Sins & Survivors: A Las Vegas True Crime Podcast - Below The Surface - the Unsolved Mysteries of Lake Mead - Part 1
Episode Date: July 1, 2025In the summer of 2022, Lake Mead dropped to its lowest levels in almost a century. The shoreline crept back. Boats that had been swallowed years ago sat beached in the sand like ghosts. But that wasn'...t all the lake revealed.Lake Mead has long been a getaway for families, boaters, and hikers. But it’s also one of the deadliest national parks in the country. People vanish. Accidents happen. But every so often, the lake gives up a secret.https://sinspod.co/85https://sinspod.co/85bloghttps://sinspod.co/85sourcesDomestic Violence Resourceshttp://sinspod.co/resourcesClick here to become a member of our Patreon!https://sinspod.co/patreonVisit and join our Patreon now and access our ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content & schwag! Get ad-free access for only $1 a month or ad-free and bonus episodes for $3 a monthApple Podcast Subscriptionshttps://sinspod.co/appleWe're now offering premium membership benefits on Apple Podcast Subscriptions! On your mobile deviceLet us know what you think about the episodehttps://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2248640/open_sms Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/sins-survivors-a-las-vegas-true-crime-podcast--6173686/support.
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In the summer of 2022, Lake Mead dropped to its lowest levels in almost a century.
The shoreline crept back.
Boats that had been swallowed years ago sat beached in the sand
like ghosts. But that wasn't all the lake revealed. Lake Mead has long been a gateway for families,
boaters, and hikers, but it's also one of the deadliest national parks in the country.
People vanish, accidents happen, but every so often the lake gives up a secret.
Hi and welcome to Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime podcast where we focus on cases that deal with domestic violence as well as missing persons and unsolved cases.
I'm your host, Sean.
And I'm your co-host, John.
Today's episode is part one of a three-part series about Lake Mead and the stories it
has kept hidden beneath the surface for far too long.
Summer has arrived here in Las Vegas and people are heading out on various road trips and
vacations, and Lake Mead is a top destination year-round in our area and for the Southwest
in general.
Lake Mead straddles the border between
southeastern Nevada and northwestern Arizona. It's just a short drive from Las Vegas. It's about
45 minutes from the Bellagio Fountains to Lake Mead recreational area. It was formed by the
construction of the Hoover Dam on the Colorado River in the 1930s. At full capacity, the lake stretches about 112 miles long, covers over 150,000 acres,
and can hold nearly 10 trillion gallons of water, though it's been far from full in recent years.
With over 750 miles of shoreline, it's a popular spot for boating, fishing, and swimming,
but it also has deep, dark pockets that are hard to search
and easy to disappear into. We wanted to put together this series ever since some of the
cases the lake has kept hidden beneath the surface started making national headlines.
When we started our research, we weren't sure if we had a bias since we live so close to the lake
and the local news makes it seem like it's overly dangerous. Were the stories that had
come to light recently just making it seem like we were living close to a major hazard? Well,
it turns out that it's true. Lake Mead is one of the most dangerous national parks in America.
From 2006 to 2016, at least 254 people died in or around the lake. Most of those deaths were
drownings or car accidents, and that number
doesn't include suicides, which are tracked separately. Lake Mead also had the most murders
of any national park during that time, with six murders in the park during that decade.
Keep in mind that the National Park Service also says it's one of the most visited parks in the
country, with nearly 6 million people visiting in 2023 alone. So of course,
more people equals more opportunity for crashes or accidents, but the sheer size of the lake,
the extreme heat, and the lack of cell service in many areas make it a risky place to visit.
In one weekend alone, in June of 2023, six people died at Lake Mead. A multiple car accident killed three people. Two others drowned, and one died by suicide, while the park rangers rescued an additional 23 people that weekend.
I feel like we can't overstate how dangerous the lake is, and I know some locals who are listening right now probably have a story of something scary that happened to them or someone that they know. Everyone sees a
lot of warnings during the summertime, the reminders to wear your life jacket, to take
ample water on your hikes and let folks know where you'll be going before you go. Don't drink and
drive or drink and jet ski. But honestly, when it comes to Lake Mead, you can't be too careful.
