Reply All - #66 On the Inside, Part III

Episode Date: May 27, 2016

Blogger Paul Modrowski is in prison for a murder he claims he didn't commit. This week, producer Sruthi Pinnamaneni looks at his trial, and speaks to the one person who witnessed the murder. On the In...side, Part I On the Inside, Part II Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:05 From Gimlet, this is Reply All. I'm PJ Vote. And I'm Alex Goldman. And I'm here, Shruti. Hi, Shruthi. Hi, here, Shrithi. Okay, so we are, what are we doing today? Part three.
Starting point is 00:00:16 Part three. We're on the third part of the On the Inside series that we have been doing over the past couple weeks. If you have not listened to the first two episodes, you're going to be totally lost listening to this one. So go back and listen to the previous two weeks of Reply All. You won't regret it. But to bring you up to speed. Why are we bringing somebody up to speed if we're not, if we've already told them who's left? We just split the audience to have.
Starting point is 00:00:40 There's people who heard it, who should be listening, and people who haven't. So who is this for? This is for the people who've listened to it. We are going to bring them up to speed so that we can launch right into this episode. What do you think it means when you say bring someone up to speed? It means to tell them things they already know. Maybe it's a refresher. Oh, boy.
Starting point is 00:01:02 Okay, so just as a quick refresher, Shruthy, You have been telling the story of Paul Medrowski. And you found him because you found his blog and you got really into his blog. And then you actually started talking to him, which led you to his case. Right. Last week, you told the story of Paul's life in high school. In high school, he fell in with this group of basically like small town, small time crooks. So one of those kids, Dean Fawcett, was murdered.
Starting point is 00:01:30 And that is the murder that Paul was convicted of. He says that he didn't do it. Either he's telling the truth or he's lying. And besides Paul, the only person who knows for sure what happened is his friend Bob. Bob says he and Paul were there together and Paul murdered Dean. So it's actually really stark. Like either Paul's lying or Bob's lying. Right.
Starting point is 00:01:49 And so I wanted to talk to Bob, Bob Faragey. I flew to Chicago, went to this building, no clue whether that was his house or not. I left a note under the door. And against all probability, I got a vote. voice message from him saying, hey, this is Bob Frazsche. I'll talk to you. Come meet me at this restaurant today. So I went. He arrived with his girlfriend. He brought his girlfriend. Right. He brought his girlfriend there. He said because he was nervous about talking to me. And that just kind of, I don't know, he felt protected. Okay. What did he look like? He was very dapper. He
Starting point is 00:02:30 had this crisp white shirt. He was about my height, clean shaven head. If you saw him on this you know to guess what his job was. Probably finance. Like, you dress well. Okay. We decided to talk in his car. He had this nice SUV that was parked outside. And we get in.
Starting point is 00:02:48 Bob Fraji and I were in the front seat and his girlfriend sits in the back. And we start talking. So do you need to pull out of here and move somewhere else? No, we're going to stay. I told him I said for me. Okay.
Starting point is 00:03:00 Well, you're going to be more than a minute. Let me tell you. Whatever. Uh-oh. Uh-oh. tell me your name my name is Robert Farachi Alright
Starting point is 00:03:10 So where did you grow up I grew up in the town of Barrington Until I was about 15 Multiple places as a younger child We relocated And what were you like growing up Can I guess
Starting point is 00:03:26 Sure You were very social Right Um Kind of an entrepreneur type I wanted to be. What did you want to be? You know, I really wanted to be, I don't know, I can't answer that.
Starting point is 00:03:44 You know what I think about it now? I never really had a plan of what I wanted to do. I was just living life so fast, the fastest that I can. And I never applied myself with anything. I've always tried to take the easy and fast way out, and I've hurt myself tremendously to this day, to this day. Bob says that he has a lot of regrets. He's had at this point two stints in prison, one for two years, another for nine years.
Starting point is 00:04:13 He's 48. He's a bartender. But when he talks about meeting Paul, you know, this moment that set off a lot of the bad parts of his life, it's almost as if he's reminiscing. I was a ballbuster back then. And, you know, he amused me. You know, not in a funny way where I'm trying to be mean, but. It was just different. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:04:35 It was just different. What did me see you about him? Because he was different. He was different, but I could explain it better if you understood where I come from. How do I feel? Okay, here. I want you to think of Godfather. You've seen that.
