Small Town Murder - #535 - Murder Bones Mystery - Seiling, Oklahoma
Episode Date: October 17, 2024This week, in Seiling, Oklahoma, a mystery unfolds, when a mother seems to vanish, in the middle of the night. Her car, toiletries, and other personal items are also gone. It seems like she j...ust took off, but detectives are soon suspicious of both her ex-husband, and current boyfriend, both of whom seem as guilty as can be. It all comes into focus, when her kids end up playing with, what turns out to be, their mother's charred bones!! Along the way, we find out that Route 66 related excitement seems very overrated, that most women don't leave their sleeping children, to go on vacation, and you shouldn't let your children play with their mother's bones!!Hosted by James Pietragallo and Jimmie WhismanNew episodes every Thursday!Donate at: patreon.com/crimeinsports or go to paypal.com and use our email: crimeinsports@gmail.comGo to shutupandgivememurder.com for all things Small Town Murder & Crime In Sports!Follow us on...twitter.com/@murdersmallfacebook.com/smalltownpodinstagram.com/smalltownmurderAlso, check out James & Jimmie's other show, Crime In Sports! On Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, Wondery, Wondery+, Stitcher, or wherever you listen to podcasts!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This week in Sealing, Oklahoma, when charred bones are found at the ex-husband's house
of a missing woman, detectives have to unravel the mystery of whether he actually committed
this horrific deed.
Welcome to Small Town Murder.
Yay!
Oh yay indeed Jimmy.
Yay indeed.
My name is James Petragallo.
I'm here with my co-host.
I'm Jimmy Wissman.
Thank you folks so much for joining us today on another incredibly crazy episode of Small
Town Murder. Like always, hope you've been enjoying them. We really it's been wild lately,
the crazy Alaska stuff never stops. We're hitting Oklahoma, which is always nuts.
Gonna be some wild stuff today. Before we get to that, head over to shutupandgivemurder.com.
Gonna be some wild stuff today. Before we get to that, head over to shutupandgivemurder.com, get your tickets for live shows.
What are we, October 18th, Kansas City.
Get your tickets there.
There's still some tickets for that.
And that's one of the only ones that there's really a lot of tickets for left.
Everything else is either sold out or pretty damn close to it.
So get in there and get your tickets for that.
Also get your tickets for the October 30th virtual live show
Halloween edition. It's gonna be so much fun. A crazy murder and all the pictures
and jokes and we're wearing costumes. You're not gonna be able to believe it.
A lot of fun and it's available for two weeks after you purchase it too. So you
can watch it 20 times, you can watch it five days after it airs. Do whatever you
want with it for two weeks and then you gotta give it back. So there you go. Have
fun with all of that. Shut up and give me murder.. Do whatever you want with it for two weeks, and then you gotta give it back. So there you go, have fun with all of that.
Shut up and give me murder.com.
Also, you wanna listen to our other two shows,
Crime in Sports and Your Stupid Opinions.
If you haven't listened to Crime in Sports,
and you were wondering, I don't know about sports,
there's an episode we did in the last couple weeks,
a guy named Mark Walton.
It's unbelievable.
You don't need to like sports at all.
Please, give it a shot. We beg you.
Honestly.
If you don't like this episode, then you'll never like the show.
And you probably hate us too.
If you don't like it, I'll piss my pants.
You'll understand what that means if you watch the episode.
So check that out and your stupid opinions.
And also get Patreon, patreon.com slash crime in sports is where you get all of the bonus
material anything that's for small town murder and crime and sports anybody five dollars a month or
above you get all of it all of it and it is hundreds of back bonus episodes immediately and
the new ones every other week this week for crime and sports we're going to talk about the 1993
florida state football scandal They won the national championship
and they were cheating all over the place.
So that's fun.
Monsters, yeah.
Oh yeah, and then STM here.
Speaking of monsters.
What, what's that?
Oh, yeah, I'm like, I thought you had something else to say.
Speaking of monsters, yeah.
Sorry, I'm just trying to participate.
You were queuing.
No, no, you were queuing, that was great.
That was a terrific queue.
I was like, oh, he's got more to say. Okay, let him talk
For small town murder. We are gonna do Ted Bundy's psychological evaluation. Speaking of monsters from 1976
Imagine being a psych imagine being a psychiatrist and having a month and a half just to study Ted Bundy
That's that'd be great. that is like being a, you know, a bone guy studying the elephant man for a month and a half.
Like that's amazing.
So check that out.
That is shut up and give me murder.
No, that's, that's the website.
We're talking about patreon.com slash crime and sports.
Quick disclaimer here.
It's a comedy show, everybody.
We're comedians and we're also telling a murder story.
Those things, those things are, you can't mix them. They can coexist.
When they, people, how do you mix that together?
Well, very easily.
Way it is is you don't be a complete jerk,
fucking asshole about the whole thing.
Yeah, exactly.
It's really easy to do it, that's the thing.
There's some things that are funny
and some things that aren't.
Nothing funny about an actual murder.
Oh, someone's getting stabbed to death, that's not funny.
It's tough going, yeah.
A guy going, hmm, I think I can get away with this if I, if I get on a tractor and drive
away. That's ridiculous. And we're going to laugh at that. And if you don't, then I think,
I don't know what you're doing. You're not a human being. You're robots to tell the story then. So
that's the way we go about it here. We don't make fun of the victims or the victims family.
Why is that James? Because we're assholes. Yes, but.
But we're not scumbags. See how that works? Super easy to do that.
So that sounds good to you. You're going to hear a wild show.
You think true crime and comedy should never ever mix them. I don't know.
Maybe we're not sure for you. Maybe we are though. I don't know. You never know.
Give it a shot. Either way, no complaining later. That said,
I think it's time everybody to sit back.
Let's all clear the lungs and let's all shout
Let's do this everybody. Oh, hey, we'll go on a trip Jimmy. Let's do it. Yeah, we're going to Oklahoma
We are yeah, that's so not so fast on that one to go on a trip, huh?
We're going to Northwestern, not so fast on that one to go on a trip, huh? We're going to Northwestern Oklahoma.
Is that where you wanted to go?
Is that where you were looking to go?
Northwestern, what's up there, James?
Not a lot.
No, the panhandle is.
The ceiling is up there.
Ceiling Oklahoma.
Yeah, it's just like the word ceiling, except with an S,
and they pronounce it ceiling. So this is in northwestern, Oklahoma
It's about an hour and 45 minutes to Oklahoma City where we'll be performing on October 19th, but it's that sold out
So I don't know why I'm plugging it anyway 35 minutes to Woodward, Oklahoma
Which was our last Oklahoma episode episode 482 blaming my imaginary friend, which we should all do that
See what I mean?
How do you not and make fun of that?
Someone kills someone, thinks they can get away with it by blaming an imaginary friend
and we're supposed to go, yeah, that's normal.
Let's-
This is the man that lives in my mouth, James.
Let's cover that with a straight face.
No problem.
This is in Dewey County and area code is 580.
Motto is the crossroads of Northwest Oklahoma.
Do they need one?
That's gonna say the well of the other motto I think answers that question.
That is crossroads of what is really the other one.
What are we looking at?
There's not a lot here.
So history, it developed this town as an agricultural center and became the largest
town in Dewey County, despite the fact that
the railroad did not come here.
Is that right?
It went to Canton, which is like more than 25 miles away.
So no one could even, it's a pretty good distance back in the day before cars and shit.
So there was also no bridges crossing either of the Canadian rivers until 1906 either.
So it was just this place that you couldn't get to
or get out of and it had a lot of population.
So maybe that's why people got stuck there.
That's why the population grew.
They had nowhere to go.
So also a horse racing track was built in 1903,
which is before the bridges were even there.
It said, what do we need first?
Schools, churches, gambling!
That's what we need.
So fast the closest go.
Yeah.
Let's see how, let's see if my trifecta pays off first.
So the lands assigned to the Choctaw and Seminole tribes extended into the area that's now occupied
by Dewey County.
Under the Reconstruction Treaties of 1866, the Choctaw and Chickasaw
ceded, quote unquote, their western domain to the United States. So this was known as
the Least District, and part of the area became the Cheyenne and Arapaho Reservation here.
Wow. So many different tribes.
So many in this area. Oh yeah, this is the center of it all here. Yeah, this is good lord. Dewey County was created in Oklahoma territory in 1891 and was open to non-Indian
settlement on April 19th, 1892. So it was named as County D by an act of Congress and
didn't receive its present name until like years later when they all voted
on it. They just called it County D. That's it. Lucky it wasn't like County D.134 or
some even more specific name.
They're naming them like cell blocks, you know, appetizing thing. They were like that
at all.
They were like giving out counties like, you want names, you name them yourself. We're
busy over here in Washington.
We'll give you letters.
We'll give you a letter and you figure it out.
So the farms were heavy producers
of cotton and broom corn.
Did we ever figure out what broom corn was?
We talked about that, right?
Yeah, I don't remember.
Is it the shit that they make brooms out of, the whiskers?
Maybe, or I don't remember.
Or maybe it was a feed corn or some shit.
Or is it because the corn has a sprout at the top that looks like a broom?
Yeah, that's something like that.
I'll bet that's something.
And also cotton.
There's also a cotton gin and a feed mill in the early years here.
Wheat and rye became important and then World War I happened.
And then they opened up a big flour mill here.
The Fred Sander flour mill.
And it's white rose special flower was the big product they
made sure.
So the milling company is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
After the war, agriculture went down by 1920.
A lot of people left and but they got their population up in by somehow they got their
Western Oklahoma was dust bowl country. So the fact that their population rose from 1920 to 1930 is pretty fucking
remarkable. I mean, that so many people must have,
cause a lot of people came to this area to do wheat farming because it was a big
scam.
