My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark - Rewind with Karen & Georgia - Episode 9: Color Me Nine
Episode Date: September 4, 2024It's time to Rewind with Karen & Georgia! This week, Karen and Georgia rewind to Episode 9 – Color Me Nine. They give updates on The Exorcist serial killer Paul Bateson and the murder of 8-year-old ...Maddie Clifton. Whether you've listened a thousand times or you're new to the show, join the conversation as we look back on our old episodes and discuss the life lessons we’ve learned along the way. Head to social media to share your favorite moments from this episode!  Instagram: instagram.com/myfavoritemurder Facebook: facebook.com/myfavoritemurder TikTok: tiktok.com/@my_favorite_murder Now with updated sources and photos: https://www.myfavoritemurder.com/episodes/rewind-color-me-nine My Favorite Murder is a true crime comedy podcast hosted by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark. Each week, Karen and Georgia share compelling true crimes and hometown stories from friends and listeners. Since MFM launched in January 2016, Karen and Georgia have shared their lifelong interest in true crime and have covered stories of infamous serial killers like the Night Stalker, mysterious cold cases, captivating cults, incredible survivor stories, and important events from history like the Tulsa race massacre of 1921. The Exactly Right podcast network provides a platform for bold, creative voices to bring to life provocative, entertaining and relatable stories for audiences everywhere. The Exactly Right roster of podcasts covers a variety of topics, including true crime, comedy, science, pop culture and more. Podcasts on the network include Buried Bones with Kate Winkler Dawson and Paul Holes, That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast, This Podcast Will Kill You, Bananas and more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is exactly right.
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Hello. And welcome to Rewind with Karen in Georgia.
This is episode nine.
This is our new weekly bonus episode
where we go back to the early days,
the early Halcyon days of My Favorite Murder,
and comment on the way we were.
We were young.
We were innocent.
We were free.
It was so 2016.
We're going to reflect on all the things that have changed,
give you case updates, and basically, you know,
we'll treat this like a high school yearbook, but of podcasting.
Like a high school reunion yearbook.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so it's time to rewind to episode nine called Color Me Nine.
That's a good one.
From Friday, March 25th, 2016.
So get your nosy neighbor and your meanest teacher
from high school and your favorite mail carrier
and invite them all to this party,
because now we all get to be day one listeners.
But also shout out to real day one listeners
because we love you.
We and you are there first.
We know, we know.
So let's listen to the intro of episode nine
where we discuss the podcasts we're listening to,
the status of our RIP Facebook group.
RIP.
And more.
1,500 people in the Facebook group is so precious.
That's a lot of people.
It was for a beginning.
It was very shocking, I think, to us.
There's going to be a confession that I've never confessed to you.
I probably told you at the time, but nobody else.
When the Facebook page was that small, I'd get up in the morning to kind of look at what was happening.
And if people posted lame memes, I would delete them.
Karen Kilgareff, did I make you a moderator?
Yeah, I was on there.
I was on there. And because it turned into this thing where it was like people were, they were just lame.
So it was like some people would post stuff that was amazing and great and really funny.
What would be on the chopping block?
Well, if the same meme got posted over and over again,
it was just like, this has been done and it's from three days ago.
It's like when people tag you in the same sinkhole now a day over and over again.
You're like, I've seen it, I swear.
We've seen it, we've seen it.
But also I think those memes that look like they were from that one app where it was the
white block letters and it was just something where I was just like, all right, we need
the quality to be a little bit higher here.
Okay, so you wanted to clean it up a little bit.
I really did see it as my own Facebook page back then where I'm like, I don't want this
shit on my Facebook page.
But then people would come on and be like, who's deleting my thing?
And get all crazy.
Do you know?
They call it a dirty delete.
And they get so fucking mad.
And it's like, read the room, AKA the Facebook page.
It's already there.
But also, what a fun confession.
I love that.
If you were mad because you got dirty deleted, it was me.
That's amazing.
I'm so glad I finally know that.
Isn't this the kind of Easter egg people are looking for in these Rewind episodes?
I think so.
You can just see our numbers going up, up, up, up, up.
Also in this episode, we talk about the fact that the Facebook group suggested a drinking
game, maybe the first, my favorite murder drinking game of many, because there's been
more.
It's whenever I gasp or say, holy shit, you take a shot.
And when you sing a regular word in conversation,
which I so, I want you to do it,
but it's not gonna be natural if you do it.
I'll try to, I'll try to fold one in in this episode.
I would love that. Okay.
Because I just, yeah, I don't wanna like make,
put you on the spot.
Cause when you do it, it's just very like unexpected.
You know what I mean?
I literally just did it in a meeting we were in.
I don't remember.
Yeah, I remember when I said,
Thank you to our fucked up families for letting us make stuff while we're stressed out.
Yes.
Or something. That was it.
That was an example.
See, it's not as good. It's not...
You build it up, then you actually do it.
Surprise me.
Murder, murder, murder.
Are you ready for some murder?
We should look up synonyms for murder. Okay. For this podcast. Okay. For the titles of
the podcast? No, no, just in general. So we don't say that word as much. Oh, right. Yeah.
Being taken out violently. Assassinations. Assassinations. What are we going to name this episode, do you think?
It's number nine.
Yeah.
Nine.
Non-lives.
It's pretty much how this goes.
Spitballing.
It doesn't get better after that.
Never.
Welcome everybody to my favorite murder.
Hi.
That's Georgia Hart Stark. That's Karen Kilgaraff.
I said it like I wasn't sure. I know. That's George. Georgia. Georgia. Right. Georgia Hart
Shores. The worst is when someone misspells your name in a professional setting when they
should absolutely spell your name correctly. Yes. Right. Karen Kilgaraff with a complicated
last name. Yes. That's happened to me many times. Also, the worst is when people say your last name,
who you've known for years and you realize that they always thought it was Kilgarafe
or Kilgarafe.
Kilgarafe?
Or Kilgarafe. When you're like, well, I wish you knew me more.
I know. Hard stock? What the fuck? Hard and stark are two very simple words. And yet somehow
next to each other, people
freak the fuck out.
People freak out. Although I do do that thing where when I see somebody that I know for
sure, like if I ran into Dustin in a bar, in my mind I'd go, hi Dustin. And when I would
go to say it-
What if I'm wrong?
Yes.
Oh my God, I do that too. Except when I see someone that I for sure know like Dustin,
I'll scream their name in front of them because I'm so excited that
I know them. You know what I mean? Like you want the credit? Yeah. Because normally I'm
like, I know who you are, but I don't think I do. And I'm the kind of person that if I
mess it up and the person's like, don't worry about it, I won't stop talking about it. Right.
Or worrying about it. Right. Or letting it go. People call me Ali sometimes and I'm like, it's okay. It's not okay. It's okay. But it's not. Well, I mean,
you should at least get one letter, right? The first letter. Totally. Is all I ask.
I love that you have that word killing your name too. Oh, me too. I find it intimidates
people. Yeah. We both have kind of like hardcore badass last names.
You have a, like yours is reminiscent of Charles Starkweather, the famous spree killer.
Sure.
That we're not talking about on this episode, but that we...
Okay. We know what I want to talk about up top before we start our favorite murders.
Before we start this bullshit?
Yeah. Is Someone Knows Something, the podcast.
Yes.
Are you, I texted you the other day because I knew
you were driving.
I was in New York. I was flying.
Oh, nice. And I was like, you got to listen to this.
And I did.
All of them?
Well, there were only three.
Right. There's a new one.
Oh, is that really good? I'll listen to that on my drive home.
So this is, I didn't realize it when I started listening, but it's like, the entire season
of this podcast is about one topic.
Yeah.
Should I read the description?
Sure.
Because it's good.
It's fucking great.
On June 12th, 1972, five-year-old Adrian McNaughton wandered away from his family at a lake in
Eastern Ontario and disappeared without a trace.
