly in May, May 25th in 2009. And she dedicated Keith's mother. Yeah. She dedicated, you know, her life after that finding justice. They spent a lot of money. They
Starting point is 00:51:20 had, what's it called? Awards for finding, for information. Reward. Yes. Yeah. Not awards. Well, monetary awards, or as we know them, rewards. Yes. Yeah. Thank you. Yeah. Awards too positive for this. I mean, listen. So she died, never found any justice, but her, but Keith's sister, little sister, Sherry Warren has taken up her mom's fight. She says that even if he died of an accidental overdose, she still wants the Maryland County PD to be held accountable for the actions. Yeah. So she organizes marches. She is still looking for answers. There's still rewards out there. And she just wants answers. Yeah. Also, just that idea. Yeah. It's just that thing of like, what, if they, if something procedurally is so screwed up,
Starting point is 00:52:18 that they, they're taking pictures of a dead body and there's just kind of a dude loitering in the background, or there's no perimeter on the crime scene, or there's no, or they're rushing a body to be taken to the funeral home, like all of those things, they, aside from the injustice to this family and to this victim, they can't do it that way ever again. So it's that idea too, that like this, it's just that thing of the crime procedure cannot be that screwed up. Like you just have to learn from those mistakes. Say it's all a mistake. Yeah. Best case scenario. It's just a series of terrible mistakes. Especially because those, those people who were, who were there at the time are probably not on the force anymore. They probably retired.
Starting point is 00:53:03 Yeah. So it's kind of admitting, it's a thing of like, when you hear on these, on like, you know, 48 hours and all these things of like cops saying, or detectives saying, yeah, we did that wrong, and we learned from it. It's so refreshing to hear because everyone makes mistakes, you know, and we're fucking big on the 80s and 90s. And before that being fucked up in terms of, you know, procedures. Yeah. So it is, and it is tough because, you know, to be involved in, in crime, in stopping crime, you have to be a big tough man who is brave and faces the worst of all society all day, every day. And so admit it and get being flexible and being able to admit mistakes and all those kinds of things don't go along with that persona. And I think that's
Starting point is 00:53:55 changing too. What's that thing of like, it's the, no one's looking for you to be the like, Texas Ranger. Yeah. Or do every single thing correctly. Yeah. People make mistakes. And it's like, you know, one guy in the, on the force believes it's not what it is. He's not going to fight with every other guy on there. He's a woman. He's not going to fight with his fucking boss. You know, you get labeled a snitch and, you know, right? Or a troublemaker or whatever it is. From what we know on law and order and all this shit, you get put on, you get desk job, desk duty after that. That's exactly right. It's all political. I mean, it's, it's political where it shouldn't be, but wow, that's amazing. I just can't believe there's not more on that. Yeah. More on that.
Starting point is 00:54:39 Especially because, well, it also kind of goes to show that the, I feel like in this day and age, because that is such a black man being hung, hung and having that not fully and thoroughly looked into is such a, it's so problematic and such a like the kind of thing that I think people are working very hard to make sure doesn't get swept under the rug anymore, hopefully. And to be fair, case file did an episode on this, like in January. So it's not nobody's, you know, episode 43. He does, you know, his story as well. So I don't want to not give them a shout out, him a shout out. Yeah. But it's fucked up, man. Let's, let's open that back up. Yeah, I'd love to know the answer to that. That's crazy.