For much of the country and the world, the dangers of Lake Mead became
impossible to ignore in 2022 when extreme drought caused the water levels to drop to their lowest
point since the reservoir was first filled in the 1930s. As the water receded, everything hidden
beneath the lake was exposed, including junked cars and old boats, including a World War II landing craft, and sadly,
human remains. That summer, four sets of remains were discovered. Three were eventually identified
as individuals who had drowned decades earlier, which brought some closure and answers to families
who could finally lay their loved ones to rest. But one body stood out immediately because he hadn't drowned. He had quite obviously been murdered.
On May 1st, 2022, visitors near Hemingway Harbor saw a metal barrel exposed by the receding water
line. The barrel had rusted through, exposing its contents. Inside were the skeletal remains
of a man. He had been shot and sealed in
the barrel at least 30 years earlier. He was wearing jeans, Trax brand tennis shoes, and a
silver Timex watch. Forensic investigators estimated his height between 5'6 and 6'1,
which is a very wide range. His shirt was size 2XL, and his pants were a size 46 waist and 30 inch length, so he was
likely on the larger side. His jeans were light blue Vidal Sassoons, and his sneakers were size 11.
All his clothing was likely bought from a Kmart in the 1970s. The forensic investigators determined
he was likely killed in the late 70s or early 80s,
and the FBI eventually created and released a 3D facial reconstruction of the man in hopes that someone might recognize him.
Sadly, so far, no one has.
As we mentioned, he is the only one of the four sets of remains
discovered in the summer of 2022 who has not been identified.
Law enforcement hasn't ruled out a mob connection,
but there's no confirmed link to organized crime. You can view the FBI's 3D image of this man on
our social media, as well as the photos of his clothes and watch. As always, we'll post photos
of the known victims we're covering, along with links to open cases. Please take a moment to look
and share this information, because someone
out there might recognize him, and who knows, if whoever murdered him is still out there,
maybe we can eventually bring them to justice as well. It's hard to imagine that someone who
likely died before I was even born had been hidden under the lake for all of that time.
Someone cared about him once, and it's possible someone still does, so please take a look at those photos and share them.
When I was researching this episode, I discovered that the Hemingway Harbor Doe has some elements that are similar to another unsolved Lake Mead murder, this one from the 1990s, and there is a woman in Tennessee who has been waiting her whole life for answers and justice. Back in August of 1994, two fishermen
were out near the Las Vegas boat harbor in the early morning when they found the body of a man
floating in the water. The man had been shot several times and was tied to a 20-gallon galvanized
trash barrel with a long cord, possibly in a failed attempt to keep him submerged.
Police later identified the victim as 34-year-old
Christopher Scott Huffman. Chris had grown up in Henderson, and he worked in casinos in Las Vegas.
He had a family, a wife named Lynn and a young daughter, and at the time of his murder,
Lynn was just about a week away from giving birth to their second child.
Chris's father, Bob Huffman, was well-known
in nearby Pahrump, Nevada, where he owned the Saddle West Resort and served on the town board.
Chris's life hadn't been perfect. He'd had some brushes with the law, and once Chris was
identified, that's all the review journal focused on, his criminal record, and not his life,
not the people who loved him, possibly as an attempt to
explain away what had happened to him. The reporting in the RJ barely mentions his wife
and didn't mention his children or his parents at all. Chris's daughter, Christine, his namesake,
was born just 11 days after he was killed. She never got to meet her father, but when the drought
started to uncover remains in Lake Mead,
she spoke out to the press in Clarksville, Tennessee, where she lives.
Christine was hoping that when the John Doe and other remains were found in 2022,
new information might also surface related to her father's murder and finally get her family some answers.
She was also very frustrated with how Chris's death was treated in the press and how more hasn't been done for all the victims at Lake Mead.
She said,
It's not right how they just didn't care about every person they find at the bottom of that lake.
She said,
Nobody cared, nobody was looking for them, and nobody wanted answers for their families.
She said she'd come to terms with the fact that it's not likely her dad's killer is out there anymore,
but she still shares her father's story, hoping that someone will come forward,
and she believes strongly that all the victims in Lake Mead need to be treated with respect
and have their cases treated properly by law enforcement.
All those families deserve answers.