In season one of Someone Knows Something, host David Riggin, who grew up in the area,
goes back and searched for answers.
And I had heard of this case and I had never cared because I was like, I got eaten by bears clearly, but no.
The more he goes into it, like that's what I like about it is you make up a thing, you
hear facts from him and then you go, what's that guy? Or it's this thing. And then he
keeps laying down hard facts that he goes out and looks at himself. So there's recordings
of him walking in the woods, testing the echo,
talking to people who have never talked to anybody about it. Right. It was one guy who was there when he wandered away and the police had never spoken
to him about it. It's a pretty great show. I hope it stays that way.
It's so good. And I find sometimes I get a little bit impatient, and this is sexist of me, but when the boys get a little wistful and poetic about their own thoughts and feelings about things, where
I'm just like, uh-huh.
That's the opposite of sexist and I love it.
Because that's always sexist against women fucking getting, being poetic about shit.
True, true.
But I mean, like I just have that thing where, yeah, I just don't want anyone to be
precious, really. But then I find it slightly more sickening if it's a man because of I've
bought into our cultural stereotypes and norms. But when this guy does it, I buy it. I feel
like he's being sincere. I don't think it's self-conscious or self-serving.
He seems so sincere that it's great. And it's clear that he's
written out everything he's saying. It's more of a story he's telling and the writing is
good and he tells a story in not a boring way like some of the other true crime podcasts
do. The music is a little dramatic at times and the sound is a little dramatic.
But he's Canadian. So they have a sincerity that they don't fear that here
in America is almost not allowed. And I like to indulge in that. He's a Canadian man every
once in a while.
I love this podcast. It's our new The Simpsons, what we talk about at the beginning of every
episode, which of course it means the people versus OJ Simpsons. Not OJ Simpsons?
As many OJ Simpsons as it takes to discuss it. Although the last episode I have to say the one about the jury was not so I loved it. You did. You didn't
like it. I mean, I loved knowing I didn't know any of that. I didn't either. What a
fucking bummer to be stuck in a hotel and you can't speak to anyone for months, months,
and then they didn't treat them well. No, no, it was. well, it was, it was good in that it was kind of riveting,
but it was riveting in almost like in a telenovela way. It's ridiculously dramatic.
It kind of took us off the track that we were already on with all the episodes. It felt
like we were moving forward and this one didn't really feel like it was moving forward.
No, but the other thing I like, it felt very different. Yeah. But I also loved Marsha Clark in her new hair.
She looks hot, right?
She looks great in that hair.
And also she was so badass in this one.
There was no, she didn't do any like rim, tears on the rim of her eyes or putting her
head in her hands.
She told, she told, what's his, Johnny Cochran to go to the playground or something. What was it? Daycare.
Go to daycare because this is the Smoker's Lounge.
Yeah. And I was like, okay. But if that really happened, which it probably didn't, I'm so
happy about.
I feel like it could have.
It could have.
I mean, by that point, she's so pissed. So many things. Like DNA evidence got completely
warned.
I know. I mean, I feel like today that wouldn't happen.
No. No one knew what it was.
Yeah. What I'm loving more than anything is David Schwimmer's character, like realizing
his friend is a fucking murderer and him apologizing to his wife that his friend is defending a
man who murdered her best friend.
What a bummer.
What a terrible, I mean, yeah.
I wonder if he had quit the trial, would he not have died of cancer?
Would he not have died of cancer and would have OJ gotten off?
Probably not.
Oh, oh, you mean during it, sorry.
Yes.
Yeah, I see what you mean.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, no, that would have been bad news.
Exactly.
So maybe that should have been his like non-statement statement that he's like, I can't support this
anymore.
Yeah. Except for that, then you're basically choosing how a person's life is going to go.
Yeah. But defending him, you're doing the same thing. Or you're trying to at least.
It's so heavy.
There's a lot of decisions in life that one has to make. And it's not until they make
a dramatic reenactment TV show 20 years later about it that you realize
the decision she should have made.
Yeah.
I mean, please live your life like you're going to be reenacted in 30 years.
And do you want someone of as high quality as Sarah Paulson to portray you?
Or do you need one?
Yeah.
And you need to live your life like Sarah Paulson could be your you.
A quiet nobility.
Right. A quiet nobility. Right.
A single tier.
Or do you want John fucking Travolta being the most flamboyant, incredible character
since behind the Candle Alba?
And maybe even better.
I love it though, but I don't mind it.
Oh, I love it.
It doesn't bring me out of it.
I never think of John Travolta.
I believe him.
I do too.
I don't know if Robert Shapiro is like that. I have to assume he's somewhat
like that in personal situations. And I love it.
I'd like to sing a tune of praise for the very own song, Nathan Lane is F. Lee Bailey.
Nathan Lane is F. Lee Bailey. Yeah. Nathan Lane. Who knew he'd be in this? I got so excited.
Yeah. He's almost unrecognizable, not only because of his wig, but because I just believe
it's that guy.
I do too. And Effley Bailey is such a noble character that it had to be played by someone
excellent. And Nathan Lane is a beloved actor, perfect for that role.
Right. Oh guys, if you're not watching it, we've ruined it.
If you're not watching it, you've ruined
yourself. You've ruined it for yourself. There's nothing more we can ruin in your life. How's
it going? Everything else all right? Oh yeah, everything's good. I'm not murdered yet. I'm
fucking up. The Facebook group is like near and dear to my heart at this point. The Facebook
book group is making me regret leaving Facebook.
If you want to sign up a fake account, fake name, I will not out you, but it is such a
pleasing place to go when I have insomnia and just talk to.
Everyone is so fucking cool.
I comment and I post things and I read everyone's posts and it's just really fun.
And the discussions we get into and the comments people make, everyone's nice. There hasn't been anything
racist or mean yet. I haven't had to kick one person out, which is like shocking for
Facebook.
I thought we were really big in the racist community. Damn it.
Well, we are. They just keep it quiet.
Oh yeah. They behave appropriately.
Yeah. And there's 50, this is our ninth episode and there's already 1500 people in the Facebook
group. Yeah, you guys. Thank you.
It turns out everyone needed a place to talk about murder.
Well, it is fascinating. It truly is. We actually, somebody at work today started talking about
H.H. Holmes. Yeah.
Literally in my head, I had to say like a teacher, don't say anything, Karen, let her
tell her story. Don't be a no at all.
Don't. I like had to press my lips together because all I wanted to do is be like, yeah,
just jump on.
Don't you want to be like, murder is mine? Like I'm the one who talks. You don't get
to talk about murder. I talk about murder.
I think that that's a, that's kind of a good lesson just in general. Cause I think I've
been that way about more than murder all of my life.
It's such a hard thing not to be like, but it's like if someone brings it up themselves,
let them tell the story.
Let them have it.
Murder doesn't belong to you or whatever it is doesn't belong.
I'm not telling you, I'm telling myself.
I totally agree.
Oh, that wasn't to me.
No, that was to me in any conversation.
Oh, not.
Oh yeah.
Did you know that? Yes.
It's so hard.
And then when you're like, oh well, and you bring up something that compares to it, you
just sound like an asshole unless you're sincerely wanting to bring up another murder.
Instead of saying like, well, this is how much I know about it, which I do all the time.
Yes.
This podcast could also go into the areas of etiquette, general etiquette.
Well, I do it in this podcast too, of not wanting to speak over you like I just did.
But it's fine with me.
Okay. Well, I don't want to.
Here, with you and I.
Okay. Well, not wanting to speak over you, also not wanting to be like, yeah, no, I know
that murder you're about to talk about.
But it delights me when you do that. I think it's hilarious.
There was one you had that I kept trying to add to and kept telling myself to shut the
fuck up in my head because it was so obnoxious.