Starting point is 00:55:33 Mine's fucked up too. Congratulations. So rare that you find a murder story that's awful. I got actually the first whiff of this I ever heard is from the show Real Detective that we've talked about many times. So good. On Netflix? It is. Yeah. It's, is it on Netflix? I'm not sure. It's on regular TV now. Like I have just T-vote. And so I have like 10 episodes from regular TV. Okay. Then I think only season one is on, sorry, what you like to call regular TV. I mean, at this, this day and age, it's just regular TV. But you can also, it's on, on demand, on direct TV. That's how I watch the one I watched today. I fucking hate on demand. Why? Because you can't put it in a, you can't list it. You have to specifically look for something
Starting point is 00:56:28 and then watch it. Yes, you have to know exactly what you're looking for. I fucking hate that. I want, there's a new show coming up called like New York Detect, or like the FBI in New York or some shit. Yeah. And I went immediately to record it and you can't. It's just, I'm going to forget it immediately. Oh, we'll make Steven remind you. Listen, Steven, can you change direct TV, please? Listen, give direct TV a call. You need to start writing some letters. Yeah. Okay. So real detective, try to watch it any way you can find out. But the reason I loved this episode was not only because it was a Southern California serial killer that I'd never heard of, which is pretty fascinating. But on this episode, the real detective, if you haven't watched it, basically follows the one
Starting point is 00:57:12 detective who solves this crime. And that detective is there talking about themselves in the 20 years ago or whenever the thing happened. It's like doing the storytelling. So it's not like a dramatic reenactment. No, there it's firsthand experience of what it was like for this person to get, catch this case, go through, be at all these crime scenes and eventually, thankfully solve the crime. And there are reenactments, but they're good. Exactly. Yeah. Because they actually hire great actors because it's not just, they don't just do like reenactments that are silent. There are whole scenes that they do like scenes. Talking. Yeah. Yeah. It's a really great show. Okay. So this one is the Riverside County. The name of him was the Riverside County
Starting point is 00:57:58 prostitute killer originally, but I called him the Riverside County serial killer. And the detectives named Bob Creed. And he, he is especially, as a detective, he is so empathetic and he is so lovely and kind. And the way he talks about all of these victims, it's the episode starts with him just kind of listing all the victims names, like he knows all of them now. So it's that kind of thing where you're just watching a person who this was his life and this, he took all of, all of these deaths to heart. And, and the fact that it was taking place in his hometown and his home territory. And it's this incredible story. So that's refreshing because when you said the name of what it was before the prostitute
Starting point is 00:58:48 killer, I immediately was like, Oh, well, then they're not important. So him naming them immediately makes me think that they're important. It's not only that, but the way they present these murders in on the show real detectives, they really play down. If not, don't mention the prostitute aspect at all. So they really are just talking about, they found this victim here, they found this victim here. And when, and when Bob Creed talks about them, he talks about, like he starts out by saying, these were women with families who loved them. And he talks about the family, they were good families and they loved their daughters. So it's because all of the, in the Murderpedia articles that I was reading, it's all just prostitute drug user,
Starting point is 00:59:34 because you never know the circumstance of their life. You don't in the killing fields do that really well when they talk to their families and sisters. But you know, I was, when I go missing, is it going to be ex-drug addicts, you know? Yeah. Yeah. Because I was a drug addict at one point, but I haven't been in 20, you know, it's like, like we did, I did a murder when we were doing the live shows and one of them called her a prostitute, but in other places I saw as a masseuse and it's like, did she cross some lines at her job and they called her a prostitute? It's just, there's so many, there's so many nuances around it. Well, yeah. And when you boil, like in journalism and this kind of journalism, when you boil people's lives down to their criminal records or the,
Starting point is 01:00:16 like the basic facts of their lives, what are you choosing to leave in and what are, and what are you choosing to bring out? Because there are lots of people who have been addicted to drugs, whether or not they go to jail for it. There's lots of people on drugs right now that if you died right now and they took the toxicology report, not you, but like anybody in the street, any man in the street, that if they died and they took the toxicology report and they'd be like, well, you're filled with well butrin and Adderall and this and that. And you smoke marijuana. Tokamax and pot and you, and you just had four drinks. So are you a drug user? And so should
Starting point is 01:00:53 your murder matter less because of that? And that's kind of like, I was really blown away because when I was, when I was reading these old articles, it was one story, but the way real detective presents this is so different and it's so modern. And then this detective on top of it, you love him and you love the work that he's doing because it's just very personal. So, all right, so this is like, no, that's okay. I need you to. And the presentation or this, like what I've written up is a combination of me writing down things from this episode of real detective, but it's also, there's an article I found in Murderpedia that gave me a really good timeline and talked a lot about these victims and it was written by a guy named David Lore.
Starting point is 01:01:37 His article was called the Riverside Prostitute Killer. I didn't get a year on it, but it does seem old because it's definitely from like the early nineties. So anyway, October 30th, 1986. So there's an area, I don't know how much you know Riverside, like the Riverside city or the county. Vaguely, even though I'm from here. Yeah. It's like, it's weird because it's about an hour and a half directly south of where we are right now. And it's, it's halfway, we never go there. It's halfway between here and San Diego. It's inland. Like Elsinore is the big, like this guy. Yeah, that lake that's nearby it is like kind of the tourist nice area. And that's where this guy lived. Okay. But, but most of the murder, the crime scenes are in and around Riverside,
Starting point is 01:02:27 the city itself. So there's apparently an industrial area outside of Riverside called Rubidow. And it's like apparently smoggy and gross and it's all factories. So on October 30th, 1986, there's a man who's collecting cans that around that area. And he comes upon the body of a woman who's stuffed into a drainage ditch. She's covered in blood, her clothes are ripped to shreds and her genitals have been mutilated. So he runs this man who discovers this horrible crime scene, runs to the closest factory to get help. And the police identify her as 23 year old Michelle Yvette Gutierrez. And she's from Corpus Christi, Texas. And her autopsy reveals that she suffered severe trauma to anal and vaginal areas, multiple stab wounds were discovered on her face, chest,
Starting point is 01:03:23 and buttocks. And she has ligature marks on her neck, suggesting that she'd been strangled while she was being mutilated. So bad news right away. So two weeks later on December 11th, the body of 24 year old Charlotte Jean Palmer is discovered near Highway 74 in Romeland, which is 25 miles away from the Gutierrez murder scene. And her body was so badly decomposed that they couldn't figure out the cause of death. So they weren't even necessarily related. In January of 1987, so about a month later, the naked and mutilated body of 37 year old Linda Ann Ortega is found along a dirt road in Lake Elsinore. She had been dead for at least three days. They found alcohol and cocaine in her bloodstream. Investigators later discover that she
Starting point is 01:04:22 worked part time in a fast food restaurant. But she also had a rap sheet for drugs and sex working. Now, the investigators are starting to see that they have three similar homicides, where the young women are being brutally stabbed to death and strangled to death. So then four months later on May 2nd, 1987, Martha Bess Young, 27 year old Martha Bess Young is discovered in a ravine not far from the Ortega murder site. She is fully naked in a spread eagle position. She also had a rap sheet for sex work and high levels of drugs were found in her body. And she the corner determines that she's been dead for about three weeks. And she had died from a lethal dose of amphetamines while she was being strangled.
