Serialously with Annie Elise - 162: The TRUTH About ‘Dirty John’ With Special Guest Terra Newell
Episode Date: June 3, 2024On August 20, 2016, Terra Newell was ambushed by her notorious con-artist stepfather, John Meehan, most prominently known as "Dirty John". Terra's story has been depicted in many podcasts and TV serie...s. However, not everything that has been said about her life and her story has been accurately portrayed. In this episode, Terra sets the record straight and gives a chilling account of her experience. Link to Terra: https://linktr.ee/terranewell Liquid IV Get 20% off your first order when you go to https://www.liquidiv.com nd use code AE at checkout. Huggies Learn more at https://www.Huggies.com. Once again, head to Huggies.com to learn more. Better Help Visit https://www.BetterHelp.com/ae today to get 10% off your first month. Seed Go to https://www.Seed.com/ae and use code 25AE to get 25% off your first month. Beam Head to https://www.shopbeam.com/ANNIEELISE and use code ANNIEELISE for an additional 40% off. Don’t forget supplies are limited and you can only shop it through my link. Shop the Merch: www.annieelise.com Follow the podcast on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@serialouslypodcast Follow the podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/serialouslypod/ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/annieelise All Social Media Links: https://www.flowcode.com/page/annieelise_ SERIALously FB Page: https://www.facebook.com/SERIALouslyAnnieElise/ About Me: https://annieelise.com/ For Business Inquiries: 10toLife@WMEAgency.com
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Hey, true crime besties, welcome back to an all-new episode of Serialistly.
Hey, everybody, welcome back to an all new episode of Serialistly with me, Annie Elise.
We have got a very special episode for you today because not only will I be doing a full deep dive on this case and probably sharing some information that even if you think you're familiar with the case, I can pretty much guarantee you haven't heard before, but I have a very special guest joining me as well. So the case I'm talking about
today is we're going to be going into a full deep dive into the story of John Meehan, aka Dirty John,
and we're particularly going to be looking at his relationship with Tara Newell. Now, I know some of
you guys might be thinking like, hey, hasn't this story already
been covered to death? No pun intended. But we've heard it, we've seen the docuseries, we've seen
the miniseries, all of these things. Why are we covering this crime instead of shining a light
on something that maybe hasn't gotten this kind of attention in the past? But the reason why is
because not only are there details that I feel like definitely have not been visited or portrayed
correctly, But after speaking
with Tara, she said that there's a lot of things she wants to set straight, that this docuseries,
even the podcast, they got a lot of the information wrong. And so who better to tell what actually
happened, who Dirty John actually was, and the lengths that he went to and his crazy ass behavior than Tara herself, the person who not only
experienced all of it firsthand, but ultimately brought Dirty John down. So I have Tara in studio
today, and she is going to be sharing so much information with us. I'm going to be asking her
questions, and we are going to just be able to hear from her directly. But before we get into
that portion of the interview,
I am going to give a brief summary on the case,
just in case maybe you're not entirely familiar with the story of Dirty John,
in case maybe you need a little bit of a refresher since it's been a couple years.
Don't worry, I'm going to keep it very high level,
but I do want to just give a little bit of background
before we then get into the nitty-gritty with Tara herself.
In the spring and summer of
2014, 23-year-old Tara Newell was living in Las Vegas. Now, even though she was living in Las Vegas,
she was still very close with her mom, who was a single mom, Deborah Newell, and also her sister
Jacqueline. The two of them both lived in Southern California, in Orange County to be specific. And
Orange County is just south of Los Angeles. It's kind of the
land of beaches, fancy restaurants, even Disneyland. And it's a place that Tara herself used to call
home as well. So Tara, her mom, and Jacqueline all still were in contact regularly, and they always
talked on the phone. They especially were talking a lot once Jacqueline started calling her sister
Tara all the time to complain about their mom Deborah's new boyfriend, John. Now in all of this,
Tara didn't really know whose side to take. I mean, Jacqueline, her sister, didn't really like
John. But her mom Deborah seemed super, super into him, just head over heels. And ultimately,
Tara just wanted her mom to be happy because Deborah had already been married and divorced
four separate times. She was hopeful that she would finally find her soulmate, her person.
And John sounded like he was a good catch.
He said that he was an anesthesiologist, that he volunteered with Doctors Without Borders.
But then based on the conversations that Tara and Jacqueline kept having,
it sounded like her sister Jacqueline didn't believe a word that was coming out of John's mouth.
I was skeptical, but I also knew that my sister didn't like a lot of my mom's significant others.
I wanted to go in and have my own opinion of everything.
So a little bit of time had passed, but then Tara got her chance to meet John for herself in mid-November of that year.
She was planning on coming into town to spend Thanksgiving with her family,
but she decided to come a little bit earlier because she wanted to help her mom move into her new house in Newport Beach. Specifically,
it was a new house in Balboa, and it was expensive. It was $6,500 a month, and Deborah was paying the
rent all by herself. Tara didn't realize it at the time, but John was living with her mom there
in that new house completely for free. Now as for Tara, she was still living in Las Vegas at the
time, but she wasn't really loving Vegas as much as she thought that she would, and she didn't like being so far away
from her mom and her sister. So this visit, aside from just visiting family and spending the holiday
together, was also a chance to sort of play with the idea of moving back to California full-time.
So Tara goes to the house, and she meets John, but he did not make a good first impression.
He was a bit rude, a bit
arrogant, and even a little bit irritable, and he kind of acted like a know-it-all. He even gave
Tara some medical advice when she mentioned that she had been having some health issues,
and the only time that he really ever stopped talking was when Tara started asking him questions
about his own life, and he didn't want to say anything about himself. But then the weirdest
thing happened after the
whole family went out to dinner and to see a movie and everybody drove back to Deborah's house
afterward. Then we go back to the place and when we get back to the place my mom gets out of the
car goes upstairs and John's still in the car with us. I try to open the door and the child locks
around the door. Tell John hey John I think the child locks around the door and the child locks are on the door. Tell John, hey John, I think the child
locks are on the door. Can you let me out? He essentially doesn't hear me or I think he doesn't
hear me. So I say it again a bit louder. Hey John, can you let me out of the car? The child locks are
on. And he literally gets out of the car and he goes upstairs. This was really the first red flag that I was able
to see with John. Instead, I gaslit myself and I told myself, oh, he didn't hear me. Now, the more
that Tara thought about it, she just felt in her gut like something wasn't right about John,
especially after she met up with him again another time. Hung out. I think the next night we did a taco night with my
friends. My friend Tina also came over along with Dan and Jimmy was there. We just had a good time
in a sense and John was happy. He was drinking. He was I think taking pills at least. I saw him
take a pills and then he had all these pills these medicine bottles lined up so I
thought that was super interesting but hey who knows he's a bit older and people have medication
and my mom had medication so who knows so as time goes on just the vibe is not really great, but it's okay. Now, of course, as we know,
her sister Jacqueline was also not a big fan of John at all. I mean, and that is putting it like
mildly. So now both daughters were saying to their mom, like, hey, mom, this guy might not be good
news. We have a really bad feeling about him. Look into him, check him out. You shouldn't trust him,
especially until you're sure that he's actually legit. But like, do your homework on this guy. We feel kind of some grimy vibes.
But Debra brushed it off. She was head over heels for this guy. He was everything that she wanted
in a partner, so she thought. So she decided to follow her heart instead. And she married John
in December of 2014. And this was just two months after they met. Once Jacqueline heard the news, she ended up crying
all through Christmas. I mean, she was completely devastated. She was so upset, and she was so
worried about everything that was going on because something just didn't feel right to her. Plus, a
lot of John's story also didn't make sense to her, and it didn't make sense to Tara. He said he was a
doctor, but he always had dirt underneath his nails. And the girls knew enough that they knew that doctors had to always keep their hands like
very, very clean, because of course, you need to be sterile, you need it to be clean. And like,
that was just one example, there was just something off about him. You know, when you get that
feeling in your gut, like, this doesn't quite feel 100% right. That's what they were feeling.
And then they started picking up on all these little things and all these little indicators that were kind of just further proving to themselves
that their intuition was right. Then at one point, Tara stumbled across a box that was inside the
closet. And inside this box, it had John's nursing certificate. Now this really confused her because
remember, John said that he was a doctor not a nurse and
when she asked him about it not in a confrontational way or anything like that but just like
hey I don't really understand this can you explain this he got very very defensive and almost angry
like she had found out something serious something damning like that she had outed this big secret of
his and this was actually kind of a common theme with John. Anytime it
seemed like somebody was questioning him or threatening him, John would just get angry.