But it's hard. For me, it's hard when you read a thing by yourself and you're like,
there was a man in Chicago during the World's Fair that built a, basically built a murder
hotel and I'm just finding out now. And I read it with what I imagine other people read like books when they go to college.
I read it with the same enthusiasm and kind of like absorption. So then when somebody
else starts talking about it, I want them to know that I know, like I want them to know.
Do you know that you're cool?
I guess. Yeah. Yeah. Like that I want to like scream and grab each other's shoulders. I want that feeling
with people I don't know that.
I would do too. And I want them to know that I'm on the level with them and we can have
this conversation instead of like, and also like, you're going to keep telling me about
it and then you're going to find out that I have a true crime podcast. And you're like,
why didn't you say anything that you knew about this? Especially really the book, The
Devil in the White City.
Yes. That's what we were talking about.
Did you read that?
I just did it.
Yeah. That's it.
I had to wait till she was done and then kind of like take a beat. I was really using it
as like an exercise. And then someone goes, I think they're making a movie. I think there
was a book. And then I was like, don't say it.
It's called Devil in the White City.
Second the words out of them. And then I was like, that's right. It's called Devil in the
White City.
Yeah. But then if I were the girl who brought it up, I'd be like, wait, so this whole time
you've been letting me mansplain something to you and you knew about it.
But also sometimes mansplaining is just talking. Sometimes people get to talk to us knowing
something and we can accept that.
Yeah. And we don't have to know, we don't have to tell them. But I know.
I know everything.
Yeah. We can be not in the position of victim or somebody that's being oppressed. You can
assume that person doesn't have the power to oppress you and you're just being polite
and letting them be a know-it-all is an okay thing to do.
But then they're never going to get to know you because you didn't tell them that you
know shit.
That's very true. But I'm also, this is a work situation where I can't, I have to let my personality out
bit by bit because it's a lot.
You can't scream in someone's face.
Yes!
I love murder.
As my mom used to say, you're too much.
And she meant it very literally.
Well, we're a lot.
And that's why we have True Crime podcast.
A murder podcast.
We could, yeah, this podcast could literally go for four hours. Yeah. Well, we're a lot. And that's why we have True Crime podcast. A murder podcast.
This podcast could literally go for four hours.
Yeah. That's why we're friends is because the first time we actually hung out on our
own, we had a five hour lunch.
Yeah, we did.
Just talking.
And the whole time I kept thinking, am I the only one that wants to stay here? She trapped.
But it was clear that we were both voluntarily eating lunch for five hours.
Yeah. And the conversation flowed. It wasn't one-sided.
That's right.
I think.
I think.
Speaking of one-sided...
We still have our doubts.
We are good. We are great. Anxiety is real.
Speaking of one-sided and talking about the thing.
Yes.
Do you want to do your favorite murder?
I do.
I think you're first.
Do you want me to go first?
Yeah. Okay, we're back.
Here we are in good old 2024.
This is us now.
That was us then.
How different is it?
We're in a studio right now, first of all.
The sound quality in here is incredible.
The sound quality, the air temperature.
Yeah. The like, the visuals. I mean, that was a sound quality, the air temperature. Yeah.
The like, the visuals.
The visuals.
I mean, that was a cute apartment, you gotta admit.
No, no.
Your apartment was great and the smells were amazing.
But I do love the shade of green.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Two cats in a one-bedroom apartment will really do something about the odor of the...
I think that Elvis could feel the energy that was building around us.
And he was just like, guys, this is so exciting.
I have to shit right here in the room with you.
My favorite thing was you would get up and be like, my god,
I have to take care of this right now.
And it would just be like, yeah, I don't care.
There's nothing you can do.
We would be recording and be in the episode.
And you'll be like, oh my god, I have to do this right now.
Clearly, you were just so embarrassed. So embarrassed. Where it's like, oh my God, I have to do this right now. Like clearly you were just so embarrassed.
So embarrassed.
Where it's like, it's a cat.
They do it all the time.
Yeah, but Elvis was particularly obdiferous when it came to it.
Like he was just so male Siamese that it was like,
he's not just going to take a shit.
He's going to take a shit that fucking ruins the atmosphere.
Ruins the vibe.
Also, he was 82, I believe, when we were recording those.
82 years old.
Oh, my sweet boy.
He was on statins.
He was on cholesterol medication.
He was highly medicated.
Oh, my god.
Good boy.
All right, so let's go into your story, Karen.
You are covering the exorcist serial killer,
because our theme is hiding in plain sight,
which is great.
That's a good theme.
Yeah.
This is one of my favorite true crime stories
because it's so creepy and sinister,
and it's one of those things of like,
oh, this guy in this scene from this movie actually,
and it unravels into like a whole other movie and it's just it's
crazy. It's chilling and then at the end I mean let's we'll talk about it after
but like they like let him out of prison after a while. It's one of those.
All right let's listen. Okay.
All right, let's listen. Okay.
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Goodbye.
You told me this week's theme in a way that I already knew that you knew what you were
doing.
Yes.
I read what they call reverse engineered this week's theme because I had to do this story
because one of our, now I'm afraid, I guess I'll say his first name and last initial because
one of our listeners DM'd us, which I adore.
He DM'd us like, so as not to embarrass, I think. But he
was like, how could you have talked about the exorcist and not talked about this? And
sent me a link and all this stuff. And I wrote back in all caps, holy shit, how did I miss
this? So that's where mine started. So then when I talked to Georgia, I was like, can
this week's be like hiding in plain sight or murders that like if they were right there the whole time?
Kind of thing. Because in the Exorcist, one of the biggest stories and I swear, I looked
at over five websites about my Exorcist first movie set that is, which was my thing last
week, if you didn't hear it. But Brian B, our listener, sent us his
DM because there was a guy in the Exorcist and he was the guy that played the radiologist,
something's wrong with my mouth.
Words.
Radiologist assistant. In the scene we talked about that I said was so creepy where she
was in that crazy machine getting like the MRI. The guy that plays the assistant in that scene turned out to be a serial killer.
No.
Yes.
Like a serial killer, serial killer.
A legit six victim straight up New York in the 70s serial killer.
That just reminded me of something when I gasped is that there is a thread on the Facebook
group that every time I say, holy shit, you have to take a shot. Or when I say no, or when
I gasp, like there's certain things. And then when you say, when you sing a word, like a
thing, like, yes, it is. You have to take a shot. It's pretty hilarious. It's very lighthearted.
It's not in a mean way at all.
Oh, no, no, no. Please. But now I don't want to be self-conscious about it.
And do it all the time.
Is our love when people are so drunk, they fall off their own couch.
All right. So when Ryan B sent us this very tasteful DM about a huge thing I missed, and
I'm so bummed.
Please don't beat yourself up.
I won't entirely, but talk about like wanting to be an expert and dropping the ball.
Well, I'm like the first five websites that came up, they didn't mention this.
They didn't.
They didn't.
So nobody knew.
But yeah, maybe it is like specialized knowledge or something.
Maybe I just have to go to better websites first.
Or you have to, I've been Googling weird shit lately, like the weird, not just like
so and so murder. I've been Googling like deep down weird shit.
Have you gone dark web?
I wish I could. I don't know how to go dark web.
But I really don't want to.
Okay. So here's the research part. And I hope I do this justice, but I'm not going to because
I basically did only part of my homework. But essentially this is it in a nutshell.
I'm excited.
The guy's name was Paul Bateson. And he was in real life a 38 year old x-ray tech at NYU
Med Center where they shot that scene. Oh, it's called an arteriogram is what she was
getting in that scene, which is like the crazy machine that like, it's like a, it looks like a, not a centrifuge, but
like the thing that spins you in all those different directions. Very upsetting and weird
noises. So I guess when they probably, when they went to like, she go location scout,
he was there. They cast him because he already worked there and knew how to work the machine.
Legit already. out. He was there. They cast him because he already worked there and he had to work the machine.
Legit already.
