Serialously with Annie Elise - 83: House Party Horror: The Halloween Party That Turned Into Terror
Episode Date: October 29, 2023Welcome back to another bonus episode! In today’s episode, we’re talking about a case out of Sabine, Texas involving a 19-year-old woman named Livye Lewis. On the morning after a Halloween party, ...an investigation began when emergency responders were sent to what was believed to be a two-vehicle major accident. However, emergency crews soon determined that they were not dealing with an accident, but rather a crime scene. This case was originally published on my YouTube channel, 10 to Life. Follow the podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/serialouslypod/ Follow the podcast on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@serialouslypodcast 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey true crime besties, welcome back to annew bonus episode of Serialistly. It's me, Annie,
your true crime bestie, here to talk all things true crime with you. Now, the reason why I had
to jump on here and drop this bonus episode outside of the normal release schedule is because I need to talk to
you about this case. It is so wild. There is so much to talk about, so we got to get right into
it. Before we do, please take a quick second, just make sure that you are following along on the
podcast so that you don't miss any future episodes and bonus episodes like these that drop, and also
follow along on the Serialistly Facebook
page where we drop all information regarding giveaways, behind the scenes information,
guest episodes, Q&As, all sorts of good stuff. All right, now let's get into today's case.
In the town of Sabine County, Texas, Halloween 2020 started out like every other Halloween night.
Trick-or-treaters were walking
through all of the neighborhoods, older kids were getting together to drink and celebrate in their
costumes, and everyone was having a fun evening. Until the carefree and fun adventure of a typical
Halloween evening turned into a bloodshed nightmare. A nightmare that didn't end on Halloween
and became more and more out of control as time went
on. Libby Lewis was a 19-year-old from Sabine County, Texas. She was absolutely beautiful.
She was also a member of the Choctaw Apache tribe of Ibarb, and she was somebody who set goals for
herself and really wanted to brighten her own future. She had just recently graduated in 2020 and was working as a
nurse's aide and was going to nursing school with goals of becoming a nurse practitioner
to be able to one day help other people. On October 31st, 2020, Livvy went to a Halloween
party with her boyfriend, Matthew Edgar. The night started off fairly normal until the couple
got into an argument. Matthew had
allegedly seen Livvy talking to another man at the party, which turned into a very public argument.
Multiple people saw the two of them yelling back and forth and arguing. After a bit of back and
forth, Livvy had decided that she was going to leave the party, causing Matthew to leave behind
her, chasing her in his car. Nobody had thought anything
extremely unusual had gone down. I mean, alcohol mixed with jealousy can be a recipe for disaster
in some relationships. I know I've had experiences like that. I'm sure many of us have, unfortunately.
So nobody really expected that this fight was going to erupt into what it did, because this wasn't just an alcohol-fueled spat between a
young couple. Not long later, Libby was found dead inside her vehicle along Farm to Market Road,
with what seemed to be a gunshot wound to her neck and facial area. First responders had arrived at
the scene, believing that they were dealing with a two-vehicle car accident because they saw Libby's car and Matthew's car. However, they quickly realized that they had just arrived
at a major crime scene. Shockingly enough, investigators didn't have to do much to find
who more than likely did this to Libby because her boyfriend Matthew was found at the scene
covered in blood and lying in the fetal position in a ditch nearby.
Matthew was taken by ambulance to a local hospital, and on the way, he told investigators
that he last remembered drinking on a porch and seemed a bit confused or like he was maybe still
drunk. He also told them that he had been stabbed, though once at the hospital, they found no stab
wounds on his body when they
were checking him out. When investigators told Matthew that Livy was dead, they say
he cried and acted shocked and distraught. So was this young couple targeted by somebody
else and he was so drunk that he didn't remember the attack? Or was he in fact the
one responsible? Matthew was treated for minor injuries and immediately handed over to the police. He was booked into the Sabine County Jail on November 1st and was denied a bond.