Starting point is 00:04:54 Do you know who Luke Cabrasi is? In the beginning of the movie, he was seeing Vito Corleone, and he was practicing on what to say. Don Corleone, thank you for inviting me to your daughter's wedding. He had no personality. There's no fun to this guy. And then there's me, get the fuck out of here. Just talk to the fucking guy.
Starting point is 00:05:17 That was the difference. That is what the difference was. So Bob was a flashy guy. Paul was the quiet, you know, kind of uptight one. And Bob even at one point says that he, Bob, was like, like the Joe Pesci character from Goodfellas. And when he said that, it totally clicked for me because Paul had said the exact same thing. I hadn't expected them to tell the same story, but there were so many moments like that in the
Starting point is 00:05:48 conversation. And then we got to the night of Dean's murder. Bob just completely his whole energy shifts. He's suddenly uncomfortable. He's fidgeting, shaking. his leg, starts to keep turning the heat on and off in the car. Can you tell me, Robert? Can you just tell me?
Starting point is 00:06:10 Tell you what? Tell me what happened. Oh, this here's all under, I don't want to get into this again. So you don't want to talk about, I don't want to talk about that. Again, this, you're opening a can of worms in my life. I am opening a can of worms. I'm sorry. I feel, no, no, I feel bad.
Starting point is 00:06:27 Again, I'm not, I'm not upset. I don't get upset like that. I'm just wondering what your point is on doing this. Actually, now, how do I know you're not a PI? How do I know who you really are? You're acting some serious questions. I'm sorry. And I don't know why you're asking these questions.
Starting point is 00:06:45 All right. Can I show you this? This is a story I did in January. Comment like something you... And I'm PJ vote. Okay, here. We're here because Ruthie, Pinnam and Annie has a story for it. us. Yes, I do.
Starting point is 00:07:03 So. Okay, Surthia, I don't have to listen to this. I'm sorry, I just say I'm not a PI. Okay, besides that, I'm not a PI. You're asking me questions that are really, really detailed at this time. These are some questions that a cop would ask, I'm not saying you're a cop, but these are some very, very serious questions.
Starting point is 00:07:21 Can I, I'm sorry, I can see you're getting upset. I'm not, no, trust me, I'm not upset. No, no, I understand. This is hard stuff. It's hard stuff. So listen, I'll tell you something. There are a few things I don't understand. understand with this, with this whole, the trial, the prosecution's position.
Starting point is 00:07:35 Tell me, leave this in a car. Leave this in a car. Come outside. So we get out of the car at this point. Bob is just shaking all over. I tell him, listen, I have questions about the night the dean died. I have to know what happened. And he says, I can't talk about it. It's too traumatic. I can't get these images out of my head. eventually, you know, he calms down. We get back in the car. I don't want to get into details of what happened that night. Okay.
Starting point is 00:08:11 I just want to tell you this. This is something that I don't care about what these cops, cops say because they live a different life. They, uh, this poor kid, this poor kid, that's all I could say. If it makes, you know, if they, I don't even know how to say it. Yeah. Nobody in this world deserves anything like that. Nobody. Nobody. Nobody deserves that. Nobody, nobody, nobody. People are going to say a lot of bad things about me after you give him this little interview, which is stupid. But you know what? If you think I did it, then think I did it. I don't care. If Paul wants to, if he wants to say this or that, he's got to do what he's got to do. But you know what? I live like this because that's who I am. I, I, I wear my emotions on my sleeve.
Starting point is 00:09:13 And that's who I am. I didn't know what to do with this. I just decided to try another approach. So before the trial, Bob had given the police tons of contradictory statements about Dean's murder. At first he said their friend, Brian was the killer. And then at some point, Brian dropped out of the story. And then he said, Paul was the bad guy. In another statement, he said, Paul once said,
Starting point is 00:09:41 held a gun to a baby's head. It sounded to me like Bob basically just had thrown anything at the wall to see what would stick. And so I asked him about that. I think one of the police reports, your statements were in there. Yeah. I, you know, under intense pressure like that, I said some stupid things. I was under so much pressure. I, you know, think about that.
