Off The Vine with Kaitlyn Bristowe - Bonus - Sneak Peek of 22 Hours: An American Nightmare
Episode Date: June 12, 2019It’s a case nightmares are made of. As Kaitlyn mentioned this week, we’ve got your sneak peek into the new true-crime series, 22 Hours: An American Nightmare. It's the frightening story o...f a D.C. power couple, their 10-year-old son, and housekeeper who were held hostage, tortured, and brutally murdered inside their burning D.C. mansion. You won’t believe what happened during those last 22 hours alive, and the shocking trail of evidence that led police to the killer! Did he have help? Hear from key witnesses who reveal never-before heard details. Will this investigation lead to the release of discovered confidential audio recordings, so the public can hear the trial for the first time ever? Listen to the first episode now: http://bit.ly/2Mzf5Ks New episodes from this 10-part series will be available every Monday on PodcastOne.com and Apple Podcasts. Don’t forget to subscribe, rate and review.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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ontario hey as i mentioned i've got a special bonus episode this week featuring the 10 minute
preview for the new true crime podcast 22 hours an american nightmare washington dc news station
w top and their award-winning journalists have teamed up with podcast one on this great
investigative series that will take you on a ride through the shock and mysteries of the infamous
mansion murders of a washington dc family you won't believe what happened to this family
while being held hostage for 19 hours in their own house
and the crazy way they found the murder.
Take a listen, the story is captivating,
and then head over to the podcast 22 hours,
an American nightmare, to listen to the full episode.
And don't forget to subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Podcasts 1.
New episodes every Monday.
Enjoy.
18911, what is your emergency?
Hey, I think there's a house fire at 3201 Woodland Drive.
Got smoke coming out of ease and a window.
Repeat you this again.
It's 3201.
Woodland Drive.
It's 124 on May 14, 2015.
It was pure chance that Donald Spence found himself
at the front door of a burning house
in northwest Washington, D.C. that afternoon.
He'd just finished a job installing wallpaper
at a house in the neighborhood.
It was the kind of neighborhood
you might want to walk around it,
full of beautiful old houses,
some might consider the mansions,
each with its own ornate style
and manicured green lawn.
The neighborhood is tucked away behind D.C.'s famed embassy row.
The home of the Australian Ambassador is right there across the street,
and the Vice President's official residence, just a few blocks away.
I just drove up to the building, and it's pouring out of the overhang.
Okay, from which floor is the far is coming from?
It's coming from. It looks like it initially from a bedroom,
but it's going sweeping across the whole overhang on the front of the house.
This is a private house, single house?
It's a private mansion.
Benz had just finished eating his lunch in his truck, and he was about to head home.
Bored by taking the same turns on the same streets for weeks.
He decided on a whim to take a new way out of the neighborhood.
That decision took him right past the house with smoke pouring out of its eaves.
Okay, I voted in the fire department at 3201 Woodland Drive Northwest.
Yes, top of the hills.
No one seems inside the house.
I don't think anybody's in the house, but I can't tell.
I knocked on the door, and I can hear the alarm going off.
And there's a fire.
Yeah, and the house is like crackling.
No flames yet, but the smoke is just pouring out.
It's true quick.
D.C. firefighters arrive in a matter of minutes.
One of the first trucks to arrive is from Engine Company 28.
It's a fire station right near the National Zoo, about a five-minute drive from the massive brick home on Woodland Drive.
The first firefighter, Lieutenant Chris Hershey, rushes up the floor.
flagstone path to the front door. The address is spelled out in gold lettering on the archway.
The door is locked, so he kicks it in. Hershey had no idea he was walking into a crime scene.
Standing in the foyer, Hershey sees thick black smoke pouring down the stairs in front of him.
It's so heavy that even with his helmet light on, he can't see his hand in front of his face.
Firefighters are trained to fight fires from the inside out, to go right to the source of the
fire. He starts to climb the staircase. Navigating up the stairs in the dark, Hershey pushes open a
bedroom door. He's found it. The whole room is lit up orange. The flames are rolling up the walls.
We got room off on the floor. There's a line on the fire. These are the fire department
radio transmissions from that day. A line means that Hershey has a hose on the fire and he's trying to put
it out. There are other recordings from this day, too. They're filled with firefighter jargon.
But they help illustrate the chaos at the scene, as firefighters discovered, this was not a normal fire.
More firefighters start to pull up on Woodland Drive and pour into the house, looking for
anyone who might be inside, overcome by the smoke. Private Michael Ader is one of them. He's not
here to fight the fire. He doesn't even have a hose. Just his tank of oxygen and a mask over his
face. Facing the thick black smoke, he heads to the second floor to look for victims. And right
away, Ader knows he's on a deadline. His oxygen will only last him about 25 minutes, and is a very big
house, so he knows he needs to work quickly. Ader goes to a different bedroom from the one
Lieutenant Hershey is in working to extinguish the roaring flames. Ader heads across the hall to
another bedroom filled with thick smoke. There's no fire here, but he knows there could be a person
who couldn't find their way out.