Livy's autopsy report came back, and her cause of death was blunt force trauma to the head,
as well as a shotgun wound to the neck. Livy was on her way home from that party when Matthew
caught up to her in his truck. He used his truck to drive and follow her, and
then he shot Livvy. Then he took her phone and key fob and went to his mother's house. There,
he got a different truck and was found later at the scene, but he had dropped the key fob at his
mother's place. Now you might be thinking, okay, case closed. This young couple was drunk at a
party. They got into a fight. He followed her. He was pissed off and he killed her. Case closed. Now we just need to know why.
Well, that's not even close to what is about to go down. Not by a long shot, guys. Months passed
and in April of 2021, there was a hearing for Matthew. Despite the circumstances of the crime
and the certainty of
him being more than likely found guilty, Judge Craig Mixon granted him a $50,000 bail, which he
posted, and just like that, he was released on bond. District Attorney Kevin Dutton objected to
the bond, but it was still set. DA Kevin said, although I do not agree on the granting of the
bond, I do believe the court
was following the law and changes in the law. D.A. Kevin told the media that the governor signed an
executive order which waived the 90-day period that the state had to bring forth an indictment
on a person after they had been arrested and were jailed. The Texas court shot down that order,
ruling that the governor could not do that. The court therefore ordered that the suspects who are not indicted before that 90-day deadline
are to be released on a surety or personal recognizance bond.
Many people in the community were understandably infuriated.
Protesters gathered outside of the Sabine County courthouse to voice their frustrations
and encourage people to sign their petition.
However, this didn't change a single thing. As frustrating as it was, they couldn't change the law and the
judge's orders. The scariest part for everyone was that he wasn't even given any restrictions
or curfews. He was essentially allowed to do whatever he wanted, wherever he wanted,
which very clearly seems insane for someone that could soon be found guilty of murder.
As we all know, nobody is guilty until proven guilty, but the thought of someone being essentially
free when there's even the slightest possibility that they have committed such a heinous murder
is absolutely bone-chilling and just feels incredibly wrong to me. So he was out on bond,
gallivanting around, and his trial was set for almost a year later,
for January 2022. And he, of course, pled not guilty. One month before the trial was set to
begin, on December 15th, 2021, the Sabine County Sheriff's Office responded to a call at 2 p.m.
that reported a woman had attacked a man and then broke the windshield of his car at a gas pump. This woman was Libby
Lewis's mother, Darcy Bass. Darcy had allegedly ran into Matthew at a convenience store when the
situation escalated. Darcy took to Facebook to later write that she would be turning herself
in after learning that Matthew was pressing charges against her. She wrote in the post that
she threw things at him, assaulted him, and damaged his vehicle. The charges against her. She wrote in the post that she threw things at him, assaulted him,
and damaged his vehicle. The charges against her were assault caused by bodily injury,
retaliation, and criminal mischief. Her post reads, Update. Matthew Edgar filed charges
against me, assault causing bodily injury, criminal mischief, retaliation. I'll be turning
myself in Monday. Below it says what had happened the day before
as the recap saying, today I walked into the store closest to my house and I was talking to
clerks when Matthew Edgar walked in and I lost it. I started going toward him, throwing things
and screaming, you killed my daughter. I assaulted him and damaged his vehicle while he was running
from me like the little bitch he is. I wish I could have done more.
It's too much to see him in public. Well, if he didn't know before, he knows now how I'm coming.
I apologize to the clerks and other onlookers, but what do they expect me to do? Figured his mama would call the law, but anyways, he drives around a 95 to 99 maroon model Toyota Tacoma, and he was
traveling around two o'clock. Now, I just have to to say Libby's mom is a badass bitch. The fact that she's saying and calling him out saying he ran away from me like
the little bitch he is, I just gotta say I love that. Not saying that I condone violence or assault
but I love that. So let's keep going. Sydney Ebbarb, the niece of Darcy Bass, told the media
that she had turned herself in around 4 p.m. that Monday. Sydney told the media,
I don't feel like a grieving mother should have to be turning herself in.