Starting point is 00:10:09 Think about that. And I didn't know which way to go. Can I turn this off? You could do whatever you want. Yeah, right here, right here. Okay, thank you. Okay, so you're talking to cops. What's, like, what's going on your head?
Starting point is 00:10:28 Like, I'm going to tell them whatever to... Correct. Correct. I'm going to tell them whatever to try to take the heat off me. And I did that. And I lied. Yes, I did. Believe what you want to believe.
Starting point is 00:10:43 You know what I mean? Anyway, Bob says that the bottom line is he told a lot of lies to the police, but the true story of what happened that night, that's the story he told at trial and that's the one I should follow. So the trial. I thought that looking at trial documents would give me just a more straightforward account, a more straightforward account than Bob was giving me in the car. Because that's the way trials work, right? The prosecution tells a story. The defense tells a different story. decide which one you believe.
Starting point is 00:11:16 Except that's not what happened at all. Somehow, at Paul and Bob's trial, the prosecution didn't tell one story. They told two. Two stories that didn't at all line up. And here's how that worked. It starts January 17, 1995. Both Bob and Paul, their co-defendants. So it's the same courtroom, the same prosecutor.
Starting point is 00:11:41 but it's so hard for me to describe it's like a total it's like it's a it's a it's a clown car like I've never heard of a trial like this it's a double jury trial which means that Bob and Paul gets his own jury and do the juries get to listen to both people being tried no no so it's it's so it's like a jigsaw puzzle the way the whole thing works together so there are moments when both juries are in the room at the same time and then there's moments where you know, the prosecutors make their opening statement for Bob, Paul's jury has to leave. And then the prosecution makes the opening statement for Paul. So Paul's jury comes back in and Bob's jury leaves. And so each jury essentially saw one trial, but they both saw very different trials. Is that super confusing? No, it's not. Okay. But I mean, was the prosecutor saying in one trial, Bob Farachi is the mastermind of this and in the other trial, Paul Madrowski is the best of the best of the best. And mastermind of this? Something like that.
Starting point is 00:12:42 Wow. But throughout the trial, which would last five weeks, throughout this trial, the two people who are always there are Bob Frazsche at his table, and there's Paul Madraski at his table. So they're seeing each other's trials as well? Yes, exactly. So they're seeing everything. So let me start with Bob's case. The prosecution had a very, very strong case against Bob, because Bob Frachi, because Bob Frachi,
Starting point is 00:13:10 had given them a recorded, signed confession. He said, I was there the night the dean was killed. His defense is that he was there, but he didn't do it. He was just, you know, a helpless witness that Paul had done everything. But the problem with that is that it's really, really hard to prove. As Bob's own defense attorney, Beth Minor explained to me, who wins cases just saying, well, I was there, but I, you know, I didn't know what he was doing. and I didn't participate and I didn't help in any sort of way.
Starting point is 00:13:44 It's like, oh, right, but you went there with the guy and you left with the guy, and then you lived with the guy. Right, we're really going to believe that. But he had to tell a story. I mean, he had to get up on the stand and he had to testify. So even though it was a completely risky move, on February 9th, Bob Franchi took the stand. And remember, only his jury would hear what he had to say. Paul's jury's out of the room. There's a news article about that moment, and I'm reading exactly what Bob said.
Starting point is 00:14:15 He said, we, Paul and I, went down the embankment like he was jumping into a swimming pool. I thought this whole thing was a sick joke. I didn't think anybody actually died. I heard some sawing noise, and then he looked up at me with a weird expression. Bob then tells the court that Paul had Dean Fawcett's head in his hand. and he said, quote, this is what I'll do to you and your wife if you ever say anything.
Starting point is 00:14:44 Bob says he then vomited. The best witness in the case for me was me. I really didn't have any witness. I was basically the only one. And I was on that stand for an hour and a half and I'll never forget that.
Starting point is 00:14:59 That was, that was, that was, you needed to see that. You needed to see that. How did you feel during the trial? Did you feel like it was going well? I don't know what's going well. What you do is you listen and you make eye contact. And I looked at every single one to say, I didn't do this.
Starting point is 00:15:24 Every single one. Did Paul look at his? I doubt it. Bob's whole defense is to say that Paul is evil. He's a sociopath. And the problem for Paul is that, the prosecution has a lot of evidence that tells the same story. That evidence after the break.