Starting point is 01:05:16 So like he injected her with amphetamines while he was strangled or like at some point? I don't know. Just that they're both exists. Like she has a lethal dose in her system, but she the asphyxiation is what she actually died from. But but she also those things were happening like at the same time. Got it. I was picturing it like at the exact same time. Yes. Like you shot her up while he's with one hand on her neck and yeah, which probably didn't happen. No, but the first woman who was found Michelle Gutierrez also had stab wounds, but she lethal stab wounds, but she died from being strangled. So they do think that he kills them and attacks them at the same time. Right. I mean, it's like all one frenzy. It seems like. Okay, so so then
Starting point is 01:06:11 so then no murders for almost two years. And then January 27, 1989, the body of 37 year old Linda May Ruez, who was a sec known as a sex worker, was discovered on the beach of Lake Elsinore and her head was buried in the sand and the autopsy reveals she has high blood alcohol level and there were sand found in her throat and the cause of death is asphyxiation. Then about six months later, same year, the body of 28 year old Kimberly Little is discovered in Cottonwood Canyon. Also, she's also known as a sex worker and a drug user. And her autopsy reveals the presence of alcohol and drugs. The the official cause of death is listed as asphyxiation. And they find on her, they finally find fibers and pubic hairs that are not her. So they finally
Starting point is 01:07:16 find some evidence that they can use that they they don't know what to compare it against, but they're saving it. It's crazy that with that many victims, they didn't have a touch of that even. Right. I mean, not as not so far that's listed on on this article or that they knew how to lift at that time. Yeah, maybe because it was pretty early. What year is it? This is in the late 80s. So yeah, they started in 1987. So they probably didn't know what could be compared like what could be used as DNA. So even if there's some kind of saliva or the right, they wouldn't know. Maybe, maybe. Yeah. So but also they're starting to I think compare they're starting to keep track of these. So it's like they know that they're they can see what's standing out on
Starting point is 01:08:05 these victims as they go. And so they're like, okay, we have a pubic hair that's not hers. And like they're they're learning what to look for and what to keep as they go. Okay. So on November 11th, same year, a local resident discovers the body, bludgeoned and mutilated body of 36 year old Judy Lynn Angel near Tomaskel Canyon Road. And this is just northwest of Lake Elzenor. And and she also had a rap sheet for sex working and and drugs. But she they discovered defensive wounds in her hands when she's when her autopsy is being given. She also had several blows to the face. And ultimately, she died of having her cranium crushed. So then the next month, they find the body of 23 year old Christina Leal in Quail Valley. Now she is fully appears fully clothed and not
Starting point is 01:09:08 having suffered any serious abuse or mutilation. She was had a record for sex work and drugs. And at that crime scene, investigators found found tire tracks for the first time. So they made impressions of those tire tracks, which I found so fascinating that they think to do that. But to me, that's like, one in a million chance of finding that person. But yeah, I guess it can be used once they find somebody that gets a suspect, but kind of carted they drive at the time. Exactly. And when it's serial killing, they know if they start finding taking imprints of tire tracks to compare to the other places, because they know that eventually, there's going to be some that becomes a consistent sure impression that they're like, Okay, this is the this is the this is the
Starting point is 01:09:56 tire. Maybe this is the car. Interesting. So so then when when she gets her autopsy, the coroner finds that she had one stab wound to the heart. And they didn't notice it at the beginning because she the she had been stripped and then redressed by the killer. So there was no through the shirt. There wasn't any. It wasn't a stab through the shirt. It was underneath. So the cops didn't see it like right away. Yeah, super weird. Here's a weirder thing. And maybe the weirdest thing of this of this whole case. When they inspected the victim's genital area, they found the killer had put a light bulb up into the woman's no, Vaj and the woman's womb. So he shoved it all the way up. And it was unbroken. And it was also a very it was a very kind of different. It was a elongated