She shouldn't even have to be grieving.
It was not natural causes that she's not here with us,
and I just feel like they need to understand that if you were in her shoes,
you would have done the same, what you would have done.
Protesters gathered outside of the police station that same day
to show their support for Darcy and Livvy's entire family. On December 21st, 2021, a few days after this altercation took place, there was a
post made by a woman named Ashley Short, who was allegedly with Darcy when she turned herself in.
Now keep in mind, everything I'm about to say is alleged and according to a Facebook post that was
again shared by Darcy and kept on her public page. Darcy had supposedly been told that if she turned herself in, she would be processed and released. But when
she arrived, the intake officer told her that she had come in too late and that she was going to
have to spend the night. Ashley Short writes in this post, someone walked past me and opened the
door to the lobby, at which point I turned around and hear the intake officer yell at her to shut
the door.
I hear Darcy tell him she will come back in the morning to be processed at the right time.
I see Darcy take a step toward the exit with her sister Tanya beside her when Officer McDonough reached both hands from behind her, grabbed her by the shoulders, snatching and slamming her back
against the wall by the intake door, and yelled, oh no you don't. I saw Tanya reach out and say,
hey, you, hey, you don't have to grab her like that. Then I see the officer grab Tanya,
who has medical issues, by the arm with both hands and shove her to the floor of the sheriff's
lobby floor. He then grabs Darcy and shoved her through the intake door where I believe she fell
to, just before slamming the intake door closed behind them,
leaving Tanya on the floor unassisted with what is now known as a dislocated kneecap.
We called 911 at 3.47. The call was answered by the dispatcher sitting behind the glass in the
lobby that this all happened in. The dispatcher then proceeded to ask questions about Tanya's
condition and if her leg was broken. The ambulance arrived around 3.53 to the jail and escorted Tanya to the hospital.
The mother of a murder victim spent the night in jail for assaulting her daughter's killer
after the justice system in Sabine County failed her. She should have never been put in the position
to see him in her neighborhood gas station, and she most certainly should have been treated with more respect than she was shown. Officer McDonough had absolutely no right to grab her the way he did.
He had no right to shove Tanya the way he did, causing injury. He had no right and used exaggerated
use of force for no reason when things could have been resolved in another manner. I do not feel
safe having someone like that on payroll at the sheriff's office.
Included in this post was a video taken from the outside of the station when it all happened,
as well as a photo of the stretcher brought in for Tanya.
I'm asked what's. Where's the button?
Why is it going out?
Open the door.
What is this?
He broke my leg! He broke my leg! did. Luckily, the $8,000 that was needed to get Darcy out on bond was raised and she was released.
As if this case wasn't messy enough, guys, it was about to take an entirely new turn, making it so, so, so messy and crazy. Matthew's trial began as planned on January
24th, 2022. It's during the first day of the trial that we get a better understanding of the timeline,
the people involved, and the situation that happened on Halloween night. The couple,
Livy and Matthew, had decided to go to a Halloween party, as we mentioned earlier. The party was held at Bobby Ozen's home. Also in attendance was Matthew's ex-wife, Montana Bockell. He and Montana had
gotten married in 2019 and had divorced in 2020. They had two children together. Montana told
authorities that the reason for the divorce was because of his relationship with Livy.
But despite that, Livy and Montana had actually become
friends. Montana even said that she thought that Livy was good with the kids. Caitlin Frick
testified that she and her husband Tyler were also in attendance at this party. She claimed that they
were all drinking and playing card games. She said on the stand that at some point Matthew had left
and returned. She then said he flew in
the driveway. He and Liv were screaming at each other, although she did not recall what they were
saying. Bobby Ozen, the homeowner, was next on the stand. He claimed that he had his fill around 1
a.m. and decided to go to his room. He claimed that Liv came into his room to talk and wanted
him to come out, hang out some more, and drink some more beer with them. He said Montana then came into the room and the three of them were
talking about going riding. He then said at some point Montana and Matthew began getting into a
fight and Liv was stepping in between them trying to ease the situation. He said that all three of
them then left and Matthew was threatening to kill them as they left. Matthew's ex-wife Montana was
next on the stand.