Starting point is 00:15:58 Welcome back to the show. Shruthy picks up the story with the prosecution's case against Paul Madrowski. So back in the courtroom, unlike Bob Frazsche, Paul is completely silent for his entire trial. He's surrounded by a team of lawyers, really good ones, from this big corporate law firm. And these lawyers had a lot to worry about. Because the prosecution had dropped, you know, all of Paul's alleged connections to the Brown's chicken massacre. And it turned out years later that there was actually zero connection. But still, Paul's lawyers were convinced that the members of the jury must have heard about this thing, that they came in prejudiced.
Starting point is 00:16:42 And even without that, there was still all these pieces of incriminating evidence to contend with. For instance, police had found a map book in Paul's bedroom where if you open the person, page to Barrington, Illinois, you'd see right where Dean's body was found a little mark, like X marks a spot. And then on top of that, crucial witness testimony from two of Paul's friends, Brian and Rose Farachi, who both say they'd heard him talk about wanting to kill Dean. But then just before the trial, all of this evidence would just collapse. So take the map. Before trial, we're preparing it's like days before trial. My attorney is like the evidence is now in the courtroom.
Starting point is 00:17:32 They bring in, you know, the physical. One of my attorneys happens to look at them in that book, and he turns to the page and he's looking at it and he's looking at it. And he's like, this ain't no damn. And Mark, this is aligned by the publisher. And so Bill Von Haney, I believe. That's Paul's defense attorney. He orders 10 copies from Radford. McNally, it's a mapbook manufacturer of the same exact mapbook. And it all's a spot. It ain't no checkmark.
Starting point is 00:18:08 It ain't no, it's just the line. And it's on all the maps. So the map book, gone. And then Brian, Rose Farachi, they recant. Brian says, I never heard Paul say anything about wanting to kill Dean. The police took my statements out of context. And then Rose. Rose Farachi went to the state's attorney's office, go over her testimony once again before trial. And Rose basically, she comes out and tells the truth. She's like, everything we said about Paul Medrowski and the Barrington murder, we just made up.
Starting point is 00:18:45 And when I heard that news, my attorneys came to visit me right away after they heard that news. I thought the charges were going to be dropped against me. And they said, no, no. The state's attorney's office will never, ever drop these charges. Here's why. I spoke to James McKay, who is the prosecutor, and it's been 20-something years since this trial. But like when you talk to McKay now, he's just as convinced and convincing about Paul as, I mean, as I imagine he was back then. This crime could not have been committed by one person, all right? The kidnapping of Dean Fawcett, a young adult by Robert Farachi. No, this crime was committed by two people.
Starting point is 00:19:34 McKay says Dean was murdered on December 28, 1992. That's the day after that night of partying at the Ramada Inn. I believe that Paul Medrowski took him to those railroad tracks in Barrington, and along with Bob Farachi, shot him in the head, and then severed his body parts soon thereafter, and disposed of those body parts never to be found. Paul has consistently painted himself as this side character. So this guy who always stood back, followed other people.
Starting point is 00:20:06 But this is not at all how McKay sees him. McKay sees Paul as the mastermind. Everybody who was part of this ring all saw Paul as the lead manipulator of Dean. They all saw Paul as the person who used physical force. on Dean to get him to commit these thefts using these bogus checks. So what you're saying is that Paul was the ringleader? Yes, that's exactly what I'm saying. Even though Robert was the older guy?
Starting point is 00:20:42 Like he was what, like 26, 27 when? He wasn't that much older. Right, Bob was seven years older than him, Bob Farachi. Okay, it doesn't matter. He was still an adult. He was 18 at the time of this murder. And more importantly, he was more streetwise than many other criminals are. This guy had been committing several crimes as young as the age of 12.
Starting point is 00:21:11 So whether he was 18 or 80, he was a wise, cagey veteran in the criminal world. Did you ever have just like hard evidence that he pulled the trigger? The hard evidence, as you call it, included among other things. The medical examiner testified about the severing of Dean's hands and his head and how the cutting instrument, whatever the cutting instrument was, it was done with a steady hand. It wasn't haphazardly done. And if you saw Paul McDra- Is that, that's your evidence, like the steady hand? No. Well, that's part of all of the evidence. It's not just the one thing. You saw it when you talked to him that Paul Madrowski is one cool customer. He's not like the nervous lying weasel that Bob Farachi is.
