Sins & Survivors: A Las Vegas True Crime Podcast - Tom Randolph The Black Widower - Part 2 - Wives of the Black Widower
Episode Date: June 18, 2024When the details of Tom’s story didn’t add up, detectives started digging deeper into his background and were stunned to find that he had been married 5 times before he met Sharon – and 3 of tho...se wives were dead. In part 2 we’ll talk about 4 of those previous 5 wives, and we think you'll start to notice some parallels. Tom Randolph was nothing if not consistent.https://sinspod.co/blackwidowersourcesDomestic 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!Apple 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 Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.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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Last week, we covered the murder of Sharon Randolph on May 8, 2008.
Thomas Randolph called 911 and reported that his wife Sharon had been shot by an intruder
and that he had shot and killed the intruder in self-defense.
When the details of Tom's story didn't add up,
Las Vegas Metro detectives started digging deeper into his background
and were stunned to find that Thomas had been married five times before he met Sharon,
and three of those wives were dead.
In part two, we'll talk about four of those previous five wives,
and we think you'll start to notice some parallels.
Tom Randolph was nothing if not consistent. Hi, and welcome to Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime
podcast where we focus on domestic violence, missing persons, and unsolved cases. I'm your
host, Sean, and with me, as always, is the one and only John.
I am the only John in the room.
This week, we are bringing you part two of our four-part series on the Black widower,
Thomas Randolph. If you haven't listened to last week's part one,
we recommend you go back and catch up before diving in here.
Just a quick recap of last week. Police questioned Tom Randolph about discovering,
confronting, and shooting the intruder in the house, and his statements did not match the
physical evidence at the scene, which called into question Tom's whole story about what had
happened that night. The police uncovered two major details about the events leading up to
the crime that raised their suspicions. First, Tom had taken out life insurance policies on Sharon that totaled around $360,000. And second, the alleged intruder that
Tom had killed, Mike Miller, was actually a friend of Tom's. According to Mike's family,
Mike had been telling them that he was going to come into some money soon,
and he had even told his sister that Tom had asked him to kill his wife Sharon.
At that point in the investigation, the detectives had formed a theory that Tom convinced Mike to
kill Sharon by grooming him to be a hitman and offering him money. Tom gave Mike the opportunity
to murder Sharon by taking her out to dinner and then having her walk into their home alone.
Mike had entered the house with a key and waited for her to enter the house.
Mike then shot and killed Sharon as planned.
And then Tom entered the house, double-crossed Mike, and murdered him,
ensuring there would be no loose ends,
he would keep all the life insurance proceeds for himself,
and there would be no chance that Mike would ever snitch.
Tom then called 911, playing both the victim of a horrific crime and a hero
who had saved the day. Tom told the police that Mike had his ski mask on when Tom shot him,
but the ski mask was found in the garage away from Mike's body, and it did not have any bullet
holes or blood on it. Detectives believe that Mike must have taken his ski mask off once Tom came into the house and the job was done.
Officers Dino Kelly and Rob Wilson went to the district attorney's office with their theory of the crime, hoping to get an arrest warrant for Thomas Randolph.
But the DAs felt there wasn't enough direct evidence to move the case forward.
They were concerned that a jury wouldn't convict Randolph.
And worse, they might come away with the impression that he was indeed the hero in the story as Tom painted himself to be.
The jurors might feel that Tom was lucky that he had a gun handy to protect himself, and the fact that the evidence doesn't line up perfectly with Tom's story probably wouldn't matter to a jury.
His defense attorneys would simply explain how panicked Tom was during the whole ordeal, having to fight for his life after witnessing the trauma of his wife's murder. The district attorneys also believed there
would be no way of getting around the hearsay rule to have the statements that Mike made to
his sister about Tom wanting him to kill Sharon actually be admissible in court. Without more
evidence, the DAs were unwilling to bring the case forward. Their decision left Detectives O'Kelly and Wilson feeling frustrated and realizing they needed to go even deeper in their investigation of Thomas Randolph and take a closer look at all of his past marriages.