Montana said that Bobby didn't want them fighting at his house and had asked them all to leave.
Something new that we learned was that the kids were also at the party. She claimed that she was
driving back to town in a separate vehicle without Matthew, without the kids, and without
Livvy. So were the kids in the car with Matthew? She claimed that during this time she tried calling
Livvy to make sure that she was okay. However, she got no response. Montana then told the court
that Matthew had actually texted her and told her that Livvy was dead. The set of text messages
between Montana and Matthew were shown. At 3.34 a.m., Montana asked him, where is she? The only response Matthew gave was dead. In one of his text
messages, he said, I will watch y'all, take y'all with a smile on my face. When on the stand, Montana
was asked if she had called 911, to which she answered that she had not, and said, but now that
I think about it, I should have called 911. Uh, yeah, especially if the kids were with Matthew
because they were at the party. Like, what on earth is going on? Or were the kids left behind? In any event,
he's saying that Liv was dead. You knew he was in a rage. You knew the children were around.
Why wouldn't you call 911? She was also asked why she didn't call 911 when Matthew had sent her
that chilling text, but she told the court that she didn't because she didn't believe him.
Lastly, while on the stand, she identified Matthew's gun. I had my car cranked and Libby said she had to run back inside for
something and that she'd be right back outside. She was inside for, I want to say, 10 or 15 minutes.
So I got out and I went in there and I was like, hey, what's going on? Her and Bobby were in there
talking. So I sat down and I was talking talking with them we were in Bobby's room and everything
was good she said that she was going to stay there so I was just going to go home I walked
out of Bobby's bedroom door and I closed it and Matthew was standing in the doorway and I go to
walk around Matthew and he starts trying to choke me and I get him off of me and I go back in Bobby's
room and I tell Bobby I said get up and get your clothes on because Matthew's outside and he's about to go crazy.
So Bobby got up and got dressed and went outside and me and Libby followed behind Bobby.
And I seen where Matthew had beat the dog shit out of my car.
All three of my doors were kicked in and I lost my shit on matthew i started swinging
at him um matthew wrapped me up and threw me on the ground all i remember is i hear libya screaming
no matthew get off over get off over i'm not sure who pushed matthew off of me it was either bobby
or libya libya goes back inside bobby's to grab her I follow her, and I'm like, Livvy, are you okay?
She's like, yes, I'm fine.
Are you okay?
And she said, yes.
And so Livvy gets in her car, and she leaves, and I get in my car, and I leave behind her.
And apparently, I don't know if Matthew and Bobby had words after we left, but it couldn't have been long,
because not long after I left, Matthew had caught up to me and cut me off on 944 by the church road.
I don't know if y'all know where that's at.
He gets out, and he comes to my car, and he starts kicking my door again, and I go around him.
And as we're driving down 944, he's, like, riding my ass and all kinds of stuff.
I knew that if I came to my apartment i'd be by myself and i didn't know
how well that would go for me so i drove to um the brick house his grandparents house next to his
house and um i seen wimmy turned down that way and i called her and i'm like are you okay she's
like yes just go home but i knew if i went home i didn't know what would happen to me so i went
where i knew people would be it in case something did happen um he was still following me there and I pull up underneath the carport and
I go to get out he's kicking my door and he's choking me again and I get him off of me I go
inside I have Woody's location like where I can, and I tracked her, and she was past the brick house, like going toward Lowe's Creek.
I don't know how far down there she was,
and then I never heard from her again after that.
Why was she late?
So you were tracking her.
When did you look to see where she was at?
Not long after I had been inside.
And whose house did you go into?
His grandparents' house, where his mom lives at.
You were staying there?
No, no.
I went there because I knew that somebody would be there.
What time was this?