Starting point is 00:22:16 And McKay, he has a witness who he says can prove that Paul was this calculating killer. So on the second day of the second day of the person, he has a witness who he says can prove that Paul was this calculating killer. So on the second day of the trial, he calls this woman to the stand. Her name is Nadine Lenarchek. She's 33 years old, neatly dressed, has long, bleached blonde hair. And she testifies that she knew Dean. She was actually part of that whole Christmas shopping spree. So she was involved in the Czech fraud stuff. Yeah, exactly. And so Nadine's story is that she was alone with Dean that night. And he said to her at one point, if they were involved in the Czech fraud stuff. Yeah, exactly. And so Nadine's story is that she was alone with Dean that night. And he said to her at one point, if I get in trouble, I'm going to go tell the police everything. As in I'm going to put this whole thing on Bob and Paul and the others. And so Nadine apparently went and told Bob Farachi this. So the police are convinced this is their motive. They know Bob knew he probably told Paul. and so their motive, you know, Dean was killed because these guys were afraid that he was going to rat them out. That makes sense. Yes.
Starting point is 00:23:23 And so the other thing Nadine does is she puts Bob Fraucci and Paul with Dean Fawcett right before he's killed. So Paul's story is morning of December 28th. He woke up in that hotel room and left. He left. Dean was sleeping. He never saw him again. Paul says that he drove to his sister's house that day and was there until midnight. Why does he remember that December? Because it's his dad's birthday.
Starting point is 00:23:51 Okay. So this is his story. Nadine says that she was with Dean Fawcett, December 28th. She was the eyewitness that saw Farachi and Madrowski pull up in Madrowski's car. She saw Madrowski grab Dean Fawcett, force him into the back seat of that car, and then watch the three of them drive away. She never saw Dean again, and that date was the date that Dean Fawcett was killed. That feels pretty damning.
Starting point is 00:24:19 Yes. Does she have any reason to lie? She, I mean, she seems relatively unbiased, but there are problems with their testimony. So I'm actually looking at the trial transcript from that day, and Paul's defense attorney asks her, you know, when she was a kid, he said, At that time, you suffered some damage to the brain, right? And Nadine answers yes. And then he asks, and when you're under stress, you experience difficulty seeing and hearing, don't you? McKay objects.
Starting point is 00:24:53 He's overruled. And then Nadine says yes. And then the defense attorney asks, and there have been instances in your life where you have found yourself in places, not knowing how you got there. Again, McKay tries to object, overruled, and Nadine says yes. And it just goes on like this for pages and pages. The defense attorney asks about her extensive drug use, cocaine, and Paul says in his blog that Nadine's answers during this cross-examination came off as so, quote-unquote, ludicrous that a few times there was laughter in the courtroom. So she's not exactly a witness you'd want to base your entire case on. You need more.
Starting point is 00:25:36 And so McKay explains he has this other. thing that he considers hard evidence, the gun. So police were very convinced that Dean was shot in the head. There was no gun that they ever found. But when they arrested Paul and they were interrogating him, they kept asking him, where's the murder weapon? And Paul says that at some point he said, I know where the gun is. And he says, I was just lying.
Starting point is 00:26:04 I just said it under interrogation stress. But, yeah. But he just implicated himself. Right, I know. It's assonine. How old is he? 18. Yeah. And this whole tail chase, it never ends.
Starting point is 00:26:19 You know, who knows what Paul knew, maybe he knew where the gun was, maybe it didn't. But the point is, the gun is never found. And once Paul claims he knows where the gun is, it would never leave the minds of the police. Jim McKay would bring it up throughout the trial. I mean, watch how he brings up the missing gun here with me when I ask him about physical evidence. Can you tell me about what was for you the most compelling physical evidence? Actually, you know what? The absence of the physical evidence in a way is compelling.
Starting point is 00:26:56 Madraski, at the time of his arrest, knew exactly where the murder weapon was, and he refused to give that to the police, refused to divulge the location of that gun. That speaks volumes. That's powerful evidence of guilt. Jim just said the absence of evidence is compelling evidence. And he used this idea more than once in the trial. For instance, there's this reporter, John Carpenter.