Right. And what I love is the link that Brian B sent us, the picture that comes up with
this article, he looks so creepy. He looks like any dude in the 70s, like kind of forward,
his hair is going forward, kind of sandy blonde, goatee, but his eyes are drooping like they're
melting. So you were like, that was a are drooping like they're melting.
So you were like, that what a great casting job that they hired this actor. And it's like,
nope, this is what he looks like. And that's why they hired him from this creepy movie.
Yeah. And I don't know. I don't know if, I mean, that's a little woo woo to think, but
his secret life was the reason that scene was so creepy. I actually don't, oh, this was
before. So he went, these murders happened later in the seventies. So I think he did
that first.
Okay.
Oh no, sorry. The murder started in 1973. So that was...
So he was like on camera having a head murdered someone.
I think so. I would have to look up. The movie came out in 73 and was, I'm the one that did
this. Oh, you're good. Justend like you know what you're talking about.
I'm pretty sure I know what I'm talking about.
Just own it.
Yeah. I think he murdered.
He must have murdered before.
Directly. I think he was doing it during and then ended up getting caught after because
it was over a period of time. So essentially what happened is, so these
people started going missing or there was like murder scenes. So the first one was a
man named Ronald Cabo. He lived in the West Village and he was stabbed to death on his
sofa and then his apartment was set on fire. He was 29 years old.
Holy shit. Someone take a shot.
Holy shit, right? Because he's. Because you're so young. Yeah.
And then four days later, so they just think that's standard murder in New York City in
1973. Four days later, a man named Donald McNiven, who was 40 years old and a guy named
John P.W. Beardsley, age 53, were both found in Donald's apartment on Varick Street. They
both lived in the building, but they were in Donald's apartment. And again,
the apartment had been set on fire. And Beardsley was actually on the social register in New
York and Philadelphia. So he was like some fancy, he had been a Harvard grad. So, and
they had no idea. They just looked like another bad stabbing murder. I think Beardsley was
the one stabbed and McNiven was bludgeoned.
Did they, and it was four days later?
Four days later.
Did they connect the two immediately, I wonder?
No, not at all.
How do you not connect two stabbing and fires?
Well, maybe they might've noted it, but in the 70s in New York City, I think there's
several murders
a day.
And they're not sharing precinct to precinct murders.
Right. Two weeks later, the body of Robin Barrero was found floating in the Hudson River.
He had been missing for five weeks. And he was still in a leather jacket. He was really decomposed, but he had a leather jacket on. And then,
nine days after that, two gay men were murdered. I think they think they were roommates and
their dog, their pet poodle.
No.
Yes. And from the stuff that was in the apartment at that murder is when they started putting
together, these are all people who have something to do with the leather community.
Okay. I was going to say that that would make sense.
Yeah. The leather jacket started and in that first guy, Robert Barrero, or sorry, Ronald
Cabo, the picture that they have up of him, he's really young and he's wearing a leather
jacket. So I'm sure at the time it was like, oh, that's just fashion choice, whatever. But then person after person,
they're probably finding different things. And so by the end, one of the jackets, they
got the tag and they found it was belong to a store in the West Village that was completely
an S&M store. S&M clothing and supplies. So like a leather gay boys killing.
And so that's when they start to realize, oh, this is gay. But once again, it's just
like the freeway murders in LA when it's a gay community thing or any disenfranchised
when it's prostitutes. The cops are like, who cares? No one cares. And we're not going
to get pressure from City Hall.
I mean, I'm sure they could, if it's someone in the community and everyone who's being prostitutes. The cops are like, who cares? No one cares and we're not going to get pressure from City Hall.
I mean, I'm sure they could, if it's someone in the community and everyone who's being
killed is in that community, you talk to the rest of the people in the community and they're
like, this guy is creepy and has gone home with all of these men. It's pretty simple.
No, it's not. I mean, I'm sure it's not that simple, but it seems like-
It's not that simple, but it's the thing of what people decide to value.
If the people in power don't value your life or what you do in the community, if they actually
think you're gross or bad or judge you morally, then they won't try to help you or they won't
feel any burning desire to find your killer.
Well, they say, I mean, this is what they say, and I've totally... So they say you're
living a high risk lifestyle already. Are you living a high risk lifestyle? Well, then
are you a prostitute? Are you a drug addict? Are you living in a gay community where you're
around a lot of strange men a lot? That's a high risk lifestyle and they care less about
you because they think you... Living a high risk lifestyle and they care less about you. Because they think you kind of... Living a high risk lifestyle means you
kind of deserve it.
It's, you brought it on your side.
I'm not saying, I'm not saying I think that, but...
Of course not. But it's an excuse. I'm sure when cops see, you know, it's New York City
in the seventies, they saw probably 20 murders a day. So you're trying to somehow prioritize
these things or you can't put your
heart and soul into every single thing that comes across your desk.
Totally.
But I'm sure it got very easy to start marginalizing the deaths of these people or to not put things
together. So anyway, body parts start washing up on the shore of the Hudson River. So there's
like, apparently there's a gay cruising spot
by the Hudson River piers, and that's where different body parts wrapped in garbage bags
start showing up. And so they putting all this together. They started calling the whole
case the in the bag.
Oh, wow.
And so you can tell by that, you know, obviously there's not, there's not a lot of sensitivity
back then anyway, but that's basically their attitude about all this stuff that's going
on.
Wow.
So, then a drag performer, they said drag performance article, but let's call her a
drag queen.
I bet she was a queen.
Yeah.
And her name was Toni Lee. And she was strangled in
her apartment in the West Village. And the Village Voice wrote a big article about it
because she was famous. A lot of people knew her. And that's when they started to really
put together. They knew for a fact that after hours and after like the normal bars, she
would go to leather bars. And so that's when they were like, we think we really were onto
something with this like leather theory.
Yeah.
And then a man named Addison Verrill, who was 36, and he was the film critic for Variety
magazine.
He was found stabbed and bludgeoned with a cast iron skillet in his apartment.
It's not where all of them are in their own apartments, meaning that this person was allowed
to come in.
Yes, that's right. That's what scares me the most. So where all of them are in their own apartments, meaning that this person was allowed to come in.
Yes, that's right.
That's what scares me the most is like, yeah, I know this person.
I see him around my scene.
Yeah, it's pickup stuff.
It's like they're going to sex bars, they're going to leather bars, or just, you know,
the seventies.
This is like the looking for Mr. Good Bar.
Totally.
Where everybody was like, it was post hippie shit where people are like, yeah, I'm sexually
liberated.
It was pre, pre AIDS epidemic.
Yeah.
Where it was kind of like, yeah, everybody wants to have sex.
Let's do this thing.
Yeah.
There's a lot of trust.
And especially with, they were in this thing I was reading about is like the leather community,
there's lots of, you know, like leather daddies are like big, muscly men.
Yeah.
So they don't think anyone's going to hurt them. Right. They're, they're, you know, like leather daddies are like big muscly men. So they don't think anyone's going to hurt them.
They're in charge.
It's very overblown presentational masculinity.
It's less of a risk than a woman going home with a man because a man can defend himself
supposedly against another man.
Yeah, exactly.
And also they're like, that's part of the play, which I'm sure is the other thing the
cops were like, you know, this is
a little something that got out of hand type of thing.
Because you're into anyway. Blame, blame, blame. So this journalist named Arthur Bell
wrote this big article after Addison Vero, after the story came out that he was stabbed
because the whole story about Addison Vero was whitewashed.
They didn't talk about him being gay. It was very like a terrible murder, but they made
it sound like a passing thing.
Random murder.
And Arthur Bell was like, there's a serious serial killer in our community and we have
to start giving a shit. And if nobody's going to give a shit about something that's famous,
like, you know, like this is our chance or whatever. So he wrote a big, huge article for the Village Voice
about that people needed to start, like real police work needed to start going into this
because people were very afraid. And then he got a phone call, Arthur Bell, this journalist.