They made companies were buying up lots of land and sending shit back East go,
you can come and have five acres and plan it and go back home and just come back out and harvest it and
make shitloads of money. So that's why the Dust Bowl happened because we tore up
all the fucking sod and so yeah that's that's so maybe so many people came that
there was still some more left over after they were fleeing from the Dust
Bowl. I'm not sure how the fuck that works. There's only one review of this
town and it's five stars so it it's going to have to stand as this place is perfect because we don't know any other
opinion. The town is honestly one of the most amazing places. I've witnessed firsthand
what this town does for the people and how we can all come together in a time of need
for friends and families. They don't explain what these things are that happen. They just say that.
Five stars.
Five stars.
There was a tragedy.
I mean, you're starting with there was a tragedy.
When you start with, I've witnessed firsthand
what this downtown does for the people.
I expect to hear an example.
Don't you?
One of the things I saw was this, holy shit.
Yeah, they're alluding to there was a need
for everyone to come together. That's not good
Yeah, what happened? I assume tornadoes had to be it's fucking Oklahoma. So not surprising there
people in this town
912 oh
Not a big place a lot of no branches and shit here the female male population
I've never seen anything like this before, it is 63.3% female.
Where have all the guys gone here? What's happening? Those gals are some farming bitches, huh?
Or are they just 63.3% of the worst females possible? They've driven all the males? I don't
know what's going on. How is there that many? Are they killing the men? What's happening?
Two-thirds are female. That's crazy
Sounds great to me. That's what I mean. Yeah, it's great. It's 100 gals 300 men. That's amazing
It's if you're if you're trying to go to college or something and that was your what you were looking at like, oh
There's two to one chicks here. I'm going I'm having a threesome every day
But for real in a town, how the fuck does that happen? Not good.
Yeah, I get haha, it would be advantageous but what are we talking about here?
What are they doing to the guys?
I'm serious, this is crazy.
And if you're shy you're running.
That's crazy.
Oh man, it doesn't matter.
You're going to have women all over you.
You're not going to be able to...
It's going to be aggressive.
Hey listen ladies, come on.
Hey listen, Farmer Fred here needs a fucking day, alright?
Take it easy.
Jesus Christ, my dick is raw.
What are we doing?
It's red raw.
Red raw.
Median age here is about 35 and a half.
A lot of kids here too.
10 to 14 is really high, that age group.
So, figure that out.
I don't know how the women got pregnant
with only no guys in town, but they figured it out.
There's a couple of guys that are fertile.
Couple of guys are just pumping out the jizz.
So family here, it's about 50-50 married,
same as kinda usual stats right along the line.
Race here, 63.9% white, 0.0% black.
So not one black person in the whole town.
0.5% Asian, 1.3% Native American, 18.9% Hispanic.
Asian, 1.3% Native American, 18.9% Hispanic. So the religion here, it is 87.4% religious here, which is really high. The only higher one we've seen was a few weeks ago in Utah,
and that was expected. But this is less. Yeah. And they're mostly Baptist and Methodists
here, apparently. Baptists are the Catholics of the tornado belt apparently so
37.7 or other Christian faith, so I don't know what that means. There's something else that's not on the list of shit here
Snake handler Pentecostals snake handlers. I don't even know Pentecostals on here though
So I'm not even sure the unemployment rate here is low the median household income here is also low
It is forty five thousand three hundred sixty eight dollars a year
Which is a good 20 almost 20 and 25 thousand less than the national average the cost of living here
Though 100 is regular here at 78
So it's pretty low and housing is the real low thing Wow median home cost here
123 thousand eight hundred dollars. That's magical. That is wild So it's pretty low and housing is the real low thing. Wow, median home cost here, $123,800.
That's magical. That is wild.
But when you see what you get, it makes sense.
You go, oh, that's not worth,
that's not worth that money at all, Jesus.
It's outrageous, huh?
It's actually out of bounds if you think about it.
Well, there's some properties that are so shitty and cheap
and they seem to be balanced out with these ranches that have a lot of properties that are so shitty and cheap, and they seem to be balanced
out with these ranches that have a lot of land that are more expensive.
That'll make sense when I give you the real estate report here.
And as a matter of fact, it is time.
If we've convinced you, damn it, you need to see a twister.
You haven't seen one in a while.
We have for you the Sealing, Oklahoma real estate report. All right.
Average two bedroom rental here is about $810, which is below the national average here.
There's a three bedroom, four bath, 1,672 square feet house.
Now, it looks like a manufactured house from the outside, but it says it's not.
It says it's a single-family regular home
So yeah, you know built right into the ground and everything the listing says views of open fields
Which I could have fucking I could have told you that probably I think that you could say that pretty much from anywhere in Oklahoma
You could put reviews of open fields. Yeah, you can see fucking Colorado from here. Just so you know
The views of open fields. You can see fucking Colorado from here, just so you know.
And there's no interior photos, so that's a great sign.
And it says in the listing, the home has been converted to metal roof and siding.
So if it rains, you are never going to sleep.
That's a lot of kidding.
It's going to sound like...
You may as well sleep in a tent, just as loud.
It's going to sound like the Luftwaffe is flying over.
Like it's fucking, you're in London in 1943 or some shit.
So it's crazy.
That is 50 grand for that.
Wow.
50 grand.
So, I mean, for 50 grand, you have four, you know,
four baths, three bedrooms, something.
Here is a four bedroom, two bath,
2,240 square foot trailer.
It's a big trailer. It's a big trailer. Big ass trailer. Monstrous
trailer but it says it is a mobile home on the listing here and it is really weird there's
no windows. It looks like one of those buildings that like cheap schools like I went to throw
up in a field when they run out of fucking or like when they're building
a Taco Bell where they do job interviews before they're open.
You know what I mean?
One of those.
Yeah, the superintendent's trailer is building this place.
That's what it is.
It's real weird.
There's a hatch in the ground outside, so I assume it's a tornado shelter in there.
Something like that.
Maybe a murder bunker, as Alison said.
Is it a is it a boulder or is it just a door?
Wow!
99,000 bucks for that though.
I kind of want it.
You want a trailer in the middle of Oklahoma for what? Just for the bunker. I want to see what's down there.
I want to see what's doing. You can get that in nice places though. Plenty of people built
nuclear bunkers and shit. You don't have to actually hunker down from her tornadoes to do this.
Here's a four-bedroom three-bath, 2280 square feet.
Looks like it hasn't been updated since, you know,
grandma was in her 50s, basically.
It's been a while.
It is on 17.46 acres.
And they said this magnificent property offers
the epitome of country living combined with modern comforts.
And it has a 60 by 120 foot barn which is a fucking huge barn. Wow! That's a big ass barn.
$299,000 bucks for that. Yeah that's a 6,000 square foot barn? Yeah it's a huge barn. Holy shit! 17 and a half acres, 2,200 square feet for $299,000. That tells you how terrible it is to live here.
That's a goddamn deal right there.
That's how bad it is to live here.
If anybody wanted to live here, that'd be a million dollars.
That's the problem.
So things to do here.
All right, here we go.
Let's find it out.
We have the Oklahoma Route 66 Museum is nearby.
Does it run through here?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, through this area.
This is Clinton, Oklahoma, which is right next door here.
It is the museum offers visitors a personal journey through the history of the nation's
most revered highway.
For whatever reason, that thing is amazing.
Why does it capture the imagination?
I don't understand.
It's just a fucking road.
When you're on it, you're like,
you're expecting to see things?
Like, oh, this must be, it's just a shit road.
It's not lined with wax sculptures of people
that have driven it. No, none of that shit, no.
You don't have movie stars handing out like,
hey, look, here's a pamphlet on what happened here.
Nothing is going on. Nothing.
It doesn't make a lot of fucking sense whatsoever. But when you're on it, you're like, man, I's a pamphlet on what happened here. Nothing is going on. Nothing.
It doesn't make a lot of fucking sense whatsoever, but when you're on it, you're like, man, I
wish there was more lanes.
Where's the...
Let's get back to the 40 is what you're thinking.
Sherwood loves to get around this dick.
Yeah.
Wow, the 40, not such a bad idea.
So encounter the iconic ideas, images, and myths of the mother road.
Yeah, there's nothing there.
Image, you just said ideas and myths.
None of either of those things actually exist in reality.
Those are fake.
It's a fucking road.
That's what you're looking at.
Learn about the dreams and the labor needed
to make the road a reality.
Yeah, it must have been hard to build, I assume.
I'll bet the idea of the 40 must have been crazy.
Mind blowing. Mind blowing.
If they got a two lane road and they're losing their shit about it.
They're going crazy over that shit.
Then this next line is my favorite line of anything ever, because I can't think of a
more desirable thing to do than, quote, experience the dust bowl.
Why the fuck would I want to experience the dust bowl?
The most horrific time ever.
Natural disaster we've ever, or man-made natural disaster we've ever had in history.
When you're done with this, why don't you experience the Trail of Tears?
I'd like to experience the Road of Syphilis, if that's possible.
Can I experience that?
Anything else you want to give me?
Is there an Ebola experience I can go
visit real quick can I ride the train to Auschwitz too is that there Jesus Christ
oh well you can actually do shit like that cuz those are can you do that not
that's what's right not like okay good not like oh yeah no not like that but
they better not I'm sure there's a train to where it goes Oh, yeah, you know that's a museum. I'll show it stop it
Yeah, all the all the concentration camps are museums because if you take them down people won't believe they existed
Good point because people think you look at what fucking people think now people are crazy. You're not you're not wrong
I'm just saying yeah, how the fuck could you go there? I do it at this point. I'm surprised
Maybe it's required. It should be required. That's what it is
I think it is because otherwise people should have that's bullshit
Well go there and fucking look at it then you tell me what that is
Yeah, I maybe I just believe it too hard because I don't want to see that I've seen a lot. Yeah, it would be gross
Yeah pictures. I don't want to be anywhere near it. So
Yeah, it would be gross. Yeah picture
So Experience the Dust Bowl as thousands streamed along the road away from drought and despair toward the land of promise quote-unquote
Listen to the sounds of the big band era when the roar of the big trucks and the welcome home cries to returning soldiers
Dominated the road sit at the counter or a booth in the 1950s diner and feel the open road as America's families vacationed along the length of Route 66. You might just overhear the families chatter
as they eat their lunch. So what are we watching? Was this a show?