Starting point is 00:27:20 He told me the story of how McKay had submitted some evidence about how there was blunt trauma to Dean's head. And then somebody objected saying that there's no evidence of blunt trauma to the head because there's no head. The head was never found. And it was one of these moments where you're sitting there watching and you're thinking, this really kind of important testimony or piece of evidence might get thrown out. And there was like a pause, but then McKay jumped up and really emphatically said, Your Honor, I submit that absence of a head is clear and convincing evidence of blunt trauma to the head. His idea is, I am the law.
Starting point is 00:28:03 I am outraged that this murder happened, and my job is to put these guys away. Jim McKay is saying to the jury every chance he gets, you know, Nadine Lenarchek, that missing gun, all of this is proof that Paul Madrowski is the killer. The problem is he doesn't have any physical evidence to place Paul at the railroad track that night. But he's saying it doesn't matter. I have something else that's perfectly adequate to convict him.
Starting point is 00:28:32 So the third week of the trial, Prosecutor McKay calls John Robertson to the stand. Detective Robertson is the person who first arrested Paul and interrogated him right after. And according to him, Paul confessed to him and said, I knew that Bob Frotchy wanted to kill Dean Fawcett. I didn't want to go along with him, but I told Bob, go ahead, use my car. Detective Robertson wrote all of this up in this very, long, detailed report. I have it right here. It's like these, you know, it's neat typewritten notes.
Starting point is 00:29:13 And he says this is what Paul told him. Bobby wanted me to go along to Houdini Dean. Bobby asked me to go with and I told him no. I told him he could use my car. I used the excuse to Dean that I was tired and knew Bobby was going to Houdini, in brackets, kill Dean. I gave him my car to take Dean away. I went into the apartment and I never saw or heard from Dean again. which seems not so exciting because... Well, it actually seems contrary to everything. If they're trying to prove that he did it, how does it help to say that he said he didn't do it and wasn't there?
Starting point is 00:29:50 Yeah. So they're thinking we don't have enough physical evidence to show that he pulled the trigger. But we don't need that. And we can actually use this statement to get him convicted. And here's why. McKay is thinking about this law in Illinois that says, you don't need to pull the trigger. all you need to have done is help someone you know is going to kill someone and you are accountable for that murder.
Starting point is 00:30:13 Okay. That actually, that doesn't seem like that seems reasonable. Yep. And so all prosecutor McKay has to do is show that Paul helped Bob Frazsche, lent him his car, knowing, hoping that Bob would go kill Dean Fawcett. But Paul's lawyer believes that this law may not even apply to Paul. In this case that, you know, in this case with the lending of the car. And he has a team of legal researchers look into it. And they come back and they say, short answer, nope, doesn't apply.
Starting point is 00:30:43 So Paul's defense team says, okay, go ahead, McKay, make your argument. We're not going to sweat it. But Paul, he says he was sitting there thinking, whoa, whoa, whoa. First of all, I didn't lend my car to Bob Frajee that day. And second of all, I never told cops that I lent my car to him. So he just doesn't understand his defense attorney's strategy. Why isn't he challenging the cops? When that cop testified that I let Dean go to his death,
Starting point is 00:31:14 I'm not very good. I'm not very good at reading people, but I could tell that the jury, their demeanor changed, their body language changed towards me. And I told my attorney while he was cross-examining that cop, I told him, you get the F back up there and you cut him down. What the hell are you doing?
Starting point is 00:31:40 Exact quote. He was like, what do you mean? He called you a cooperating witness. This is great. I said, no, it's not great. Go back up there and cut him down. Paul's so angry. He tells his lawyer, let me take the stand.
Starting point is 00:31:55 Let me tell everybody that this guy, Robertson, is lying. And so we argue about this for a little while. And eventually he just, he just, says, look, if you say that you want to take the stand, I'm just going to quit. You can represent yourself. I don't know if you know how stressful it is being under a murder trial. I didn't know how to deal with that. I asked Paul's defense attorneys several times if they would do an interview with me and they declined. And I was actually wondering, like, this thing that Paul is claiming that this is a false confession, could that, I mean, could that possibly be true? I mean, people are
Starting point is 00:32:42 always accusing police of falsifying confessions, but I did actually think that there were things here in this confession that felt that I have questions about. So, for instance, the report just repeatedly calls Bob Bobby, you know, Paul always calls Bob Bob. Another thing is, okay, so Paul was interrogated April 28th and 29th, and this report is dated and signed a whole 19 days later. And had, I mean, so I get why that's unusual. I'm assuming. Can I tell you the most unusual thing? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:16 The most unusual thing is, in my eyes, is the police had questioned a number of other suspects and witnesses, like Bob Farachie. Had they done it in between? Exactly. Rose Farachi, Bob Fratchy. And in all of those cases, they had either handwritten statements from these people or, like, in Bob Fraudje's case, they transcribed everything he said and he signed every single page. In Paul's case, none of that. Like, you just have the detectives report and the only other signature there is another detectives. Like, you don't, I feel like people have different attitudes or whether they trust law enforcement or not.
