SERIALously - 200: Toxic Love Turns Deadly | The Brutal Murder of IG Influencer Alexis Sharkey
Episode Date: October 7, 2024In November of 2020, 26 Year old Alexis Sharkey was reported as missing. A day later, Alexis was found deceased. Nearly a year later, as the investigation was wrapping up, the case took a drastic turn... leaving many people shocked and heartbroken about what the future would look like in terms of justice. Special thank you to Alexis’ friend Chealsea Turnbow for joining us to talk about this case and what Alexis means to her. We're going on TOUR!! Come see one of our episodes LIVE in a city near you! Head to https://annieelise.com/blogs/events for dates and ticket info! Huggies Learn more at https:www.Huggies.com Zbiotics Go to https://www.zbiotics.com/AE and use AE at checkout for 15% off any ZBiotics probiotics. Shopify Go to https://www.shopify.com/serialously for a $1 per month trial today Quince Go to https://www.Quince.com/ae for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns. 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 Sources: 6ABC CBS News ABC 13 Fox News Fox 26 Houston NBC News Business Insider Audio Sources: 6ABC ABC 13
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Hey, true crime besties.
Welcome back to an all-new of the True Crime Podcast, serial-lessly
with me, Annie Elise.
I hope you guys are having a fantastic start to your October.
We're already like a week in, but I hope you guys are having a good day, a good start to your month.
I wanted to give a quick shout out to Apple.
They have featured us this month under their Creators We Love campaign, which is such an incredible honor,
so you can take a look at that over on the Apple Podcast app.
But we love partnering with them and they are so incredible. And I also want to just give a shout out about the live tour. We
are three shows down and guys, honestly, I don't know how else to describe these
shows other than electric. The energy at these shows, it was sold out. So far
we've done San Diego, Phoenix, and Orange County all sold out and the energy is
just so incredible.
It's also been so fantastic meeting so many of you guys
after the show, one-on-one, hearing your stories,
talking with you, meeting with you.
And we have two shows left.
That's it, Salt Lake City and Denver.
And those shows are coming up.
They are gonna be amazing as well.
We have some really special guests joining us.
So if you haven't gotten your tickets yet,
but you were planning on going
or you're thinking about going, definitely go check that out.
It's at annieelyce.com under the events tab. I think we have some tickets left. I
don't know the other shows sold out so these might be sold out by the time this
is airing but I would just say grab those tickets now before they're gone.
But these shows have been really incredible and like I said so rewarding.
So I just
want to say thank you if you have come to one of those, if you are gonna come to
one of those, or if you've just supported from afar. But it was my first tour and I
couldn't have asked for anything more. Now I want to jump right into today's
case because it is one that has to do with social media, an influencer, domestic
events, secrets, and really some shady things and quite a few red flags when
you start peeling things back. It's living your worst nightmare ever, truly. Each morning my
husband and I wake up and say I just hoped it was a nightmare. I hoped it wasn't real. Now if you
watch my YouTube channel Tend to Life, you might be familiar with today's case.
I covered it a few times back when it was first breaking,
but I wanted to revisit it now
because I never have done a full deep dive.
There also have been so many different details
that have surfaced, new information that has come to light,
and I really wanted to dig in and cover everything
in this case, everything that we know.
This is the case of Alexis Sharkey. We also have
exclusive audio from one of Alexis's best friends, Chelsea Turnbow. She was kind enough and brave
enough to talk with us about her friendship with Alexis and also the toxic relationship that Alexis
was in and really what it all led to. So I just want to thank her again for speaking with us because
she has shared truly some very valuable insights
with us.
Alexis Sharkey was a 26 year old young woman living
in Texas and Alexis was absolutely stunning.
She was tall, she was slender,
she had this gorgeous head of hair, long red hair
that fell like right underneath by her rib cage.
I mean, she was truly stunning.
She also was an Instagram influencer.
She always took the right angles,
knew the right photos to take of herself,
was dressed to the nines, makeup was flawless.
I mean, she truly was just beautiful.
And being an Instagram influencer, I'll be honest,
it's a lot of work.
I don't know firsthand,
because I'm not an Instagram influencer,
but I have friends who are, and it is a lot of work.
It's not just about posting these beautiful pictures. It's about
engaging. It's about catering to what the audience wants. And it can be a grind. But apparently,
Alexis hated the word influencer. She saw herself more as a businesswoman because she wasn't really
getting paid to influence people. She was paid to take photos, she was paid to market herself
and all of the different products that she partnered with,
and she just was generating a lot of content.
It was definitely a business for her.
It wasn't just about looking good.
It was also about being very, very organized
and being responsible and really grinding
and trying to work hard.
And I think it is safe to assume
that when somebody is good looking
and has a career that is based around looks, whether it's being a model or being an influencer,
it's easy to assume that they're just a pretty face, right? And nothing else.
But Alexis was brilliant. She had a degree in biology and she double minored in psychology
and nutrition, none of which are easy subjects to learn. And when Alexis graduated from college in 2012, she was summa cum laude.
Hell, she was in the top 2% of her class grade-wise for her entire college career, from freshman
year to senior year.
So all to say, Alexis really did have it all.
She had looks, she had smarts, she had a good work ethic.
She pretty much could have done whatever she wanted to do with her life.
And if you were to go by her social media accounts,
you really would think that she did have it all.
Here's how one of her best friends,
Chelsea Turnbow, described her.
She was such like a free spirit.
Me and her from the start,
we just automatically like gravitated towards each other.
It was weird.
It was like we have this bond that was unbreakable.
It was something that like I've never experienced before.
I've never had like a bunch of like girlfriends.
I kind of kept myself growing up
and she just like truly understood me
and she cared so much about other people
and other people's feelings.
She always put other people before herself,
and that was something like I admired about her.
And she was just such like a driven person,
and so like excited and ambitious about life.
By 2020, Alexis was 26 years old,
and her Instagram was full of pictures
of Alexis smiling and laughing.
She was lounging in beautiful ritzy looking places.
She was out getting in touch with nature. Of course, there were tons of pictures of her and
her cats too. She truly just looked like she had a very happy and full life. And in addition to her
main account, she also had an Instagram account that she created for her cats. She babied them,
she would take photos of them, she would post them, and a lot of people do that, right? They,
a lot of people have Instagram accounts for their pets, and Alexis definitely did as well.
Now baked in with all the photos of her cats, of her in these glamorous hotels, out with her friends,
there were also plenty of pictures of her and her husband, Tom Sharkey.
Now Tom was a stark difference compared to Alexis.
Alexis was tall, slender, kind of
almost looked a little bit shy in some of her photos, whereas Tom was extremely
tall, taller than Alexis. He was a bodybuilder, he was very wide set, he had
huge muscles, he looked a little bit more serious and more angry, just kind of
almost seemed like, I hate this word, but like the big
brute next to a young beautiful girl. And he was also much older than Alexis. He was 20 years older
than Alexis to be exact. Now I'm not entirely sure when their first date was. It might have been
around October of 2018 when they did a photo shoot together. But it sounds to me like Alexis and Tom might have
known each other or started dating a little bit earlier in 2018. Apparently Alexis was going
through a little bit of a rough time that year. She was working at a restaurant in Odessa, Texas
called Twin Peaks and her Instagram career hadn't quite taken off. She hadn't quite become this
influencer yet. She had also recently called off an engagement
to some other guy, so she was really trying to figure out what direction her life was
going to take. After she had graduated from college, she wanted to take a year off and
then start med school in 2018. But for whatever reason, she changed her mind and she decided
not to go that route. So anyway, Alexis wasn't in a great place, and Tom was a regular at this restaurant where
she was a server.
So eventually, she started opening up to him.
And again, I don't know exactly what the timeline was from them connecting at that
restaurant to them dating to then him popping the question, but I do know that she posted
an engagement photo in June of 2019.
Although whether that's when they got engaged or when they just announced it, I'm not so sure.
But in any event, they got married in December of that year.
So we're talking six months or so
after she posted that engagement photo.
And remember, Alexis was 26.
Tom was 48 years old.
So we're not talking about a little minor age gap.
In fact, Tom had kids who were the same age as Alexis.
So literally, she and his daughter could have gone to school together.
There was definitely a large age gap here.
And while age gaps aren't always a red flag, we definitely have covered cases in past episodes
before where we know that there are some men out there who intentionally date women who
are much younger.
These guys see these much younger
women as easier to control because they don't have the same life experience yet. Maybe they're not
as comfortable setting boundaries, maybe they aren't as comfortable standing up for themselves,
but we have unfortunately seen a pattern like this. And that's not to say that anyone who is
in a relationship where there is this large age gap is in danger, but it is something that we have noticed
in certain cases.