So Ader starts what's called a right-hand search.
He gets down close to the ground
and orientes himself by keeping one hand
anchored to the wall on his right.
Starting at the door,
he runs his hand along the wall
until he covers the entire room's perimeter.
But Ader can barely see.
With one hand maintaining contact with the wall,
he reaches out with the other,
blindly feeling around.
His hand hits the back of a chair.
He sort of gives in a nudge, but it's weighted down by something, almost like someone's sitting in it.
He reaches up to where he'd expect a head might be and feels a face.
Adder goes to lift the person out of the chair, but he can't get a good grip.
Something's wrong.
They keep slipping out of his grasp, and he doesn't know why.
He doesn't know if the person is alive, but they feel like dead weight.
He goes to lay them on the floor so he can try and lift them in a different way.
As he lowers the person onto the floor, he realizes he's laying them on top of another body.
Correct for three victims, water and delta, second floor.
Ader manages to carry the first person out to the hall and hands them to another firefighter to bring to the medics outside.
He turns back and finding the doorway to that same smoke-filled bedroom.
He sees his lieutenant has just arrived.
to help. Ader goes to the spot where he found the second victim on the ground and begins to
lift them off the floor. But across the room, his lieutenant says, help me lift this person. I am,
Ater insists with his hands under the arms of the second body. That's when they both realize
they're holding different people. There's a third victim in the room.
They're a table of three victims. I copy truck two. Truck two, what size are you on?
jobs. Three victims removed. Second floor. Key Delta quadrant. We're all out front. All need
medic units. The recordings are a little hard to understand. We'll need medic units.
That's what the firefighter says. Outside 3201 Woodland Drive, three victims lay in a row
on the front lawn. They're covered in blood. The firefighters can't really figure it out.
There's not usually that much blood at the scene of a fire. They wonder if
there had been an explosion of some kind. The medics work frantically, and one of the victims is
lifted on a stretcher and rushed to the ambulance nearby. It's been a surprising 25 minutes,
and not in a good way. Ader takes a seat on the curb and starts to process what just happened.
He removes his mask and draws a breath of fresh air. Up until now, the smoke had clouded his vision.
He was using his hands to get around and navigate his way through the room, through the house.
This is the first time he's seeing what's on his gear.
He looks down and sees something red.
It's definitely blood, and it's on his mask.
It's covering his turnout gear.
It's on his boots.
It's on his gloves.
After he suits up to go back inside, Ader finds that thick smoke upstairs is starting to clear.
And he finally gets a good look at the bedroom where he found those three people.
There's only one way to describe it.
It's a bloodbath.
The room and quadrant focus, too, is a crime scene.
The police are now on the way.
It's clear to everyone on the scene.
The bloodied victims pulled from the upstairs bedroom
weren't simply overcome by smoke.
And there's still another gruesome discovery for firefighters
inside the other bedroom,
across the hall where Lieutenant Hershey and other firefighters
are working to put out the fire.
Lieutenant Corey Goetz is working back up.
He's crawling toward a window when he kind of falls into a hole in the floor.
The heat from the fire had burned so intensely, it melted the bed.
The floorboards had given way, creating almost a crater in the middle of the bedroom,
filled with blackened bedsprings and something else.
When Goats trips into that hole, he brushes against something, part of a body.
He reaches up to confirm his suspicions and feels what might be a sort of,
small knee. He reaches farther to feel another leg. And then his gloves land on what feels like
a head. It's the charred body of a child. It is being called a major crime scene as homicide
investigators examine a house that caught fire in northwest D.C. The room is a crime dream.
They found four people, including a child, dead inside on the second floor. Right now it does not appear
that this was just a random crime.
I said, but what happened?
They said we don't know.
They killed the whole family.
Police have said they believe more than one person is responsible for the crime.
A wide-reaching manhunt for Darren Wint, stretching all the way to New York City.
We had the DNA on a piece across.
How did his DNA get into that house?
Got a package that I'm going to need you to bring down to me.
To do what he did to four people, including a 10-year-old boy, is just beyond words.
They were brutalized, and we saw the evidence of that.
The jury has just reached.
a verdict in the murder trial of Darren Wint.
He was going to strike the American dream just by committing murder and mayhem.
I'm Megan Clowardy.
Thanks for listening to 22 Hours, An American Nightmare,
a new true crime podcast from WTOP in Washington, D.C.