But then at other times, he'd be a little too sweet, a little too nice. And the behavior
wavered enough that it started to feel like he was trying to manipulate not only the girls,
but also Deborah. He just love bombed on her and if you don't know what love bombing means
it means when someone is giving you so much attention in the beginning making you feel so
great in the beginning doing things like maybe giving you little coffees he would get her a
coffee every day. He would even hold her purse all the time which I thought was kind of weird.
Then he would just be
like, oh, I want to help you with everything. I want to help you out. And that was also his way
of getting in. So he love bombed her. And then he developed her trust. You know, he was really
someone that she could depend on. Someone that was there for her. We would take walks at the end of
the day and he wanted to hear all about my day. He would make me breakfast. He would take my dry cleaning in, take my mail to
the mailbox. So you thought, I've got the perfect husband. I thought so. So Tara and Jacqueline
decided like, look, something doesn't feel right here. And if mom's not going to dig into it,
maybe we should start digging into it. And that's what they did. They started looking into his background, and they even went as far as to hire a private detective
to try to find out what John was hiding, who John really was, what was the truth here. And oh boy,
guys, was he hiding stuff. John also apparently had homes all over the country, and there were
a ton of women who had taken out restraining orders against him.
Clearly a very dangerous and shady individual, to say the least. Plus, John was not a real doctor,
just like Tara had indicated when she had found that nursing certificate. It was all a ruse,
and this was especially disturbing because the whole time that John had been with her mom, Deborah, he had made this huge, big, elaborate show of putting on his scrubs every morning,
driving to work, to go to work at the hospital.
I mean, truly, like, trying to sell this hoax massively.
Now, obviously, he was lying, but if he wasn't going to the hospital to work all day,
what was he really doing all day?
Now, the creepiest part to my mind is what
he had been up to before he met Debra. Now, remember, he said that he was a part of Doctors
Without Borders, specifically that he had been working in Iraq. Well, as it turns out, that's
not where John was. John was actually in prison on charges of drug theft. And John got released
from prison literally right before he met Debra. He got out
of prison, signed up on a dating website, and then boom, that's when he met Debra. So Jacqueline and
Tara felt kind of relieved. They're like, oh, we hate that we were right about this guy, but at
least now we have all of this information. We have proof that he's been lying. We have proof of who
he really is. He's a con man, all of these things. So they brought all of this evidence to their mom,
and they showed her what they had learned. But what they these things. So they brought all of this evidence to their mom, and they showed
her what they had learned. But what they weren't expecting when they brought this huge revelation
to their mom on a silver platter was that she defended John. Deborah thought, no, there must
be a reasonable explanation for everything here. Now, the good news is that after all of this
happened, one of John's former cellmates actually wrote John a letter,
and the cellmate sent it to John and Deborah's address. So when Deborah saw the return address
and saw that it was for a prison, her curiosity started to get the better of her, and she decided
to read this letter. There wasn't anything immediately red flaggy about the letter other
than the fact that this inmate clearly knew John and had served time with him, but it was now more difficult for her to shrug off the idea of who John may really be,
because apparently prior to that point, it had been a little bit easier for her to just
sort of shrug off what her daughters were thinking, to shrug off what they had found,
but now she had proof in her hands. John was lying. He was a criminal. And Deborah now could not trust her husband.
So that was finally the straw that broke the camel's back, and she decided she needed to
look into John's background herself. So Deborah starts doing her own digging. And on top of
everything that her daughters had already figured out, Deborah also learned that John had a very
long, long criminal record, guys. I mean, some of his past charges were for
violent behavior like stalking and even threatening former significant others. And one woman had even
accused him of raping her. And on top of all of that, John was a con artist through and through.
He had a very long history of dating women and using them for their money. And John had worked as an
anesthesiologist for a while, but he lost his job due to issues with drugs. So that's when it seems
as though he really started to spiral downhill. So now in this moment, it feels like all the walls
are closing in. Debra's realizing that she was conned. She was taken for a ride. This guy isn't
at all who he says that he is. He's a complete liar, and
all of these great things that he had said about how he loved Debra, he wanted them to be something
real, it was all a complete lie. He had been using her, and he had been intentionally driving a wedge
between her and her daughters, basically isolating her so that nobody could stop him from just taking
full advantage of her, full advantage of her money,
her love, her willingness, everything. So needless to say, by this point, which was now March 2015,
Debra was ready to ditch John, get rid of his sorry ass, dump his ass, and move on with her life.
Except we all know that guys who are manipulative, controlling, isolating, and con artists, they are not known to
take rejection well, and they do not lay down lightly. And on top of all of that, John had
something in common with a lot of other scammers out there. For the most part, in order to even be
willing to take advantage of somebody in this way, you have to have what are called three dark
personality traits. Narcissism, Machiavellianism, and Psychopathy.
Basically, a willingness to do whatever you have to do to get whatever it is that you want,
even if it means hurting other people. And this described John to a T. So like I said before,
John would go back and forth between these extremes. Sometimes he would be acting super,
super sweet, like he just wanted Deborah back, that he was sorry, that he loved her, that he would change. And in turn, she would
agree to keep seeing him for a little while. But then they would split again. It was back and forth
like this for almost one year exactly, from March 2015 to March 2016. And during that time, Tara did
end up moving back to California, just like she had been thinking of
doing and in the interest of keeping peace within her family she even tried to find a way to get
along with John to keep an open mind even after all of the massive red flags that she had seen
around him and all of the horrible information that she had discovered but then in March of 2016
Deborah finally divorced John and he took this final breakup especially badly, guys. I mean,
John was pissed that Debra called things off, so he decided to do what we see a lot of narcissist
scary people do, and he decided to lash out at her. Think this, posting revenge porn on Facebook,
stealing Debra's car. He even went as far as saying that he had relatives in the mafia
and that he would send them after Debra if she didn't do what he said. I mean, really scary stuff.
And then there were also the threatening phone calls. Tanya, you enjoy your time left on this
earth, okay? Because that's what it's going to come down to. So this whole thing, as you can imagine,
really was frightening for Debra and frightening enough that she actually went into hiding for a
while. Meanwhile, John now had his own place where he lived in just absolute squalor and filth. And
I guess it was because when he didn't have a wife or a girlfriend to take care of him,
he just couldn't even be bothered to pick up after himself. I don't know, but it was truly disgusting.
And while he was
now living alone this whole time, it just allowed him to kind of like stew on this anger, and he just
got angrier and angrier until finally he went for the ultimate betrayal, and he decided to go after
Deborah's daughter. He decided to go after Tara. So on August 20th, 2016, just five months after Deborah and John's divorce, Tara was
outside in the parking lot of her apartment building. Unbeknownst to her that anybody was
watching her, unbeknownst to her that anybody might be following her, she was just living life
like a normal 20-something year old does. It was about 5 30 p.m. She was just minding her business,
not even thinking about John,
when then all of a sudden he appeared out of nowhere and with him he was holding a knife.
Right away Tara realized that John planned to kill her, probably all to get back at her mom,
and he asked her when he saw her, do you remember me? And then he grabbed Tara by the waist.
She tried to run away, but John started stabbing at her multiple times.
But Tara fought.
She fought back for her life.
She was kicking.
She was biting.
And luckily, her service dog that was with her also started barking and trying to help her,
trying to save her in all of this.
And the good news is that Tara was struggling with him and fighting back enough that
she managed to knock the knife completely out of his hands. And then when she did, she grabbed that knife for herself. And what happened next is
honestly a total hero moment, in my opinion. See, Tara had never taken any sort of classes in self
defense and martial arts, nothing like that. She wasn't the sort of person that you'd expect to be
able to fight off this violent attacker who was bigger than her, stronger than her. We're talking a full-grown, adult-sized man against this 20-something-year-old young woman.
But what Tara did have going for her, even though she didn't have a history with martial arts or
anything like that, she was a huge fan of the TV show The Walking Dead. So after watching hour
after hour of people killing these zombies on TV all to, you know,
survive the apocalypse, she had this very, very detailed idea in her head of how she needed to
fight, and even how she needed to take a life if she needed to. So in that moment, Tara imagined
that John was a zombie, which, not for nothing, he probably did look like a disheveled, crazy-ass
zombie. So she grabbed his head, she held it back
so that he couldn't bite her, and she took that knife and she stabbed him over and over and over
until he finally would stop. Now for a lot of the attack, Tara was kind of just like slashing almost
at random. But then she stopped to think about what she had to do to make him leave her alone
for good. Because in this moment, she knew that it was dire and she knew that this was the type of fight that was a kill or be killed situation newport beach number one there's
a man up here with a knife and a girl screaming hi i need an ambulance right away and the police
someone's been stabbed and he attacked a girl
when the police and the first responders arrived a little while later, they found Tara and John,
and they were both badly hurt. But here's what's crazy. Instead of rushing them both to get medical
attention because they both had all of these wounds, they questioned Tara as though she was
the suspect because they took one look at John, saw that he had a knife wound to his eye, and they
immediately started treating her as the perp. Never mind
that Tara had also been stabbed and needed urgent medical treatment. They treated her like a criminal,
questioning her for hours before they even bothered to get her the help that she needed.