We also know that older men sometimes tend to move fast,
which is what we see here with Tom and Alexis.
There was just those six months
between the engagement announcement to the wedding.
Then in January, 2020, they moved to Houston together.
Now, once she was there,
she got involved in a great group of friends.
People really cared for her and they really had her best interests in mind.
How we became friends, it's actually like a really funny story. There was, let's say, Tanya,
Lexi, Kendra, me, and we all met on Bumble BFF.
We just all come from like the same background.
You know, Kendra just moved here
and she was trying to meet people.
Tanya, she was a single mom at the time, and so was I.
I was newly divorced and I know Alexis,
what we call her, Lexi, she just moved here also.
So we were all on there at the same time.
And actually Tanya was the one who kind of like
got us to go to dinner together.
And ever since that night,
we were just completely inseparable.
And it's so funny,
cause everyone's like, y'all met on Bumble BFF,
like what?
And we just, we all understood each other.
And there was just this undeniable like friendship
between all of us.
We all understood each other and we had so much compassion for one another.
Our whole entire story is just, it's crazy how we all met and I don't even know.
It's so many people made fun of us for it
and it's to us it was just like so funny because usually people go out bumbles like meet guys
or girls and no we were just trying to meet friends.
According to Chelsea, her relationship with Alexis was especially important. They really
connected and I think it really shows the kind of people Alexis was lucky enough to
have in her life. I can't even remember the holiday it was.
I believe it was in September.
So we all, I guess it was her, Tom, and then me and John, the guy that I was dating at
the time.
And it was, I forget when it was.
When was this?
I would have to look back at pictures.
We all did a little cookout and they came over
and it was just us four.
And me and Lexi just really bonded in that moment.
That's when our friendship took this whole other level.
We were talking about personal things together,
things that we've been through.
And even Tom pulled me aside and he was like,
I've never seen her like blossom like this,
like with another friend.
She's like so close to you.
She tells me things about like how close y'all are.
And it just, I don't know, from that moment
and that like evening,
we just had this like unbreakable bond with each
other and I keep saying that but she just understood me and I just understood
her and it was like we understood each other without even having to talk like I
would be thinking about her and then she would text me or it'd be like vice versa
so I think from that that moment of in and that timeframe of that night that we hung out, that was like
what took our friendships like this next level.
And apparently, all of that contrasts pretty drastically with Alexis's relationship to
Tom.
Although it wasn't always easy to figure out why or what was up.
So her relationship with Tom, the funny thing is, is he didn't really come around that much.
Like there was multiple occasions where Alexis would just come out with herself.
And for the most part, like we just didn't really have the guys a part of our friendship.
Like it'd be like occasionally, like they would meet us at dinner and we would all do
like this little date night.
But for the most part, we tried to keep it just girls night.
She never really complained about him.
She kind of kept it really private.
But when he was around, you could see this like
controlling this that he had with her.
For instance, like that night where me and her
just like took our friendship to the next level, um, he was,
we were talking in the bathroom and we were just like girls laughing with each
other. And we turn around and he was just like standing at the door,
staring at us. And I will never forget that moment.
It just like chills down my spine. Like, uh, there was some,
there was this aura about him that was so dark, like, and you know,
they say like,
narcissists have like, they don't have like,
that spark in their eyes?
That's kind of how his eyes looked.
It was just almost like nothing was there,
like no emotions.
He just stood there and kind of like listened to us talk
the whole time.
And meanwhile, my boyfriend at that time was sitting
on the couch, like doing his own thing.
So it was just kind of weird, but she never,
she was just such a caring person.
She never spoke badly about him.
And I think it's because as women,
we want to give men like multiple chances,
like, oh, well maybe, and we try to play the blame game
on ourselves.
And she was such a caring and sweet person
that I think she kind of,
oh, well, maybe it's because of this. Maybe it's because of that. And in reality, in retrospect,
no, it was him the whole time. But yeah, she never really talked about him. And for the
most part, she was just such a happy person. So you could never really get a true perspective
as to what was going on behind closed do
It's safe to say that by
period between Tom and Ale
after only about a year.
if there ever even really
period. And I'm basing thi
Alexis made to friends of
the ones that Chelsea to there were a few times actually
where I had this question mark in my head
about him as a person,
and we had this Halloween party at Tanya's house,
and all of us good friends got there first
to help Tanya set up for the party,
and I skimmed through with a video
filming all of our friends together. And he just kind of, when the camera was coming to him, he kind of like
freaked out and like tried to turn his face really quick. And I'm like, that's like not
normal. You know, like, why would someone not want to be like in videos with a bunch
of friends? It was kind of like he was hiding himself. And at that moment, I was like, what are you hiding from? And there was a
few times where he would be telling me and John that he's
worked for people who have hired him to be like a hit man. And at
that time, he had drawn like, oh, he's just that's crazy.
Like, he just wants us to like him more. It just sounded absolutely
absurd and insane. So there were times definitely where we were like scratching our head about
him. But she always made it seem like he was a caring person. And all we can do at the
end of the day is like, believe our friends, right? So we all did question him as a person. That's 100%. I mean, she was just the most beautiful
girl, free spirit, and I could see why she became so controlling. Apparently, when she was out with
friends and just catching up on what was going on, Alexis pretty openly talked about how badly Tom
was treating her. She described him as controlling and manipulative, and she would
do this in group settings where lots of people would hear her. She also told her friends that
Tom had been physically violent with her. She opened up about it with at least four different
people that she was close to. But also, it wasn't a secret that he was kind of a shit husband,
and things were definitely now starting to come to a head. I actually vividly remember the instance where we were all like, oh, something is not right.
It was Tanya's birthday and we were setting up a surprise party for her.
And you know, usually Lexi is like very, she wants to be involved in the plan.
She's very receptive.
She loves getting ideas.
And she was kind of like reclusing a little bit
towards Tanya's birthday.
And Lexi would always show up like dressed to the nine.
She always had her makeup done, the cutest outfits.
And she showed up in this really cute pair of jeans
and just like this plain white tee.
She had no makeup on, her eyes were swollen.
And she wasn't really wanting to talk to a lot of people about it.
And me and Kendra and Tanya kind of pulled her aside and we were like, what is going
on?
Like, is everything okay?
And about this time she was thinking about separating with him and
she's like he's just being mentally abusive, um, verbally abusive. He, I went and like took my,
or like I split our assets up. I'm like working in the steps to separate me and him. And she's like, it's just no longer working.
And then I pulled her aside and I was like,
okay, well tell me like what's going on.
And that's where she was like,
he is so mean to me, like physically.
And I'm like, what?
Like you've never said this before.
And she's like, I've just tried to protect him
and I can no longer do that for him anymore.
And she's like, it's just so toxic and I just can't do it.
And that night, I believe they went out
and she met one of our guy friends
who was a DJ in Houston, he still is, his name was Seb.
And I believe this is what led up to the whole entire thing
is, you know, he found a text
message probably from Lexi and Seb and he just kind of like snapped and saw red.
And a person like him that already struggles with major insecurities and now he's losing
like the love of his life.
And I think it was more so lust on his side.
Like I think that's what made him snap is like he thought he was losing the person that
like motivates him.
And people who, you know, I'm pretty sure he did steroids.
He was majorly into like the fitness world and you know, that messes with people's brain
chemistry.
And I think he just had this deep, deep anger inside of him that just finally snapped and came out.
And it's frustrating that we don't know a ton of details about what did happen behind closed doors,
because Alexis never filed any charges against Tom.
She also never filled out any paperwork related to these allegations.
But I also don't think that she had any reason to lie to her friends.
She also took a trip to Mexico with some friends, and while she was traveling, Alexis admitted to those same friends that she was afraid for her
life. She thought that Tom might actually try to hurt her. She made similar comments during another
trip, this one to Marfa, Texas. During this trip, according to her friends, Alexis said that Tom,
quote, had been putting hands on her.
Later on, when she was talking with another friend, she got even more detailed about the kind of abuse and the kind of mistreatment that she was getting from Tom. Specifically,
she said, quote, he strangles me and chokes me out, and I black out and wake up on the bathroom
floor every single time. Now, I mean, that's sickening in and of itself. It's bad enough
for something like that to happen once, to happen ever. But over and over again, enough times for
Alexis to say something like, every single time this happens. Now, of course, Alexis's friends
were all worried about her. Who wouldn't be? It ended up getting bad enough that Alexis and Tom were
legally separated, and Alexis was fully prepared and ready to get a divorce. That is, at least,
according to her friends. There doesn't seem to be any evidence that she actually filed the paperwork
for a divorce, so pretty much everything that we know about these relationship problems comes
directly from her friends. I've also heard that maybe Alexis did have all of the paperwork ready to go,
but that she hadn't served him yet, that she hadn't served him the forms, and
that perhaps she and Tom had talked about a divorce and agreed to go through with it.