What time was this?
What time was this? What time was this?
What time was this?
I want to say we left Bobby's around 2.30 maybe.
Okay, so you were safe at 2.30?
Yes, I was inside.
And where do you normally live?
Where do you live?
I'm sorry, what?
Where do you live?
I live in the apartment in Hempel.
So you would have went there?
Yes.
But instead of going there, you went to his family's house?
Yes.
And that was, so after that he didn't mess with you because you were safe because you
was at his family's house?
Yes.
And Livvy, where was, Livvy passed by and was going towards Lowe's Creek at what time?
Around that same time.
She was in front of me.
Libby was in front of you?
Yes.
And you didn't know where Libby was going to go that way?
Where was she going?
People, go in there.
I'm on the phone.
Okay, hold on.
I'm telling you, go in there. Where was Lib the phone. Okay. Hold on. I'm coming. Go in there.
Where was Libby going?
Do what?
Where was Libby going?
I have no idea.
So she, do y'all know anywhere that she would be going out there towards Lowe's Creek?
I don't.
But at that time, I mean, after all that, she's going to go.
So she, Libby was in front of you.
She's going all the way. She don't know if you're going to the apartment. Are y' was in front of you she's going all the way she don't
know if you're going to the apartment are y'all talking are y'all talking on the phone no i no
we did and i asked her if she was okay she said yes and she told me to go home
and then y'all were behind right behind each other y'all right behind each other when y'all talked? Go in there.
So, you didn't see Matthew nor Libby no more after that, after 2.30?
No, I did not.
Jail calls were also played in court on this day, one call being between Matthew and his mother, Cindy. In this call, Matthew had asked two very specific things, for her to bring books, along with how to secure his guns, including the.308
gun used in the murder. It was estimated that Libby was killed between 3 and 4 a.m., and the
last bit of important information shared was that Libby's ankles were crossed when they found her
body. Prosecutors claimed this was
because the vehicle was stopped and she must have been getting comfortable and in a comfortable
position to have a conversation with someone, such as her boyfriend Matthew. Day two of the trial had
even more witnesses and testimony from individuals, such as forensic scientist Carrie Todd, medical
examiner Dr. Danielle Armstrong, forensic
examiner Jay Norman, and many more. The conversation was about DNA in Matthew's vehicle, the autopsy
results, the bullets used, and the swabs taken from scratches on Matthew's chin and face.
Then everything took a turn on day three. Day three of the trial began, but one crucial thing was missing. Matthew.
He had completely vanished. The trial still continued without him while investigators
searched for Matthew. Matthew's defense attorney, Roy Hughes, asked the jurors in court to only give
his client 50 years in prison because the jury had an option of anywhere between 5 and 99 years,
but it had to be agreed upon unanimously. So on January 27, 2022, despite his absence,
Matthew was convicted of first-degree murder and was sentenced to 99 years in prison and also had
to pay a $10,000 fine. But still, Matthew was nowhere to be found. A little hard to face your
sentence if you can't be found. After being convicted, the trial moved into the punishment
phase on the morning of Friday, January 28th. New information was exposed that was previously
completely unknown. A probation officer testified that Matthew had actually been on probation for a
different crime, and part of the probation was to wear an ankle monitor. But Matthew had stopped charging the
battery, and his last ping was at 11.37 p.m. on that Wednesday, the day before he fled and
ultimately was found guilty of murdering Livy. Also, while he was out on bond, he was arrested on new charges of assaulting a woman
and criminal mischief. The woman he assaulted was his ex-wife, Montana. Matthew was accused
of choking her neck, kicking her, and damaging the doors of her vehicle. Next to take the stand
was Sabine County Sheriff's Department investigator. He testified about a 2014 vehicle pursuit of Matthew that
resulted in a crash involving the car Matthew was driving as well as a patrol car that resulted in
a broken vertebrae in Matthew's back as well as Officer Pete Davis breaking a leg. According to
the police, the Hemp Hill Police Department and the Sabine County Sheriff's Department had both
been involved in two different pursuits of Matthew and he had somehow managed to escape both times. Matthew led police on a third
chase that lasted about 10 miles. Matthew's vehicle went through a stop sign and crashed into a wooded
area on the side of the road. However, yet he still managed to get out of police hands. He used his
cell phone to call a friend to come and pick him up, but the friend notified police of where he was, and then they picked him up instead.