I mean, don't get me wrong, I get it that they need to investigate everybody at the scene, but
in my opinion, they kind of fumbled the ball here. And to make matters worse, they tried to check Tara into the exact same hospital where John was already staying, which honestly, what a horrifying
and traumatizing situation that must have been. And Tara felt this way. So she put her foot down
and she demanded to be transferred somewhere else. She did not want to be anywhere near John,
because at this point, John was still alive. She was still scared of him. She didn't want to be
anywhere in close proximity to him. So eventually, the police did listen to her, and luckily,
Tara went on to make a full recovery from her stab wounds. But at this point, John, I mean,
he was basically brain dead. He spent four days on life support before ultimately, the medical
experts convinced Deborah to pull the plug. I mean, up until that point, even after everything,
she just didn't want to let him go. She was really struggling with the idea of taking him off of life support.
But finally, she gave the go-ahead on August 24th, and John, Dirty John, passed away. And at this
point, everybody thought they knew everything that there was to know about John. They knew his
history. They knew what was going on. All of his dirty secrets were out.
But it wasn't even scratching the surface of what the truth really was and what everybody was about to discover.
And we're going to get right into that after we have a quick break and hear from today's first sponsors.
So John just attacked Tara. She luckily survived. She fought like hell and now he's been pulled off life support, and he's dead. But it was far from over, because once John was now out of the picture, the whole terrible story
about his past came to light. Now, I already covered his scams and his criminal history,
but there was so much more in terms of allegations that had not yet been proven.
You know, the kind of things that maybe won't show up on your police report. Like once when a pair of police officers started investigating all of John's scams,
he actually tried to hire a hitman to kill these detectives. Luckily, no one actually accepted this
job and the officers are still alive, but I mean, seriously, the gall of this man, the nerve,
to hire a hitman to kill detectives? Like, are you out of your freaking mind? It really does
sound like something was wrong with John, too, pretty much from day one. His dad was also very
violent, very abusive, and John truly learned all of the wrong lessons from him. On top of that,
he had a long history of substance abuse, and he was still using drugs right up until the day that
he died, which I'm sure didn't really do him any favors in terms of helping him manage his anger, his possessiveness, his need to control things. I think that definitely was a
contributing factor, and certainly not an excuse, but a factor no less. And get this, on the day that
he attacked Tara, he had zip ties, duct tape, basically a whole kidnapping kit, including
syringes full of drugs, all tucked away inside his car. I can't
even imagine what he would have done to Tara if he actually managed to get Tara into that car and
abduct her. It is such a haunting thing to think about. Now, the good part, though, about him having
this horrific little, like, kidnapping kit in his car and his torture devices, I mean, the good news
was that that proved that Tara truly
did kill him in self-defense. So finally, the police eventually stopped treating her like a
suspect and treating her like the victim that she is. And luckily, she didn't just escape from John
and from this long, drawn-out legal battle. After she survived the attack, she thrived.
Since 2016, Tara has gone on to be an expert of sorts of getting out of toxic
manipulative relationships and then recovering afterward. She also has an Instagram that is super
popular and a TikTok channel. Hi guys, I am Tara and I killed my stepdad in self-defense. Her goal
in life is to help people, to help take the power back as a victim and not give the power to the abuser or have the perpetrator be the one with their name being heard and their story being told.
So Tara also works as a personal coach for people who need to get out of unhealthy relationships.
She really is using what she learned during one of the worst parts of her entire life and turning it into something that can really help other people. So I am so beyond excited to have Tara in studio today joining me because not only
does she want to correct a lot of the things that have not been completely properly said in the
media, in the podcast, in the TV show, all of the things, but I want you to hear from her what it
was like, what it was like uncovering and exposing who
John was, what it was like in those moments when she fought back for her life, and telling
your own story and what that really means.
So Tara, thank you so, so much for being here.
I am so excited to have you.
Let's get into it.
I am here with Tara.
She is the one who I want to say like you fully exposed John for who he is, for the dirtbag
he is, but not only that, but you fought back and you came out on top. So I'm so excited to have you
here and share some of your story. I know you had mentioned the previous podcast, the docuseries,
the TV series, some things were inaccurate to what really happened and there are some things you want
to clarify and make known. So I'm really happy to have you here joining. Yeah, thank you so much for having me here. Yeah, I'm so excited. So what I want to start by is
everybody who's listened to this podcast, I know you and I briefly talked about this too.
It's really important to us that the victims are the ones who their story is told, that their voice
echoes louder than any perpetrator does. And so oftentimes it seems as though the perpetrator is
the one being platformed. That's whose name is being out there and that's whose story is
essentially being told. So just to kind of start with, Dirty John is obviously a hit podcast. It
had, I don't even know how many, millions and millions of downloads. You probably know the
figure exactly. I know it's over 160 million listens. Okay. So huge.
I mean, obviously huge.
And then they did the whole TV series.
Yes.
So when all of that was happening and you were kind of seeing it in pop culture everywhere
and all around, how did it feel seeing that the name of it was Dirty John and it wasn't
something like the Newell family story or Tara Newell or something like that and more
hyper focused on him?
So at first I was really involved in LA and in production. So at first I was thinking, okay,
the name Dirty John, it's a really great like two word, like going to stand out. So I get them using that in marketing. However, as time progresses and I realize that it's not just a TV
show, it's not just a scripted series, it's something that's about my life, then I really
start to realize that it doesn't make me feel so good. It doesn't make me feel like the victims
were centered. And watching back the documentary,
I had to watch it the other day for research with my new project. It was Christopher Goffard
telling the other victims stories. And I love Christopher Goffard. I think he's a great
narrator. I think he's a great journalist. However, we did not know the ethics of true crime. And
this wasn't a conversation that we were really having back then. It's really been more so current
conversation. So I didn't realize it until people were kind of asking me and being like,
oh, I did or they weren't asking me they were telling me they're like, hey, I dated a dirty
John. And every time someone told me that it kind of stuck me being like, you didn't have to kill
him. And I think that everybody has a dirty someone or not everybody if you don't, thank goodness. But to use my attacker's name as their toxic person that they were dating, it isn't fair to me.
Yeah, I think that's a great point.
And I think it almost kind of, in my opinion, from an outsider, diminishes what you went through a little bit.
If somebody's like, oh, I had one of those or I have one of those too.
And you're like, no, you didn't.
Like you have no idea what my experience was like.
Right?
Like I was watching the TV show Pivot.
They mentioned it on there.
And then I have to take a second to really process it
because I'm like, it's used everywhere.
Then Will and Grace, they use that whole season
of Dirty John with uh Joe McHale
uh and then randomly when I watch TV sometimes they'll mention Dirty John that's got to be
really surreal for you in those moments I would imagine it is and it's weird because I've talked
to like Kim Goldman who you know the OJ case he He just recently passed away. And I was wanting to say like, yes,
it is so much complicated, more complicated for the families. And with how they view that,
they have to mourn it a different way. So I don't want to be like, yes, he's dead. I want to be
compassionate for those families. So even though I might feel a certain way, I don't want to be like yes he's dead I want to be compassionate for those
families so even though I might feel a certain way I have to be like how do those families feel
because my story is unique for me and their story is unique for them and so since having this big
awakening in the true crime world where people are now starting to have these conversations of
making sure that you're sensitive to the victims that you're telling their story and not highlighting
the perpetrator what steps have you taken to really reclaim this as your own story in your
own experience so i'm actually telling my story less and less now where i can have more control
over it in a sense or really kind of collab with people that I want
to collab with and be with and you know I like their energy I like their content and really be
more selective in that fact because I did get to the place I'm a people pleaser so I'm like
okay yeah you want me on your podcast for sure I'll be on any podcast because at one time it was like I need
to get the word out there where now it really affects me when I tell my story when I go through
it and I need to take account to that of what it's like to actually move forward it was great for a
while telling my story but now it triggers me back and it doesn't allow me to move on where I'm able to, you know, have kids in the future.
Because I don't, trauma holds in the body and I don't want that to affect them later on.
Wow, I feel like that's, first of all, very mature and very insightful of you, but it sounds too kind of almost like you're ready to close that chapter and start a new one away and like leave that behind oh yes yeah so when it was at the height of pop culture and it still of course
is it's out there in such a big mainstream way but you were kind of on board with it because
you wanted to share your story but now you're just pulling back and removing is that correct
yeah yeah and you know I worked in production before. I did background work.