So basically, she was in the process of officially separating and
she was working her way up to it.
I'm pretty sure she was just in the process
of meeting up to file for a divorce.
I know for a fact that she was in motion.
She went to the bank to separate their bank accounts
and she pulled me aside and she told me that, you know,
she was making more money than him at that time.
So it might've had to do something with money
and she was becoming her own person
and she moved to this city where she was completely thriving and meeting people her age.
And I think she just started to realize like, oh wait, there's more to life.
So I don't know for certain if she was already in the process of filing for divorce.
It was something that was like definitely in the front of her mind and she was working into action to make all of that happen.
Alexis's friends also said that around the time
that Alexis may or may not have filed for divorce,
she started making a lot more social plans, all the time.
Every single night, basically,
she would have some excuse to go out.
Now, it wasn't just because she wanted to go see people
and that she wanted to go hang out.
It was more that she didn't feel safe
being at home alone with Tom.
She would find ways to make sure
that that would never happen.
And for his part, it sounds like Tom
was not 100% ready to give up on the marriage.
He was still fighting to keep Alexis.
But realistically, Alexis didn't need him.
Her Instagram was now blowing up,
which it had been since basically early 2020 when she and Tom first moved to Houston. She
also made new friends, good friends. She had a good support network around herself. It
wasn't like she needed him anymore. Now, I will say this, Alexis wasn't exactly
this outgoing extrovert. She didn't have a humongous entourage or anything like that, but like I said,
the people that she was close with, she was super close with.
Even though she only knew them for a few months, they were very, very close.
So she was doing great in her life, aside from the romantic department, that is.
In fact, she was now making so much money from Instagram that she
didn't even need a day job anymore. She didn't need that job at the restaurant. She also certainly
didn't need Tom and his controlling and violent bullshit that she was putting up with. Now,
speaking of Instagram, just for a moment and how it works in hitting the algorithm, getting big,
getting your content seen, and getting it out there. You can't really get seen
unless you are posting all the time.
So Alexis's friends were used to constantly seeing
new photos of her and new videos of her just all the time,
going up basically every single day.
That's how you hit the algorithm.
That's how it works.
But even ignoring Alexis's Instagram activity
and her TikTok activity,
which were both very, very popular,
she was always on her phone
non-stop. If you texted her, she would reply literally within a few seconds. If you called
her, she would pick up the phone. And if you posted something about your own personal life
on your social media accounts, she would be the first one to comment or to reach out and see if
you're okay. She would ask what was going on. She was just very, very active through social media
and on her device via text.
And my point is with all of that
is that she was always super, super reachable
for the people that she was close to.
So it was very strange when Alexis
just stopped posting completely
right after Thanksgiving Day in 2020.
Now for context, that year, Thanksgiving fell on the 26th,
and that day Alexis had had Thanksgiving dinner
with some friends.
They took a photo together where they're all seen smiling,
and it's now believed that that was the last photo
that she ever took while she was alive.
And it looks nice.
It's just a couple of friends posing together,
looking comfy at home, sipping some wine,
enjoying the holiday.
A few of her friends then saw her out and about on Black Friday, the 27th.
One of those friends was named Tanya Ricardo, and Tanya was one of the people who had dinner
with her the day before.
So at around 6pm on Black Friday, Tanya and Alexis chatted a little bit.
They made plans to meet up the following day on Saturday to go see a movie.
So on Saturday morning, Tanya reached out to Alexis just to say hi and to confirm their plans.
But Alexis didn't reply. Now this was weird because like I said before, Alexis was basically attached to her phone.
It wasn't just a way to be in touch with people. I mean, it was her world. It was her work. It was everything.
It was her career.
It really encompassed everything that she needed to do or where she needed to be.
To make matters worse, though, after that, she didn't put up any new posts.
Not on Instagram and not on TikTok.
Which, okay, in all fairness, I get it.
We all do need time off, especially if it was a major holiday weekend.
Maybe she wanted to take a little break from constantly churning out all of this new content.
However, it was pretty out of character for her.
Literally nobody had heard from Alexis since about a half an hour after that 6pm chat with
Tanya on Friday night.
She did hop on Facebook and she liked some posts here and there, she did a laugh emoji
here, a little like like there, you know, things like that.
But from roughly 6.30 PM onward,
it was just radio silence.
Literally nobody could get a reply to their calls,
to their text messages.
Her read receipts were turned on,
which is where when you send a message,
you can see if somebody has read it or not,
even if they don't respond.
And because of this, people could see
that she wasn't even seeing their messages.
They were only showing as delivered, not read.
She wasn't even leaving people on read, she was just gone.
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So since nobody had heard from Alexis in a while, Tanya drove down to Alexis' apartment
with another friend and they started knocking on her door.
But nobody answered.
They sat around and they waited for a couple of hours, just in case Alexis was out running
errands or maybe was going to come home soon.
They just wanted to wait.
They wanted to check it out for themselves.
But she never came back.
There was no sign of her anywhere.
So that's when Tanya got worried enough that she reported Alexis missing.
From there, it was really no time at all before her family and her friends were all just flooding
social media with photos of Alexis and truly just begging people to reach out if they saw her, if they knew her,
if they knew where she was, if they had heard anything. They were just looking for answers.
And I'm going to let her best friend Chelsea describe Alexis's disappearance because it
involves a truly chilling moment where she felt like she just knew in her gut that something was wrong.
It's a really crazy. How we kind of like figured it out.
So like I said, you know, just shared by the same energy and I
will never forget I was playing it was like Thanksgiving break
and I was with my family and we're playing trouble at our
kitchen table and
my boyfriend at the time called me and he said, Hey, I just want to let you know, like Tom called me and said that let's
sees like missing.
She ran away like someone he hopped the fence or she hopped the fence and he tried to chase
after her and she got inside the sports car.
And I'm like, what?
And it was just weird to me because the last text message she sent me was like an hour
before all of this took place.
And I never responded back because I was with my family.
So I started immediately texting her like, Hey, where are you?
And a little bit of backstory.
I texted her maybe a couple days before all of this
transpired. And I told her like, you know, I have a two bedroom
apartment, Lennon's she never sleeps in her own room. Anyways,
Lennon's my daughter. And I was like, why don't you just come
stay with me for a little bit? Like I feel more safe that you
will be inside of my home instead of staying there where
she's just coming in and out. And she was like, Oh, I think it'll be fine. You know, she was just kind of like pressing down the issue a little bit.
And so moving forward to the night that he called my ex boyfriend now that boyfriend at the time,
you have John called me and was like, Yeah, it's kind of weird. He says that she's missing. And so
I start panicking. I'm calling her. She's not responding. And I'm like, that's just weird. He says that she's missing and so I start panicking. I'm calling her she's not responding
and I'm like that's just weird. Like she has always when there's a problem she contacts all of us
right like we are her best friends. We're the people that is her family here because our family
lives out of state and so I started calling Tanya and Kendra and I'm like we got to rally up like
there's something seriously wrong and all of them agreed. Meanwhile, John and the boyfriends are like, Oh,
y'all are just kind of like freaking out. Like don't freak out.
Like it's totally fine. She probably just wants some space.
And I remember telling them like, no, this is not normal.
Like something is something inside of me is screaming to let's figure out what's
happening. And I'll never forget that night.
I went to sleep without hearing anything from her.
And I woke up in the middle of the night
and I shot about a bed in a panic
and I heard this voice in my ear say, find my body.
And it is, I get the chills,
like I have the chills right now.
It is the most chilling thing
that has probably ever happened to me.
It was so vivid. And then I woke up the next morning and I called John and I said, John, I think like he
killed her. And he's like, Oh, that's crazy. Like, don't say that. That's insane. Like calm down.
You're going to the utmost extreme. And then I called the girls after and I said, guys,
like I really think he did something to her. And at that time, they were all like, I 100% think so too. So it wasn't like we were all separated
and being like, oh no, like that's crazy. All of us had this like instinct of something has happened
and he did it. That was like the one vivid feeling that I had that it felt like she was, it's literally her, it sounded like her voice
was in my ear and it was the craziest thing.