Right. Is this a boyer thing? Stare at fucking actors as they eat their
lunch and pretend to be from the 50s? What are we doing here?
What's that? A strawberry shake, little Timmy? Come here. Let's have a cheeseburger together. Leave it to Beaver Fantasy Camp? What are we doing here? What's that, a strawberry shake little Timmy? Come here. Let's have a cheeseburger together.
Leave it to Beaver Fantasy Camp.
What are we doing here?
What is this?
It's very strange.
The museum also offers changing exhibits
focusing on the Route Fit 66 experience.
And then there is the ceiling open rodeo,
which always cracks me up.
Anybody.
Maybe you should.
There should be triaths for that.
At least had a bowl before you.
Yeah.
We need triaths for that.
We need triaths, I think, to see if you can do this.
Maybe touch a bull's nose and feel that snot before you want to get on top of that thing.
You're going there to see someone get gored, right?
That's why you're going there.
Yeah, I want to see some asshole.
That's some inexperience.
Bought a Luke Bryan CD.
Get on the back of this animal.
Came in from Oklahoma City to do this shit.
Yeah, some dickhead has a Morgan Wallen ticket.
Get on the bowl, fucker.
Let's do that.
Yeah, that's what it's going to be.
Wow.
Cowboy fans can enjoy a fun-filled weekend.
They mean football fans or just fans of cowboys in general.
I mean, cowboys are a bad thing, isn't it?
Or Oklahoma State cowboys.
Yeah, maybe that's that.
That's the other thing. Yeah, maybe that's that.
That's the other thing.
Yeah, OSU.
A fun-filled weekend of rodeo fun and activities
for the first week of August.
Sit back and watch the great cowgirls and cowboys
compete in the Bearback Set.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha.
No comment.
Together, huh?
We don't even have to comment on that.
Picture, watch the cowgirls and cowboys get bareback everybody.
This is going to be great.
Bring the whole family.
Then it gets better.
Saddle wrestling, well, bareback saddle wrestling, that sounds like something now.
And then if you're really, if you're a little kinky, then there's team roping for you.
So we can get bareback while we're roped up and do some saddle wrestling
Then there's ladies barrel rest racing where we stuff about as many ladies as you can into a barrel and then race it and
Bull riding events, of course mutton busting as we've talked about it's got to be a thing
the kids calf scramble
wild cow milking which sounds like
What first of all, I didn't know there was wild cows there that we made those yeah number one also yeah
Don't go grab that thing by the tit
Buck you off you're hanging on to its udders
Don't get under that animal
Don't get under that animal. They're a thousand pounds for Christ's sake.
They're huge.
That's, wow, that's like trying to change a stranger's oil
while they're driving.
That's what that sounds like.
What the fuck are you doing?
There's also a little princess competition
because you have to have that.
Who's pretty?
Yeah, but yeah.
Let's judge who's not.
And of course, a rodeo queen contest.
And as always, the clowns are sure to tickle your funny bone
Yeah, they're hilarious. I'm sure
So there we go news for you James as they get fucking I know just trample. That's wonderful. I love it
Poor bastards. We should put we should put non rodeo clowns in there just clowns
Oh, you want to be a clown so fucking bad, this is part of it, there you go.
That's how you get to be in Cirque du Soleil.
I want open rodeo clowning, that's what I want,
not open rodeo.
Fuck, crime rate in this town,
property crime is about one third below
the national average, so not a lot of stealing going on.
And then violent crime, murder, rape, robbery,
and of course assault, the Mount Rushmore of crime is about one third of the national average,
so about two thirds low under the national average. So safe place. It's in the middle of
goddamn nowhere. It's a lot of ranches. I don't even know what to do. Yeah. All these, all the
women, it's going to drive the crime rate down a little bit. So that said, let's talk about some
murder and real fucked up, weird, twisted little case here. Okay. Let's talk about some murder and a real fucked up weird twisted little case here.
Okay, let's talk about a guy first off, Leroy Dean Dennis.
That's a cowboy name.
That's a cowboy name, yeah.
Leroy, and he is too.
Leroy.
Leroy Dennis?
You fucking bet he is.
Leroy Dean Dennis, by the way.
Dean really puts it a little more.
Leroy Dean Dennis here.
We named him that after his breakfast sausage.
Probably.
He was born in April 1948.
So I don't even know if the breakfast sausage existed yet.
I don't know.
And James Dean didn't exist.
I mean, I'm sure he was alive, but I don't know if he was
a famous sausage-tear by then.
Sausage-tear, is that a word?
Sausage-ay?
Sausage-ay.
Sausage a sausage a
Hello, sir, this is a world-famous sausage a fucking
Pig was raised
So yeah, he's born April 48 his family owned and operated a
1500 acre ranch in ceiling oh yeah in ceiling in ceiling they bought it about 1941 so
They are I mean ranching people boy. Let me tell you something
1,500 acres that's a shitload. That's a lot of land. Yeah, yeah a lot
He's gonna grow up in this area and pretty much just be a rancher when he grows up when he you know as he's growing up
And he doesn't really do a whole lot
because there isn't really a lot to do,
especially back then, he just ranches and then sleeps.
There's really nothing going on.
He's gonna meet a young lady, luckily for him.
I don't know how, not on the ranch, I don't think.
Her name is Janet Maria, and she is born in 1952.
They're gonna get together right away,
and when she's, you know, they get together
when she's about 20, they're gonna get married
in 1974 on Christmas Eve.
Which is, who the hell has a Christmas Eve wedding?
That's pretty selfish.
As I was saying, you are fucking that holiday up
for everybody.
You're ruining everybody in your family's children's lives.
Yeah, oh, I guess we're not doing Christmas Eve like we normally do.
Yeah.
And then the next day, you have to deal with that, with people coming from out of town.
Oh, fuck yourselves.
Not opening that one gift on Christmas Eve.
Selfish.
Thanks a lot.
Appreciate it.
Selfish.
I'm sure the judge who married them was like checking his watch, like, I got dinner plans here.
I gotta pretend to be Santa.
I gotta do this.
Jesus Christ.
Jesus Christ, you guys are all, okay, I guess I'll marry you then.
So they marry and they start to, for about four years or three years, there's no children.
Then in 1978, they have a son named Tad.
Oh yeah.
Talk a lot about Tad here.
They end up buying a house in Oklahoma City.
Really?
Now this is the crazy part. The ranch, I guess, as this guy's siblings,
as Leroy's siblings leave and his dad dies,
his mom, Macell, M-A-C-E-L, Macell, Mackle,
I don't fucking know.
That's Macell, right?
I think it's Macell.
Macell, she lives, she stays in the house and lives there.
He's gonna end up being a weekend rancher.
That's a sweet gig. It's later on he'll do this. He'll live in Oklahoma City during the week and
then he goes on the weekends to the ranch with his mom and does ranch work and then goes back to work
work on Monday. In the Pacific Ocean, halfway between Peru and New Zealand, lies a tiny volcanic island.
It's a little known British territory called Pitcairn and it harboured a deep, dark scandal.
There wouldn't be a girl on Pitcairn once they reached the age of 10 that would still emerge.
It just happens to all of them.
I'm journalist Luke Jones and and for almost two years,
I've been investigating a shocking story
that has left deep scars on generations of women and girls
from Pitcairn.
When there's nobody watching, nobody going to report it,
people will get away with what they can get away with.
In the Pitcairn trials, I'll be uncovering a story of abuse
and the fight for justice that has
brought a unique, lonely Pacific island to the brink of extinction.
Listen to the Pitcairn Trials exclusively on Wondery+.
Join Wondery+, in the Wondery app, Apple podcasts or Spotify.
In a quiet suburb, a community is shattered by the death of a beloved wife and mother.
But this tragic loss of life quickly turns into something even darker.
Her husband had tried to hire a hitman on the dark web to kill her.
And she wasn't the only target.
Because buried in the depths of the internet is The Kill List, a cache of chilling documents
containing names, photos, addresses and specific instructions
for people's murders.
This podcast is the true story of how I ended up in a race against time to warn those who
lives were in danger.
And it turns out convincing a total stranger someone wants them dead is not easy.
Follow Kill List on the Wondry app or wherever you get your podcasts. Put a week's worth of feed down for these things?
It's wild.
Yeah, he must, or he's got people that I'm sure that they're 1500 acres.
You got to have somebody hired, I'm sure,
to work that area.
That's a lot of land.
Yeah, unless you just got them out there,
wild cattle or whatever, just kinda grazing.
People trying to milk them.
People running up trying to milk them.
So the house they get in Oklahoma City
is at 8809 Sheringham Drive,
and it's a five-bedroom three and a half bath
2376 square foot house so very comfortable family home. Yeah, very comfortable the current Zestimate on it is
246 thousand dollars in case you're looking at that so it's not for sale, but anyway
Leroy has some trouble a little bit of trouble here You know Leroy is a little rough around the edges as you might imagine here, and he's got a little bit of trouble here. You know, Leroy's a little rough around the edges, as you might imagine here.
And he's got a little bit of issues.
In 1979, about a year after Tad was born,
he is going to be charged with grand larceny
in April of 79, stemming from,
and this is some rancher crime right here,
the theft of $600 worth of fencing.
What?
Yeah, you don't hear that very often.
What do you mean for chain link?
Chain link, stole it all, man.
Jesus.
Chain link, wood slat, it was all of it, man.
Fencing.
Fencing from a neighbor of his, I guess, from a resident named Ray DeLong.