My ex was a PA.
He wanted to be, you know, a DP and everything, a director of photography.
So we were really involved in that space.
I worked on, like, Mall Cop 2.
I worked on, like, a Sonic commercial, a few other things, like, random things that didn't like go out there as
much but I worked on a lot of stuff and when you're in that real everything is
romanticized in a sense everything is so shiny and so fun and then when you're
working in that industry you're kind of desensitized to it and even when you're
watching it on TV you're desensitized to it because you're not realizing that this is someone's true crime story and
whenever i talk about like ethics and stuff i tell people imagine the worst day of your life
is now everybody knows about it how does that make make you feel? And I was, you know, I'm moving
forward. I'm putting my story behind me now, but I'm also working on a big project to
have that kind of final like circle moment and have that closure where I'm trying to connect with the other
victims now I'm trying to hear everyone's story piece everything together so it's really the next
step and I'm really excited for that journey and I could share more later on about that yeah
definitely on a different date but like I'm looking for more and more people that were victims because there's
thousands out there. Wow. Well, I know that that's going to be healing in itself for you. Absolutely.
So when you are ready to talk about that, I certainly want to hear more. I know we've talked
offline a little bit about it, but definitely want to hear more. But you brought up a good point.
You were saying when people are talking about it, it's as though you're reliving the worst day of
your life and everybody knows about it. And for for me I talk about a lot of different true crime cases and so I would
say it's fair to argue just being objective that I'm part of the problem in all of that so I guess
my question for you too is some creators I know have told your story without your consent without
making sure that there's accuracy in all of the facts that they're sharing or the storytelling
they're doing some people have told it without giving you any sort of compensation. So
not only what is that like, because I think you did touch on that, but what
advice and what feedback would you give to other creators, myself included, of how to make sure that
these stories are being told to raise awareness, but in a delicate manner and in a way that is,
again, more victim-focused rather than
perpetrator-focused. Yeah, well, I think education is important, and that's why I really love this
one festival that I go to. It's True Crime and Paranormal Festival, and they kind of try to
teach the creators and other people, like, okay, these are the people. This is how they would like
you to engage with them
and it's honestly really up to you what you do with a creator but really trying to okay focus
on that this this is an actual person if they are talking about their story you know it's so easy to
get a hold of them and if they don't then you know there is other true crime stories out there
but then I also because I am in the space of a creator and worked in production before I have
a little bit more understanding that like creators need to put out that content without that content
these stories wouldn't be put out there but if there's someone being like I absolutely
do not want my story told I think that a creator should respect that a hundred percent you know
one thousand percent yeah and there have been times there's there's only one time that comes
to mind actually and I think it was two and a half years ago where we covered a case and
somebody had reached out who's an extended family member and they're like we do not want this out
there this was very personal to our family and immediately you pull it down you archive it you
apologize and have respect for them where i've heard on the opposite side sometimes creators
dig their heels in and they're like no it's public information it's fair game i can do this and it's
kind of like if somebody's coming to you vulnerable asking you not to share this how on earth can you sleep at night still
sharing this right it's crazy to me yeah and then you'll run into maybe another dilemma of
the survivor wants their story out there but the other survivor doesn't that's a good point you
know and you kind of have to respect that survivor that wants their story out there but also trying
not to go into the other person's story absolutely you know and
here's how you can also work around that if you're the other survivor you say you know there are
other victims in this but i want to focus on my case in particular and sometimes you can't tell
your story without the other person's story but you have to try to tell it as best as you can
without them a part of it. Absolutely.
I think that's a great point and something that a lot of us should take note of for sure.
Now, I do want to talk a little bit about the backstory of everything before we go into
the attack, the aftermath, all of those things.
And I want to talk to you about your mom for a minute.
And again, only what you're comfortable sharing.
But you have voiced some frustrations about how
she was depicted in the show in the podcast about maybe being desperate for dating and settling for
somebody who wasn't right for her and that things weren't really accurate to her story so I was
wondering if you could just tell me a little bit more about that yeah so I am doing a lot of research now on everything that was done about me.
So I have a lot of opinions now.
Great.
Yes.
And the podcast starts out painting my mom that she was married four or five times.
I can't remember now.
I think she was married five times overall.
But here's the thing. She grew up in, her background was the the nazarene church and divorce is a no-no in
the church for her to even really like leave those toxic relationships i'm proud of her she may not
have the best picker but i'm proud of her for leaving because that is so hard to do and there's
so many people that are in these types of relationships and will be in them for
years absolutely you know so i think that whenever you and if you are in this relationship and you
haven't left don't shame yourself you know just create awareness and plan that leave you know
there's no shame in any of it no absolutely i think that's such a great and interesting point
that it does take an incredible amount of bravery and courage
to leave a relationship even if it's not one that's super unhealthy or abusive just one that
you're unhappy in and people stay in these unhappy marriages so for her to have faith and love and
want to continue on this journey to find her soulmate that is incredibly brave right yes yeah
so part of the podcast was that she was kind of painted out as desperate,
looking for love. She hadn't found her quote unquote man yet, but she had all these successful
relationships in the sense of having kids, you know, and she was successful in business.
And so I don't like the fact that she was depicted that way. And then it goes into having a male narrate the podcast.
A male isn't going to know what a woman is going to feel like when she's on the street,
getting whistled at and hooted and hollered at like we do.
You know, like think of how many times that happens to women
and think of how many times that happens to men. Totally. So just from that, a guy can't have a
full understanding of what it's like to be a woman in this situation. And then I felt like there was
this whole focus on like generational trauma, but not necessarily the right way. I think that it's really important
to focus on the fact that my family did grow up in the Nazarene church. I think that the story of my
mom's sister getting killed is important in the aspect that, you know, this is a generational
curse in a sense. Now, I haven't touched much
on that with your mom's sister. Do you want, is there anything you feel comfortable sharing? I
didn't want to include that in the earlier recap just because it's a very sensitive topic, but if
you're comfortable sharing it just to give the listeners a bit of context to what you mean.
Yeah, so my mom's sister was killed by her husband during the time she was actually dating Marcus Allen.
And he was this football player.
And then her husband that she was leaving, I believe, I'm not quite 100% sure on this,
if they got a divorce or if they were getting a divorce or what was the case.
But I know he went back to
the house to figure out like some bills or whatever and during that time he shot her in the
back of the head in the house um and then he also shot himself in the stomach to try to say that he
was trying to kill himself like a murder suicide yes and he survived yes
and especially with the spot where he shot himself in the stomach it's not fatal at all
oh okay so that was intentional you believe yeah i believe so yeah you know i can't
speculate but it's very interesting and then my grandma went and testified for him in court and forgave him right and i believe because
she did that my mom and i and all of our family members kind of had this skewed vision of what
forgiveness looks like that makes sense it's almost as though it sets the standard and the
precedent that you forgive first and you forgive some of the worst evil out there
and I think that's something worth not only noting but considering too when people are so quick
to cast judgments or assumptions especially with your mom and why she may have stuck around as long
as she did it's like because if you're kind of bred with we're going to forgive somebody who did
this to our own family member then you do have a lot more you know I guess openness and
ability to forgive other people who aren't even as close to you necessarily yeah and like you know
there's a lot of culty church shows out there now documentaries that was basically what she grew up
in you couldn't go to school dances you couldn't wear certain clothes you had to wear dresses you had to always be like
presenting yourself um you know i i can't remember if she went to this one school or not of like
how to be submissive to a man oh really but that's like a thing in the churches is that still a thing
it is actually i feel like maybe we need to do a whole separate episode on that because i've got a lot of things oh yeah like the uh i believe that uh let us pray that one documentary oh um yes
they were talking like the baptist churches and there's the one in uh canyon lake that my one
friend rachel peach she was survivor at because the pastor paid prayed on her wow oh gosh a lot of creeps out there well speaking of
your mom in the reconciliation as so many times when we talk about cases like these or any sort
of cases where there's a level of domestic violence or disputes of that kind we always
know that it's so easy to fall under somebody's manipulation under their spell and really just kind of focus only on them
to where you justify all of their actions so what was it like trying to express your concerns to
your mom harboring a little bit of maybe anger or resentment once then he came after you and then
trying to reconcile that and move forward what was that difficult i like at first i think there was a state
of shock you know we all had to kind of go through our moments and like when she met him she met him
right after this one guy who she bought a plane for and he completely screwed her over and cheated on her and like just threw her, tossed her,
you know, the narcissist like toss throw away.
He totally did that to her after she went and got him a plane and did all this stuff
for him.
And so that was her last relationship.
So she was already in a vulnerable spot.
Then this guy comes in.
He claims to be Prince Charming.