Other than that, I think we were just in this
fight or flight mode the whole entire time,
trying to help like the detectives.
And we just didn't have time to ever process this.
There were some instances where I was like,
oh, you know, I think he probably did
it here and he probably did it there.
But that was the one time where it was the most chilling thing that in that whole entire
situation where it was very vivid.
Now what's really weird about all of this is how Alexis's husband Tom responded to
her disappearance.
First, he didn't report her missing.
It was her friends who did that.
And you know, it's not like he just failed to notice that his literal wife had gone out
and hadn't come back.
And sadly, Alexis didn't make it back home.
Ever.
Instead, her body was found on the same day that she was reported missing.
Alexis was completely nude, and she was lying in a ditch
at the side of the road. She was about three miles from the apartment where she and her husband Tom
lived, which how dehumanizing is it that she was just thrown on the side of the freeway,
like garbage, nude, just discarded like that. And the only reason that she was even found was
because a sanitation worker spotted her while he was driving by.
He literally saw her feet sticking out from some bushes.
Now even from the road that he was driving on and spotting her as his vehicle was moving,
he knew that it was a dead body.
When he called the police, he said that, okay, maybe it was a possibility that it could have
been a mannequin, but deep down he knew that that wasn't the case
because he also admitted that he was too scared
to even get out of his truck to go see for himself.
He wanted the police to come handle it.
Sure enough, some investigators went to the scene
and pretty quickly they identified the body
as an actual dead body, specifically Alexis's.
Now, since she was naked
and obviously didn't have any ID on her,
they had to get her fingerprints
in order to identify her body for sure.
There also were no obvious injuries on her, no clear cause of death that anybody could
determine without doing an autopsy.
In fact, at first, the police thought that maybe she had taken something and possibly
overdosed, because that would explain how somebody would die without leaving any bruises,
any cuts,
any scrapes. It didn't even look as though there was any sort of struggle. Her body was clean,
meaning it looked as though it had almost been placed there, just gently laid down in this area
of brush and weeds and branches. So according to the investigators in the beginning, the only
thing that made sense, if there was no sign of a struggle,
was that she possibly OD'd and just passed out and then died.
But a lot of Alexis's friends said that she was definitely not the sort of person to mess around with drugs.
She was responsible, and at her wildest, she might have, yes, had a couple of drinks with dinner,
but she certainly wasn't out of control or anything like that. And it's like what I said before, she wasn't the stereotypical party girl that you might think of
when you hear that she was this influencer. Sometimes people hear influencer and they think,
oh, they're going to all the glamorous parties, the after parties, they have access to alcohol,
to drugs, to everything, but that's not how Alexis was. She was much more about having a few close friends,
spending quality time with them at dinner,
catching up on life, maybe having a glass of wine,
that sort of thing.
Certainly not a drug-fueled lifestyle
so much so that she would OD.
In fact, Chelsea said, quote,
"'If she did overdose, somebody did it to her.
"'She didn't do that to herself.'"
Alexis's mother, Stacey Robinote,
also told the press that she was pretty sure
that Alexis had been murdered.
There was no autopsy report available to the public yet,
but even without knowing the cause of death,
she just had a mother's intuition, an instinct,
a gut feeling that somebody had killed Alexis.
This was not an accident.
We're very broken.
We're very brokenhearted.
It's just so painful for someone so bright
and having so much to offer just to be gone,
snuffed out, and I don't know why.
I don't know why.
And the horrific nature of her last moments must have been,
it's, I can't even, I can't even go there.
I do.
I do believe she was murdered, yes.
From what I've been able to gather,
as well as a mother's gut,
I learned very young as a mom to trust my gut.
And I don't, it's not let me down.
So everybody was defending Alexis's reputation,
saying she didn't struggle with drugs, with alcohol.
She certainly wasn't a party girl, nothing like that.
But you know who wasn't defending Alexis's reputation
and who wasn't pushing back against all of the speculation?
Her husband, Tom.
He actually kind of went in with that official theory,
just agreeing with the idea that, sure,
of course she must have overdosed.
And no real surprise, but he was acting even more suspicious in all sorts of other ways
too.
Almost immediately after Alexis's body was found, I mean seriously, right away, Tom posted
on Facebook saying, quote, my world, my everything.
I'm so lost right now, my one and only.
Now, I don't like to criticize people for how they grieve and how they mourn,
because I know that death and grief can look differently for everybody.
Everybody handles it differently.
So I usually don't like to come for somebody for the way that they handle it.
But I do have to tell this story honestly, and I will say this, whether you think it's fair or not,
some people thought that that post of his did not sound
super sincere, that it almost sounded a little over the top. I mean, my world, my everything.
It maybe felt a little too poetic for Tom. It even sounded like something that maybe he had come up
with in advance, sort of like a, how do I make people think that I'm actually upset when I'm not?
That kind of thing. And again, I'm not saying it was right to attack him
over this post, but people clearly were.
Something just wasn't sitting right with the public.
And just 49 minutes after he made that post,
he followed it up with another Facebook post.
This one said, I just want to say this.
Some of you are posting on social media
helping us locate my world,
and we appreciate all of your help, love, and support. Others were wasting time talking
about other things. Basically, crap talk. And if my wife would have seen this, she would
have been disappointed in your actions. You should all be ashamed of yourselves. I have
been assisting the deputies and making phone calls to find out what happened to my wife.
Next time, stop and think, and realize you don't know it all." So definitely a very passionate,
very angry, very emotional post. And this post got a little over 150 likes, but it got more than
1,000 replies because a lot of people were calling out the fact that he was coming out swinging right after learning that somebody that he loves, his own wife, was dead.
He also was making comments that he felt like people were making accusations against him.
He said that he was getting literal death threats from people who assumed that he was the one who murdered Alexis.
And some people definitely thought that he was much more upset about people making these accusations against him than he was even about his own wife's death.
And that's what it seemed for a while to the friends, to the family, to the public, that
he was so hell bent on defending his character and his innocence, and he wasn't hell bent
on finding out who murdered his wife.
There was no post saying, my world, my everything, I love you so much, we're gonna find who did this to you, we're gonna hold them responsible, we will
get you justice. It was nothing like that. It was my world, my everything, how am I
affected, how am I heartbroken, what has this done to me? Then follow-up posts
saying, everybody's accusing me, I'm the victim, I'm doing this, this is all the
things I've done, just really defending himself
and losing sight a little bit, in my opinion,
of the fact that his wife was murdered
and that they haven't found her murderer yet.
And the public picked up on this right away.
Tom gave an interview about a week
after Alexis's body was found as well.
And the entire time,
it seemed as though he was just deflecting.
A lot of statements just kind of saying like, hey, look over there. Look at that. Don't look at me. Kind of just trying to put the light on something or someone else.
Right now, Alexis's husband, Tom Sharkey, tells us that he's working with HPD homicide detectives, giving them access to anything they want, turning over emails, messages and phone
records. We had a six minute conversation today where he told me that
following his wife's death and disappearance, he has started to receive
death threats. He sounded emotionally distraught and very upset. Tom Sharkey
says she wasn't always the happy person seen online. She was stressed. Quote, sir, my wife was an amazing woman.
She really was. There's always other signs to everything.
I was the one holding her, cuddling her and building her back up. End quote.
He went on and on about how great their marriage was and how he had tried so hard
to support Alexis, even when she was emotionally distraught
and in his words, troubled.
He said that she had been struggling a lot
in the past few months and that sure, yes,
her social media was full of her smiling,
her out and about, having fun,
but that all of that was all for show,
just for likes, just to build her brand.
And we do know that social media, especially Instagram,
is the highlight reel.
Very rarely are people posting authentic posts of trouble in their life or things that they're
struggling with occasionally, but we know that you usually take what you see with a grain of salt.
And according to him, a lot of the time, the only way that he could keep her going and keep her
feeling good was to hold her and to cuddle with her,
to be there for her, her security blanket, her teddy bear,
which to me it feels like, and I'm just speculating here,
I don't know for sure, but it almost kind of started to seem
as though he was trying to plant the seed
that Alexis may have been suicidal
and that she possibly could have taken her own life.
And her friends had said that she wasn't the kind of person
to use controlled substances for fun,
but it seems like Tom was trying to imply
that she might have overdosed on purpose.
And again, that's just my interpretation,
but it feels to me like he was trying to make people assume
that she might have done this to herself
so that they wouldn't suspect him.