Starting point is 01:10:59 light bulb. It wasn't different. It wasn't just standard. It was kind of old timey looking. It wasn't it wasn't a common one for somewhere and something. Exactly. So they now know that he's escalating and he's becoming more, you know, deviant. He's starting to do weird shit. That seems like such a big clue that they're almost lucky to have. Was she dead or alive when that happened? I feel like she must have been dead. I think she must have been dead because it took, they said it must have taken a really long time for him to be able to put it up there unbroken. Yeah, because she would have been fighting. She was right. Oh, for fuck's sake. So he is then now the escalation is part of part of that them knowing he's escalating is because he's leaving
Starting point is 01:11:43 things behind intentionally. And he's degrading them more than average because he because he was, you know, the degradation of being left, you know, often spread eagle, often half naked in ditches in drain it, you know, in like on these places where he's just saying these people are garbage with how he's leaving them. But now he's adding to it even more in a very upsetting way. Okay, so then on the morning of January 18th, 1990, so it's actually only a month later, but it's the next year, investigators get called to a scene east of the I-15 in Lake Elzenor. A jogger had found the half nude body of a woman who is identified as 24 year old sex worker Darla Jane Ferguson. She had been strangled so severely that she nearly bit off her own tongue.
Starting point is 01:12:42 I didn't either. Investigators find tire tracks at this crime scene, make impressions at this crime scene. Amazing. A month later, February 8th, 1990, farmers working at an orchard in Highgrove find that nude body of 35 year old Carol Lynn Miller, also known as a sex worker and drug addict, she had gone missing a month earlier. She had multiple stab wounds to the chest and she also had a wound near her right nipple. They found pubic hairs on this victim that they kept and this murder is where that episode of real detective starts because they basically come in and they talk about how these murders had been going on. It was the kind of thing of like they would have a murder and it would be a sex worker and they would be like,
Starting point is 01:13:45 oh no, and they were like suspecting that they had a serial killer, but it wasn't until this, I think this may have been Bob Creed's like one of his early, like when he got put on the case. No, because I think he was on this task force early, but I guess that the point of interest was when he got there and he was looking at the crime scene, he realized that his grandfather used to own that orchard. And so he's starting to go, is this guy fucking with us? Is this guy doing this on purpose? Because they also, there was a half eaten grapefruit that had been peeled, half eaten and thrown on the victim. What the fuck? So there was like a lot of kind of messaging in that, or that he was really freaked out about. So obviously the guy was taking his
Starting point is 01:14:40 time. He was purposely, what's the word, antagonizing the police? Yeah, that's where he started to go like, could this guy know, could this guy have known that this was my grandfather's? Like he's like, we used to play here when I was little kid. Yeah. So I wish I knew exactly when they put this task force together. I don't have it, but it basically was like, I would say probably after the fifth or sixth body, they actually put a dedicated task force together to be like what is going on. But they never find fingerprints at any scene. They know that the bodies have been taken to those scenes and dumped there. So they can rarely find any evidence. And they've only found tire prints twice up until this point. And no semen? Not that I've ever heard being mentioned.
Starting point is 01:15:37 I feel like they would say so. Yes. So yeah, so the guy's very careful. Okay, so under December 21, 1990, a janitor emptying the garbage factory complex on Iowa Avenue discovers the nude and carefully posed body of a young woman who turns out to be 27 year old Susan Sternfeld, also local sex worker, drug addict. There's no mutilation on her remains. She died of strangulation. The county coroner eventually finds out. Next 42 year old Kathleen Leslie Milne is discovered on January 19. A motorist is driving by and sees her body alongside a road northwest of Lake Elzanoir. She had been rendered unconscious by several blows to the head and strangled, but she had been dead less than 24 hours.