He gets a phone call from a man who tells him, I'm the guy that killed Addison Vero.
And we were together. I met him at a bar. We went back to his apartment. And while we
were at, like after we had sex, I had an epiphany and I realized this was not a reciprocal relationship.
He didn't love me. He didn't want to be my boyfriend. He didn't want to get married.
And I wasn't getting anything I wanted
and that's why I killed him. And he tells him a bunch of specifics, including that there
was Crisco all over the scene of the crime, which was a very common lubricant that people
used back then. But that had not been released to the press in any way.
And so Arthur Bell calls the cops and says, I just got this phone call that was crazy.
I figured I should tell you.
And he starts telling them these details that no one else knows besides the cops and the
cops know this is the real guy.
Holy crap.
So he talked to the real killer, which is insane.
So then Arthur gets a call from a guy named Richard Ryan, who said he also
knew who the killer was because he had met him and talked to him. And this guy had basically
told him, I think he said he met him in AA or something. And he basically had been trying
to get sober and had admitted to him that he had killed Addison Barrell.
Wow. And so- But that's the only one he admitted to killing.
Yes. Yeah.
So he, Arthur Bell takes that information, goes to the cops, gives them the name. And
that's when they go and find Paul Bateson. And after they arrested Bateson, he was in
Rikers. And apparently he was bragging to everybody in there that he not only killed
Addison Vero, but he was killing quote, like a bunch of gay guys just for fun because he
was bored.
Holy shit.
And so then-
Just for fun because he was bored.
Yeah. He's just trying to impress people.
Go bowling, dude.
He was cutting people up, wrapping their parts in bags and dumping them in the river.
They think he's responsible for way more murders, but he pled guilty to the Addison Barrow murder,
got 20 years and he got out in 2004.
20 years from just...
For stabbing, bludgeoning murder.
Just because you got said that someone didn't love you, dude.
Oh, you mean the murderer?
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
No, yeah.
You got bummed that Addison didn't love you.
But you know this, I mean, he's probably psychotic or, you know.
Yeah, but it's so weird.
Like, so an un, what's the word I'm looking at?
It's only they got in a fight.
He just killed him and he only gets 20 years.
Yeah.
That bothers me so much.
Well, he's crazy.
He clearly can't, you know, I know, what's he going to have another relationship
and then how's he going to deal with that? Disappointing.
I hate that there are people like that out there.
Yeah, there's lots of them.
I know.
So, but here's the interesting thing. So William Friedkin hears about this, finds out that
an extra in his movie was a serial killer, goes to Rikers and starts interviewing him and
then decides, and in the meantime, somebody else, I don't have the author's name, wrote
a book called Cruising, which was about a serial killer in the 70s leather scene in
New York City. And so Friedkin goes and talks to Paul Bateson and then decides he's going
to direct the movie.
No way.
And so there's a movie called Cruising starring Al Pacino about a cop that's going undercover
in the New York City leather scene to find a serial killer.
Did you watch it?
I have not seen it.
I wonder if it's easy to find or if it's one of those.
I think it is.
It's kind of infamous because it's very homophobic.
It's very bad.
It basically says all these people are deviants without
morals and would kill you, kill anybody. And there's a lot of bad stuff in it. And when
the gay community found out that they were shooting this movie in New York City, it basically
galvanized the gay rights movement and they would go down and protest the shooting while
they were filming. So they would go down with like protest the shooting, while they were filming.
So they would go down with whistles, they were holding up like mirrors and making light
go into the scenes or whatever.
That's great.
But they ended up shooting it anyway. They got it done. And when it came out, everyone
was like, this is the worst. Like up until that point, most gay men in film were like,
oh, you're the kooky butler that has no real life or personality.
And they don't actually say you're gay.
They just imply it.
You're just a joke.
Right.
You're just a joke.
And now you're not just, when you're not a joke, you're a murderer.
Who deserves, and a murder victim who kind of deserves it.
You're a victim.
Exactly.
And everything about your life lacks all morals and you're just, you're basically, yeah.
How much more real would that whole story be if the person, the murderer, it had nothing
to do with the fact that he was gay. He's just a fucking psychopathic murderer.
Yes.
You know?
Yeah. But I mean, yeah, it's just the whole thing is super awful. There's a great movie
called The Celluloid Closet and it's a documentary about, you know, all like gay people in Hollywood
and the treatment of them and basically the way they've been presented and seen.
That sounds cool.
And they talk about cruising. It's really good. I think that's it. I had something else,
but...
Sorry, my cats are attacking each other next to you. That's amazing.
That's it.
So tell me his name again. I want to go...
Paul Bateson is his name. I want to go back and see that scene where there's a fucking
real life serial killer. I know. It's really good. It's very, very creepy scene. Now I
should have watched, I just didn't have time to watch Cruising, but I also know it's incredibly
depressing. There's no point in you watching that.
And I also read like reviews of it and apparently it's not very cohesive and it was initially
rated X. So they had to pull out all these scenes because there's all this like, kind
of intense leather scene shit. And they wouldn't be MPAA or whatever they're called, would
not let William Friedkin. So basically when he had to edit it, it came out way shorter
and almost nonsensical.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
And people always talk about wanting to go back in time, which I totally fucking do.
But the 70s, even the 70s, the 80s, the 90s were so racist and homophobic and fucking
sexist. Would you really want to go back?
I mean, that's the thing. It's just this, it's, the more we talk about stuff like this,
it just becomes this like humanist thing to me
where it's just like we have people have to, I mean, it's separate from mentally ill people
who just have to murder or whatever.
But it's a thing of like, we have to look at each other as human beings.
It's crazy that, you know what I mean?
We always want to go, oh, those people, they get what they deserve.
Or it's like, are you fucking crazy?
But if something happens to you, you don't deserve it. Yeah. Someone could say, you and I could be in a category that someone, a lot of people
out there would say that about for whatever reason, because we're women, because we live
in Los Angeles, because, you know, whatever the reasons. So people could say that about
you. So why would you say that about other people?
Right. It's just, it's just lame. It's just, I don't know. I don't know.
At the end of all these stories, I'm always like, oh, it's lame. I'm sorry I brought it up.
Sorry I brought it up. It's a rough one. It's called My Favorite Murder. I'm sorry I brought it up. I'm sorry I brought it up. I'm not.
Yeah. There's something fascinating to the idea that there's just like a person in a horror movie that's also living is walking the walk.
I wonder if he in his twisted brain was like laughing at the irony of it too.
I know, I wonder. He's apparently a very bad alcoholic too. So he claims he didn't remember
a lot of the time.
He's still alive and he's out.
Yeah. Oh yeah. I think he's died since. He got out in 2004. He's living in upstate New York.
What did he do after? Just chill and make breakfast? Did he make breakfast for himself
every day?
You know what? He went down to the community center and he...
That's so crazy.
He loved to help with the spaghetti dinner every month.
Isn't it crazy that you only have to go door to door and let your community know if you're
a pedophile, but not if you're a pedophile, but
not if you're a convicted murderer.
Serial killer.
A convicted serial murderer.
He wasn't convicted for all of them.
So yeah, just a killer.
Just a killer.
Karen, do you have any updates on your story?
There is, well, it's like a corrections corner.
There's confusion in this episode about whether or not
Paul Bateson had begun killing before he appeared in this movie,
In The Exorcist.
Like now they believe he began to kill men in 1977.
This movie was filmed in 1972.
So it's a future serial killer that you're seeing in that movie,
not an active serial killer.
SONIA DARA GERMAROVICH My God.
SONIA DARA GERMAROVICH Yeah.
SONIA DARA GERMAROVICH And then, so we also don't know where he is now, which is fun.
SONIA DARA GERMAROVICH Right. So he served a 24-year sentence,
and then he was given parole on August 25, 2003, from the Staten Island prison where he was being held. He was 63 at the time.