Or maybe he was just talking about her emotional problems
and how he was supposedly supporting about her emotional problems and how
he was supposedly supporting her because he wanted to make himself look better. I mean,
either way, it just came across as a little bit gross and almost manipulative. It's also
something that Alexis's friends absolutely denied. The girl never struggled from mental issues.
Her mental stability was very strong. She was such like a strong
willed person. Just happy all the time. The only time that I saw her when she was so sad
was that night at Tonya's birthday where her eyes were welped up. And you can tell she's
been crying and you can tell like she was so stressed. And that's not her not being mentally stable.
That was a man that came into her life that was ruining her mental stability.
And she was such a strong person that she knew she had to walk away from that.
So people questioning her mental state or it's so irrelevant because the girl was
the happiest person that you could ever come across.
In one interview, one of
said she had no demons. S
and I know that that is w
and that's not what it wa
happy, always had a smile
of people looked up to he
very, very Positive, alwa very knowledgeable, always positive, always very knowledgeable, knew a lot about what was going
on, loved being an influencer, as you can see, and sharing tips and tricks about makeup
and hair and fashion.
If we needed her for anything to do with that, she was the girl to go to for sure.
And that reporter, who had talked to Tom, also talked to another one of Alexis's friends,
who painted a very different picture.
What are you doing, Lex?
This is just my hangout.
Authentic, silly, weird.
Just some of the descriptions Devin Styler used talking about her friend, Alexis Sharkey.
When you think of an ideal woman, it's Lex.
She, I always told everybody she had it all.
She was brains, she was beauty.
Somebody could just throw her on, sorry, somebody could just throw her on the side of the road
like garbage, you know, it just like she was nothing. It just, it, it astonishes me. It blows
me away that such a beautiful, such a horrible and disgusting thing could happen to such a
beautiful person because nobody deserves that. Now going back to Tom, he even said that the last
time that he saw her, it was after they had dinner to celebrate Thanksgiving. But remember,
that was the day after because she spent actual Thanksgiving with her friends,
and he had that photo that she took with her friends on Thanksgiving to prove it.
So according to Tom, Alexis ate with him on Friday night, and she also had quite a bit to drink.
Then, she apparently wanted to go out.
He says that he warned her about the dangers of driving under the influence,
and again basically implying that Alexis might have gone missing because of some bad decision that she made on her own, like she
was either drunk enough to drink and drive without him intervening or that she was just
reckless and wanted to go party some more, things like that.
But Tom did admit that when Alexis left the house, she was not driving, which is fair.
It wouldn't make any sense for a drunk driving incident to end up with her naked on the side
of the road without a single mark on her.
And when her body was found, there was also no car nearby.
So again, it makes sense that she would have had to have been out and about on foot if
she really did leave alone.
Except Tom also told the police that she didn't actually walk away.
He told them that same story that he had told her friend Chelsea, that Alexis only walked
far enough to get to the street, which involved jumping over
a fence that ran around the apartment.
Then, she got into a strange car, and they drove off.
And I do find that interesting, because Alexis's friends said that she would never just walk
off on her own.
She would have called somebody to come pick her up.
Which could be consistent with Tom's story about her getting into a stranger's car.
Maybe it was an Uber,
or maybe it was somebody that Alexis knew,
but Tom didn't.
Still though, why jump the fence?
I mean, the story just made no sense.
I think that Tom was kind of trying
to victim blame here a little bit
and blame Alexis saying,
oh, she died because she was so depressed
or because she was drunk.
She clearly did something that she wasn't supposed to do and
that ultimately got her killed, that kind of thing.
And those statements might have worked if we didn't know her cause of death.
And if it looked like there was a shot in hell that she could have died from an overdose or a suicide or
even a normal traffic accident.
But clearly, that wasn't going to be the case here at all.
Because when Alexis's autopsy results came in,
they showed that she had been strangled.
So Alexis' autopsy results are back, and it says that she was strangled to death,
that that was her cause of death.
And I know that I have touched on this a little bit in recent episodes,
but I need to emphasize how personal all of this was.
Strangling is something where the killer has to either look
the victim in the eyes or be right up close behind them. They have to be so close, in fact,
that they have to be able to reach this person's neck. So even if you're using something other
than your hands, like a belt or a garrote or something like that, you can't choke somebody
from far away. And it's usually a method of murder that we see when somebody knows the victim personally.
And more than that, has a very specific and passionate hatred
for the victim.
They want to watch this person suffer and die.
And if you're not strangling somebody from the back
and you're doing this from the front,
just think about that for a moment.
It sometimes can take upwards of five minutes
for somebody to suffocate to death.
So for five minutes, your hands intensely wrapped around somebody's throat, quite literally sucking
the life out of them and just looking at them in the eye. That is very, very personal. And that's
why a lot of the times when there are murders that we cover where strangulation is the cause of death,
a lot of the time the police rule out
that it could have even been random,
that it could have been a random robbery or a break-in
because it is just so personal
that more times than not in random killings,
the perpetrator will use a weapon of some sort
because they don't wanna get that close.
And in Alexis's case, you add in the fact
that she was stripped naked and dumped on
the side of the road.
I mean, there's a lot of disdain there, right?
It feels like it's something that you would want to do to somebody when you would want
to humiliate them or dehumanize them or stick it to them just one final time.
And it certainly was not something that Alexis did to herself.
In fact, within just a few hours of the news hitting the
internet that Alexis was dead, everybody had a theory. Everybody. So I'm going to talk about
some of those rumors that were going around, and blanket warning right off the bat, these theories
are unverified. So use your own best judgment on whether to believe it or not, and do your own
research, do all of the things. But one very early theory was that Alexis died specifically because of her career as
an influencer.
Or, as she would have put it, as an online social media business person.
Because when you get to a certain level of fame, of notoriety, usually you also in turn
get some sort of stalkers with that.
You get weirdos.
So people thought, okay, maybe one of them wanted to hurt her. Maybe somebody became obsessed with her. She was absolutely gorgeous. She had this life
that so many people aspired to have as well. So maybe there was some sort of stalking element
there. There were also a lot of rumors going around, especially on Reddit, that Alexis died
because she had an unhealthy relationship with one of her sponsors. And I'm going to say this right now, I'm just repeating what other people have said.
I know I said that before, but I really just want to be extra clear now.
I'm not endorsing this theory at all.
I'm just covering it because it's an important part to the story.
But Alexis worked for a company called Monet.
It was basically one of those MLM type setups where she was trying to sell shampoos, trying
to sell other hair products, all the products that they made, and then the
more that she sold the more money that she made. And as we know, Alexis was
making bank. She was really good at this. It probably didn't hurt that she had all
those Instagram followers as well that she could advertise to and that would
buy what she was promoting and buy what she was using because again there was a
level of aspiring to be just like her. But anyway, Alexis wasn't only selling these products, she also had people in her downstream.
Now if you know anything about how MLMs work or even if you don't, basically it's the idea that
people were working for her. They're not exactly employees, but you recruit other people to sell
just like you're selling and then you make a commission based on all of their sales as well.
And so you slowly start getting this downstream below you
to where you're now making money off of other people sales,
and it makes the burden of you trying to sell much less.
Monet calls these salespeople mentors.
And that's also what Alexis called herself
on her Instagram profile.
She was a Monet mentor.
And like I said, she was
making lots of money and she was all in on this Monet business model. In 2019, she did well enough
that the company sent her to this big fancy conference in Cancun. However, all of the people
underneath her in her downline, they weren't doing so well. They weren't making the big bucks that
Alexis was. Not that that was Alexis's fault. I mean, the company itself, Monet,
got into some trouble in the state of Florida,
not where Alexis lived in Texas, but Florida.
So still, it was big news.
They had to pay 82 grand in damages
because the state ruled that they had used
misleading advertisements,
that they were preying on their employees.
I mean, it was just a mess.
A lot of the allegations against the company
and the products also claimed that the shampoos were making them lose hair.
Customers had bought this stuff to get, you know, healthy, shiny, full-bodied hair, and they ended up with no hair at all or
red patches, losing hair, things like that. It would irritate their skin. It would give them rashes. This again, all according to reports.
Alexis, however, defended these products online.
She said Monet was great.
She didn't understand where all of the criticism
was coming from, and she said that she was gonna
keep selling their products.
So the theory goes that there were a lot of people
who didn't really like Monet as a product.
Either they were customers who thought
that they had gotten ripped off and had some sort
of bad reaction to the product,
or that it was somebody in Alexis's downstream
maybe blaming her for recruiting them and getting them into this MLM to begin with.
And again, according to this theory, if you believe this speculation,
what whoever this disgruntled person was is the one who killed Alexis.