Starting point is 00:33:54 You don't have to be super paranoid or super anti-law enforcement to believe that in the 1990s, A police officer in Illinois could have had it, could have forced a false confession or create a false confession. Like this was a documented thing that happened so much so that when Obama was a state senator, one of his big achievements was passing a lot that said like, police in Illinois have got to tape confessions because essentially like we don't trust the ones that the cops write down. Right. So I really wanted to talk to John Robertson and understandably maybe he didn't want to talk to me. but his partner, John Coziel, who was also there during the interrogation, he did talk to me. And I have to say he had pretty good explanations for things. He said, you know, maybe Paul didn't want to sign a statement. Like that happens all the time where somebody says some things to the cops, but they don't want to put their name to paper because they're worried that they've already gotten themselves into trouble.
Starting point is 00:34:52 That would make it worse. He says we write reports after, like, days, weeks after the interrogation, that happens too. like this was a big case. And most of all, he says, why would we have made up such an idiotic lie? If we were to make up a lie to send an innocent man to loaning your car to go kill someone. And, you know, I want to make it clear. I didn't get into this business. Paul was innocent. I'd be the first one showing up at those hearings to fight for his innocence. It's just not something that is even in my psyche or anyone I ever worked with. Why would they have made this thing up about, like, you lending your car? Why? Because they take what you say and they manipulate it and they twist it into something.
Starting point is 00:35:45 Right, right. But you told me time and time again, you said I told the cops nothing. All I said was, give me an attorney. No, I never said that. I could tell some things under coercion. What they said, I said, is inaccurate, right, false. But tell me what you actually did say. Like, help me understand this. You know, the thracies did borrow my car. All the. time. And I did say that. Afrachis always borrowed my car. No, I didn't borrow Bob my car on the 28 to kill Bean Fawcett with. Never. That report is told garbage. Now, of course, yeah, there's some truth in that garbage. But when you put it all together, it's bullshit. I've never heard you
Starting point is 00:36:31 curse this much. Just got me out of bed. It's the fourth week of the trial. Paul's lawyers had plan to call alibi witnesses on Paul's behalf, like Bernadette. Paul's sister, she was supposed to go up and take the stand and say, December 28th, the day that Dean was allegedly murdered, I was with Paul, he was at my house, it was my father's birthday, and he was nowhere near the scene of the crime. But she says that that day, Bill Von Haney, Paul's defense attorney, he had prepped her, she was ready to go. Ready.
Starting point is 00:37:11 And he told us, we're not going to need. you. And I had this blink guilty, and we don't really prove that he was guilty. He wanted us to testify, and I told him, Paul, don't worry. Don't worry. And what was he, do you remember what he was saying?
Starting point is 00:37:57 Like, what was he? Yeah. You know, I don't, I can't quote him, but I know he being the fist down on the counter. He was angry and crying at the same time. No, I need to testify.
Starting point is 00:38:11 Everyone needs to testify. I just trusted them, and I kept telling Paul, no, don't worry about it. They know what they're doing. They've done this before. We don't know. So, yeah, the defense rests. And then the prosecution, McKay's partner, makes the closing statement. I'm going to read you the last lines.
Starting point is 00:38:36 He points at Paul Madraski, and he says, they say that the eyes are the window to the soul. Don't look into his eyes. You may have shivers come up your spine. and surely don't touch him, for if you do, his body must truly be cold to the touch. The last time I cried, I was at trial. I shed. And it was when I realized that that jury was going to convict me.