Chris's case remains unsolved and is listed as an open homicide on Metro's website.
Over 30 years later, his daughters are still hoping someone will speak up.
We'll be sharing photos of Chris on our social media as well
in the hope that someone will eventually come forward with information.
Christine's family has had to live with the silence for decades.
One of the cases we have to share with you this week is actually a story where,
for once, John and I don't feel that the links to organized crime are just rumors or Vegas urban legends.
On Wednesday, April 2nd, 1980, an Ellis Air Force base serviceman and his friend were hiking near North Shore Road, which is appropriately named as it runs along the north shore of Lake Mead.
This, like most of the area around Lake Mead, is a very remote area.
They noticed a car, several hundred feet off the road, stuck in a 25-foot ravine.
They checked the car to see if anyone was hurt or needed assistance, but found the car was empty.
They located the registration information and found that the car was registered to a man named Nicholas Costanza.
They tried to call him to let him know where his car was, but they were unable to reach him.
Instead, they spoke to his father, Nicholas Costanza Sr., who said that he didn't know where his son was or why his car was in that ravine.
Two days later, on Friday, April 4th, those same friends were hiking along that same trail, and the car was still there, but it had been bashed up and looted.
So the friends were curious about the car, and they decided to search it as well.
As they peered inside the ransacked Oldsmobile Cutlass, they made a haunting discovery.
In the trunk was the body of 27-year-old Nicholas Anthony
Costanza Jr., whose friends and family called Nicky. Nicky Costanza had been shot in the back.
His car, reportedly a 1977 or 1978 Oldsmobile Cutlass, had clearly been in some kind of an
accident. He'd been missing since March 30th, and it was determined that he had been dead for at least two or three days.
He was born on June 20th, 1952 in Newark, New Jersey, and he moved to Las Vegas with his family and lived here for 25 years.
He worked as a dealer at the Tropicana, and on the surface, he seemed just like another young man trying to make a living, but more on that in a bit. The Homicide Division of the Las Vegas Metro Police Department opened
an investigation, but no arrests were ever made, and more than 45 years later, the case is still
cold. When you begin to look into Nicky's family and the world around him, though,
the waters muddy very quickly. Nicholas Costanza Sr. owned a restaurant called
Nicholas's Little Italy, and it was later said that he moved
his family from Newark in the hopes of starting his own organized crime family. He was reportedly
a longtime associate of reputed mobster Anthony Spillotoro with ties to organized crime, and
according to federal prosecutors, was intimately associated with illegal activity, including drug distribution,
counterfeiting, and bookmaking. How close were the Costanzas linked to organized crime?
Well, Nicholas's daughter, Nikki's sister Elaine, married mob informant Frank Culotta.
Frank Culotta was a former mobster and hitman who operated in Las Vegas as part of the Chicago Outfit's famous Hole in the Wall Gang, which was a
burglary crew known for high-profile break-ins during the late 1970s and early 1980s.
Both Culotta and Spillotoro were later portrayed in Martin Scorsese's 1995 film Casino.
Joe Pesci's character, Nicky Santoro, was based on Spillotoro, and Frank Vincent's character, Frank Marino,
was based on Culotta. Culotta served as a technical advisor for the film and even appeared in a small
role, helping ensure its gritty portrayal of organized crime was as accurate as possible.
Nicky's brother, Jerry, was also arrested multiple times, further supporting theories
that the Costanzas were entangled in the criminal underbelly of 1980s Las Vegas. According to Nicholas Sr.'s ex-wife,
however, Nicholas Sr. was not capable of organizing a bowling team.
Two years after Nikki's murder, his father and brother were both arrested on drug charges when
an associate of theirs, Frank Scungio, became an undercover informant for the FBI. Scungio had been caught in a massive
undercover FBI sting operation called Jewel Pigeon and had agreed to cooperate with the
feds and wear a wire. Nicky's father claimed that he was only buying drugs from Scungio to try to
gain information about his son's murder. The two of them had worked together at the Tropicana, and he was trying to gain his trust. Unsurprisingly, though, prosecutors did
not believe that. Both Jerry and Nicholas Sr. eventually pleaded guilty to multiple counts of
cocaine distribution. Nicky's murder is unsolved, and given the strong culture of silence around
organized crime, we may never know what happened to him. Nicholas Sr. openly complained that
investigators had washed their hands of it and suggested that they didn't care because the family
was Italian. Whatever the truth, it's clear that Nicky Costanza lived and died in a time when Las
Vegas was shaped by corruption, connections, and calculated silence. His life was cut short by a
single gunshot. His body, hidden in the trunk of his own car, was likely a final message.