Now there's no evidence that Alexis's Monet work had anything to do with her murder. I mean,
none, none whatsoever. This was all speculation.
It was just people trying to wrap their minds around it, trying to put guesses out there,
theories out there, but none of it really had any concrete proof. However, what I do think is
interesting regarding the whole Monet situation is that after Alexis was found dead, other
influencers who also sold Monet started posting ads for their products with Alexis's photo on them.
It was almost like they were trying to capitalize on all of the attention of the story and all
of the clicks that her name was getting, just so that they could sell shampoo.
Which I gotta say, that is pretty gross.
I mean, I'm sure that there was nothing nefarious there, I'm sure it was mostly about finding
a trendy hashtag to jump on or boosting views, but still, it really did feel
like these influencers and by extension, Monet itself, was trying to profit off this young woman's
death. Not lift her up, not honor her memory, but just get the money and get the clicks.
Now other people with other theories thought that Alexis might have been cheating on Tom,
and that her boyfriend was actually the one who killed her.
Which it makes sense, right?
I mean, how many times have we seen an affair where somebody gets jealous and they kill the cheater?
And the fact that her murderer stripped Alexis naked?
It does feel like they wanted to embarrass her, maybe even slut shame her for not being a loyal, devoted wife or girlfriend.
And in fact, once these rumors about a possible lover started coming out,
some guy actually came forward on Instagram and literally said that yes, he was the side guy.
Not that he actually committed the murder, of course, or had anything to do with it,
but he said that he loved Alexis and that he would never want to hurt her.
But he also said that they had in fact been together while she was married to Tom.
The guy I'm talking about is named Sebastian Marmaleo,
who went by Seb for short,
and he's the one that Chelsea mentioned earlier.
And for somebody with nothing to hide
who hadn't done anything wrong,
he was acting a little bit suspicious.
He was going through his Instagram account,
he was deleting a whole bunch of pictures,
I'm assuming pictures of Alexis and him together,
but to be honest, I don't know that for sure,
but it just seemed a little bit odd. And either way, it looks bad for sure to be taking down these posts
that could be possible evidence in a murder investigation. But you know who else it looks bad for?
Alexis's husband, Tom. I mean, think about it. If those rumors were true and Alexis was cheating on him,
that could have been a very clear motive for him to hurt her. And if they weren't true, and Alexis was cheating on him. That could have been a very clear motive for him
to hurt her. And if they weren't true, he did still have motive, because we already
have pretty strong evidence that Tom was violent. And yes, that evidence all came from her friends,
and okay sure they might have been lying, but I don't see any reason why they would
have been. Especially as more details about Tom's past came to light. All right, so many of you may know earlier this fall,
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Back when Alexis was first murdered and the story hit the news, I started doing some digging. This was years ago.
And I came across some court documents.
And in my opinion, these documents were very telling and very indicative of Tom's behavior
and his level of control, jealousy, narcissism, if you will.
And I'm gonna just give you the high level overview.
We know that Tom had been previously married.
I don't know if he had been married once
or twice before Alexis, but we know he had grown kids
who were Alexis's age.
And these court documents were from his ex-wife.
In these, she's alleging all sorts
of horrific behavior by Tom.
She's requesting that the court restricts his rights to the kids, that she get sole custody.
And we've seen this in toxic, tumultuous custody disputes.
But what we don't often see is that Tom's own family also requested that his rights to the children be restricted.
They said that he suffered from suicidal ideations, from anger issues that he could potentially be threatening,
and they thought that it would be in the children's best interest if they were with the ex-wife and if he did have restricted access.
But not only that, there was also information in these documents that Tom had retaliated against his ex by sending sensitive photos to her employer.
Now if you are familiar with this, you know where I'm going.
Revenge porn is a very real thing.
Whether it's nude photos, private videos you take with your lover, your spouse, whomever,
and then they are shared either on the internet, with employers, like in this case, all as
a means to humiliate and to ruin somebody's life.
There are a lot of different laws in place now protecting people from revenge porn,
but in these court documents, it's cited that he did send sensitive photos to her employer.
So it illustrated a history of somebody who was vengeful, controlling, narcissistic, if you will,
and it just wasn't looking good for Tom.
Because now we're seeing a bigger picture
as to who he is aside from just this person
that he is trying to peddle himself as on Facebook,
the grieving husband, the one who's so helpful,
which we're gonna get to more of that.
But does that mean that he was involved?
Or could that just be a horrible, horrible coincidence?
And that he maybe was a horrible person in his past ten plus years ago, but now has reformed,
and was the doting husband the loving husband?
And would this information skew people's perception of Tom, all while the real murderer
got away?
Either way, affair or not, Tom did not come away from this investigation looking good.
And meanwhile, Chelsea and Alexis's other friends were all watching him very closely.
They were pretty sure that he was the one responsible and that he had dumped Alexis's
body.
I guess we all played like little detectives a little bit because at the end of the day,
this was our best friend and we didn't think things were happening quickly
enough and time is of the essence when you're trying to find a missing person. So me, Kendra
and John would drive past her apartment and the most chilling, chilling thing, we pulled
into her parking garage and we saw Tom for the first time.
And this is backstory.
This is like after he's called us multiple times and he would, he told everyone like
y'all need to stop calling me.
The only person that I'm going to talk to is Chelsea because Leslie trusted her the
most.
And you know, all these recordings the detectives have, we recorded every single phone conversation
we had with him and we're just, you know, stroking his ego a little bit like, yeah, that's so crazy.
Like, who do you think did this? Like, do you think she was like cheating on you? And
the scenarios that he was coming up with were just you could tell it was like coming from
a guilty soul. So this is like during that time when he's like calling us. So we show up to the apartment complex
and we're in John's truck and we see him
at the entrance of where they go in for their apartment,
like the doors and we're like, oh my God.
Like it was just the craziest feeling
and we remembered what kind of truck he had.
So we were going through the parking lots,
trying to find his truck and we parked next
to it and there was trash bags in the backseat and suitcases in the back of his truck.
And to know that like she was sitting in that truck and her body was in there and reliving
that experience because at that time we obviously didn't know how he transferred her body. And it was just gut wrenching to find out later, like, oh my God, we were literally right by that trouble.
So the theory was that she told Tom that it was over and that she was done,
and that she was going to serve him those divorce papers,
and that he was pissed that she was leaving him, but also pissed that she had all of these friends to spend the holiday with.
She was thriving without him, and the theory is that that made him jealous enough to kill
her.
However, the police were pretty tight-lipped about who they were suspecting.
But so far as the general public was concerned, pretty much everyone was zeroing in right
on Tom.
Now, first of all, he told that story about warning Alexis about drinking and driving,
which sounds like complete BS now that it was clear that she had been murdered,
and it just seemed really apparent to so many people that he was pointing fingers anywhere he
could to get the attention away from himself. And this next detail, honestly, I'm not gonna lie,
it angers me to no end. And I'm gonna try really hard to stick to the facts and not go off on some
kind of rant, but no promises. But around the time that Alexis's body was found, Tom started telling this story,
which, in my opinion, was very self-serving, kind of trying to make himself look like the hero in a
murder investigation. Basically, if anybody was willing to listen to him, he would say that he
was the one who figured out that Alexis was dead. Not that he was the one that broke the news to the public
or anything like that,
but instead, Tom basically took credit for solving the case,
or at least the missing persons case.
For what it's worth,
the person who actually publicly announced Alexis's death
was her mother.
She put up some photos of Alexis on Facebook,
along with text which said,
"'It's with a deeply broken heart that Mike and I
want to let you know that Lexi's body has been found.
We cannot begin to thank you all for your love
and the kind words that you've extended to our family.
Please give us this time to grieve this incredible loss
to our family and this world.
We will miss you love.'"
Which I have to just say, what a sweet post.
And it's always amazing to me that anybody can be together
enough to speak or put words together
publicly at all after this kind of loss, let alone write something so thoughtful.
But I want to talk about what Tom did in this moment and what Tom was saying and the weird stories that he was telling
about himself. Because apparently while everybody else was searching the area around the city and hoping that she was still alive,
Tom, according to himself, realized that he should be checking the morgues
in the area.
And that apparently is when he found Alexis's body.
No one in her family had been notified yet, he was the one who identified her, and he's
the one who helped everyone realize the sad news that Alexis had passed away.
Now I don't know for sure whether or not that's true.
Maybe he really did track down the morgue
and identify Alexis before anybody else knew anything.
I don't know the full details on the exact order of events
that went on from Alexis being found in the ditch
to then everybody being notified,
but I'll also be honest, I'm not really buying it.