As part of their investigation, the detectives traveled extensively to identify witnesses and gather testimony. Their investigation took them to Utah several times,
as well as to Kentucky, New Hampshire, North Carolina, and South Carolina,
as they worked to build the case against Tom. As we mentioned, Tom had been married five times
before he met Sharon. This week, we're going to talk about four of his wives, Catherine Thomas,
Leona Stapleton, Gayna Allman, and Frances Randolph. We're going to hold off on
going into details about Thomas' second wife, Becky Galt, for now, but more on her later.
As we mentioned last week, Tom Randolph has a flamboyant personality. As one of his documentarians
put it, Tom Randolph is a complicated, inappropriate, disturbing, and oddly engaging self-described narcissist that loves to
talk. What has been noted by others with a background in psychology or criminal behavior
is that Tom has the innate ability to spot a vulnerable person, hone in on them, and ultimately
manipulate them to get what he wants. He would make people feel special and then turn on them.
He'd start with flattery to suck them in and then use them as a means to an end.
And if he couldn't get what he wanted out of them, he moved on to someone else.
During interviews, when he talks about his wives, he's almost always talking about what they did for him and what he was able to get out of the relationship.
As part of his pattern of behavior, he quickly moves
on and remarries after the end of his previous relationships, whether the marriage ended in
divorce or death. And also, there are numerous allegations and admissions of cheating because,
as we said, if Tom wasn't getting what he wanted or needed out of the relationship,
he would look to get the praise and adoration from another person. When one interviewer asked
him to name his wives,
he quickly rattled their names off and then with a huge smug grin on his face asked,
do you want the names of my fiancés too? We'll start with Catherine Thomas, Tom's first wife.
Tom and Catherine met while Catherine was still in high school. The two of them got married in
Utah on August 2, 1975. She was 18, and Tom was 20.
During their marriage, they had two children together, a daughter named Krista and a son named Justice.
Tom has called his two children his gift to the world.
When Catherine was interviewed by Detectives O'Kelly and Wilson,
she told him that Tom was charming and witty at first, and that she fell for that, but he was a complete control freak, and eventually she grew to be afraid of him.
One story she shared with the detectives was that one morning, she made Thomas a bowl of oatmeal.
When he sat down to eat it, he noticed that she did not put sugar on it, and it set him off.
He became so enraged over the missing sugar that he picked up the bowl and threw it against the
wall and screamed at her, saying that his mother always put sugar on his oatmeal.
That disturbing event stuck with Catherine for 30 years, and it marked the beginning of the end for their marriage.
The oatmeal incident showed Catherine that Tom could be dangerous, and after that, his toxic and abusive behavior just got worse. According to Catherine, he had trouble keeping a job,
he became more controlling and manipulative,
and he wouldn't stop harassing her.
He started dealing drugs, developed a substance use disorder,
and even began dating other women.
She also told detectives that whenever he was arrested,
his mother would just bail him out.
In later interviews, Tom admitted that his marriage
to Catherine was bad and had even said it was his fault because he was cheating on her and using
drugs. As time went on in their marriage, Catherine said his psychological abuse became even more
intense. She said Tom wanted to make her feel like a piece of crap. His need to control her and to psychologically abuse her did not end, not even after their
divorce in April 1983. After her divorce, Catherine started dating a man named Stephen Thomas,
who she would eventually marry. Randolph, being the control freak that he is, did not like that
she had moved on and was dating someone else. To say that Tom was unhappy about the relationship would be a serious
understatement. He hated Steve, and he told Steve that his marriage to Catherine was like
stealing meat from another man's refrigerator. Thomas once asked Steve if he would kill someone
for $25,000 if he knew he could get away with it, and unsurprisingly, Catherine told detectives
that she knew Tom had taken out a large
life insurance policy on her shortly after their wedding. Tom had even threatened to have Steve
killed, and finally, Steve and Catherine moved to Washington State to get away from him, but since
they had children together, they would continue to be in contact with each other. Catherine even
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only. Please gamble responsibly. If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or As we mentioned, Becky's story will be covered next week
because the details of her
story are extensive. For now, we'll just say that Becky did not survive being married to Thomas
Randolph. His third wife was named Leona Stapleton, and according to Tom, she went by Lee. Despite our
efforts to research and learn more about Leona, we weren't able to find much at all. What we do know
is that she married Tom in 1994,
and the two of them moved together to Indiana. That marriage only lasted about 11 months before
the two of them divorced. There was nothing in court testimony or news reports about her,
so we know little about who she was, where she lived, how she met Tom, or even the exact
circumstances of her death. Tom said she was beautiful and
called her an island girl. In interviews, Tom recalled that she liked to party, and according
to him, sometimes she would forget to come home. According to court testimony, Tom told his family
and friends that Leona had died of cancer. She died approximately 10 years after their divorce
was finalized.