But what that message meant and who sent it is still unknown.
The final case we have for this episode is a domestic violence homicide
where the alleged killer vanished somewhere on Lake Mead.
On the evening of September 7, 1997,
police responded to a call from a quiet neighborhood in Las Vegas.
Inside a home near Jones and Spring Valley, they found two people shot to death.
The victims were 59-year-old Jeanette Rowe and her 33-year-old son, Bradley Schweitzer.
Jeanette worked as a nurse at UMC, and it was reported that Bradley had been struggling with
drug use. According to investigators, what happened was that a family argument had turned deadly. Jeanette had been in the kitchen preparing dinner when her husband,
Robert Rowe, confronted Bradley about his drug use. He got in his face and shot him with his
9mm handgun. When Jeanette tried to intervene, he then shot her. Robert's 16-year-old daughter
fled to a neighbor's home for help. When the police arrived, the stove was still on and the officers turned off the gas to prevent a fire,
but they couldn't legally search the house right away.
They had to wait nearly an hour for a warrant.
During that time, Robert Rowe vanished.
He was last seen pulling out of his driveway in a tan pickup truck.
They found Bradley deceased in a chair in the living room, and Jeanette was found dead in the kitchen.
Two days later, Robert's truck was found abandoned at Lake Mead.
Detectives discovered that his sailboat, normally docked at the marina, was missing.
That set off an intense search involving park rangers and aerial surveillance.
On September 10th, a ranger spotted the sailboat drifting aimlessly on the Arizona side of the lake in a spot called Rattlesnake Cove. The sails were down, the rudder was missing,
and Robert was nowhere to be found. Homicide Sergeant Bill Keaton told reporters,
he's either dead out there or he's trying to lead us to believe that he's dead.
The location was remote and hard to get to on foot, and the boat had clearly been left adrift,
but was it a staged suicide or an actual one? At the time, police were unsure. Sergeant Kevin Manning said,
did he kill himself or did he just swim away? We don't know and we have almost no way of reasonably
finding out. To me, if he was taking his own life, it's about the cruelest thing he could do because
his daughter and the rest of his family may never know for sure. For us, the case will be open forever. Decades later, Robert Rowe remains
missing, and the case remains unsolved. As Robert L. Smith wrote, it's a mystery as deep as the lake
itself. Cases like this remind us that while Lake Mead is a popular destination for boating and
camping, it's also a final resting place for some and a hiding place for others.
The shrinking shoreline continues to reveal more than just debris.
It reveals lives interrupted, families devastated,
and crimes that still don't have answers.
We'll be back next week with part two of our Lake Mead series,
where we'll look at more missing persons, unsolved mysteries,
and families still searching for answers.
But for now, if you have any information
about the Hemingway Harbor Doe,
the murder of Christopher Scott Huffman,
or Nikki Costanza,
or the disappearance of Robert Rowe,
please contact Crime Stoppers of Nevada
at 702-385-5555
or visit crimestoppersofnv.com. Tips can remain anonymous and please check out
our Instagram, Facebook, or our website for photos and case summaries. Share them, talk about them.
You never know who might hold the missing piece because someone always knows something and justice
doesn't disappear because the evidence was underwater. Thank you for listening.
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If you or someone you know is affected by domestic violence or needs support,
please reach out to local resources or the National Domestic Violence Hotline.
A list of resources is available on our website, sinsandsurvivors.com. Sins and Survivors, a Las
Vegas true crime podcast, is research written and produced by your hosts, Sean and John. The
information shared in this podcast is accurate at the time of recording. If you have questions,
concerns, or corrections, please email us. Links to source material for this episode can be found
on our website, sinsandsurvivors.com. The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are solely
those of the podcast creators, hosts, and their guests. All individuals are innocent until proven
guilty. This content does not constitute legal advice. Listeners are encouraged to consult with
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