Starting point is 01:16:44 Oh my God. I would hate to be the person who found her. Yeah, so horrifying. So then a couple months later, April 27, a transient stumbles upon the body of 24 year old Cherie Michelle Pazer, a part time maid and sex worker. She had been left in a flower bed in a bowling alley parking lot. She had been violated, strangled, posed, and this is awful. She had a toilet plunger protruding from her vagina. So this is a person that is intent on degrading, after murdering, degrading these victims. And there's a couple parts in this episode of Real Detective where he is, Bob Creed is talking and then he just stops talking and stares and then they just cut away to something else. Because he's just like processing it. He's remembering these horrible
Starting point is 01:17:40 fucking scenes that he had to come upon and process. Well, what I noticed too is that it seems like he's getting more and more bold with where he leaves the bodies. Yes. Because he's not putting him in a drainage ditch where no one will see him put it there. He's putting in a flower bed in a parking lot of like probably busy business. At a bowling alley. A bowling alley. That's just so bold. Yes. Exactly right. Because he's gotten away with it now, how many 12 times or however many whatever number I'm on. That's fucking with them. Yeah. So now he's like, I'm smarter than the police. I can get away with this. I'm doing whatever I want. I can't breathe. Okay. So now July 4th, 1991, picnickers near Railroad Canyon Road discover the remains of 37 year old
Starting point is 01:18:26 Sherri-Ann Latham also has a rap sheet for sex work and drug use. Her hand was wrapped around nearby branches suggesting she was still alive when the killer left her. An autopsy later reveals that she'd been strangled and they find cat hairs on her corpse according to her friends. She did not own a cat. So now the investigators are thinking the killer does. Fuck. So they take those hairs and they put them aside. Kind of monster murders women, but also has a cat. I mean, it kind of goes to show how great cats are. They love you no matter what. No matter what kind of monster you are. Monsters love them no matter what. Yeah. Okay. So they get their first major lead on August 15th, 1991, because a man driving a gray van
Starting point is 01:19:22 picks up a sex worker near the University of California, Riverside. And she told investigators that everything was fine at first. Then he becomes angry and starts assaulting her. And she manages to jump out of his van and run down the street. Good girl. So he leaves, but then he stops in a nearby corner and he picks up her friend. No. 23 year old Kelly Hammond. So in this is what's interesting. This is this I'm reading from the a part of that article. But in the episode of real detective, when they come upon this body, Bob Creed lifts up the, you know, the tarp that's over her, whatever it's covering her. And he goes, I know this girl. No. She lives in his neighborhood. Oh my God. And he watched her and her mom walk by his house
Starting point is 01:20:18 a couple of times a day. So he knows her. And that's again, where he's like, this guy's fucking with me. Yeah. This guy knows that I'm working on this case. He knows these people. Well, I would think this is someone I know. And this is someone who knows me. Right. Well, the other thing too, it's for smart of you to think the other thing too is in this episode of real detective, they do not mention that that either of these women are prostitutes at all, sex workers, sex workers, sorry, at all, which I think is really interesting because they basically, the story comes in as this girl, her, the girl that got away. Her name is Ali white cloud. And she comes in and says, we are at a bar. This is how they, and I wonder if that's because that's how either she wanted
Starting point is 01:21:03 it presented or that they were trying to erase the stigma of sex. But it's Ali, Ali white cloud comes in and says, my friend and I were at a bar and we met this guy. And she wanted to go home with him. I didn't want to. He offered both of us a ride. I said, don't go with him. And she did. And so she goes to the police and, and gives a full description and describes the van. Yeah. So I don't whatever version of this is the truth or whatever. I, I think it doesn't really matter though. It doesn't matter, but I also think it's interesting. And I like the fact that real detective just presented as it's a girl that almost got pulled into a van and then came in and spoke for her friends to the police with respect. Yeah. Yeah. So, so they give they do an APB with the
Starting point is 01:21:58 description of this guy and he's the creepiest look. It's the creepiest looking picture because he's wearing like sunglasses and a photograph or like a drawing. It's a drawing. It's a police sketch. And the van he's driving is 1989 Mitsubishi van, which is one of the weirdest looking vans. It's got that flat front. Is that the one? Yes. Like it, yes. Like when you're in the front seat, wherever you park, it's like you're right there. I totally know that one. Yeah. And it has a weird almost like a nautical window in the back, like a little round window. Yeah. Like a creepy van window. Yeah. So, okay. So now they have way more information about this guy than they've had for since 1986. So it's a huge, it's a huge lead. They put out the APB and so now the cops are looking