Libby's family, friends, and supporters throughout the whole county were absolutely
dumbfounded to learn all of this new information. Not only was he allowed out on bail when he could
possibly be a murderer, but it was known and very clear to the authorities that this was not at all
his first
run-in with the police. I would think his criminal record, as well as the possibility of being found
guilty of, I don't know, first-degree murder, would make someone like that who was out on bond
an extreme flight risk, and understandably so, since that's exactly what he did. Talk about
dropping the ball. So days turned into months and Matthew
was still not found. And guys, it gets even crazier. I can't say that we even got justice
because he's not, we don't know where he is. I mean, we don't know where he is, what he's doing,
if he will ever even be found to get his sentence, you know,
but I'm glad that the jury did see him guilty and did not give him a slap on the wrist, and I was
mad because he don't get to make this decision, like, you did what you did, you need to face,
we had to sit in that courtroom and hear things and see things that just
it hurt us it was reliving it all over again this case has some insane similarities to the
gabby petito and brian laundry case unfortunately this case has not even received half of the
publicity that the petito case did investigators Investigators claimed that the following months after Matthew
fled that they had followed up on about 30 leads and sightings and they all came up dry. At one
point there was a tip that Matthew may have been in his grandparents home however when it was
searched there were no signs of him. Definitely stings a little bit that he's not here. They allowed him enough range for him to be able to run off and
not be held accountable for his actions once again. Based on Facebook pages, as well as what
has been said in the media, the whole situation of Matthew being on the run is very fishy for
many reasons. Starting with the fact that on the third day of trial, when Matthew didn't show up,
neither did anyone in his family, even though they had showed up the previous two days.
Now, I cannot find information to say with 100% certainty if it was known before the trial began
that he was missing or if it wasn't known until after the trial began.
The media makes it seem as if it wasn't known until he simply didn't show up at the scheduled
time of the trial, and if that's the case, why wasn't his family there? Shouldn't they have been present and
shocked as everybody else was in the courtroom to find out that he had fled? Or did they already
know he was planning to flee? Which we're going to get to. Darcy Bass' Facebook page is full of
her beliefs of what really happened. Similarly to the Laundries, Darcy believes that Matthew's family fully knew that
he was leaving. She also believes that his ex-wife Montana knows more than she is saying, or may have
even been involved. Darcy made a status on February 26th that says, it still makes me sick to think
that he posted something like this in the middle of whatever happened to my daughter. Still, so many
unanswered questions. Montana knows what
happened and has been caught lying numerous times. Maybe if the law would prosecute on perjury and
apply some pressure, we would know the whole story and whose DNA was present. Maybe Montana was there
too. She posted this along with a series of photos Montana had posted from Halloween night that shows
Matthew commented on her post at 3.02 a.m.,
which is the time frame that Livvy was believed to have been killed. Now, I'll be honest, a lot
of things with Montana do not add up. Not calling 911, even though the kids were reportedly at the
party and possibly even in the car with Matthew. Did she go and pick them up from the scene? Did
she meet him at the scene? The conflict and charges between Montana and Matthew as all of this was unraveling.
There's just so many things that feel disjointed here. We also know that she told investigators
that the reason that she and Matthew separated and divorced was because of Livy. Was she jealous?
Was she participating in this to get her out of the way so she could put her family back together?