He claims to be an Charming. He claims to be
an anesthesiologist. He claims to be a doctor. And he's putting on this face and he's, I don't think
he's good looking, but my mom and lots of women did, you know, and I can see like that white guy,
like certain energy, like, you know, big big dick energy yeah yeah but really small dick
energy yes and so he came in just like presenting to be this person and she fell in love with it
and then she was living with my sister my sister was the one kind of calling things out and kind
of being like you can't live here if you're going to be with him
and then so my mom moved out to Balboa and that's actually when I met him is when they were moving
into that place and I didn't have really any feelings about him at first my sister did and
you have a sister so you know you can like you guys can either feed
off of each other or you guys can you know separate and like have your own feelings definitely
and I wanted to separate and have my own feelings rather than feed into it and then go after my mom
and be like rare yeah you know yeah absolutely and gang up and yeah definitely so what was that like
when you first met him what was your first impression tell me all about it tell me everything
and we're kind of like assuming like who he is and then my mom comes down there and then she's like
oh this is john and then we're like oh yeah we saw him you know with the ambrosia truck because we figured that was him and he was just
not like warm and fuzzy but we were also moving so i was just like okay we're moving we're busy
then we get everything moved and we go into the balboa place and we're just like chit-chatting and stuff. I'm asking him
questions about his daughters, about his job, about just him in general, and he's giving me
all these one-worded answers. Well, like where you can't really elaborate on or these like closing in sentences, you know? And I'm just like,
okay. It's just like trying to pull teeth. Yeah. Trying to get some information out of him and get
to know him. Yeah. And he's just not working with you. Yeah. But he's, we go to dinner actually,
and he does come alive when he's talking about my medical stuff. What about the medical stuff? So I actually,
I find out later that I actually had a stomach ulcer. Oh. But he was telling me that I had
ovarian cyst. Because he's the doctor. Yes. Yeah. Uh-huh. He felt like he knew. So he like was
now charismatic. He was talking to you and it was like he finally felt like he was contributing to
the conversation. Oh yeah. So there wasn't anything specific necessarily that was off-putting about him
it was just kind of like a questionable vibe or not even that well not at first so the first trip
it was he was hanging around a lot he was he was always there and you didn't know he lived there at the time i didn't and so i went
back to vegas and then came back a week later for thanksgiving and then that's when i had more
questions and in the meantime had you been talking with your sister as well yes and what kind of
stuff was she telling you like i'm sure just like giving you the scoop and just irate but like
i'm pretty sure she was telling me everything that was true
yeah she told me that he is dating multiple women i think she told me that he was stealing drugs or
doing drugs and i'm like yeah that's true so she pegged him pretty early on oh yeah because i found out too that what he would do is he would go drug shopping or
doctor shopping sorry he would go to all these different doctors offices and he would um sometimes
steal their prescription pads and write drugs and then also create relationships with these
doctors and get drugs there i found out also there's like a newport beach like pain
place that he would get drugs from too um and so that was one of the things then my sister
she didn't have this information yet but she just like figured that he was a convicted felon or
something like that and so she started doing more research
and then that trip the day before thanksgiving i was asking so he actually went to the hospital
and i have a lot of friends that have been in recovery and have been frequent flyers in the hospital. So my mind went to, oh, he's there to
get a drug fix. Oh, that's interesting. Yes, because he said his arm was hurting. And usually
with people that do a lot of drugs, their arms might hurt from them injecting stuff into their
veins too much. Wow. So that was one of my thoughts when oh he's at the hospital
and then my hairdresser she does all my family's hair so she did john's hair and she was telling
us just stuff like oh he was saying this this was a little weird um he's driving your mom's car everywhere and so i went back and i was with my ex at the
time we had our three dogs in the room and i opened up the door and there's all his stuff
there and there's a nursing certificate and in my head i didn't think anything of that like medically, medical wise or anything.
But I was like, oh, he's living here.
Oh, so that was like the aha moment.
Yes.
And what else was happening around this time aside from the hospital visit that was making you now start to feel like maybe my sister's right.
Maybe this guy is not necessarily a con artist, but not a great guy, not a good fit for
my mom. What other kind of things were happening in that time? He had this elaborate story about
how all his cars and his, like, he had a motor, a quote-unquote motorcycle that got stolen,
and all the stuff got stolen from storage in Cathedral City. I said that that sounds weird. Why doesn't he have the
insurance money from any of that? Where's his car? Where's his rental car? I just did a whole thing
with my insurance where someone hit me and I was able to haggle them for a rental car. Totally.
You know? So I was like, where is all that stuff? You know? Nothing was adding up. Yeah. And how was
his behavior during
all of this as well were you starting to notice anything with anger issues or him being irritable
or how he was treating your mom so i like barely had like i only had like the first week with him
like the first weekend and that was just like a little iffy but then the second one so i did all
the grocery
shopping and everything for Thanksgiving and he comes back from the hospital with
my mom and my mom comes up to the doorway and is saying to me why are you
questioning this why are you asking you know this is my life why like why are
you asking about his car situation why are you asking about this like
and then i was like why are you driving him like why is he using your cars and that was what our
fight was about and then he comes up behind her and starts yelling at me and is telling me tara
you only want your mom for yourself you don't want your mom to be happy. Tara, you want all her money.
And I start yelling FUs back at him.
And then we're just yelling, arguing, telling each other to F off and stuff.
And then my mom literally turns to my boyfriend at the time and she says, like, do you think any of this?
And then he's he's really
calm he's a good guy um and he's saying well deborah you know i agree with tara yeah this is
you know not normal this is weird there's something fishy and then so we're just packing
up my stuff our all our stuff because you were were planning to leave then. Was it just that uncomfortable? Well, we were kind of, like, getting kicked out. Oh, you were?
Yeah. Okay. Like, we're getting into this big argument. Like, it's not safe to, like, stay here
in a sense. And then, um, I'm also saying, like, you know, you're like you're basically kicking me out. I don't
think I said that like exactly but I said like like something to be like hey don't leave you
know like hoping that she would say like Tara don't leave let's work this out. Yes but I was
like you're choosing him over me. That must have felt devastating. it really was and i mean there's times where i still
like thanksgiving still like like a moment you know um but it's better now and he's not here so
so it's extra better it's extra better and i think that we have gotten past a lot of that
good but it was not fun during the time and then the next day well I actually my
boyfriend and I because we lived in Vegas we weren't gonna drive all the way
back to Vegas yeah and I mean maybe we should have but we ended up going to my sister's house and well apartment and that
place actually didn't allow dogs so we had to like sneak in the dogs and boxes and bring them
upstairs and stuff and then I just remember that night he would do this thing where he would
give my mom sleeping pills and stuff just to be like oh like calm down
like i'm a doctor just take this right it'll take the edge off let me take care of you yes and then
she would pass out and then he would take her phone and then message us from her phone pretending
to be her saying what kind of stuff so that night he told my sister that she should kill herself.
Oh my God.
Jumping face first off of the building, like it was a high rise that she lived at, would be preferable.
And just like saying the most horrific things.
But when he was sending these messages, he wasn't typing it out like my mom.
So you guys knew?
My sister couldn't quite like put
that you know in that moment yeah but later on she knows you know and i kept telling her i was like
i don't think this is mom look at the wording i don't think this is mom but instead i was holding
my sister hysterically crying because for a mother to say that to a child you know well and you had mentioned something too when
you had said that when you were at the house and he came up behind your mom and said you terry you
want her all to yourself you want her money this and that note for everybody and anybody listening
if that you're ever in a relationship or your parents are ever in a relationship and the partner
is saying something like that run because a partner should
be nothing other than supportive of your kids welcoming of your children definitely not trying
to pit them against each other so that is huge in itself and it seems as though he was just kind of
projecting what his own intentions were which obviously now we know in hindsight so as all of
that was happening with your sister how was she feeling because she
had been calling him out as like this scumbag now it felt as though your mom was turning against her
I would imagine that that was just catastrophic yes so we weren't invited to Thanksgiving but
my sister showed up anyways I remember I think she like threw some stuff off the table or something like that
it's funny because looking back at the series like the series that they made where Juno Temple
she's like oh the tv series yeah she like did something and not seen and I was like
that was a lot more dramatic in real life so your sister was definitely not holding back oh no she
would say what she felt she would act out yeah and how old was your sister at the time so my sister
we're 15 months apart in age so she was I was that's just like me and my brother how funny
like literally exactly oh I love that okay sorry keep going um so what she was why was 24 or 23 when they met so I would want to say she
was like 24 so that's pretty courageous and bold too for both of you to be in your early to mid
20s and being so vocal about your concerns about what's happening and like not holding back any
attitude as well so as all this was happening
obviously like you're starting to see some red flags you're not quite sure what the truth is
what's going on and I believe you told your sister at one point that you were afraid that John might
hurt you is that right or that you were scared of him in some sort of way absolutely but I think at
that point your mom I'm sorry for your mom well we were all scared at first um not my
mom necessarily because she didn't quite like put it all together yet um but we started piecing
things together my sister hired a private investigator with my brother-in-law and then
my other sister and they started to look into him they found out that he was using different social
security card numbers that he had a storage in cathedral city and in that storage there was a
backpack with zip ties um a children's book stuff for chloroform in a children's book yeah okay right a creepy creepy creepy creepy um and a duct tape in there and so we found out that
he was incarcerated also before he met my mom for stalking someone uh and that he had just like
multiple restraining orders on him he was very he had a rap sheet like no other. And so that's what we
started putting together. And then I actually had dreams that he was coming after me and that I
stabbed him and was stabbing him over and over again during that time. And then I always had
this feeling of being watched. it was this while your mom was
still with him or after she finally decided to leave the whole time so this time she was still
with him and here's the thing with John John was didn't want to like women were his prey
it wasn't necessarily other men he would definitely get into it with other men
but he would never go after a man like he would a woman and i think this also has something to do
with like his mother going back to his mother's relationship with him because at one point he
hated his mother and so my mom eventually left him took everything out but then john was able to
take my mom to different lawyers and convince her that there's other john mehans and that this
wasn't him and she was bullied she would believe him yes and i honestly because i've been going
back into court reports and everything there is a lot lot of John Meehan's out there.