Our research has not uncovered any evidence that implies that Tom may have been responsible for Leona's death or any evidence that investigators suspected that her death from cancer was
suspicious. No evidence was raised about any life insurance policies that Tom may have benefited
from. Their relationship was short-lived, and it's evident from what we were
able to learn about this case that her death did not raise any red flags with investigators.
No details were entered into evidence, and no family members were interviewed
by the media talking about accountability or justice, so we don't have a lot to tell you
about Leona. Tom's fourth wife was named Gayna Allman. He met her in 1995 through a newspaper ad, 1995's version of Match.com.
She was happily one of two lucky ex-wives of Tom's who survived being married to him.
And according to her testimony, she told the court that in the beginning, Tom showered
her with gifts and attention, love bombing her, which is his pattern.
Tom pushed for them to get married very early on, and of course,
then took out life insurance policies on her. Not long into the marriage, Tom got arrested in a bar
fight in which people got shot. It's unclear who did the shooting, but Tom wasn't charged in that
case. Gayna had some friendly contacts with the police department, who reached out to her,
knowing she was married to Tom, and warned her about Tom's violent nature. One day, Tom was sitting at the dining room table, and Gayna was
in the living room just a few feet away, and Tom was cleaning his gun. Of course, he assured her
that it wasn't loaded, so there was nothing to be nervous about. You can probably guess what
happened. The gun was loaded, and it went off, but it thankfully missed Gayna, but only by about a foot.
This, of course, terrified her.
She started screaming and yelling at him, but she could see the writing on the wall,
and as soon as she could, she decided she would get out as soon as possible.
She packed up while Tom was at work, whatever that was at the time,
and went into hiding, staying with a friend while she worked to get her divorce finalized. Tom wasn't one to give up easily. One day while she was out driving,
he found her and followed her and tried to get her to pull over. But luckily, she knew the area
better than he did, so she was able to lose him. Gayna went on to be an important witness in Tom's
trial because she observed his behavior
firsthand. She testified about his controlling nature, his temper, his history of selling drugs,
and of course the gun discharge, which she considered to be an attempt on her life.
Thomas's fifth wife was Frances Randolph. Frances was a single mom with one daughter named Rachel.
Rachel talked a little bit about her mom in some
testimony eventually, telling the court that her mom was sweet and always made sure she cooked
lunch and dinner for her and that she had a really positive outlook. Rachel said that Frances was
always looking at the positive side of things and told the court that her mom had no enemies.
Everyone liked her and her mom would sing the Tanya Tucker song Delta Dawn to her every night. One of the aspects we found strange in researching this case
is that it was rare that one of the children of his wives initially had negative things to say
about him, with Colleen being the exception. He had a good relationship with Rachel, playing the
role of stepdad pretty convincingly, even doing things like taking her
to gymnastics lessons and encouraging her to participate in sports and extracurricular
activities. A lot of this will sound familiar, but Tom pressured Frances into marrying him only
six months after they met, and immediately took out a large life insurance policy on her.
Rachel would later testify that Tom had been physically abusive with her mother. She shared
that there was one incident where Frances went to Burger King and got him a sandwich,
but there was mayonnaise on it, which he didn't like and he didn't want.
So, he slammed the sandwich into Francis' face because it had mayonnaise on it.
Sounds a lot like the incident Catherine mentioned with the oatmeal,
and it's another example of Tom's abuse.
Francis, unfortunately, had some pretty serious health problems.