Starting point is 01:22:51 for that van. Oh, they also say, is there anything else you can remember? And she says that when he opened up the back, she remembers seeing a red sleeping bag. And at most of these crime scenes, they found animal hair, which turned out to be a tan cat, tan cat hair on at every scene, and red nylon fibers, which they link to and match to the kind of nylon fibers that they find on sleeping bags. What a crazy thing. I feel like there's so many people and this is what he talks about in Someone Knows Something where it's like, that is one detail that you wouldn't, why would you bother mentioning that? Yeah. But that is actually really important to the case. So that's really interesting. I thought you were going to say that she said she saw a cat
Starting point is 01:23:42 in his van. Well, it's close. It's the other thing. But that's when they presented in the Real Detective Show, when she's giving all that information, when she says that thing about a red sleeping bag, he's just like, ding, this is the guy. Love it. So they put out all that information. And oh, so basically from all of the information and the victims that they've had so far, the task force knows this, that all the victims are found raped, stabbed, asphyxiated, nude, posed, they all have literature marks on their wrists, ankles, and neck. They have one set of shoe impressions. So they know that he carries them to the scene dead and leaves them there. And that he works alone. They say that if he's married, his wife would work nights because
Starting point is 01:24:40 then he can just do, clearly he can do whatever he wants at night and is not being questioned about it or no one's suspicious of him. They never find fingerprints at any of the scenes, but they consistently find cat hair and they consistently find those red nylon fibers would be more exciting if I had said that before that thing I just said, but anyhow. So on October 30th, 1991, they see a man is driving along Summerholt Drive and he sees what he thinks is a mannequin. I'm a mannequin, you guys. Never a fucking mannequin. He goes up and finds that it's the that it's the dead body of 35 year old Delilah Zamora Wallace, mother of five, also known sex worker and drug addict. She's also her cause of death is asphyxiation. Then two days before Christmas,
Starting point is 01:25:37 Eleanor Ojeda Kisaris body is found near Victoria Avenue, which is just down the street from the Riverside Police Station. She's 39 years old. She's been strangled and her right breast is missing. No, not the boobies. We always say not the boobies. So she was also had a rap sheet for sex, work and drugs and the cops are positive that he placed her there too close to the police station to fuck with them. So the very last victim is 31 year old Catherine McDonald. She's found raped and murdered in a field by a construction worker. There they find a set of tire tracks and they find footprints that match a pro wing tennis shoe. They know now he's rushing, he's escalating because this is the sloppiest he's ever been. So they process all of that,
Starting point is 01:26:40 then they go to make a next known next of kin, you know, they go to tell notification for the next kin, they go to her house, they find the front door open and the house is dark. They walk through the house guns drawn, and they finally find Catherine's three year old daughter who's been by herself since her mother disappeared the night before hiding downstairs. So sad and it's the saddest part of the whole episode. This little girl who was just hiding alone in a house because her mom didn't come back. Her mom went took the garbage out and disappeared. Oh, so she didn't even see anything. She's just like, no, no, no, her mom is wrong. Her mom walked outside and never came back inside at night. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 01:27:25 Horrifying. Okay, so she was snatched. Yes, she was and which he hadn't done that before. It was out in front of her own house. So they have all together they had found five different types of tire prints at these crime scenes. So, so Bob Creed decides he asked the guy to check, is there one type of van that could use all five of those types of tires and one type of van comes back and it's a 1989 Mitsubishi and it's this type of van. It's so weird looking. So on the night of January 9th, 1992, Officer Frank Orta is patrolling University Avenue, which is where a lot of sex workers were known to walk and he sees that exact type of van. So he follows it. Can you imagine seeing that? Yeah, there it is. What the fuck?
Starting point is 01:28:26 And it has expired tags and so he pulls it over and he talks to the driver a little bit. He asks the driver to open up the back of the van. The driver says, sure, no problem. He opens it up. There's a red sleeping bag there and the officer places him under arrest. Now they bring him into the station and then somebody immediately starts questioning him. They don't wait for Bob Creed, who is the head of this task force for like five fucking years. They don't wait for him to come down to question him, just whoever was there. I don't know exactly how it happened. So the guy they arrest immediately is like, I want a lawyer. I'm not saying anything. Son of a cunt, man. So Bob Creed doesn't even get to question him. Oh, but here's what they end up finding out,
Starting point is 01:29:11 that the guy, the driver of this van is a man named Bill Suff. He was born August 20th, 1950, in Torrance, California. According to his high school classmates, he was friendly, a skilful musician, and he graduated 87th in a class of 144. So not a, you know, sounds like a C minus student. His brothers were very troubled. One of them was a drug addict. The other was a pedophile. Suff ended up living in Texas. And there in 1974, when he was 24 years old, he and his former wife were arrested and later convicted for the beating death of their two year old daughter. Are you fucking kidding me? He was there sentenced to 70 years in prison, but he was paroled after serving 10 years. Why? No. His wife served 20 months, but her