Yeah, it's not an uncommon name.
Oh, yeah.
And there's like a, there is, I think, like a legit doctor in Newport named like John Meehan, too.
Oh, okay.
So there's a lot of different people out there.
So that's totally believable.
And especially taking that person to a lawyer and having the lawyer say this to them
you know but lawyers can lie to you too oh absolutely absolutely right so what was the
it finally like what was the final straw where your mom was like i'm not believing anything this
guy's saying i'm out and then what was that like for the relationship between the three of you your
sister yourself and your mom so there was little things over time where, you know, before she left him the first time,
he got a letter from jail and he snatched that out of her hands, told her that it's a
federal offense or something like that to open someone else's mail and kind of scared her with that and then as time goes on
he's able to convince her to get back and then she gets back together with him and she wants to
create this whole new life she wants to see how maybe he could get along with kids and you know
if she believes this we'll believe it later on you know it's really interesting because like when
you're in it you're in it and you're in that love bubble but then you're realizing all these things
which my mom was doing and then my mom got to the point where she actually hired a private
investigator to look into him and then starting to plan her leave and talking to different lawyers because she couldn't
just like get up and leave this man this guy was so dangerous absolutely yes you have to plan your
leave you have to you have to and even if you have it planned i forget what the exact statistic is
but i think they say it takes several times until you have seven seven that's right until you're
able to actually leave successfully
yeah so when she was ready to leave what did she call you and your sister to tell you like hey i'm
finally leaving i see the light or i see what you've been talking about what was that like
so she was trying to plan things i believe he and don't quote me on this one per se but i believe he found money okay and found out that
she was hiding stuff from him and everything he confronted her on it and it was in the closet
and he then was trying to tell her like hit me hit me hit me and if you hit me you'll never get
up again wow that's actually what he said per vatum you know if you hit me, you'll never get up again. Wow. That's actually what he said per vatum.
You know, if you hit me, you'll never come up, get up again.
Wow.
And so my mom was packing her stuff.
She literally left with one shoe.
I remember her saying, she's like, I left with one shoe.
Like she packed only like one pair of the shoe.
And then she got a hold of my sister drove out to Vegas and packed up the
full house videotaped everything that brought my mom's movers the people that worked for her
because she had a moving company too for her interior design business and so they've just recorded everything packed it up
meanwhile he calls the cops and says oh she hit me and right and she's in a different state so
that gets dismissed and then time goes on and then he does more stuff he lights her car on fire and like moves it to a different
location the cops had that for a minute and then he also ran his car that my mom got him into a
gate in vegas like into um you know like the gates when you enter into that community like into one of
those gates and just left the car there the car was completely trashed with like del taco wrappers
and just wrap food wrappers everywhere in the car so that kind of gives us evidence too that he was also stalking us um because he was always in the car and something he would do
too is he would leave the dog that he got with my mom at the vegas house with a big bowl of food and
water leave the door open and then the dog would escape all the time trying to look for him and that dog kept ending up in the pound so what kind of like
spiraled was like all these things kind of happening and then i ended up getting his dog
my mom went to vegas got the dog from the pound waited a few days for him to get it though because
we didn't want to step on his toes or anything and then we had the dog i'm taking care of the
dog because i work at a kennel a dog kennel i get to bring the dog work to work with me and
then i think that but i don't know this could be speculation i think that could have even pissed
him off in ways too okay that's That's a good point. Right?
But I don't know. And it's funny because so the night before my attack, he's following my sister and actually at my mom's place.
And my sister sees him.
She's with her guy friend at the time.
And she chases him down in the car.
He gets off the freeway and they lose him my sister actually goes to my place i at that time worked very early in the morning i had to get
to work at 7 a.m every day and so she just came by my house she listened to the door like heard um cash by the door and then was like okay tara
seems fine and she also let me know hey saw him you might want to keep your knife with you
i went to work the next day i was trying to leave early because i was going to the Jason Aldean concert.
And I was trying to like plan that out.
And so the day before I had a call for two roadies and rich bags to get groomed.
But it was this guy calling in a fake French accent.
And all the dogs were barking.
So I usually get someone's name phone number all their details
and everything but he called at feeding time and i like didn't get any of that it was just like oh
yeah come in tomorrow bring your dogs um because also rhodesian richbacks for a dog groomer is not
that hard of a groom like if you're i don't even know what kind of dog that is what kind of talk is that what does it look like so it's a tan one with like black or brown ears and it's they're known as like lion
hunter dogs okay i'm gonna google it yeah and they're they're cute um but it's like a smooth
coat you don't have to cut their hair or anything like that like you would a shih tzu okay so i was like okay that's eat in and out you know
and then i started waiting for them and there they were no shows and then i'm like okay i get
to go home earlier and i get to get ready so that i could leave work earlier so he actually messed
up my schedule even though he thought like oh I'm gonna find out her schedule
so I know exactly where she's at he messed it up yeah and I get home I get like partially ready I
do like the foundation the blush and the eyebrows and then I save the eyes for when I get off work yeah and then I drive home like well actually my
mom actually picked up his dog her him and her dog that they had together and
then I went home and got ready came back to work and then did everything and then
left like 20 minutes early and did you have any thought or inkling in this
moment that he might be coming
after you you know that he was following your sister that she spotted him I would imagine you
guys were relieved that your mom was now away from him but of course all this stuff with the car being
on fire the following the stalking that you were worried about everybody's safety did you have any
thought that he would come after you specifically I did I even wrote my ex a
letter really yes telling my ex that he gets the dog if I die and when did you write that like in
comparison to when the attack took place like a month in advance weeks a month or two and before
the attack so you were constantly living in fear is that fair to say oh yes oh yes i actually went
over to he like we were broken up but i went and like stayed at his place where he was living at
the time it was funny because like the he he lives with like he works in the industry and lives with
like his friends are actors and stuff so i was literally like going to all these like famous actors houses and like just staying there and not like famous famous but like his friend was on
atypical and okay like uh oh uh united states of tara and stuff all that um so i was going and
i was staying there while he was while his friend was working on movies and it just felt like a sense of safety and it was like this legit fear of like
I'm watching over my shoulders everywhere and I don't even feel safe to be at a place that's an
hour away with my ex-boyfriend and what's that like because at that moment it's like
there's nothing you can really do as far as getting an order of protection restraining
orders anything like that because he hasn't made any actual threats against you right
so which not that a piece of paper does fucking anything but he did like make certain threats to my sister but and he knew all the ways around everything yeah he was calculated
yes like he sent my sister a picture of her birth certificate with spit on it in a picture and then
i feel like we're kind of fiery sometimes my sister and i so but i was just trying to stay out of this i was just like this guy is you know
i'm willing to work with him to make mom happy but but she's done at this point right yeah she's
done at this so now he's like losing he's like i don't have a grasp on anybody anymore i'm losing
it yes and well like part of the reason why she was like done too is because she hired her private investigator and then she had a stack like at
least two inches of a stack of papers on him wow like and then one of the pictures i remember her
showing me this picture and it's the one where he cut open his stomach in jail and he stuffed feces in it. What? Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. What?