He was done with parole in 2008 and no one knows where he is.
There were rumors he was living in upstate New York.
No one knows whether or not he's still alive.
And people have tried to figure it out and look into it.
There's people named Paul Bateson,
like someone named Paul Bateson died in September
of 2012, but they don't know if that's him.
And it matches. Yeah.
Yeah, they can't. It seems the same. They can't prove it.
That's 24 years and then paroled at a relatively young age. Then you're off parole and goodbye,
good luck.
And you're a true serial killer.
Yes.
This is not like, this is not some horrible thing.
At the moment.
Yes, it's not a passion, a crime of passion.
It's not any of that.
This is a person who very intentionally stalked and killed men.
I mean, to me, that's hiding in plain sight more than you being a serial killer that hasn't
been caught.
That you being a serial killer that's been caught and released.
And good luck and God bless.
Yeah, it's wild.
It's truly crazy.
It does feel like, I think when we talk about stuff like this,
it's like, shouldn't there be a separate class of talking about jail
and holding people who literally can't stop killing other people
or can't stop raping other people.
Like, shouldn't that whole thing go differently for them?
Because especially these stories that are from the 70s or earlier, where it's like they
go to jail for eight years or something.
It's wild.
I mean, if we're going to talk about that, let's talk about statute of limitations.
Hate them.
All right.
Well, now we're going to listen to George's story on this episode.
Her story is about two children who committed murder themselves.
Here we go.
Hey, what's your murder, George?
Hey, okay.
So hiding in plain sight.
When you said that to me, I was like, oh, okay.
I didn't really get it. No, I was excited about it because I was like, so you mean like
serial killers who have day jobs? Like I didn't really understand it. So I was like, what
is...
Yeah, that's kind of what I meant.
Okay. Yeah. And you said yes. So I was like, what does that mean to me? Hiding in plain
sight. And to me that meant being, and I'm fascinated by this and how disgusting it is,
hiding in plain sight
is being a child who kills someone. Because that's plain sight is being a child.
And this one is kind of, so I have two similar but very different child murderers that I've
always thought about because they're so fucked up. And the first one is, the murderer is Josh Phillips. And he killed Maddie Clifton. So do you know
this one? No? Yeah. This one is a kind of well-known one, but it's interesting because
recently some new information came out about it. So basically, this kid, Josh Phillips,
was born in 1984. He's from Jacksonville, Florida. And in July 1999, he was convicted of murdering his eight-year-old
neighbor Maddie Clifton. He murdered her in November, 98. He was 14 years old and she
was nine years old. And what happened was Maddie disappeared and everyone, the whole
community started looking for her and couldn't find her. And then the search ended a week after the disappearance when
Josh Phillips' mother went to clean up Josh's room and thought his water bed was leaking,
which A, don't get your kid a water bed. B, it's not leaking.
You're not like a bachelor.
What is that? Yeah, way to give your kid fucking back problems and send them to jail at the
same time because
what's more comfortable, the water bed or the jail mattress? I don't know.
It's always the mother's fault.
It's Melissa, you needed to get this together. Upon further examination, she discovered that
it was Maddie's body hidden inside, hidden underneath the bed. And she, and fucking clear
as to her, ran outside across the street. There was a police and was like, Hey, this kid, you know, like some parents, I don't know if they would
do that immediately or they would wait until he came home and, and I'm like, what the fuck?
And then call the police. She was like, get the fuck, you know, freaked out. Oh, that
is amazing. So Josh was arrested at school that day and he was held in maximum security.
So here's what's so fucked up about it. As a 14 year old, he was tried as an adult and sentenced to life
without the possibility of parole. Like adult killers who kill more people in a more fucked
up way and sexually assault them are not given such a harsh sentence.
And so according to Josh, what happened was that Maddie came next door to play with
him. And despite the fact that Josh wasn't allowed to have people over when his parents
weren't home, he let her in anyways. According to him, the two were playing baseball outside.
Josh threw the ball and it struck Maddie in the eye causing her to start bleeding and
she started to scream and Josh freaks
out because his father is abusive and has a temper and if he finds out that Maddie's
there, the fact that she's screaming and got hurt at his house, he's going to be in a shit
ton of trouble, including being abused. So he takes her to his room. I don't know if
I should even go into the details because I know people who are listening have children
and I don't want to...
Well, if you have children and you are listening to a murder podcast, but you're going to get
sensitive then I would go forward one minute and 30 seconds.
Thank you.
Basically, she died from stabbing and strangulation and clubbing with a baseball bat.
Overkill took her pants off, but didn't,
but she wasn't molested, which is odd. Also, I was reading something on Reddit that said
that she didn't have any, he said he dragged her inside the house, but there wasn't any
dirt or sticks or anything on her body, on her clothes, which would indicate that that
had happened. So we don't really know for sure. And that's a really, that's, I mean, he tries to get off easy by saying he hit her in the head,
but then he goes on to over and tells how he killed her. So it's not like he was, if
he was lying about one of them, why wouldn't he lie about both of them? So he's never going
to be free. She was nude from the waist down, but it didn't seem. And
so the murder appears to have been motivated by his fear of his abusive father. It's just
so fucked up.
Do they know that's true? Or that be another thing he could have been making up?
Yeah, we don't know that either. Or even that maybe the... Because I watched a couple episodes
of true crime shows where the parents get interviewed and maybe that was something they made up even to say like, oh no, the father was abusive
and he was scared of him. Like, let's give him an out. So we don't know if that was true
or not.
I think you're right. Especially the stabbing part.
Yeah.
The stabbing is such a furious and personal thing.
He also choked her for 15 minutes.
Oh yeah.
That is a lot. And it's very hard to choke someone to death.
I think we all, if you're into true crime, you know this.
It takes a lot longer and a lot more force than you.
And that's when you're an adult.
That's when you're an adult.
Yeah.
But she's also eight or nine, so she's probably a little more fragile.
I mean, the thing that fucks me up about this is that she's this little tomboy girl and
she reminds me of me as a kid who wanted to hang out with the older boys and play with
them and be one of the guys. There's a home video he made that the boy made of this little
girl, Maddie, and her sister playing with their new puppy. So she trusted this kid next
door. She wanted to come over and was bugging him to play with her. And as a 14 year old.
Did he have like a history of anything?
No.
Mental stuff?
No mental stuff. The dad died in a car accident eventually. Okay. So in 2012, recently, the
Supreme Court ruled that automatic life without parole sentences for juveniles is
unconstitutional. And that ruling entitles Phillips to a resentencing hearing. Also,
he's super hot now. Whatever. That's just beside the point.
But let's just put it out there.
Let's just let everyone know that.
Let's just get those people on Tinder aware.
Yeah. So, and there's not a ton of conversation about this murder on Reddit or anything like
that. So I just thought it was interesting.
I agree that life without parole for a 14 year old is insane. Even though I get it.
He, I mean that stabbing a little girl to death and strangling, something happened to
that boy. Something very bad happened to that boy, whether it's a psychotic break, whether
it was something to, he was
terribly abused.
Well, there was an interesting conversation in Reddit and like the one little bit I was
able to find where this commenter was saying, you know, when I was a kid, my dad was abusive
and all you wanted to do was not get in trouble. You didn't think about what would happen in
the future if you got caught hiding whatever it was that you were in trouble, getting in trouble meant the whole family would be terrorized.
So you do whatever you can to not get in trouble that moment.
And it kind of made sense in a way that was like, she's not dying from this way.
I need to kill her at this point and get it over with because I'm going to get in trouble
for having had someone over.
Which is, maybe he was a little, maybe he was developmentally delayed, but 14 seems too old to think that killing someone
was an okay solution to that.
For sure. Also, I feel like hitting someone in the head and being afraid, and this is
just theory obviously, he would just hit her in the head a bunch more times.
Right. Why not just smack her in the head with a baseball bat?