Starting point is 00:39:03 I could just feel it. I knew I was going to be found guilty. And I met with my parents, and I told them, I said, look, you don't have a son anymore because I knew the judge was going to give me so much time that I would never. ever. The two juries break to deliberate. Bob Frachie's jury comes back with the verdict, not guilty, which everyone thinks is shocking. After all, this was the man who had a signed recorded confession saying he was there at the murder scene.
Starting point is 00:39:37 And then Paul. Days later, Paul's jury comes back, and when they do, they say, we find you guilty. And here's why. Remember that whole argument about whether or not lending some of the jury. your car could be the same as murdering someone. So the prosecution turns out was right and Paul's lawyer was wrong. So not only did he not defend Paul against that, in his closing argument, Bill Van Haney, his lawyer, he actually says, so what if Paul lent Bob Fraudgie's car? So he's like accidentally saying, so what if my client is guilty?
Starting point is 00:40:17 Exactly. I actually asked Paul's current attorney, Jennifer Blag, about this, and she said when she read this part of the transcript, she basically fell out of her chair. Did the trial have like a turning point, like a moment? Yeah, Boban, 80 said he loaned the car. Fuckins put the nail in the coffin. Roll him out. It's over. You know what I mean? Yeah, that's a turning point. Once your attorney concedes the state's evidence is correct and the state's evidence is sufficient to convict you, And it's done. Yeah. And Paul is up for the death sentence at this point.
Starting point is 00:40:59 It's really hard to wrap my head around that. I know. And, you know, the reason I started paying attention to this entire trial is because I thought it would help me answer this question, which is at the heart of this whole thing. Is Paul who he says he is? Or is he a murderer? Is his blog basically, you know, a hundred and something thousand words of a murderer pretending to be a charming eccentric? And in the end, what's frustrating is the prosecution, I think the prosecution never had to prove who Paul really was. I mean, they talked about it.
Starting point is 00:41:48 They said he was evil. But to win the case, all they needed to say was this guy, he lent his car. to Bob Farachi. I mean, a thing that I feel like I wonder is, from your perspective, looking at the trial, I think it can feel like the jurors, the people there got a really narrow view of Paul. But the people there could also... Because he didn't say a single word. He just sat there the entire time.
Starting point is 00:42:14 Right. Which is the exact opposite version of the Paul that I've been getting. I've been getting just all these words, like all these blog entries, all these phone calls. And I think that somebody who was there, like I wonder if they would say, well, you have a narrow view of him. Like, if all you know is what somebody looks like on paper, you don't know that. Absolutely, and that's exactly what they say. So I have spoken to reporters who covered this trial. I've talked to jury members, you know, who sat there and looked at Paul for five weeks. I've talked to Dean Fawcett's mother who was there every day.
Starting point is 00:42:47 And every single one of them says, listen, if you were sitting there in that room, you would know. I mean, one person said to me, you know, I don't believe, like, I think the idea of evil, evil as this concrete thing, I think that's really silly and dramatic. But honestly, sitting there in the room, that's how I felt that I was in the presence of something really, really evil. Srethi Bidiminani is a producer for our show. Next time on Reply All, what all of these people are seeing, and the conclusion. conclusion of our story on the inside. The Plyall is hosted by PJ Vote and me, Alex Goldman. The show is produced by Shruti Pinnaminani, Fia Bannon, and Chloe Prasinos.
Starting point is 00:44:20 Our executive producer is Tim Howard. The show is edited by Peter Clowney. Production assistance from Tom Cody. The show was mixed by Rick Kwan and Austin Thompson. The show was fact-checked by Michelle Harris. Matt Lieber is the first day of the year that you can fall asleep with the window open. Special thanks this week to Eric Mettle, Eileish O'Neill, Zach Stewart Pontier, Mark Smirling, Anthony O'Rourke, Jason Wee, Iona Seaworth, James Rico, Nicole Santilli, and Detective Kevin Cropke.
Starting point is 00:44:51 Big thanks to Richard McAdams of the University of Chicago for his excellent legal advice. And extra special thanks to Mary Kay Fawcett. Our theme music is by the mysterious breakmaster cylinder, and our ad music is by Build Build Buildings. You can find more episodes at iTunes.com slash replyall. Our website is replyall.fail. Thanks for listening. We are taking next week off to work on some stories, but we will see you in two weeks for the conclusion of On the Inside.

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