Yes. He cut his stomach open. Yeah because John was such an addict he cut his stomach open in jail
and then he shoved feces in it so that he could go to the medic and stuff and go to the hospital
and get his drug fix. His feces i'm not quite sure
but like okay what would that do i mean obviously it would like cause an infection i would imagine
and make you very sick but like so he had an open wound and he put poop in it yes and if you do that
you have to be on a lot more stuff and a lot more antibiotics and stay there a little bit longer wow yeah so he like
knew all of the tricks i literally i thought i've heard it all never heard that so thanks for the
enlightening enlightening well then it's funny too because i'm like hearing stories about him
and there's this one story in all the cops He literally fell down an elevator shaft with a cop trying to run away from them.
This guy, okay, like, I thought I knew a lot about this guy.
You're continuing to blow my mind.
It really makes sense why his name is Dirty John.
Just, like, shoving shit in his own body.
I can't.
But, like, and it kind of brings a whole new meaning to the phrase full of shit.
But, okay, sorry.
That's just, like, it's blowing my mind but continue continue no worries yeah so he he's done a lot of shit
and so okay yeah back to the more serious part um
so he ends up i end up driving home from work that day did you have
any sort of sense that something was off that particular day I know you had been living in
fear but did you think anything specific that day felt off so I was so distracted by the concert
yeah I was like I'm gonna get ready I gotta do this to do this. I got to do that. I got, got to meet my friend afterwards
who I'm going with because I paid for all the tickets for, well, I paid for my friend's ticket
that night. And you're like, when you're 25 and lawn seats are a hundred dollars, that's a lot
for you. Of course. Especially like 10 years or eight years ago now yeah definitely you know
um so i in my mind i spent a lot of money on this i was like gonna get there i was going to have a
great time and i was also recovering from the breakup in a sense so i was trying to live like
my best single girl life and so i was just preoccupied by everything and i get home i pull into the
parking garage the gate is broken i actually complained about like the gate a day prior
and i see a guy who's backed up into a space and he's wearing a baseball or no he was wearing a straw cap um like a straw hat i guess um
sorry sometimes the moments come back no and i have like realizations that click in that moment
take your time um so he was wearing a straw hat and that was in the police report and he
is just fiddling with like a tire iron he's outside of
the car and yeah like but it's back in reversed oh yeah it's reversed into the space yes okay
and i'm not putting two and two together but my dog is literally barking at him and aggressively
barking at him and growling at him and i think because you know by uh 17th street um newport the coronado's
now 1880 you know there's some homeless people unhoused people over there and i literally
am just thinking okay he looks like he's an unhoused person so i pay i tell my dog to knock
it off and then i pull into the spot where I normally
park but I don't have assigned parking I'm just a creature of habit and I get out of my car I grab
my dog in the back seat and then as I'm walking by the license plate I get grabbed by the waist
he looks me in the eyes I look him in the eyes and he says do you remember me and in that moment were you kind of not numb but were you in shock to where you weren't
registering who it was or did you automatically immediately know oh this is fucking dirty john
this is john well and during that time his name really wasn't like dirty john no i know i know
you're i would have been more like this grimy dirty unhoused little john guy like i was thinking oh shit he's here to kill me and right when i
looked at him i knew i actually couldn't respond to him because i needed to save my energy in a
better way and i immediately tried to detach from him I wasn't able to detach from him and then
that he starts I'm not sure actually what came first but he tried to cover my mouth
and then he I put my purse up over my heart. It was like a nice little leather clutch.
And I just feel like I'm getting punched.
Okay.
And so that's happening.
And then.
Were you on the ground at this point?
No.
No.
Okay.
Like I just felt like I was getting punched.
I dropped my dog's leash and everything so that he can get away and run away or whatever,
do what he needs to do. And then I'm not sure if it happened after I was quote unquote getting
punched, but I was really getting stabbed. But he covers my mouth and I bite him as hard as I can.
And then he doesn't even try to cover my mouth and okay that's actually this
that's what happened sorry um so he tried to cover my mouth first and that's when I bit him
and then that's when he gets angry and then he starts punching me well what I thought was punching
me but he really is trying to stab me and he has the knife in a del taco bag so I don't know that
he has a knife with him oh so you are thinking
this is just his fist he's hitting me i keep feeling this pressure yes and everything's
happening in like milliseconds like now to this day like i could really go back and feel like the
sharp sensation of the stab going into my chest but like during that time i just felt like it was a punch
and so i'm just biting him i think i'm even screaming although in when you're in this moment
you're like silently screaming in your head but you're screaming out loud and i end up on the ground and I fall on my shoulder.
My shoulder gets scraped pretty badly.
And then he's on his knees.
My dog is attacking his ankles and stuff.
And at this time I see the knife is apparent.
So he's trying to bring it down onto me.
And I'm wearing rain boots because I just came from my job as a kennel attendant and I'm not sure actually just once just once but it
barely graced my face and it was so like it was like a paper cut to my face I was so lucky and
then he comes back down and then I do another kick and then I kick his forearm and then the knife falls on my right hand side and I just pick it up
and then I just start wailing on him. I think that I'm stabbing him in the front of his chest
but my mind my brain is compartmentalizing that trauma and will only allow me to see that rather
than what I was really doing which was overthrowing it to his back
shoulder and that's when he actually gas he starts to lose energy in his body and then i start to
hold his head because i don't want him to bite me like a zombie does so i'm holding his head and then the last two i actually give thought to i stab him
once in the um forehead and then the last one was to the eye which is the softest point of entry to
the brain so i do that and then i throw the knife i toss the knife I start to scoot away from his body start to assess
the situation I see that I'm bleeding from my forearm so I start to apply pressure to that
and then I look around I see my dog is starting to eat the del taco at this time there's a lady
that comes up to me with a yellow lab and then she's asking what can I do to help.
I tell her to grab my dog because I in my head I'm thinking I always have my dog with me.
He could have brought the deltac to have poison in it.
Oh wow.
So now at this point because it has slowed down a bit you're starting to think.
You were able to be more concentrated with those stabbings at the final two and then now you're figuring out what's
going on and you're starting to get reoriented somewhat i'm still in a state of shock yeah um
but i'm starting to be like okay what do i need to do in my survival mode what um what do i need
to do to get better in a sense or to take care of the situation then the guy starts to give
john cpr i try to tell and this is what i actually kept repeating to everyone um i said that was my
stepdad he tried to kill me that was my stepdad he tried to kill me because i kept trying to give
them as little information as possible to make not give too much
you know but enough for them to know the situation exactly what happened because I'm also thinking
oh crap I well I'm not thinking oh crap because I'm thinking I'm in the state of shock but i'm thinking like i can't i watched so many true crime shows and was it
advid like it just like i loved sbu and lawn like all the lawn orders and um csi so i knew okay
if i give so much information to this could backfire on to me and people could think that I just killed this guy.
Definitely.
So I'm trying to be like that was my stepdad.
He tried to kill me.
That was my stepdad.
He tried to kill me.
So they know that there's a relationship.
That person was trying to kill me.
You know, it's not some random dude on the street, too.
It's not a, you know know my boyfriend even in a domestic
dispute or anything it was my stepdad coming after me with a plan it's incredible to me that not only
were you able to fight this grown ass adult man off based on things that you had learned from tv
too because you had mentioned you didn't want him to bite you like a zombie you went for the eye
because you know that's the softest point of entry but then even
the steps in the immediate aftermath the dog the poisoning putting pressure on the wound not pulling
anything out all of this you were able to learn from TV and how to react to the situation that's
pretty incredible and that you were able to think quick enough on your feet to react that way in real time like that honestly blows my
mind it is I don't think a lot of people would react that same way and so you should be very
incredibly proud of yourself for that absolutely thank you of course of course so walk me through
then after you're telling everybody my stepdad tried to kill me what's happening now somebody
I'm sure surely is calling 9-1-1 i think like 20 people called from their balcony or something like that okay i'm trying to get the
phone calls now but i think it was like 20 something people or something like that
so there were a lot of witnesses at the scene oh yeah because where he attacked me
it was on like the open parking structure on top and then there was
at least three stories of apartments and so there was at least like
i don't know there was at least 40 that could like see the full view wow you know and so yeah
and then on the other side too there was even people
that could have looked from that way too so it was a lot of you know and i was screaming i was
screaming loud um so people even heard me from that and i did every single thing right in my
attack and that's what i want other women and other people to know
that I did everything right. And if you do these steps, you have a higher chance of surviving.