The other part just gets so violent up close, crazy bloody. I mean, like, oh my God.
Yeah. Almost like wanting to see what happens.
Well, the pants down thing is not good.
The pants down thing is a very, very, it's sexual no matter what.
Yeah.
So even if you didn't touch her, it's sexual.
Yes.
And stabbing is sexual in that, you know, in that psychosexual way.
Yeah, totally.
Strangling too.
I mean, yeah.
Oh man.
I mean, and when you strangle someone, you for the most part have to look at them in
the face.
Yeah.
If you can fucking do that, you got some major issues beyond you being scared you're going to get a belt whipping from your
dad.
Yeah. And also, I mean, people always say this, but I'll just say it anyway. You can
hear the chorus of people who were abused by terrible parents who are like, I would
never kill anybody. So it's not A plus B. I think that psychiatric
element absolutely has to be there.
Because here's the other thing too, you're right. A mother who would immediately run
across the street, obviously it's insane finding a dead body under your son's bed. But she
knew. She knew he did it. I don't know, she didn't go, let's let the
cops tell us what happened. She went, you have to go get my son.
Her first thought was for the little girl and her family who was waiting to find where
she was and not for her kid or for the dad who, you know, because if you find the body,
someone in the house did it. You might not know it's your son. Her first thought was that I found this, the girl. She's clearly
the victim, not my son.
That's amazing.
Yeah.
That's fucked up. There's another one too, but maybe I don't need to get into it.
It's just Eric Smith, the red, like the little, the redhead kid.
He killed his parents?
No. Okay. So Eric Smith, born 1980, he murdered four-year-old Derek Roby on August 2nd, 1993.
This is in Steuben County, New York. So Eric, unlike Josh, had been diagnosed by a defense
psychiatrist with intermittent explosive disorder,
a mental disorder causing individuals to act out violently and unpredictably. He was a
loner. He was tormented by bullies. He was like a nerdy redhead. You look at him as a
kid in court, especially in these videos of him in court, and he's just this... You can tell
he's troubled just by looking at him. You can tell he'd been bullied. You can tell he
didn't like himself. And he basically said he took his anger out on this little kid,
this sweet little Derek Roby, who was riding his bike to summer camp. And let's see, Eric
was riding his bike to summer camp and four year old Derek was walking
alone to the same camp. They saw each other, he lured them into the nearby woods and then
Smith like over killed the shit out of him. Like, so this was on purpose. Like, you know,
it's such a weird thing. It's like, well, these two different things where this kid
said that he had to do it because he hit her in the head and his dad was going to find
out this kid just straight up wanted to murder someone.
And I remember hearing this thing about one of the many fucking true crime shows I watched
that Eric took a banana out of his lunch and smashed it into the little kid's face. And
later that night, the aunt or someone was babysitting him and got a banana out and the
kid freaked out. And I think that's how they figured out who it was. The kid freaked out
over the banana. So basically, Smith said that he'd been bullied by older children in
high school and that is also by his father and sister. And he confessed that he took
his rage out on Robie, but was worried that Robi would tell.
So he killed him.
It's very odd.
It's so old to see when he did it.
So this kid was, Eric was, I think he was 14 as well.
Oh, wow.
I just remember looking at pictures of him.
Oh, you know why?
Because when I was doing the doing those two boys that killed
their dad, his picture came up all the time and he looks so young. He looks, he's in a
blazer.
He doesn't look 13. He looks like he could be 11 or 12. Yeah. And he's got those ears
that stick out.
Big old ears. And if you look at him now too, because there's some interviews with, there's
some jailhouse interviews with him now, he's
just so apologetic to the family. He says, I wish I could take the kids place. He's very,
very remorseful about it. But even now he looks like, remember the redheaded guy in
the burbs who was one of the haunted that lived in the house? He looks like him now.
It's just like he doesn't look, which is so, I shouldn't judge someone by the way. He looks like him now. It's just like, he doesn't look,
which is so, I shouldn't judge someone by the way they look, but you know.
Well, I mean, that's why people get bullied. If you look different.
Yeah, definitely.
It's so...
Well, so he's been apologizing through in prison. This other kid, Josh, he has since
gone on to, he got a degree in being a paralegal and he's been working as a paralegal helping other
inmates with their appeals. So, both of these people have gone on to try to make amends
for their murder. Do they deserve to be in prison forever? And I'm not asking, they don't?
I fucking don't know.
Right. It really brings... Well, it makes you come way off the like, let them all fry. Right. I like to feel that way just because it's very comfortable and
like a solution. But it's the same reason that I don't. I still can't give anyone a
definite answer about the death penalty. Right. I just couldn't give anyone an answer. Right.
Wow. That's a rough run. I mean, we just say it every time. We might as well have like
it just pre-taped and we roll that in. It's like, wow, that was awful.
Wow, that was bad. And also, wow, those stick in my head and always have and I'll always
think about them randomly all the time.
I think about all of these. So are there updates for your story?
Well, so I mentioned in the episode that in 2012, the Supreme Court ruled that automatic
life without parole sentences for juveniles were unconstitutional. And so in 2017, the
year after this episode was recorded, Phillips did get a resentencing hearing and he expressed
regret for murdering eight-year-old Maddie Clifton. He claimed not to understand what
he was doing at the time. And a psychologist testified that he believed Phillips was truly remorseful
and had been rehabilitated. But the judge ultimately resentenced Phillips to life in
prison with an opportunity to have a sentence reviewed after 25 years. And he cited how
heinous the murder was, and an appellate court upheld the decision. And so
that review should occur sometime this year in 2024, which will be 25 years after Phillips'
original 1999 sentencing.
I mean, he spent his whole life in jail.
Yeah, because he took the life of an eight-year-old.
Right.
But I don't know. These are hard ones, especially because they're children
Well, and also it's it's all hard because it's all contextual and it's easy to kind of sit over here knowing We'll never go to jail going those people should do this or that
But for things like this where when you tell the story and you know what happened to that little girl
It's just like
Yeah, what is right? There's also those things were like when kids kill it's just like, yeah, what is right? There's also those things where like when kids kill,
it's because incredibly fucked up things
have happened to them.
And we've seen that.
Or they just don't understand what they're doing.
They don't understand the permanence of that.
Yeah.
Or the Mary Bell story,
where all the worst things had already happened to her.
She did it in that way of like,
someone's kind of doing this to me.
It's just like- Yeah, mirroring someone's actions. Absolutely. Horrifying. And then for
the Eric Smith case, he actually spent 28 years behind bars for the 93 murder of four-year-old
Derek Roby when Smith was 13. And Smith was finally granted parole in 2021. After being denied in 10
previous hearings, he was ultimately released in February of 2022
at the age of 42 years old,
and he now lives in Queens, New York.
It's like one is home and living his life,
and one is still behind bars,
and it's like, how are they different?
And like, what makes one person more remorseful
or more rehabilitated than the other?
It's just such a, I mean, it just depends on the judge, really. makes one person more remorseful or more rehabilitated than the other.
It's just such a, I mean, it just depends on the judge, really.
And the jury? I mean, are there people there that are also listening to all the facts
and then, like, weighing in on that? I don't know.
I think in this kind of case, it's a judge only. Maybe?
Hey, let us know, legal people.
Yeah. All right, so let's, um, it's hometown time. So let's listen to the original episode 9 hometown
Do you want to read us? Let's see. Why don't we do this?
So you want to read a favorite hometown murder that we got emailed you can email us at my favorite murder at gmail your hometown murder
We'll read one every fucking week. even though we get so many. It's incredible. I love you guys. And then maybe let's do a quick separate episode of other people's favorite. On the
Facebook page, I said, what's your hidden in plain sight murder?
Oh yeah.
And I can read a few of those and maybe we can read one or two hometown murders. So we'll
have a mini episode that'll come out maybe a couple days after the regular one comes
out.