And he ended up, I guess, got a one-year deferred sentence and if he
didn't get any trouble they dismiss it and the charge was dismissed in 1980
because he didn't get in any more trouble but all the residents of
ceiling said this was not an isolated incident. He's a he's a fence. He's a fence. He's a fencing bastard boy. So the way this the world
will end up working out is that people in Oklahoma City and people
in ceiling have completely different versions of him.
In Oklahoma City, he is known as a great fucking guy.
Just a top notch neighbor, terrific guy.
In ceiling, he's known as a fence-thieving scumbag.
Nobody likes.
He crimes on the weekend, man.
Which is so weird.
Yeah, go to the city and crime.
The people out here are going to notice it.
What's wrong with you?
He's thieving on the weekend.
One of Dennis' former, this is Leroy Dennis here, one of his former Sunday school teachers,
so guy who taught him Sunday school said that Dennis one time, I guess some fertilizer disappeared
from the feed store.
Just was gone, poof, gone.
So at one point Leroy Dennis showed up to pay for it.
Oh.
And he said, what do you mean?
Why are you paying for it?
And the guy said, Wendell Hedges is his name, said he never admitted to taking it, but he
paid for it.
He wouldn't admit that he stole it before he had the money to pay for it. So, but he just said, I just,
I just want to pay for it. And they're like, but if you didn't take it, the fuck you paying
for it? He's like, I didn't say I took it. I'm just an altruistic fucking guy. I just,
I don't know. I want to make things right in the world.
Way to the Murrah building.
That's it. I set things right in this planet, you know what I mean?
I'll right other people's wrongs. I'm raising 14, 15 other people's kids right now because
they ain't doing a good job. I don't give a shit. I'm a nice guy. I'm on my way down to the JC
penny and I'm going to just write all of the loss prevention wrongs in that place today.
I'm just going to win fall of about four or $500. I've got a windfall of about four or five hundred dollars. I'm gonna grab
one of them secret angel Christmas trees and just take the whole dang thing home with me.
I'm gonna clean it up. Rain Christmas presents upon the children from a helicopter. I got so many
power wheels bought. Oh you don't even know buddy, I got it all. Hot Wheels tracks one of them ones
makes a belt. You know what I'm talking about. The one white trash daddy's beat their kids with.
You know, you double it up.
It makes a good whip and I'll tell you something.
So the Dewey County undersheriff, Jerry Jones,
not the owner of the Cowboys.
No.
That's his night job, his owner of the Cowboys.
But during the day he's Dewey County undersheriff.
Well, if you could be a weekend rancher, why not? I what's the difference?
He described Leroy Dennis as a man who worked alone on the ranch raising cattle and building fences
So he's working alone alone 15 alone two days a week on 1500 acres that he must be very productive over those two days
He's gotta be Christ, that's a busy man.
And he said, this sheriff also said, Dennis also received some money from the federal
government as part of a conservation program to grow native grasses in lieu of crops, you
know, so we don't have another dust bowl. It's that program from FDR days. It's that
program. It says, hey, weio fucking pay you if you don't grow
Anything more on this and stop the dust from go let the sod grow back and some Bermuda and mow it
That's it the other guy that are this is Jerry Jones said he stayed to himself. That's kind of unusual
Everybody knows everybody in these little places
He's not participating in the town
Bullshit, I guess he doesn't go sit around at the diner and gossip sweet gig wouldn't it be I mean it's not participating in the town bullshit, I guess. He doesn't go sit around at the diner and gossip.
That'd be a fucking sweet gig, wouldn't it be?
I mean, it's not bad.
Just to grow grass and ride a John Deere out there
all weekend? It's not bad.
That'd be fun.
Fucking throw a six pack on there?
Ten deer cattle?
No, that's quite the life, yeah.
That's a party.
There's a lot of subsidies that farmers get where you go,
is that right?
I hear you guys, yeah, I know it's hard to be a farmer, but man, that's a lot of, I don't get any of that.
Sounds pretty rad.
You're getting a lot of money for nothing.
I get paid not to grow shit.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
We have too much corn.
I'll just pay you if you don't grow it.
Great.
Can you pay us if we don't make podcasts?
Can you do that for us?
There are a lot of them.
We'll pay you to make a week off, take a week off.
Really guys.
Fine.
Terrific.
Done.
So residents said they were familiar with Leroy Dennis because him and his family had
lived there forever.
It's going on 50 years they've lived there.
So the residents said they knew Dennis as a part-time rancher in the late 70s since
he would stay in Oklahoma City during the week and commute to Sealing on the weekends.
Now Oklahoma City neighbors, totally different deal.
Not a scumbag weirdo who keeps to himself.
He's a different guy in Oklahoma City.
Taking that Sealing subsidiary money and spreading it around Oklahoma City, heading on down to
the strip clubs and handing it out and really just making some friends.
An Oklahoma City neighbor said that Leroy Dennis would often take his three children to a park
near their home, and he'd see him playing
with his children all the time, being very friendly.
He'd be friendly to neighbors
and would even help neighbors with home repairs.
Yeah, you got a bad water heater,
he'll help you put a new one in.
You're fucking plumbing backed up, call up old Leroy.
He'll come over here and help you out.
You're fridge overheating because it doesn't have a vent, James Call up old Leroy, he'll come over here and help you out. You're fridge overheating
because it doesn't have a vent, James?
I needed Leroy.
I had to sawzall a hole.
In the drywall.
Not in the drywall, in the wood.
It's tongue and groove wood on that wall.
So to sawzall tongue and groove wood
is a real pain in the fucking ass,
let me tell you first of all. Get you first started as a motherfucker. Oh boy
Yeah, I drilled holes to get a pilot going and did that and yeah
Our fridge was literally our freezer was not working. I just shut down
completely it was overheated because it's stuffed into this fridge hole and
LG decided to stop putting vents on the
front of the refrigerators because they didn't like the way they looked.
So now they put them in the fucking back because everybody lets their fridge sit out in the
middle of an open room so it can get ventilation.
Everybody's fridge out there in the middle of an open room not backed up against a fucking
wall.
LG, my fridge looks great from the front but the side of my house has a fucking hole in
it. Yeah, but I had to...
I had to shakily and shittily sawzall a hole in tongue-and-groove fucking wood to fucking screw a goddamn vent on it now.
Thanks, LG.
But it works. So I could have used Leroy, is what Jimmy is telling you here.
Ceiling residents knew him. They knew him a lot. But Oklahoma City, they know him a little bit less.
He comes later and, you know, kind of just is there on the week,
during the week.
So before he began the weekend ranching thing,
he served as director of safety services
for the Oklahoma County Red Cross in 1978.
Wow.
Which seems like an important job
in a place where tornadoes happen a lot.
Right.
You want to get the rescue efforts to be, you got to put somebody smart in charge of that. You can't just let
your cousin do that or something. And also taught first aid classes for the Council on
Law Enforcement Education and Training, which is a statewide law enforcement organization.
So he's apparently into helping people. Red Cross and first aid classes.
He was also a peace officer at one time in Carnes and had received his law enforcement commission
from that organization. So he was a sort of a cop, I guess. I mean, a peace officer is a cop.
It's a cop. Yeah. So I guess it's a not like a regular, maybe an, I don't know, what a not on the force every day,
kind of a, like those, like,
because there's weird things like constable,
what the fuck is that?
That's kind of a cop.
That's just the guy that tells you
to get the fuck out of your house.
Yeah, it's kind of a cop, right?
That's all he does, right?
I don't know what he is, though.
Can he shoot you?
Is that a thing?
I don't know if he's carrying.
I don't know.
It sounds like it's got a lot of grommetas to it.
Constable, oh shit, he's gonna take my house away.
My friend's dad was that in Maricopa County
and she didn't want to tell anybody
because it came with a bad connotation to be vix people.
Oh yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I knew somebody who's had a constable
in their family as well in Arizona, yeah.
And I asked them what it was.
I wonder if we know the same person.
It was a guy.
So maybe not.
Well, he might have a sister.
I don't fucking know.
He may have had a sister.
Yeah.
Who the fuck knows?
So they're going to have multiple kids.
Tad, 78.
Todd, yes, they named their kids Tad and Todd.
No.
Tad and Todd.
I really love the to the sound, really a lot.
You can't do that.
Tad and Todd.
If you have another one, name it Tad. I'll choke the fuck out of you.
Jesus Christ. I will choke the life right out of you.
That's they're like the Flanders kids. I'm fucking on the Simpsons.
They're Rod and Todd and that's Tad and Todd. I'm sorry.
It's worse than Rod and Todd. I think I'd rather have Rod and Todd than Tad and Todd.
So Tad and Todd, which sounds like an English snack
You want some tad and Todd's yeah sure it's like a
Like that shit like the shit you scoop up with the stick
That's what it's a tad and Todd like the chocolate you scoop up with a vanilla stick
What are those not a snack back though?
Yeah, no, but the ones that are chocolate they have now or they're like
Yeah, that's a tad and Todd.
You want a tad and Todd?
So, and then they luckily don't have another son
to give a- Good, yeah, Ted.
To continue this, to have Ted, Ted, and Todd.
Have to go Ted, Ted, right?
You can't go Tid.
You'd have to go Ted, absolutely.
They have Julie in 1986.
Oh, what the fuck is that?
Luckily they didn't give her a name, rhyming with the rest of them. They have Julie in 1986. Oh, what the fuck is that?
Luckily they didn't give her a name,
rhyming with the rest of them.
Now, Janet, this whole time,
she is working as a nurse
at John Marshall High School in Oklahoma City.
Okay.
So she's, you know, she's doing her thing, nursing.
School nurse.
School nurse, yeah, at the high school.
So, I mean, that's a, we have a lot of people on our shows
that are school nurses somehow.
You notice that, by the way?