Specifically, she had a serious problem with her heart that required surgery.
She wasn't in much of a hurry to have it operated on, though,
because of the riskiness of the surgery.
Tom talked her into getting the surgery, though,
but before that happened, Tom convinced her to create a video will
in which she says everything is to be left to him in the
event something happens to her and that she wanted Tom to raise Rachel because he's a great stepdad.
You can hear Tom in the video. It's obvious that he is behind the camera recording the will and
he's also coaching Frances through it, getting her to say all the things he wants her to say.
She did end up having
the surgery, and according to the doctors, she made it through just fine and was recovering.
We'll also note here that leading up to the surgery, Francis's sister said that Francis
looked awful. Her face was swollen on one side, and she suspected Tom was drugging her. Of course,
selling drugs, prescription and illicit was just about the only
long-term job we ever discovered that Tom ever had. Shortly after the surgery, Tom and Rachel
were in the hospital with Francis, and Tom asked Rachel to step out of the hospital room so he
could discuss something with Francis. About 20 minutes later, he came out of the room and told
Rachel that her mother had died. He made a real show of it,
apparently crying and falling on his knees dramatically. To be clear, Tom claims that
either she died in surgery or died as a direct result of the surgery, but there was never any
evidence of that. Her death was completely unsolved, but definitely happened after the
surgery, and her doctors said that she was recovering well, as we mentioned.
Rachel was devastated and so confused, of course, about how this could have happened,
since she'd just spoken to her mom 20 minutes earlier. Tom told the hospital he didn't want an autopsy, claiming that he didn't want her cut into pieces. Instead, he had her cremated within
24 hours. If there was any evidence of foul play, all that evidence was lost in the cremation.
As you expect, Tom got the insurance payout, and we learned that he claims the money was going to
pay for Rachel's college education, but there's no evidence that's true. And in fact, there are
no clear answers on what happened to that insurance payout. Unbelievably, Tom also sued the Utah hospital where Frances died for wrongful death
and won a $1.2 million settlement from them. The prosecuting attorney noted that, horrifyingly,
Tom had sent Frances' cremains to her family split up among several pill bottles. It's almost
unimaginable how callous he was to her surviving loved ones.
Frances's will stated that she wanted Rachel to be raised by Tom because Rachel thinks of him as her father.
Rachel told a story in which Tom and her mother put her up to making up a story that her biological father was a pedophile, so she would never want to live with him.
Rachel explained that she regretted going along with that and that it wasn't true. It was clear that that was just another example of Tom
Randolph manipulating people, in this case, a young girl who just wanted to stay with her mom.
It gets even worse, and this is going to sound really familiar. Tom also attempted to hire a
hitman named Glenn Morrison to kill Francis.
Tom told Morrison to make it look like a robbery, kill Francis, and shoot him in the backside to
make it look legitimate. Eventually, Morrison would testify that he said no without even
considering the idea. He was convinced that Randolph would kill him after he killed Francis.
It was clear to detectives that Glenn Morrison was able to see through Tom's manipulation and sense that he
would be in danger where Mike Miller did not. Tom's MO here is unmistakable and remarkably
consistent. He would meet a woman somehow, online or wherever, and pressure her to marry him right
away. He'd then take out multiple life
insurance policies on her and then locate and start grooming someone he thought he could get
to murder her so he could collect the insurance money. If that plan failed, he wasn't above doing
it himself. The unbelievable thing is how many times it seems to have worked. In part three,
we'll talk in detail about Tom's second wife, Becky Rae Galt. What happened
to her has a crucial connection to the eventual case dealing with the murder of Sharon Randolph,
wife number six. Make sure you're subscribed by visiting SinsPod.co slash listen, and get
subscribed on Patreon or Apple Podcasts by visiting SinsPod.co slash subscribe so you don't
miss our extra-long swing shift
episode where we talk more about some of the wilder aspects of this case. You can find us
on Instagram, TikTok, Threads, and Facebook, all at Sins and Survivors, and reach out to us with
questions, comments, or case suggestions. Thanks so much for listening to these important cases,
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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,
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