Was there more involvement? Because Livy's family seems to think there was. Darcy also pointed out on her
Facebook the suspiciousness behind Matthew's ankle monitor dying the night before his court day and
how nobody had thought to check it out. Unfortunately, many people think that ankle monitors are live
tracking, but many are just actually a third-party company reporting the locations back after the fact, so nobody would have more than likely noticed that
it had even died for a while if he hadn't not shown up to court that day. She also pointed out
many times that his family doesn't seem concerned in the search for their son. Ironically enough,
his family did arrange a search on September 10, 2022, which was months after he had last
been seen. The search was to be held in the same area where he was seen almost eight months prior.
Now this, in my personal opinion, makes them look even more suspicious and like they're trying to
cover their tracks by looking concerned, appearing concerned. I mean, did they really think that after
almost eight months later of him being on the run, that he would be still alive on the run and that he would still be in that exact same area that he
was in eight months prior? Matthew's sister Jenna commented to the media in August saying,
at this point, neither I or my family members know if my brother is dead or alive.
So maybe his family was searching for his body during that September search. Either way,
I truly don't understand why nothing was done by them for almost eight months. Unless, of course, it's because they
allegedly know exactly where he is. Darcy is extremely disappointed and feels the justice
system has failed her daughter. Seeing her Facebook posts, as well as interviews she has done,
is absolutely heartbreaking. How do you feel right now? I feel like that I am in some type of nightmare. Like,
I'm definitely in a nightmare. Definitely don't, I can't rule anything out at this point.
You know, I feel like you never know what can happen. Never in a million years have I thought that this would happen to my
daughter. Never a million years would I think that it would end up like this, that, you know,
someone would commit a crime, you know, this heinous crime and be able just to walk off,
you know, that is unimaginable, you know, I thought that, you know,
the justice system would have been
just a little bit more tougher
and not so lenient.
I understand that the verdict was great
and I thank the jurors
and the sentencing was great,
but the lack of trying to keep an eye on that person
and this is a very dangerous person,
the most dangerous person in our area, okay, and they don't have a lot of people just to
look after, and they should have done a better job of looking after this one to protect not only
myself and my family, but the community also, and now everyone, you know, nationwide. So, yes.
And so, what do you feel needs to be done to find Mr. Edgar?
I mean, they need to be doing everything that they can.
I understand, you know, that maybe they are.
But, you know, like today, all the state troopers here, I've never in my life seen so many cop cars, but, um, I just felt like if they were, had been walking side by side,
all these people through the woods, maybe we, there could have been a little bit more ground cover. Maybe if they were stopping the vehicles that were going through, um,
maybe if they were watching the family, um, a little bit closer, closer, keeping an eye on their comings and goings, their phone records,
everything like that, then, you know, I think that that would definitely help contribute.
I just don't see the urgency. I don't see the urgency to find him, you know, and I don't,
there's no flyers up in town. I guess I'm going to have to be the urgency to find him, you know, and I don't, there's no flyers up in town.
I guess I'm going to have to be the one to print those, which I had someone messaged me about doing
those. And it's a wonderful idea and just get it out there. You know, I thank social media,
you know, for, you know, to be able to share and people out there that is doing things on social
media, but we have to be here, like doing things on the ground floor, you know, and I get messages
saying that he's out of the country. I get messages from saying he's in, you know, Louisiana and
Beaumont, you know, um, I personally don't think that he's very far.
Yes, I don't think he's very far.
And what are officers telling you?
Are you checking in with them frequently on this search?
Well, since I was never like I haven't been told anything, I haven't been given any updates. I haven't been contacted as far as that.
You know, today, you know, after the holiday, you know, from yesterday, I will call them.
There's some other, something else had come up.
Something had happened at her cross.
She had a picture on her cross.
And yesterday, I stopped by there and her picture was perfectly cut out.
It was a five by seven and it was perfectly cut out with maybe like a razor blade.
I had three of my friends with me and it was just too much.
I didn't even know what to think.
So I'm going to contact them and let them know that,
you know. So, yeah, I'm going to be in contact with them. They have not just called and updated
me. It's been kind of a more or less a strained relationship between me and them, being that they
never came to my house and told me about my daughter, never told me where they were taking her whenever after the accident.