A lot of people in our stories are school,
really out of whack amount of school nurses.
It's been around a lot.
Like there's a rancher once in a while,
because it's small town murder, so there's world shit.
That makes sense, but school nursing is very specific
to be, it's very strange.
Now they don't have the
best marriage everything seems okay from the outside but Janet tell some of her friends
at work gossiping around the water cooler at the high school here that he's pretty controlling
of her and she doesn't like that and he didn't like for her hair to look nice. What?
He didn't want her hair to look nice
or for her to wear jewelry.
So basically don't look nice is what he wants.
Don't dress up.
Don't look attractive
because I have a very insecure,
is what that says to me.
Yeah.
Don't look attractive.
No, put your hair in a fucking bun or whatever.
Don't look like you're.
You want to look like the before picture in a high school dating bet movie you know what I
mean you want to look like that before the popular girl redoes her makeup and
she comes back down the stairs then
you know when she's getting made fun of in motion number nine yes exactly yeah you want her like
classroom shot of before she does goes to the party
Sandra Bullock in that doily dress yeah Yeah, that's what you're looking for. So they take her hair down take the glasses off
Oh, she's hot. Wow. Oh, look Wow. Wow. Oh my goodness
Jesus I must have superpowers. I can still tell if it chicks hot even if she has glasses on in her hair up
Isn't that weird?
Sometimes she's on you. Yeah, sometimes that's hotter. I love glasses. That's hot shit's hot shit I like oh boy that's cute so July 25th 1990 Leroy and Janet divorce so
their divorce is final years yep 16 years three kids and it's over so they
gave it a shot I mean Christ the guy's been weekend
ranching for Christ's sake. So
they tried. She hung in there a long time, especially if he's been a controlling dildo.
So Leroy is going to live in Sealing at the ranch with his mom, and then he is going to
take the kids on the weekends or whatever. So a lot of times he'll end up staying at
the house there with them because it's a commute. It's an hour 45 away. Yeah. So that's weird. That's got to be strange for the weekend. Jesus. Yeah. So Janet here,
she ends up getting custody of the three children and stays with them in the Oklahoma city house
in the divorce decree. We have the decree and what it entails here. Fuck. I hate those
two words. That's a tough one. Well, you'd really hate
it if this was the decree. Janet is awarded custody of the three children, which, I mean,
that's to be expected. Also awarded her though, ownership of their Oklahoma City house. Yeah.
She gets that. A car and 50% of the 1500 acre ranch that's been in his family since the 40s.
No.
That, I don't understand.
That's crazy.
How do you get half, she got the whole house.
Yeah.
And that's an inherited thing.
Like you can't take my dad's ranch now.
This is crazy.
You can take the shit we've built,
but you can't take the shit my fucking mom and dad did.
That's insane.
That's incredibly unfair.
That's wild.
Because you're supposed to put everything together split it down the middle
Yeah, they put it all together split it down the 60-30 line and gave him 30. It's not okay
Well, they gave her all her stuff and then they gave her half of his stuff
So they split his stuff 50-50, but she got to keep all our stuff. So it's very weird
That's kind of fucked up and I'm hey, I'm all for an equitable whatever the fuck
But this is a little this is a little much here.
There's winners and losers in life, sure.
But this is super losing.
Especially later on when we find out
where some of this money came from,
it's kind of interesting because she was just as much.
We'll find out.
Okay, so the judge also, if that's not enough,
the judge isn't finished yet.
It's plenty.
No, no, no, it's not.
Also ordered him to pay her $30,000.
$30,000 in 1990 money is a lot different than 30,000.
30,000 now would still be like, oh my God.
That's a lot of money.
That's a lot of money.
30,000 in 1990 is like 90,000 now.
Someone tells you you owe her 100 grand too.
You're going to go, what the fuck?
They gave her everything and made him buy back 750 acres basically.
Jesus Christ!
But she still gets to keep it.
No, I mean she gave him everything then they said give her 30 grand and we'll give you
750 of that 1500 rock.
Yeah, yeah, then you can have that back, yeah.
What the fuck is this?
Now he never pays it though.
No.
He doesn't pay it, which I don't know if he had it or not
That's a big chunk of change to just bust out
now
Friday December 7th 1990. So this is a few months after the divorce. Yeah
Janet here. She has a normal day. She's got a boyfriend now, by the way
So miles in her life. Yeah
She picked back up in about five months and has a boyfriend
and everything and she's got a social life and her kids and so she's getting her feet back under
here with her generous financial settlement would help. That'll help keep you upright.
Jesus. So she had dinner on fri- it's a Friday, December 7th, she had dinner with her kids
and they decorated the house for Christmas.
Yep.
Fucking fun.
This is the first week of Christmas.
This is my favorite.
That's my favorite thing.
I love it so much when we start getting the big tubs out of the basement with all the
shit.
Yeah.
They're looking at where the hell does this go and where these lights go.
I love that shit so much.
Every year I'm amazed at the ornaments
that I put on the tree.
Oh yeah, I remember this.
Yeah, look at that ornament.
2007, look at this.
That's a date right on it.
Oh fuck, I love Christmas.
I love when the house, last year we were on the road
and I came home and Sarah had decorated the whole house.
Oh, it was already done.
Came home to this like fucking Christmas wonderland.
It was the, I was like, oh my God,, talk about feeling like you're walking into your house and then
have it be Christmas.
It's like twice as warm and nice.
It was fucking great.
So they're decorating.
Tad had a wrestling match at school the following morning.
So Saturday morning, old Tad, you know about the early wakeups to go to Athletica.
Boy is that a nightmare.
So Janet is known for never missing a wrestling match or any kind of school event.
Partially because also she works there.
So she knows everybody.
So they all, Tad, Todd and Julie, God, Tad and Todd, Tad, Todd, Julie, they all went
to bed around 9.30 PM on a Friday night. Which that's, I got an early morning.
We got it at 6 a.m.
Fuck it.
Yeah.
So at this time Janet was still up and doing whatever she was doing.
I'm sure trying to take a breath after having a whole goddamn day decorating shit and then
also having to get up in the morning.
Because Julie's a kid at this.
Julie's like four years old, five years old.
Really?
Yeah.
She's gonna watch a stinky singlet?
Twelve and seven. Yeah. Jesus Christ.
These kids are, she needs a breath and a glass of wine probably at the end of this night.
So the next morning, Tad is woken up by his alarm clock, gets them up, ready for, for
wrestling. He gets up, he gets dressed, he runs downstairs, he's jacked for his wrestling
match here. Uh, he goes down to his mother's room because he can hear her alarm going off
He's like alarms not working better go wake mom up. Yeah, so he gets down to wake his mother up and see she's not in bed
Now normally in this case and we'd go and there she is with a knife in her forehead in her
You know part of a bunch of her organs are missing, but no she's on the ceiling
It's the opposite the bed is not only is she not in the bed you know, part of a bunch of her organs are missing, but no. Some of them are on the ceiling.
It's the opposite.
The bed is not only is she not in the bed, the pillows are placed under the blankets
like the bed is made.
You know what I mean?
Like, yeah, pulled up and everything.
So he also noticed that some of his mother's toiletries were missing from her vanity, which
at 12 years old, I had no idea what my mother was doing in the bathroom.
None. Did you have any clue what product she was using?
No. The only thing I knew about the bathroom regiment is that sometimes I'd go to brush my teeth and there'd be nylons in there.
Yes, and you'd go, oh God, Jesus Christ, God damn it.
The water's so brown.
You have to go to the kitchen sink now. Yeah, that's the, I've been there myself, Jimmy Westman.
I'll tell you that right now.
Absolutely awful.
Can you hang these over the shower curtain rod already?
Or is it not that time yet?
What is this spaghetti in here?
I hate it.
How long does this have to soak for?
What are you doing in these?
I hate this so much.
Are you doing male, female cowboy bear back in these? What's this so much. Are you doing male, female, cowboy,
bareback in these?
What's happening?
This is gross.
Awful.
So yeah, I don't know how a 12 year old
would know what toiletries his mother has
or what ones are missing.
But he knew some were missing.
Would have never known.
If you said, if the cop said your mom's missing,
what's normally in her bathroom?
I would have went, uh, she probably has some toothpaste,
I bet. I don't know, like, she probably has some toothpaste I bet no idea yeah so that that tad was like okay that's weird
why is there stuff missing so then he goes looking for her in the house and
he gets to the garage and checks in there and the car is gone so she's got a
1990 or 1989 Chevy blazer that's gone. So brand newish
Blazer and that's not even there. So he said, oh shit. But at the time he's like, oh, you
know what? She probably, well, I don't think we went to the grocery store yesterday. She
probably forgot to get snacks for the wrestling match. So she's probably getting snacks for
the wrestling meat because she's brought to bring the other two kids And so yeah, she's probably getting snacks
And then you know she'll be back and pick us up and okay
So he sits there and waits for her to get home and Tad said I sat there and waited for a little while
But she never came back
Hmm gone so Tad waited about half hour
And then he called his dad up in ceiling at the ranch and said fucking
mom's gone I don't know I got up her beds made her toiletries are gone her
her car's gone what the hell man like she's I got a wrestling meet what do I
do here so Leroy tells Tad I'll come to Oklahoma City later this morning if you
know if she doesn't turn up obviously if she shows up give me a call but if not
I'll be there a little later this morning I need to build a fence on the ranch quick
this guy builds up fences there's so much fencing involved in this guy he is just Mr. Fence Builder
so the Leroy called his family friends in Oklahoma City some friends of his that he's known for a
while and asked them hey would you go would sit with my kids for a little while? Cause Tad's the oldest and he's 12. So,
you know, go wrestling meat. So there's the,
go hang out with my kids for a little while until I get there or until my ex
wife comes home, whichever comes first. So by the time night comes,
she's still not there.
So if you're sitting from like six 30 in the morning and now it's dark and you still have
your singlet on waiting to go to the match like.