Great.
Is that cool?
I love it.
Okay.
So why don't you read me a hometown writer, please.
Okay, cool.
This is also another...
Now I'm getting obsessed with follow-up.
I'm getting obsessed with thoroughness and research, but I really do genuinely love it.
So this is a bit of a follow-up, but there's much more to it.
And it's from Lily K, we'll say.
Yes.
Hi, Karen and Georgia. Can't believe how much
you sound like my friend Julie and I when we're together and really get going. I've
been obsessed with true crime for so long that I became a forensic psychologist.
You are a fucking badass, Lily.
Why not do what you love? There's nothing else in the entire world I'd rather do. And
yes, you can intern for me sometimes. Way to go. I make my husband watch all the true crime shows
and now when he gets sick, he's convinced I'm poisoned. Like those deadly women of centuries
past.
Love it.
Anyway, I just found your podcast and your call for hometown crime. Then I saw you did
mine in your second episode, Bummer, but I decided not to listen to it yet and pretend you didn't do it so I can
tell you about it.
Love it.
Paul Bernardo was mine. And like I mentioned, it affected me so much that I became a forensic
psychologist. When I was in high school in Toronto, the Scarborough suburb of Toronto
rapes were going on. It was terrifying. The bus company
started letting women out at any point along the route at night, not just at stops so we
wouldn't have to walk far from the stop to home.
Oh wow.
Our regular gym classes were canceled and we got a specialist in to teach us self-defense.
Holy shit.
Also, there was a guy at my high school who looked more like the sketch of
the Scarborough Rapist than Paul ever did. And he said he was thinking of changing his
hair when the sketch came out, but he was afraid that that would actually make him look
more guilty. And then she put in parentheses, it wasn't him by the way.
Okay. So just as the rapes started slowing down, we heard about two girls go missing
on the other side of Toronto. Did you know Leslie Mahaffey was actually locked out of her house the night that she
met Paul Bernardo?
Horrible.
She was a rebellious teen and her mom picked that night to do some tough love on her when
she broke her few and locked her out.
And her mom locked her out.
Can I just say my mom, tough love was a thing.
My mom fucking did it and it was the worst.
In the eighties.
Yeah.
Kids, parents, please don't do tough love on your kids.
It doesn't work.
Yeah.
That's right.
Oh, sorry.
Go on.
No, that's okay.
It's, oh my God.
So she locked her kid out.
Mother locked her out of the house.
How much does that woman hate herself now?
Oh, I can't imagine.
I mean, that is, if she's even still alive.
That is,
talk about the worst thing in the world. A child dying and then you... Oh my God, that's a nightmare.
And then Kristen French was also portrayed as the good girl and Leslie as the more rebellious. And Tammy Carla's sister was basically a forgotten. I know every single detail about this case, but in
case you don't
want to hear it, I'll get to some good anecdotes. This was going on throughout my entire high
school life, the rapes, the murders. Then my last year of high school, they found out
it was Paul and Carla. So of course I went to the trial. I actually had this college
boyfriend I wasn't that into and I made him go with me. Poor guy. He was really upset about being there but I loved it. Paul, it says Paul was so incredibly in court. I wonder what she
meant. When they took his handcuffs off, he wouldn't just turn his wrists to have them
removed. He would turn his entire body. It was as if he was trying to look every person
in the gallery in the lobby. It was creepy. And then
in college, a girl in my dorm started dating a guy named Sam who looked like Paul. So whenever
I had a couple drinks in me, I'd call him Paul.
I also wrote all my psych papers in college on Paul Bernardo or Carla abnormal psych class,
personality class. I wanted to know what made
them tick.
And then she was the second one, but it's super long.
Yeah. What a terrifying fucking thing to go through high school with.
I mean, it took up their whole world. I mean, that was crazy.
And then to find out that a woman is involved. I don't know why. Because you would see a
couple and you'd think, I'm safe.
It's the ultimate lure.
We've talked about that. Yeah. Episode two, was it? I think so. But that's the reason I love that she gave all those details
because that was the one where I was a little fuzzy on my details. And that one really...
The shit you wouldn't know about it. Same thing about watching The Simpsons is that it's information
that you watch the whole trial, but you could not have known what it was like to be on the jury or
what it was like in Marcia Clark's office when her boss was pissed about the glove.
That was their idea to have him try the glove on.
Yeah.
Ugh.
Details.
And also that being, I love that she loved it so much.
She went to trials.
Yeah.
That's amazing.
I can't tell you how, I've been asking people their hometown murders for years when I'm at
parties and drinking too much and calling people by murderers names. And this is like just feeding, this is feeding
me on a level that I can't even handle.
You can really put away that voice in your head that says you're weird in any way. It's
just simply not weird.
Because we have an inbox full of hometown murders. I hope we haven't gotten any like,
yeah, it's incredible.
Any what? Sorry.
I don't know. Like you said, someone, it's incredible. Any what? Sorry.
I don't know.
Like I wouldn't, like you said, someone asked us to be on their podcast and our Gmail and
I wouldn't see it because it's just buried underneath.
That is, there's at least one person, but I think there might be more than one person.
We need to give them a different email address.
Yeah.
I love it.
I wonder where Lily is now.
How cool is that?
I know.
What if she's like the lead forensic scientist?
I don't know.
Is there something more specific she could have become?
I don't know.
Can you write us, please, and like give us a follow-up, please?
Lily K. we need to know about your life now.
Yes, please.
All these years later.
It's the eight and a half year follow-up.
Oh my God.
That would be so rad.
I mean, it's like Lilly Kay was the first.
We've had so many people either right in with their hometown
or that we've met in person at the live shows
that have told us that like they changed their major
or they've always wanted to be like do forensic science.
That idea that there'd be all these people
that kind of go into that line of work because they like true crime and true crime got popular
in 2016 is so exciting to me.
That's one of my favorites is like I decided to do this and it's just, it's unreal.
And also it's like I'm gonna be a part of the solution. I'm gonna get in there, use my brain, and try to like advance what all
of this is.
Totally. And you know, a huge majority is women. So it's just like so proud that if
we have any little tiny part of that, like what more do we fucking need from our lives?
We've done it.
You know what we need? Better titles.
You don't like Cutlery 9? Okay.
I do actually.
Yeah, it's pretty good.
For a pun, I do.
It's good.
Okay, so now we're going to tell you what titles we would pick now if we were naming
this episode not a pun, but a quote from what we said during the episode.
Okay, so one is you've ruined yourself.
Love that one.
I feel like that one's a pretty strong contender.
That was you talking about ruining the People vs. OJ Simpson, which we called the Simpsons
For listeners we were basically spoiler alerting it. Yeah. Well, you've ruined yourself. I can hear myself saying sure sass
Then there's someone take a shot, which is you talking about the drinking game and then you actually say holy shit in the episode
So then you're take a shot do it and then I'm sorry. I brought it up
So then you're take a shot do it and then I'm sorry. I brought it up
Were you telling a story and how you feel sometimes after talking about these like I'm sorry I brought it up on the murder podcast. Yeah, cuz like how what you thought what we were thinking
Yeah, that encapsulates a lot. It does I mean
I'd pick any of those. Yeah, what would you guys pick?
I think we've been posting them on social media, like, vote for which one you want.
And I kind of love that. And I've been voting too, I'm not going to lie, on Instagram.
A dirty vote? You're getting there dirty voting?
I'm doing a dirty vote because you can't see the answer of like the percentages unless you vote. So I vote for mine.
She wants to be a part of everything. How about that?
Oh, there it is. We did it. We fucking did it.
We did it. It's another Rewind episode for all of you. Thank you so much for listening. You guys have really been
supportive and here for this and it's very exciting. It is. We appreciate you guys so much. Thank you guys for tuning in. And stay sexy. And don't get
murdered! Goodbye! Elvis, do you want a cookie?