Absolutely. They always say whether it is whatever the situation is, whether you're running and
you're abducted, you're abducted somewhere else at a target parking lot, anywhere you are,
don't ever go willingly don't ever just
like lay down don't take it don't let think that okay if I just go with them and go quietly like
I'll make it way less worse or I'll have a better chance of getting out of it absolutely not
statistically you have to scream fight as hard as you can make a scene collect DNA as you're doing
it and like yeah that is what's going to give you the better chance of coming
out of this alive oh yeah so I called my mom I told her I'm so sorry I think I killed your husband
I knew he would do this and then she goes into the phone call and is like what what something
that we had talked about when you and I went to lunch is that starting kind of right away when
they were on the scene it almost is was though I get they have to look at everybody and think everybody's
suspects but they almost started treating you like the perp asking you a ton of questions and
meanwhile you had an open wound during all of this so what was that like when they're the ones
harassing you and you look over and they're getting cpr to john and like that kind of feeling of everything i mean that was a lot and in my head i'm thinking like oh i'm okay so i'm not but then i realized i
do have this wound on my arm and luckily the paramedics they did wrap that up once i stopped
doing phone calls and the cops started to ask me a little bit but they let me kind of deal with that and then my
mom showed up and then my mom took the dog and everything and then they started to do stuff to
me and they wanted to put needles and stuff in me and I'm terrified of needles and my dog is an ESA dog so he would
go to the hospitals and the doctor's offices with me to begin with and like actually he was more so
a therapy dog literally he came to the doctor or in the ambulance with me and I told them I was like
basically I could sue you if you don't give me my dog right now because my dog is working
for me not to mention that your dog is therapeutic and a service animal for you on a normal day
yeah not to mention somebody just tried to kill you like you need your freaking dog with you yeah
yeah and so when they let me have my dog then I I was like, okay, you guys could do what you need to do.
And then so we go to Hoag in Newport.
And I get there and I'm in like the hallway, just like waiting there and I'm just like I don't know what to do and stuff but I'm
just like here and then eventually they put me into a room and then they're asking me questions
over and over and over and over again and I was explaining this to someone recently that it's not like they were like, oh my gosh, she killed someone.
But they were just, there needs to be a little bit more kindness.
Yes, and that's something we talked about at lunch.
Your treatment at the hospital and with female and male medical professionals.
So what was some of that treatment that stuck out to you or mistreatment i should say and what advice would you give to them for
future victims and the handling and the bedside manner with all of that so i want to say not that
i wasn't believed or anything like that but they were like whoa what just happened you know they
needed to put all the pieces of the puzzle together so they were just like interrogating me asking me questions over
and over again and at this point someone came in cut the wrap that they had on my arm so I'm
sitting there with like a one inch open wound and I'm having to answer all the questions they're
taking pictures of that wound and that's why they also cut open the and I'm having to answer all the questions they're taking pictures of that
wound and that's why they also cut open the wound because they needed to take pictures of it too
um it's a male taking pictures of me and he's just trying to get pictures of everything and stuff
but here's the thing if they brought in a woman and she would ask me for consent and everything and be like i want to
do this i want to do that um you know let's put all the male energy out of the room since you just
got attacked by a man um let's go about it a different way i would have had a better interview
process i would have been better taken care of and i wouldn't have been re-traumatized by everything in the hospital and then because of that stab wound I have to then go to the ICU and that's where John was
well they were gonna bring me there okay but then I told them no way and heck because he was still
alive at this point so he was brain dead but yeah but he was on a ventilator and everything okay then i go into
this room where they're touching me everywhere like everywhere like private parts everything
and they're just grabbing me poking me with needles pricking my finger and I'm
screaming at the top of my lungs and I'm looking at my mom and like she's where
like the sound panels are so like 50 feet away on the other side and I'm just
screaming at like top of my lungs staring at her being like i wish she could help me i wish
someone could help me because it was it was another it was just like a re-traumatization
with being touched and not having consent and then like i don't even like with significant others like allow them to like touch me and stuff like that
and so it was just like no one was asking to do anything everybody was just doing and then I was
it was a violation again so that really I had to calm down from that and then I remember being in the hospital just like trying to calm down and
watching Age of Adaline and then the next day like it was blurry because I guess I had I had
exploratory surgery to see if I was bleeding out but I was in there for like a few days
and then I eventually got out of there and then I went home
and then that's when like my ex came and helped me with everything and was there for me and then
everybody else was just in a state of shock yeah between your mom your sister and you it's like now
all of this stuff all this fear that we've been having for months, over a year, it's come due ahead, and this monster tried to kill our sister, your daughter, and that would be, I would
imagine, very difficult to deal with and have as a realization, and I would imagine your mom probably
would carry some heavy feelings with that as well. Yeah, no, I think that she was like, I can't believe this happened, trying to digest everything,
and also feeling that guilt. And it was funny, because I couldn't go back to my apartment,
but not because like, I couldn't go back there. It was more so everyone was telling me like what
I could and couldn't do during that time. And then I was just like, okay, so I really didn't do during that time and then I was just like okay so I really didn't have like a sense
of like re-normalcy but then it was also I couldn't go back to work too because my dog was
in my attack with me and because of his bark I was triggered by dog barking. Oh. Yeah. I could definitely understand that. And then I think even
the fact that John called me, and I didn't piece all this together until later, that John called
me at my work and stuff, that created a trauma of itself. stalk me, but I think he did, well, actually, that is stalking.
He did visit my work a few times just to go around the block.
Tara, that is the definition of stalking.
So after all of this, it's now been several years, and it's never going to, I'm sure, be a complete journey where you're still you're it's never going to i'm sure be a complete journey
where you're fully healed and you've come full circle out of it you do what you can but how's
your relationship with your mom how's your relationship with your sister how's their
relationship is there is everything good now and are you guys stronger than ever how does that look
i say you know there's always so much to deal with and go through especially trauma like this i think
that everybody still is healing i think that because i've really had a lot of time to heal i'm
at a better spot than anyone is but i've been forced to deal with it and i didn't choose this
attack to happen to me.
So it was kind of like, okay, got to do the healing.
And I'm very grateful to have financial support at that for the last seven years.
Now I'm kind of like, okay, I got to make it work all on my own now.
So you've now since then, and especially recently, you've mentioned briefly a little bit about the projects that you're working on.
You had a podcast and we can table a little bit of that if you know, you know,, you've mentioned briefly a little bit about the projects that you're working on. You had a podcast.
We can table a little bit of that.
If you know, you know.
But you've really dedicated your career to helping other survivors of these violent crimes.
And it does feel like you're kind of the perfect person to be in that position to do that because of what you've experienced and everything you've learned from that.
So tell me, do you think that not only your experience but your history
help bring something else to the table with helping other victims how do you feel that's
going for you a hundred percent it is funny because I was literally baking cookies and
that's how I got connected to you yeah and it's whenever I do things that are even not in my alignment it brings me back
to my alignment of like sharing my story but in a different fashion now you know and helping other
victims and it's really cool because this project that i'm working on now i can't give like too much
information but i'm working with the other survivors of John and then after that it may
transpire into me helping other survivors with their story and getting out there I've even like
connected a few friends with my friend that's a producer who helps uh she is um Melissa Moore
she's the smiley face killer's daughter and she literally took her career
and made it into something where she helps victims now i'm like she's my mentor yeah i love what she
did and i want to do the same i want to get survivors like ethical treatment on set i want
to get the money for their story if i could get them money for their story you know and I get
that like not everything pays but if there's going to be like a documentary out there there's going
to be people on set getting paid like the cameraman everything all that then they need to
get a rate too absolutely I think that's extremely important and I think that that is justified
absolutely right so statistically
speaking chances are that right now during this episode there's somebody who has a family member
or maybe they're directly impacted a romantic partner themselves who's being manipulated who's
abusing them who is suffering what would you tell them right now given everything you experienced? I say education is so important.
You know, I'm always here to do a 15-minute consult call with. You can always go on my website,
book that because I want to help out anyone I can and I think, you know, 15 minutes, like I can
always give away 15 minutes for free for someone, but I say plan your leave get knowledge like know everything before
you make that execution also another great person to check out who's on YouTube is Dr. Mani she is
amazing she also has a new book that just came out it's not you and I think that she's one of
the main people I look up to for narcissist abuse and all
of that and understanding like these characters, these cluster B personalities out there.
And so I think that, you know, find resources.
You know, just start educating yourself.
Absolutely.
Well, I really appreciate you being here.
I appreciate you sharing
your story I know you're going to be closing the chapter on this soon so all right guys and don't
forget to check out all of the amazing deals from our sponsors today I have linked them all in the
show notes for you below but remember supplies is limited so grab them while they're hot I'm very
thankful for having you here and for sharing your insights so thank you so much thank you and thank
you for being one of the last creators I'm so honored i'm so honored well thank you we'll link
all of your stuff too in the show notes so everybody can check out where to follow tara
where all the projects she's working on once you're able to announce everything too but it'll
be i'm sure on your website too for everybody as well yes yes got lots of stuff all right perfect
well thank you guys again for tuning in to today's episode of Serialistly.
And until the next one, please stay safe.
All right.
Bye.