It's a long time to get orange slices.
Something's up.
Yeah.
So Tad's father and Janice and Leroy's Janice ex-husband, they end up talking to each other
and saying, we better call the police here.
She's not, I don't know what's going on here, but she's missing.
So they decide it was actually Leroy's idea. We should definitely call the police here. She's not, I don't know what's going on here, but she's missing. So they decide, it was actually Leroy's idea,
we should definitely call the police.
So they called the police department,
and the police department,
the Oklahoma City Police Department,
told them that, I'm sure she'll be back
sometime over the weekend.
They said, this is very common,
and then when people disappear,
because they said, did she just disappear?
And they said, well, she took her car.
And my son says she took a bunch of her toiletries.
So they're like, well, she went somewhere, is what that is.
So wait, and she'll be back over the weekend, I'm sure.
If not, give us a wringling on Monday, maybe.
We got a lot going on.
We got a softball charity game this weekend we got to do.
Let's give her around 72 to figure it out.
Yeah, so then Monday comes around
and she never gets, she's not back yet.
Wow.
Whole weekend goes by of no Janet.
And this is not like her at all.
She's a pretty reliable mother of three at this point.
So very strange.
And the police take her disappearance more seriously
at this point.
And they're talking to everybody that talked to her
the day before or the day
She left to figure out where she might have gone. Did she say anything to you?
So they travel out to ceiling or I'm sorry
They travel to her house to interview Leroy Leroy stayed with the kids the whole weekend in the house
Because what else are you gonna do? Yeah in case she came back. You're gonna take yeah
So Leroy said the last time the children had seen their mother was Friday night
He said she was wearing jeans a red top and a gold necklace.
That's what Tad had told him.
And he also claimed that he and his ex were on good terms.
Yes, we got a divorce, but they said, you know, we're still on good terms.
It's fine.
He said he'd been on, they said, well, where were you at this time?
You know, just to make sure we got to clear everybody.
And he said, well, I was on my ranch
at the time of the disappearance.
And his mother said, yes, he was home with me.
So there's an alibi for home.
So the police, they searched the home,
just a simple once over to see if he's like hiding,
you know, a human woman somewhere.
Look for little spots of blood.
Corpses, things like that, you know,
behind a curtain or something. So, yeah, suspicious things. No evidence of foul play. There's no blood. Corpses, things like that. Behind a curtain or something.
Yeah, suspicious things.
No evidence of foul play, there's no blood,
there's no body, there's no anything like that.
Janice just fucking vanished.
Also her purse is gone too.
So purse, car, toiletries.
What do you want?
That's an overnight.
That's an overnight, yeah.
And she's got a boyfriend too,
so they're wondering, got to talk to her maybe
her him so
The under sheriff old Jerry Jones said it almost appeared that she just left just boom that ran away from her life
It's really weird Tina Bloomer who was Janet's cousin Tina Bloomer. That's a rough name
Said quote we knew something we knew something was wrong.
We knew something had happened to her.
We just didn't know what it was.
They said they were full of anxiety
because she would never do this and she'd never run away.
So they said, where the hell could she be?
Because they look at her calendar
and she's got a full slate of plans for this week.
Tons of shit to do.
So they're like, what is going on here?
Why did she make all these plans if she was going to skip out?
This makes no sense.
So one police detective said she just vanished.
She had plans to go to a close friend's birthday party and she was going to take her son to
a wrestling match that day.
So her plan was wake up, take Tad to wrestling.
When he's done, go to her friend's birthday party. She had a bunch bunch of shit to do that day. They said there's no trace of her. There's no sign of struggle in her house
There's no blood anywhere. There's nothing out of place
It just looks like someone intentionally took their person toiletries got in their car and fucking left
So they said she had a paid for house
Her house is paid off by the way a paid for house and a car in a very nice area
and plenty of money in the bank. So they're like, this makes no sense. People run away
from that. People with, especially like people who are, seem to be happy being a mother and
a parent. Yeah. She's happy with her family. The divorce is over with. So it's not like
she's fighting with her ex husband anymore. She doesn't have anything to run away for.
She's got a paid off house and money in the bank.
People work their fucking balls off their whole life for this life.
That's what I mean.
So they're like, this doesn't make any sense at all.
The cop also said her friends and neighbors described her as a good mother and conscientious.
And so they didn't know exactly what to do.
They did say that she is five feet, seven inches tall and weighs 157 pounds with brown hair brown eyes and
wore dark rimmed glasses.
So that's what we're looking for here if anybody's looking for.
So the police are going to talk to more family to try to figure out if somebody knows something about it.
What did she say? Just a hint of somewhere she could have gone. So they speak to her father Arthur
who said it was very unlikely that she would abandon
her children.
That doesn't make sense.
I mean, she knew that they would call.
It's not like they're two years old.
If she did leave, she knew they'd call her father and their father would come.
So it's not like it's or her parents or somebody.
But they're not just sitting there, put on their thumbs wondering to leave in the middle
of the night while your kids are sleeping isn't like her.
Fascinating, yeah.
So they said, he said though that the cops
got real interested when he started talking about
she has a new boyfriend.
They were like, really?
We'd love to talk to him.
This guy said he never liked Leroy, by the way.
And he was happy.
The boyfriend?
No, the father never liked Leroy, the ex-husband.
Doesn't like him and said that he was happy
his daughter got a new boyfriend and moved on from that one.
And the boyfriend's name is Jim Umbenhauer.
Umbenhauer, U-M-B-E-N-H-O-W-E-R, Umbenhauer.
So Jim Umbenhauer, they've been dating.
And so the police start digging into Janet's life.
They're interviewing all of her work friends,
and all of them said that prior to the divorce,
Janet had complained about Leroy being controlling,
telling her how to do her hair, telling her what to wear,
telling her not to look sexy, shit like that.
So they said she'd been much happier with Jim Umbenhauer,
they said, she'd been doing great here.
So they said, let's go talk to Jim
and find out what he's got going on.
Let's hear it.
Jim's got some suspicious shit going on.
Let's just say that.
What's his deal?
Wow.
Now they first of all, he said,
yes, I frequently spend the night at her house
and I recently gave her a ring.
So they gave her a ring a couple of weeks ago.
So I guess an engagement ring or a promise ring or some kind of something.
We're hooked up.
There's something significant.
1950s class ring.
Some bullshit he gave her.
Who knows?
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So he said he had been to his Arthur,
Janet's dad's house recently
where he got a key to Janet's home.
This is after she's disappeared.
Real?
This isn't before.
Yeah, so they're like, okay, since you, since you, since she's been gone, you went and got a
key to her house.
Why did you need a key to her home?
And he said, well, he went to search the home for do his own sweep of the home here.
He waited for Leroy and the children to leave and then went in the house. So the police are like, well, that doesn't really seem like a thing you would do.
That's weird. Why would you? It seems like you do that. If you needed to get evidence out of the
house, you'd say, can I get a key? I'm going to go there when no one's there because that's
when I need to search it. It sounds really suspicious. So they're like, okay, now what's
up with Umbenhauer? He's an active member of the military
Like okay
And the detective Craig gravel said Jim wanting to get into the house after Janet went missing was very strange
We didn't know what he was searching for but this was be hot bizarre behavior
Yeah, very bizarre behavior. You want to stay the fuck away from that place, especially if it's a girlfriend
Yeah, that's it? You're not married.
I need to get in there.
Why?
What the fuck?
To search.
I don't like that.
What are you looking for, chief?
So afterward, they get together,
Umbenhauer and the police,
and he agrees to come in for questioning the following day.
Once they hear all this, they're like,
we gotta have a, we talked to you in your living room,
but we need to have like an interrogation room.
And it's a new relationship. This isn't like a five year relationship.
There's no patterns of behavior to look at. Yeah. We don't know that like, oh, well they've
gotten along or whatever. There's no pattern of behavior here. So we have no idea. So he,
he does that. He had degrees to come in, but before he comes in the following day, that very day,
they find Janet's car.
Where?
It is in the parking lot of the airport, Will Rogers Airport, the Oklahoma City Airport.
It's in the parking lot, so the investigators come to the scene to look at it.
They found the trunk was filled with toys.
Like she just bought a bunch of Christmas presents
for the kids.
So it's filled with toys.
So they're like, okay, why would she have bought
a bunch of Christmas presents for her kids
and then leave her toy-filled car at the airport
without any warning?
So they said, that's very strange.
But they thought, if she's coming back by Christmas,
maybe that would make sense,
but otherwise, I don't know what the hell she's doing.
Who takes off and runs to the airport
when you got plans tomorrow?
Yeah, in the middle of the night.
Lots of plans, that's the thing, totally, yeah.
With your kid, with your friends,
it makes so little fucking sense.
Sounds like a fast turnaround flight
that you're gonna make all your plans tomorrow.
Yeah, you're running up to the counter
with cash in your hand going,
what flight's leaving now?
How far can I get with this?
Yeah, looking like a terrorist.
So they don't know what's going on,
so they said before police could leave the scene,
this is, they're at the fucking airport.
This is disturbing.
At the airport, they pop the trunk toys,
they're looking at it, they're standing around it going what the fuck, they fingerprint all the forensic shit they're doing that they
have in 1991.
And in the middle of all of this, before they wrap up the scene, here comes Jim Umbenhauer
driving up to them in the parking lot.
Yeah.
That's not so-
How did he know?
Why are you going to every place that she
was like, this is weird shit. So they, the detective said they were shocked with the
only way they could put it was shocked. This is crazy. They said no one understood a how
he knew where the fuck the car was. Right. Because this hadn't been announced to the
media or anything yet. They went out there and found the car. Like there was no shit
wouldn't, no one else would know it for another day that they found the
car when it was in the newspaper this is 1991 it's not like there's an internet
where people are posting shit or anything like that you know an airport
employee posted or something so no one understood that he claimed this is wild
he claimed that he'd been simply driving around parking lots looking for her car when
he happened to come upon it at the same exact time the police did.