And part of that is because Tom said
that nobody had been able to identify Alexis'
remains until he showed up and he saved the day because he's the one who recognized
her.
Which we also know isn't true.
The official police reports say that they identified her from her fingerprints, not
from him coming in and asking to see her.
On top of that, Tom was legally listed as Alexis' next of kin. Meaning, when her body was
found, Tom was the one who had to sign the paperwork and give the morgue permission to
release her body and have it sent to whichever funeral home was going to handle the service and
the burial. But Tom didn't do any of that. When Alexis' mom Stacey learned that her daughter had
in fact been found dead, she immediately went into planning mode.
And sometimes when you can't deal with huge, terrible news and you need time to process it,
sometimes it's easier to throw yourself into something and plan something.
So in Stacy's case, that meant that she wanted to plan a funeral.
And she wanted to plan this funeral in Pennsylvania, where Alexis had been born.
It's where she grew up, it's where she went to high school. It's also where she went to college.
Alexis hadn't been living in Houston for very long and her oldest friends and family were all out of state.
Except when Stacy asked Tom to sign the paperwork and have Alexis's remains sent to Pennsylvania,
he said that he would and he just never did. He didn't announce that he had changed his mind or ever say, oh, sorry,
I forgot. I'm just
really busy, I'm grieving, I'm doing my best. None of that. It was basically like that conversation
with Stacy never even happened. He didn't lift a finger to help move the process along or get
Alexis's body released. So Alexis's body sat in a morgue without a burial, without being able to be put to rest for two weeks.
And during that time, her mother Stacey didn't even get to come in and see Alexis' remains
for herself, which I cannot even imagine.
Because it's my belief that you would receive so much closure just by seeing somebody you
love and knowing that their death is real and getting to say goodbye.
But Stacey wasn't even allowed to have that because Tom apparently just couldn't be bothered.
In fact, the only way that Stacey was able to get the ball rolling on this funeral and
see her own daughter was by advocating and campaigning.
She finally got the paperwork updated so that she could be listed as the next of kin as
far as the body was concerned.
The morgue really worked with her on this because it was so obvious that Tom was dragging
his feet.
Everybody was sick of waiting for him to just like get it together and to start doing things,
so they just let Stacey step in and take over.
And in addition to not even letting Alexis' family have Alexis' body and not letting
them have this funeral and grieve in a normal way, Tom was also withholding a bunch of Alexis's personal things.
Her family wanted little tokens of things of hers to remember her by,
and I think we all have little knickknacks and things we keep from people who are now no longer with us.
I know I have things for my grandmother, and I'm sure other people have things as well.
So it's not even about having anything that is very valuable in terms of money.
It's just something sentimental, whether it's a
ring or a piece of jewelry, a piece of clothing, a sweater, something like that. But Tom wasn't helping them have this. Not at all. Not long after Alexis's murder, he ended up moving away from
Houston, which I'm going to put a pin in that because I'm going to come back to that later.
But I want to make this point first. After Tom left, rather than pass a key along to Stacy or tell her and her friends that they could take whatever they wanted, take whatever is going to help you grieve and heal and mourn, or just even leave the stuff in that apartment to go through later,
he had a couple of his friends come to the apartment and completely empty it out. Which literally, it is just so beyond cruel to do that. He knew how important all of these personal effects
were to her mother, Stacey.
She wanted to have something of Alexis's,
and it would have cost him absolutely nothing
to just let her come and choose from Alexis's things,
not literally get rid of everything.
But instead, he went to all of these extra steps,
extra effort to ensure that all of Alexis's possessions,
all of her that was left in this world,
ended up in the trash.
Which isn't just an F-U to her family and her friends,
but also a huge F-U to his wife.
He also allegedly got rid of Alexis's cats, her cats.
She had three cats named Asia, Jack, and Smokey.
And like I said, she loved these cats.
Remember I mentioned she even made a whole separate
Instagram account for these cats where she would post
photos and she just babied them so much.
She doted on them completely.
And Alexis's mom wanted to take these cats in.
She wanted to take care of them.
She knew how important these cats were to her daughter.
But when Stacy asked where these cats were,
Tom wouldn't tell her.
They weren't at the apartment. And I don't know if he just dumped them on the street,
or maybe gave them away to somebody else or what, but he didn't have them, and he didn't tell her
where they were, which is just so vile and so cruel. Her family now was left with basically
nothing to remember her by. Nothing tangible, that is. I'm not even going to pretend to understand
how somebody like Tom thinks,
but based on what he was doing that seemed so callous in regards to her friends and family,
and then based on his Facebook posts and him trying to say that he was the savior, the martyr,
the one who always helped Alexis and how she was so troubled,
it seems like on some level he wanted people to think that he wasn't involved in Alexis's death
and that he was a victim in all of this.
And I don't just mean in terms of trying to convince
the police that so that he wouldn't go to prison.
I think that Tom actually did care about how people
in the general public saw him too.
And I'm basing this on the fact that he gave some statements
to the press where he said that he was fully cooperating
with the police.
He wanted Alexis's murder to be solved
and he said he was gonna do whatever he could to make sure that that happened, which for the record was a complete
lie. If anything, he was getting in the way, and he was making this investigation take
more time. So much so that it ended up ultimately impacting whether or not Alexis ever would
receive justice.
The police didn't talk about a lot of the investigation at the time, and that is
pretty typical. They didn't want to tip their hands too much. But later on, they did say that Tom was
not cooperating at all. Apparently, he gave a bunch of statements to the police that they knew were
lies, and it was very easy to disprove them. He told the police that there were no problems in
their marriage, that everything was great, even though the investigators knew at this point that Alexis had wanted a divorce.
He also couldn't seem to make up his mind about whether or not they had a fight before
she left at the end of the dinner on Black Friday, or if everything was great and they
got along perfectly.
He went back and forth between saying both things to the police.
Tom also named a bunch of other people who, according to him, were all very
suspicious. Now, since the police generally have to investigate any tip that they receive,
no matter how out there it is, they wasted no time looking into all of these people that
Tom had mentioned. But it was all just a wild goose chase. All of these other people were
cleared and it makes me feel like this was just more of Tom lying, trying to make himself look innocent, but really doing a terrible job at it. And other times, he would
just flat out refuse to answer certain questions. One official document described him as, quote,
evasive. He would agree to interrogations, then he would skip them, and he generally just made it
very difficult for the police to get anything out of him. And now I'm gonna go back to something that I touched on earlier, which is that Tom left
Houston right after Alexis was found dead.
And in case you haven't already guessed it by now, this wasn't one of those cases where
he was just so sad and he was grieving that he needed to get up, get away from it all,
and have a fresh start.
No, no, no.
He skipped town.
He went to Georgia.
He left just two weeks after the murder investigation began.
So we're talking now probably late 2020 or around then.
And it took until the following year, in August of 2021, for the police to even figure out
where he was.
He didn't tell anybody where he was going, which, I'm sorry, if you're a grieving
husband and you're trying to find out who murdered your wife and left her naked for dead
and just lying there like a piece of garbage
on the side of the freeway,
you're not gonna even tell the police
where you're relocating to in case they have questions,
in case they need help with the investigation?
Mm, it doesn't sit right.
So they finally found out where he was
and some Georgia area police went up to Tom and they basically said,
Hey, we still have a lot of questions about your wife's death.
So can you please come to the station and answer them?
And once again, Tom acted so helpful when the police ended up asking him why he skipped town.
He said it had nothing to do with any sort of guilty feelings or being worried that he was going to be arrested.
He said it was more so that Alexis's murder had been such big news
and so many people had been assuming that he did it.
So all of these accusations and allegations were flying around on the internet
and it made him feel very uncomfortable and very unwelcome in Houston.
That's why he left, not because he had anything to do with it.
According to Tom, he had no choice but to leave Houston.
He was feeling harassed.
He was feeling like people were blaming him for something that he just did not do.
So then he agreed to do an interrogation, and he set up a specific time and day where
he was going to come into the station and he was going to give his statements.
He also said he would give the police a DNA sample.
He would do it at the time of the interrogation.
He would help in any way possible.
He just wanted to clear his name. He wanted to be ruled out, and he wanted to find out who truly did this,
because it wasn't him. But then, he blew off that appointment. And not only did he blow off the
appointment, he fled the state again. This time, he moved to Florida. I mean, it was just red flag
after red flag. Ultimately, some US
Marshals tracked him down to an address in Fort Myers. They shared this
information with a Texas-based division and also the US Marshals Gulf Coast
Task Force in Houston. So once they did that, they filed a warrant for his arrest.