Starting point is 01:30:10 conviction was overturned when it was found that he was fully responsible for the beating death of a two year old child. Can you imagine not only having your child beat to death by her husband, but then getting sent to being held responsible and sent to, like she's mourning in the most painful way. And then she goes to jail and in jail, you hurt your own kid. If you're in jail for hurting your own kid, you're like a pedophile in man's jail. I mean, they are like tortured. And so yeah, she didn't, she spent over a year in prison as a baby killer. So, so when Bill Suff is paroled, he goes back to Southern California. He gets out of Texas, and he then gets a job. He's now 41 years old. He gets a job as a stock clerk,
Starting point is 01:31:03 and he is known to be a writer of books. He likes to drive fancy cars. He does community service work. He also likes to impersonate police officers. Of course he does. His neighbors described him as a friendly nerd who was always doing things to help people. What the fuck? Yeah. So, basically now Bob Creed is scrambling to find evidence they can hold him on because they finally have him in custody, but you know, he's going to get out and more women are going to die. So, they look into his background. They find out that he works for Riverside County Supply. So, he is a clerk at the supply company that supplies desks and chairs for the Riverside Police Department. So, when they were putting together the task force and building the task
Starting point is 01:31:58 force, every time they would order a desk or some chairs or a chalkboard, well, Bill Suff was the guy that would come and deliver it straight into the room where they were investigating his serial murders. What? I bet he enjoyed that so much. He not only enjoyed it, he knew exactly what they were doing. So, the first time they knew that they had tire imprints, he changed the tires on his van. Yeah. Every time he would go in there because they were constantly at one point they said, some officers working on the case asked him if they could use his phone and made a phone call on his phone trying to track something down for the murders he was committing. So, he was just this neutral face in the background that they saw as like, oh, that's the delivery guy,
Starting point is 01:32:52 that's the clerk guy. But meanwhile, he was all eyes and ears every time he was in that room. He was looking at everything. He was memorizing all of it. He knew exactly what they were doing and he knew who they were. Which is weird that he then didn't get rid of the red sleeping bag kind of. Right. That must not have been a prominent thing up on the board. But it's so amazing because they, in Real Detective, they set it in really perfectly where he's in, the bat went like the first time they have the task force meeting, Bob Creed clears the room and then starts telling everybody blah, blah, blah. Well, Bill Suff is one of the people he asked to leave the room. So, he's in there like he's working side by side with and like near the police.
Starting point is 01:33:39 So, Bob Creed gets a search warrant for Bill Suff's house and when he arrives there, he's surprised to meet Bill Suff's 18 year old wife. Oh, God. So, this is where it all comes together. She tells the detective she works nights. He's standing in their kitchen. She offers to make coffee. She's like, I need coffee because I'm so tired because I was up all night. He's like, oh, you work nights. A tan cat runs through the room. He looks over and sees a pair of pro-wing tennis shoes over in the corner where all the shoes are by the back door. So, when he's looking out the window, he sees a truck bed that's filled with tires and he's like, what's up with the tires? And she's like, oh, he's always out there changing the
Starting point is 01:34:23 tires on that van. So, he was changing the tires. Anytime he would see them get a tire imprint, he would change the tires on his van. Then the kicker is, he looks at the lamp that's hanging over the kitchen table, tips it up and sees it's exactly the same kind of light bulb that was left inside his victim. And he's like, this is, we're here. So, he essentially they arrest him, they get him. He has tried and convicted for 12 counts of first degree murder and one count of attempted murder. The jury deliberated for 10 minutes and they came back. They gave him the death penalty. He's still on death row in San Quentin to this day. And the police believe he's responsible for 22 murders, if not more in Riverside County. I wonder what, you know,
Starting point is 01:35:16 he was gone for those two years. I wonder where he went and what happened that time. You mean where there was no bodies found? Yeah. Or yeah, there was no bodies found for two years. Yeah. Because that's a long time and he usually it just goes faster and faster. And Bob Creed, who I have to say is just like one of those, I feel like detectives are those, they're like, all the good cops become detectives. It's like the ones that are on the street that are good at it and they're smart. And they care. Yeah. And they get promoted and they become detectives. And he so clearly was one of those people that like treated these women like his neighbors and his friends. And he, when he talks about going to talk to Kelly Hammond's mother,
Starting point is 01:35:56 it's like a big part of that episode where he's like, we know these people, we have to tell them, we have to now change their life for the worse by us being there and being like your daughter's dad. Yeah. He eventually, Detective Bob Creed eventually became the head of major crimes, the major crimes unit in Riverside County. Yeah. And that's the, the Riverside serial killer. Bob's fucking crazy. And I have no idea. Good job, dude. Thanks. I know I had no idea either. Like Riverside is close by. Yeah. And I've never heard of that guy.