I just left Chili's. It wasn't there. So I figured airport. Let's try there.
Well, you know, he already searched the house. He did his own search on the house. So why
not do it his own one man police force thing? Why not?
That's a wild claim.
I was-
Yeah, to drive around,
I've been driving all of Oklahoma City,
and then I just got to the airport while you're here.
Malls, strip malls, fuckin' grocery stores,
whatever I could come across.
I got me a Rand McNally,
and I just drew a grid, and I'm drivin' it.
What the fuck man?
So the police were like, I don't think so
They were not surprised or they weren't convinced that his presence was a coincidence that they all found the car at the same fucking time
So they said by the way Jim
Why the fuck did you go to your girlfriend's house there after she disappeared to look through it?
Seems like once she's not there you have no reason to be there.
And he claimed he was simply interested I love that he always says I was simply doing
this.
Simply.
He said I was simply interested in retrieving some old love letters that I'd written her
in order to keep their relationship private.
Yeah, I don't want you guys.
Yeah, that's things I said I was gonna do to her. Wow, I don't want to hear into all the things I said I was gonna do to her.
Wow, I don't want her hearing all the things
that makes my dick real hard, like real hard.
You know, like, it gets hard normal,
but she knows the shit that makes it like,
oh boy, glass cutting implement.
Things about pinching it between my lips.
You know, all that kind of thing,
and how me and one of my high school buddies
did some explorations, you know wasn't exactly
what I mean.
I told her how I found out I'm not gay.
Not gay but you know she could still stick things in my butt if she wants.
I'm not saying it's all in the letters and I was trying to cover it up see.
See now you got me to tell you what I didn't want you to know.
You might as well just take them now.
Damn you boys are good.
Oh God.
He said Janet had always requested that they would keep their relationship and all their
private stuff private.
So he was just trying to honor what she wanted, which is extra missing woman.
And you went to get all the correspondence they've had.
This is crazy.
And you show up, you show up the same time as the cops,
like this is very suspicious.
You couldn't look any more suspicious
than this guy looks right now.
And then they said, well, you're going to have to,
did you get the love letters?
And he said, yeah.
And they go, thank you very much.
Hand them over, but he's had them.
So who knows which, if he's given them all the letters,
but he hands them a box of letters.
So Leroy then goes on the news and Jerry Jones saw him on the news with Leroy pleading for
any information that could help with the case.
Please find my ex-wife and my kids are sad.
What the fuck here?
I'm tired of watching them all the time.
I'm a weekend guy.
I had to pay 30 grand so that she could do this.
Yeah.
I gave her a whole house for this type of thing.
So Leroy lived on a, because he lived on a farm that was in his jurisdiction, Jones offered
to help with the investigation in any way he could.
So this Jerry Jones said, well, you know, I'll help out. So he, Jerry Jones also
told the police that there were rumors floating around town here that Leroy, who was not well
liked by his neighbors, he's the one responsible. So a town of less than a thousand people,
the rumor mill is swirling. They don't even know the other guy, so they can't blame him.
They don't even know he exists. So they only have one person to blame and it's Leroy.
We don't like him.
So then they find something that's very interesting. Then they stick it up till now. They've heard that the divorce was all amicable and everything like that.
But then they hear otherwise. They talk to some more of her friends and coworkers and they find out that the divorce was not amicable, that Leroy would go to her house and argue with
her in front of her children, which I mean, you've done that about 700 times.
I went to pick them up and there was an argument.
I think that's what this is. I don't think that...
Yeah, maybe.
You went there for an hour 45 just to argue probably.
I go, you know what?
I'm hankering, hanking for good argument.
I got it, hold on.
I'm going to go stop at the store.
Goddamn, I miss her.
Grab me some bugles for the road.
And get some road stacks.
It's too damn quiet around here.
I'm going to head back up to my ex-wife's house.
Hey, mom, you want to argue about something?
No?
Shit.
Well, alright.
I'm heading to Lisa's.
Getting the hell out of here now.
You just, little Freudian slip there.
I'm tired of it being so nice around here.
I'm gonna have to go argue with this bitch for a while.
You're gonna do this shit.
So yeah, they've been arguing and they also said
that Leroy was adamant about getting full custody
of the children, which contrad that Leroy was adamant about getting full custody of the children
Which contradicted Leroy's claims that he was fine with Janet having full custody
So one of the detectives said in a heated divorce, you never know what someone's capable of but in Leroy's case
He didn't have custody of his children and now his ex-wife who he still loves has another man in the house
So that's a good recipe for murder
Boy that's a stretch. Well that is really, they got divorced, she got the kids which is like 97% of cases and
then she moved on which is like 94% of cases so he must have killed her.
That's a lot.
We know for sure that's what he did.
That's positive, that's a good recipe for murder.
It's a little dash of this and a teaspoon of that.
Half pound of spite.
Bring it to a boil.
Half pound of spite, three pinches of hate,
and you got yourself a stew.
That's the recipe out there, folks,
if you're looking for it.
So.
It's got a little bit of regret aftertaste.
Oh, yeah. You get that as a,
you dip your regret bread in it.
You mop it all up with regret bread.
Yeah, you sop it all up with regret.
So, now the police, they really wanna talk to Leroy
because they're suspicious of him.
They ask him to come in and take a polygraph and he does. He said sure thing. His story
is he went to the store that day to buy a bunch of grain. He was grain
shopping. Yeah. In ceiling. In ceiling and then he came home and spent the rest of
the night in the house with his mother. So it was me and my mom with all of our
grains. That's what we did here. It's a great story. Now the results in the house of his mother. So it was me and my mom with all of our grains. That's what we did here.
That's a great story.
Now the results of the lie detector, and this is very common, are inconclusive, which happens
all the time. That's when you get someone who's nervous because they've never been hooked
up to a fucking lie detector before and all their shit's jumpy and it happens a lot.
I'm afraid for this thing to come up saying I'm lying when I'm not.
That's, yeah, there's plenty of stuff.
Whenever they'll ask like, so the basic questions too, if you watch the lie detector thing.
So where do you work?
Your address is this.
Is your name Jerry?
You're wearing a blue shirt.
Yes I am.
Okay.
Did you cut your wife's throat and then dismember her and put it on?
Whoa, that'll make anybody's heart rate go up.
Jesus Christ. Just as the mention of it.
Oh God.
So they asked him if he would take another test,
because they couldn't figure it out that time.
And he said, listen, I have heart problems.
I'm not sitting through that shit again.
You got your goddamn test like you asked me to.
I took it, and I can go fuck yourselves.
How's that sound?
Take that test and figure it out. I can't say I wouldn't be on that thing too.
Yeah, if he's got heart problems, I'm on his side man. That's my doubt.
This is my ex-wife. Y'all can find her all you want and tell me when you do because I'll
be over here, but I don't fucking know. I'm not going to take 20 lie detector tests over
it. And if you don't, I'd like my shit back anyway.
So then they find another witness.
They find a witness who says that they saw Leroy
outside the house in Oklahoma City
on the afternoon of December 7th,
which is the, she disappeared the middle of the night
of between the 7 and the eighth there
The witness said that they saw his vehicle parked outside the residence that evening around 7 p.m
Now December 7th the Friday night where they were having a Christmas decorating party He's been at 930 so two hours before they went to bed. He's out front
Yeah, and another witness said that she started helping Leroy pack Janet's clothing into boxes the Monday after she disappeared
Or he just she did so she left Friday. They were like, where'd she go?
They just called the cops and they were saying, you know, maybe she'll come back over the weekend by Monday
This witness has said that this witness said Leroy was packing her shit up. Basically
Maybe he was like well you abandoned it my house now. Maybe he was like, well, you abandoned it, my house now.
Maybe he was doing that.
Maybe he was doing like a possessions nine tenths of the law.
I live here.
I don't know what he was trying to pull.
They packed up her things.
This woman helped him.
They packed up her things during the entire week and put them in a closet before putting
the boxes in the attic.
Wow.
So she comes home, her shit is going to be in the attic.
Up there. It's cold. Yeah, her shit is gonna be in the attic. Up there.
Yeah, there it is.
So that's weird.
Definitely fucking weird.
She has to move back in.
I mean, you know what?
She deserves to have to do that if she left these kids all day.
If she just came home with like trinkets from Disney World, I'd be like, listen, you asshole.
You have to move back in.
She's got a bunch of drink umbrellas
from her trip to the Bahamas.
I don't wanna fucking talk to you right now.
But- She's got the souvenir cup, the whale bone.
Here's a question.
What is more suspicious behavior?
Right.
Getting the key and searching the house
and then showing up at the site
where the cops find the woman's car
where you had no idea where it was,
no one else on Earth did,
or packing her shit up three days after she leaves
and putting it in the attic.
Which is more, I can't tell which is more suspicious.
They gotta look at each other and go,
these motherfuckers do this together?
I guess, right?
That's what I said, are these two,
are they hanging out together or what?
Like what the hell's going on here?
You know what?
She is a bitch.
You're right.
Fuck her.
Did he hire a man to date her and then murder her with him?
That's what I mean.
What is the story?
This is crazy.
So this was well in advance of knowing where she was or anything like that.
So then a neighbor says a large fire was seen.
Oh. like that. So then a neighbor says a large fire was seen. Oh, okay. This is a neighbor
said on the morning of Friday, the February 7th. So that is 12 hours before the Christmas
decorations go up. Between seven and eight a.m. one of Leroy's neighbors in ceiling observed
a large fire with black smoke and flames jumping 30 to 40 feet above the tree line.
So wow, he is burning some shit.
And they said that this is about a half mile away from them and they could see the flames
coming up above the tree line and all this type of shit here.