You know, you know, of course, I was the grieving mother.
I am the grieving mother pushing the card like, well, have y'all checked this?
Have y'all checked that? You know, like, where's the cameras in town?
So there's been a lot of write me off is hard to deal with.
And but I'm just seeking the truth I just I want the
truth I understand that we got a conviction but I think that um I mean he laid in the ditch and
waited for somebody to find him because that's how um the scene was set and so you feel like
there's no justice right now no no none um I thought I would get like a little bit of relief
in the first day in the courtroom I did I got a little bit of relief
I thought oh my gosh you know like they're gonna be they're doing this you know and
and then it just went south because there was questions that were not asked
and there was only questions asked, you know,
that they knew the answers to already.
And more than 99 years, I wanted to know what happened to my daughter.
Like what went so terrible?
Why did you go from trusting this person with your child, you know,
him and her both him Matthew and
Montana to to want to you know kill this person kill my daughter kill this person that was taking
care of your most precious item you know and um no there's no justice there's no justice I feel
like there's other people that helped,
that helped him. They knew about the, um, that Libby had been, um, I can't even say it,
that my daughter was gone and they didn't do anything. They didn't call the authorities.
Um, then there's people that have perjured the court several times and obstruction of justice,
perjury, none of those things have been brought up. And I feel like if they were, then, you know, pressure buzzed pops, you know, and if that pressure would
have been applied, then the things that we, that I don't know, may have came out.
On December 6th, 2022, In Pursuit with John Walsh aired a segment concerning the murder of
Libby Lewis. Not long after In Pursuit with John Walsh aired, Matthew was finally captured.
The Texas top 10 fugitive of justice who walked away from his murder trial almost one year ago
was captured outside of Pimphill. But the investigation into what went wrong and who
may have helped Edgar is just now beginning tonight. We have new information straight from
the US Marshals Service on how law
enforcement busted Edgar after 337 days.
On the run, he may have been a no show
in court on day three of his murder trial,
but last January a jury convicted
Edgar of murder in the shooting death
of his ex girlfriend Livvy Lewis.
Halloween night 2020.
His sentence 99 years in prison. Now others are also looking
at some hard time as well.
That's because the lead investigator
with the US Marshals Service believes
Edgar remained in East Texas or
continued his close ties to the
community and that his family and
acquaintances were helping him quote.
Stay off the grid.
That's despite family members
insisting to authorities he had
simply walked out the back door of
their home that day and disappeared.
Meantime, Darcy Bass,
the mother of victim Livvy Lewis,
has prayed for his capture since day one.
Speaking with KFM 6 News Bass is calling
on Swift justice for anyone who helped
Edgar Hyde. They got him. Oh my goodness,
like he was right here. That is crazy. I don't understand how that happens, but let's just pray that everyone that helped him and assisted him harbored him will be also be brought to justice. Today, federal agents had been following up on leads that Matthew Edgar was holed up at a home surrounded by
woods on Richard Drive.
That's just northeast of Pimphill,
not far from where Livvy Lewis's body
was found on the side of the highway.
The weather bad on Thursday,
but law enforcement surrounded that
home on Richard Drive for hours,
taking cover behind trees and
buildings waiting for hours.
Finally, around 830.
Thanks to night vision technology, Edgar
smoking a cigarette and another man was spotted on the back porch. Law enforcement quickly moved in.
Edgar was arrested without incident. The other man released for now. All right, guys, thank you so
much for tuning in to another bonus episode with me. Like I said at the top of this episode,
make sure you're following the podcast so that you don't miss any more bonus episodes in the future and if you would be so kind as to just
quickly rate this podcast review it it takes 30 seconds max to leave a review and it really does
help the algorithm and help push this podcast out to more people so that these victim stories get
heard which we know is the goal so thank you guys so much for tuning in to another bonus episode, and I will be talking to you again very, very soon.
All right, it's me, Annie, signing off. Thank you.