And on Wednesday, October 6th, 2021, a little under a year from when Alexis was murdered.
They were all ready to bring Tom in.
The US Marshals went to his house, or more accurately, his daughter's house, because
he was crashing with her and her boyfriend at the time, and the Marshalls started banging
on the door.
The daughter and the boyfriend came out of the house, but Tom didn't.
Now, I find this next part kind of hard to wrap my mind around,
but people will always find a way to surprise you, I guess. But the daughter and the boyfriend,
they had no idea whatsoever that Tom was literally wanted for murder at this point.
And like I said before, the police weren't exactly advertising that he was their top and only suspect
at this point. And Tom, of course, wasn't going to just announce that to his family either.
But the point is that when the U.S. Marshals showed up to arrest Tom,
it was a complete shock to the daughter and the boyfriend.
They hadn't done anything wrong. They didn't know what was going on.
So the police kind of just like shooed them out of the way so that they would
not be in any danger if the arrest now somehow went wrong. And their main
priority was finding Tom, arresting him. Now somewhere along the way, the daughter or the
boyfriend mentioned to the police like, hey, by the way, Tom has guns. He has guns in there.
So the marshals were being very careful. They did not want to get into a shootout. They didn't want
anybody else injured in this process. They just wanted to arrest
him. So when Tom saw that they were there, he turned around and he went upstairs. He went further
into the house. Now since they didn't want to escalate the situation, the marshals stayed
downstairs. They sort of waited for him to surrender. They waited for him to come out.
They knew he couldn't stay upstairs forever, but he did stay away for a really long time.
Long enough that it had the officers feeling a little bit nervous.
It was around 10pm when they first showed up to the house, but now it was almost midnight,
and one of them decided to go inside and check on him.
And when they did, they found that Tom had died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Now my assumption is that they must have heard the gunshot when he did it,
and that's what prompted them to go inside at that time
rather than stick it out longer and wait further.
That's just my speculation.
Nobody has said for sure if they heard the shot or not
or why they decided to go in around midnight,
but they went in and they found him.
And that was that.
It was case closed in about the worst possible way possible.
There was never any conviction. There was no day in court for Alexis, no justice for her,
no justice for her family. And I guess if anything, if there is any silver lining here,
it's that Tom didn't get away totally scot-free, but he also never had to spend a single day in
prison. My name is Michael Burrow. I am a sergeant with the HPD Homicide Division.
And I'm here to provide you guys with an update on the investigation into the murder of Alexis
Robinalt Sharkey from last year.
The investigation determined that Thomas Sharkey, her husband, is the only person who had the
means, motive, and opportunity to have committed the murder. I would like to emphasize that this
has been a very tragic series of events for both families,
the Robonauts and the Sharkeys.
They've been through hell, essentially,
with the attention of the public on this case.
I want to put out there that no one else
is suspected of any involvement in the case and
no one else is under investigation in the case.
We have clear evidence that Mr. Sharkey acted alone.
Both families are composed of innocent people who have been through a lot and are in pain,
especially the Sharkeys right now, his family. I would ask that people give both families
their privacy and space to grieve.
The family of Mr. Sharkey did not know
that he was wanted in the case at the time
as we were able to keep the warrant secret.
Mr. Sharkey also did not know that he was wanted
until last night when he was confronted by law enforcement.
I think
the news of Tom's suicide.
good, at least he's dead o
that. But instead they tho
was a tragedy that he lost
Alexis's mom Stacey actua
where she had this to say
for Tom's family.
It's just such senseless loss that has happened.
With my daughter and then him, I'm just sorry for all of that.
It's it's just beyond.
It's been a horrific year.
Loss of life is not.
It's never good, but I do feel like in a way
he did serve himself justice. Are you surprised that he ended his life? Yes I
am. I just really thought that it would end with a trial and that he would come
in and make his case. And he chose to not go that way.
Well, I will admit that we have felt
that Tom was guilty of this from pretty much the beginning.
I have to say, I don't know if I would be nearly that calm
or level-headed if someone actually took the life
of one of my children and then killed themselves as well.
I'm honestly so impressed by what a true class act Stacey is, honestly, through and through. I mean, to just be so patient through all of this devastation and then for everything to end up how
it did, it is heartbreaking. But Alexis's friends don't want what happened to Alexis to ruin her
memory either. They've all gotten together like the time they did a candlelight balloon release.
But it's been hard.
I love you.
We love you.
Love you.
Where'd they all go?
I never really got a chance to communicate with him a whole bunch.
I did communicate with her mom a little bit.
But in that time, we just wanted to be so supportive to her family.
And, you know, we just asked for advice beforehand that we talk to media.
And her mom is seriously one of the sweetest people.
It's truly devastating what happened to them.
And I will forever feel so sorry for what happened.
With Lexi passing and what we experienced from the media
and Reddit groups, it kind of tore all of us apart.
We are all like individually still friends,
like we all communicate with each other.
I would say that I'm the closest to Kendra still.
She's like an older sister to me.
We all still talk to each other,
but ultimately it tore us apart and it's so sad.
And I mean, it makes sense, right?
Like to go something very traumatic like that.
Like they even say that in a marriage
when something happens like this,
like it splits the couple apart.
So yeah, we all have kind of like separated
in our own ways and you know,
it makes me just believe that Lexi was like truly
the backbone of our entire friend group.
There was such a void without her being there. And I think it was just,
it was just such like an irky feeling that she was no longer there. And it was so hard. We
didn't go to her funeral. It's, yeah, it just feels like something that has not been able to
be processed at all. Yeah, you know, like I want her story to be heard.
She was just such like an amazing friend and amazing person.
And I want people to shed light on the type of person that she was and for people to know
that she was so happy and what happened to her was devastating.
But I don't think that she would want people to remember her by what happened to her was devastating. But I don't think that she would want people
to remember her by what happened to her. So I just want people to understand that like
she was such a loving person. And yeah, I just it's hard to talk about. But I mean,
they're like, if I can go back a little bit, I see her places.
Some of the girls went and got ladybug tattoos and they called her lady.
And on my 30th birthday, which is like a huge milestone, my parents got me a hotel room
and it was like up on the 20th floor.
And my parents, like, they decorated the room for me. They went all out and I was walking by looking at everything and there was just this ladybug
sitting on the window.
And I knew it was her and it was just the craziest thing.
Like a ladybug 20 floors up, like in a hotel, like it was just absolutely insane.
It was just sitting there and it sat there for like 30 minutes.
And that just speaks for the type of person she is.
And that's what I want people to remember her by is she is such a free spirit
and she was so giving and so caring.
Don't remember her by what happened to her.
Remember her by the love that she showed and the compassion she showed to others.
I just would like to give some advice to other women out there who are probably
listening to this or have experienced abuse in a relationship. It starts with mental abuse and then
it goes into verbal abuse and then it gets into physical. I have dealt with it in my own life after
all of this happened and even witnessing what happened to Lexi,
I still made excuses for a person.
And ladies, just please, if there is the mental abuse,
verbal abuse, physical abuse,
please just seek out help and leave the situation.
It only gets worse and bitterness
and jealousy grows from that.
And sometimes people, you don't think that they would hurt
you, but it's just one time, one instance where someone
can snap and it's over.
And that is another reminder of why Alexis deserves
to have her entire story told.
Like I said, I did do some short updates back when this was
all breaking a few years ago, but I wanted there to be one place, a dedicated place where we could cover each development,
where we could dive in deep and get the full story told.
And I did it here on the podcast because some of these developments were so awful and I
wanted to speak freely without having to censor myself the way that I do over on YouTube.
I believe that any time we dilute what a victim experienced or what a survivor experienced,
you're diminishing what they went through. You should at least, at the very bare minimum,
be able to use the legal terminology for what their perpetrator did to them. By diluting it,
it's almost as though you dilute the seriousness of it. And I believe that her story needs to be
shared. It needs to be told, if not only for the sole purpose
of having her voice continue on,
but also to raise awareness for anybody else
who finds themselves in a relationship
that has similar red flags or similarities with control
and all of the different things
that Alexis was struggling with
in her relationship with Tom.
If it helps or saves even just
one person, that is enough. So I really appreciate you guys tuning in today and
hearing Alexis's story. I appreciate you lifting her story up and helping raise
awareness. And I also want to just publicly thank Chelsea for being so
brave to speak up and share all of her incredible insights and past
experiences and memories of her and her best
friend. Thank you guys again for tuning in and until the next one, please stay safe. Bye.