Starting point is 01:36:32 It's so funny, like the way you find these murders now, I just put in the weirdest searches and you still don't know anything. I know. What's going on? Also, I do find it fascinating like the, there's, they know almost nothing about this guy's childhood, which I would love to know because obviously it was insanely fucked up if his two brothers are insanely fucked up and he is the worst of all of them. I'd love to know what kind of evil and insane parents they had and what that situation was. But I really love that show for how much it really shows. It's like the side that you never get to hear, which is these detectives and like the experience that they go through and the years sometimes that they spend
Starting point is 01:37:16 trying to find these killers. It's just, it's so insane. There's the one on the killer that you did. The guy, Ben. Mendelsohn. No, his last name is Ben something. Oh. Child killer. Bar Jonah. Yes. Yes. Yes. It wasn't even when I was saying and you knew what I was saying. I'm so shocked that I knew that. What I like about that show too is that it gives you little glimpses into the PTSD that you know they fucking have. And so they're not trying to be like, this is what happened. It's like, the one I did, he starts crying. Yes. No, they suffer terribly. I mean, Jesus, like that guy having to, it was like a child killer that had multiple victims and every story was horrible. And that one is especially great because the way
Starting point is 01:38:06 he, he just, the way he eventually finds him is he starts walking the path that those children were taking to school and he finds Bar Jonah standing in a security guard outfit at the end of one of those alleys. This is why you make them move their finger from the photo. That's right. This is why you fucking do it. That's exactly right. If you're, if someone knocks on your door, if you get pulled over and they're holding up a badge, you fucking call that number into the police department and, and make sure it's real before you. Yeah. I guess if you're on a rural area, if you're alone in the house. Now you're finding reasons to say rural. God damn it. I am. You're right. Rural. You can say farmland. You're in
Starting point is 01:38:46 farmland. Out in the country. Out in the country. Do not, you don't have to. You don't have to. Well, you get to check first. It's your right. And like, I'll tell you what, and those FBI agents flipped, the one guy flipped open. His quiet friend behind him. I was like, what are you doing? It kind of looked like they were coming for us. Take us away. A little bit. But the, you don't look at the ID. When someone flips the thing like that at you, you look at the badge. You look at the thing where you're like, Oh, this is a real cop. And you get all caught up in the kind of like the gold badge part. I wonder if you're allowed to say hand me that. And I want to look at it. What's your name? What's your this? What's your that? Well, a real cop would give it to you. Yeah. What
Starting point is 01:39:28 would they have to lose? Yeah. Totally. I mean, they would want you to believe they were a cop. It's why they're showing it to you. Listen. Hey, be, be overly cautious. Instead of everyone listening is like, we are. Yeah. You've already taught us that. We know. We did that before. Oh my God. That's all this podcast is. I know. Is warning you and scaring you and giving you anxiety. And telling you how to get rid of your anxiety. What's a positive thing from this week? Um, with fucking totally knew it at some point. And now I forgot it. What's yours? I, I would just say that this my this past birthday was like one of the best birthdays I've ever had. Because I'm at the age now where like,
Starting point is 01:40:17 I honestly don't care about birthdays. So the last couple of events, super low key, if not totally doing nothing. You didn't even fucking, we were recording that day and you didn't tell me. I know. I mean, I didn't remember. Well, but why would you? I mean, but you should have told me, but you didn't care. So you don't. Yeah. But, but that was in my mind. I was like, it doesn't matter. And I don't care. But it's actually not true because you, well, first of all, so many people because of your tweet responded to the lovely tweet you sent to me about my birthday. But there were just so many nice things and not just people, both of the podcast, but then like my actual friends knew and said lovely things. And it's like, when you actually
Starting point is 01:40:59 give people a chance to do that, if they want to, then they do. And it's really nice. And it makes them feel good too. Yeah, exactly. It's just, it was just lovely. And we had that fun dinner and watching DC. Yeah, that was so nice. Like, what if I just threw up for no reason? It was just like a really lovely kind of redefining birthday experience. I love that. Yeah, it was nice. Happy birthday. Thanks. Congratulations. Thanks so much. Way to go. Something I love or I'm happy about is when Steven babysits the cats when we go out of town, it just makes me so happy because I know they love him and they like hanging out with him. And I know this because Steven, the first couple days of us being gone, Steven babysought them and sent me photos constantly. And I could
Starting point is 01:41:49 tell they were happy and they don't run away when he comes in. And then my dad was going to stay at our place for the rest of the weekend. And so Steven left. And when my dad, who doesn't like cats, came in the door, he said, oh, Elvis came out at first and then ran away immediately. And I think he thought my dad was Steven and got excited because the guy who gives him all the cookies was there. And then realized it was my dad ran away. So thanks, Steven. It means a lot to me that to have someone there who I really, I love my cats. Yeah. I mean, I just have the best time and like, I've always told you that like, I'll come over here. You're always like, you and Vince are always like, come do some work, hang out for a while. And then I ended up just hanging out with the
Starting point is 01:42:30 cats. I don't get anything done. It's just pictures of Elvis, good pets. Yeah. I love it. Have a good time. You have my Instagram password for the cats too. So I'm like, to fucking go for it. It's great. Thank you. So thanks for doing that. And yes, I pay him. Don't worry. You get paid and loving in my cats being nice to you. Yeah. Um, you guys, thanks for listening. Yeah. We really appreciate it. And you guys are, this is the best. I can't, this is the best. It's pretty nice. It is. Yeah, I like it. All right. Well, um, you guys stay sexy and don't get murdered. Elvis, you want a cookie? Okay, bye. Bye. Bye. I love the new mic set if you can just. I know. I have them here.

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