So she also said that she had seen other fires burning on his property in the past, but this
was the biggest one she'd seen.
Not like she's staring at his property the whole time.
So that's kind of a so what thing because that happened the day before, so who gives
a shit?
So then the cops are suspicious of Leroy.
They really are.
They think he has the financial motive.
They're like the boyfriend has no motive is their point.
Not that you need a motive.
The boyfriend might just like to kill women.
Maybe that's why. Mm-hmm. There's plenty of motiveless shit, but they're looking
at logic right now. Occam's razor, husband's got to owes her all this money and all this
shit. He'd be the one that wants her dead. So they both Tad and a neighbor both tell
the cops that Leroy wanted custody of the children. Tad also said that Leroy wanted custody of all the children, especially him, so they
could all live in the ceiling on the ranch.
He wanted to raise the kids on the ranch like he was raised.
One of the neighbors in Oklahoma City said that Leroy was very adamant about getting
custody of all the children and wanted them all.
Need all of them.
Tad, Todd, take them both.
Collecting them all. Need all of them, Dad. Tad, Todd, take them both. Collecting them all.
That's right.
Also, there was people talking about his financial status
because they found out that he owed his wife $30,000
from their divorce settlement
and was pursuing a bankruptcy action because of that.
Oh, wow.
And also, he had told Tad
that he would not be able to make his child support payments
for about two months. He told Tad, I'm make his child support payments for about two months.
He told that I'm gonna be about a little short for about two months.
This shit ruined him.
So yeah, I did.
Well, it did.
I mean, they have the whole house, the money, everything.
So that's interesting.
So they're like, that's a lot of motive.
He wants the kids.
If he gets the kids and she's gone, his financial problems are solved and everything's back
to what he wants.
So they're like, that's a lot.
He wakes up and can't breathe. He falls asleep and has nightmares this guy's a miserable life
So the cops are really going Leroy or Jim Leroy or Jim man. I mean they both seem super guilty
But they don't know each other. There's no way they there's no they have no connection with each other whatsoever
They look into it. They're a Finkle and Einhorn, absolutely.
Yeah, totally.
So maybe Jim Ubenhauer is just Leroy in disguise.
We don't know.
So they said, let's get Jim Ubenhauer in here,
have him take a polygraph and see how that turns out.
So they go to the, they take him to the station here
to take a polygraph test.
They do a six hour interview with him.
Wow.
And results are in, he fails the polygraph.
Oh.
So we got an inconclusive and a failed,
which is not helping anything.
You're like, now I'm even more confused.
Great.
So they learned that from this, though,
they learned that Ubenhauer had been
living with a different woman at the time
of his relationship with Janet,
and was not being truthful.
What?
Not truthful at all to her,
or to either one of these women,
which that gives him a shitload of motive right there too.
Right.
Yeah, and he claimed he'd been planning to break up
with this new woman and started relationship with Janet.
He's been telling Janet, oh, I'm going to break up with her.
Don't you worry.
They're not married even.
He's not married to this woman.
So he can leave anytime he wants, but he's there.
So despite their suspicions though, because the cops at that point, when they found out
about all of this, he failed the test.
Then he found out about the other woman and he's been lying to Janet, they went, so we should arrest him now, right? Literally,
he failed the polygraph, blew the box, he's been lying to us about everything.
And this-
He's lying to everybody.
Let's go ahead and slap the cuffs on him, but they said, no, we don't have enough evidence.
The only evidence we have is some motive, and he's a liar, but Leroy has motive and he's a liar too. So he said he was fine with not having the kids, evidence we have is some motive and he's a liar but Leroy has motive and he's
a liar too.
So he said he was fine with not having the kids, which we know is bullshit.
So what do we do here?
So they don't take him into custody.
Then soon after that, they get another call from Leroy.
The cops got a call from Leroy telling them, Hey, some of Jim Oubenhauer's belongings are
in Janet's house.
So I don't know what to do with this shit.
Basically, like I'm not keep I'm gonna throw it out or what do I do with this shit?
Do you guys want it?
Is it evidence?
I don't know.
So they said, Oh, we'll take it all.
Let's go over here.
So they rush over to the house to do another search of the property for clues.
They find a box of men's toiletries in the bathroom that belonged
to Ubenhauer. Umbenhauer, whatever it is. In the bottom of the box was an unlabeled
VHS tape, which they confiscate and take back to the station. Don't play that.
Unlabeled? That's just porn, man. I man. By the way, I just heard the story.
My cousin told me a hilarious story
about when he was a teenager.
Him and his friend were looking over these old tapes
that the guy's mother's boyfriend had,
just tapes to see what was on him,
because some of them were movies or whatever like that.
And one of them was this guy fucking the kid's mother.
And he's like, because I've never seen a person turn a fucking tape off faster he dove at the VCR Oh God click
his mom it was the this his mom's boyfriend banging his mom was on the video and it was
like right in the middle of it like you turn it on and she's like, ah, like doggy style, getting railed.
You turn it on and you see where mom's boyfriend's been watching.
Yeah, it is profile of mom getting railed.
And he's like, I've never seen anyone dive so fast.
I would break the TV.
If you couldn't hit stop, just kick the TV over.
Oh, god.
Rip the plug out of the wall.
Jesus Christ, no.
If my fucking breaker box was there,
I'd just shut the power down.
You're just changing.
Out of my life, I'll burn this house down.
Oh, my god.
You would need acid to pour in my eyes after that.
There's not enough. Oh, how do you erase that from your fucking brain?
My stepfather used to record the Playboy channel.
Well, that's great.
That's what you want to discover.
And the Spice channel.
Everything on fucking direct TV.
It's like, dude, this shit is direct.
You can watch this anytime you want.
And he recorded it on tapes labeled vacation. So I'm trying to
watch a vacation.
But that's a score as a teenager. It's not your mom.
Dude, I'd shoot myself in the face.
They were hoping for porn. That's what they were hoping for. Because this was like the
late 80s, because my cousin's older than me. It's like the late 80s. So like you had a
porn tape that was like gold,
so that's what they were hoping for,
and they pop in and it's porn,
but it ain't the porn they wanted to see.
Yeah, seeing what your family beats off to is fucked up.
No one wants that shit.
But seeing your family beat off
to how they fuck your family,
I don't want that at all.
This poor guy had to see his mom's tits dangling down,
rocking back and forth.
Oh yeah.
It's not good.
Really giving it extra for the camera too,
you know what I mean?
She's a star.
Yeah, you don't want that.
She's done this before.
Oh yeah.
I'm uncomfortable with it, but she's done.
Holy.
So police ask, they ask him, they're trying to find out, they watch the tape, and what
they find on the tape, it is sexual in nature.
It's not like a produced, like a, you know.
It's a little amateur, yeah?
Yeah, it's not like a produced from a company thing.
It's like a tape of a tape of a tape of somebody's shit
where there is a woman, it's a sexualized thing.
There's a naked woman being restrained and burned in it.
Like burned with things.
Yeah, it's some S and M shit.
So they're like, huh, whose tape is this?
They asked Jim if it's his and he said, no, not mine.
I've never seen it.
And by the way, we find out later it is 100% his tape.
Yeah.
Yes, he says no, I don't know what you're talking about.
And they said well did you and Janet engage in whatever?
He said we've never watched pornography together.
Like yeah, this isn't probably what she would watch, no.
I doubt it, you know what I mean?
That's why I hide it under the Axe body spray.
Yeah, it's under I hide it under the Axe body spray in the bathroom.
Under my fucking degree under there.
So still the police said, come on in and take a second polygraph.
Why don't you? Since you failed the first one.
He said that he loved her.
He claimed he's not involved in her disappearance.
And this time he passes the test.
What is going on?
Which is this is the most confusing fucking case ever.
Isn't it? You don't know what's going on.
He passes the test, which a lot of people, to pass a test, they take medication.
That's easily a way to pass a test and anti-anxiety shit.
So it keeps your shit from spiking and all that, keeps you real even.
But who knows? You know what I mean?
So they said, the police, though, say, I bet it was because he was sick the first test
and this time he's telling the truth.
Okay.
Even though what he's done is everything he's done is highly suspicious and he's lied at
every turn as a matter of fact, they go, it's gotta be Leroy though.
We think it's Leroy.
So because we have a past polygraph, we're going to go ahead and clear Jim here, even
though that past polygraph comes with a lot of asterisks attached to it
So then this is almost two months after Janet's disappeared. She's gone almost two months. This is early February of
1991
Remember that neighbor who said they saw the fire on his property the morning before the disappearance 7 a.m. Well now
Now that they think about it, and now that they check back on their calendars, they'd
realize they actually saw it the morning after Janet was reported to have vanished.
It wasn't the day before.
Yeah.
So months later, my memory is much better than it was the next literally three days
ago.
Now I get it more.
And rather than the cops chalking that up to,
well, I mean, people's memories suck,
the one detective said, this was huge.
Big, big moves.
I mean, big in terms of being able to put more on him,
I guess, but not big in terms of actually knowing
what's going on and knowing what happened.
So they go back and they said,
we are gonna search Leroy's Ranch fucking hardcore this time.
Before we looked around, who knows?
Now we're gonna focus and just zero in on his shit, man,
because it's 1,500 acres, so it is a lot to search.
And think about all the nooks and crannies
and places in a 1,500 acre farm.
So I have 12 acres and there's a shitload out there.
It'd be hard to search all of that.
Oh boy, it's crazy.
It'd be crazy.
So I can't imagine having a hundred or fifteen hundred acres.
That would be amazing.
That'd be wild.
So it's like your own town.
It's fucking crazy.
So they go there.
This time they're really looking around hard.
Now January 14th, so this is, I'm sorry,
it wasn't early February, it was mid-January,
that lady said she saw the fires,
which made them go look harder.
Investigators are combing a burned out bushy area
of the ranch that's way away,
quarter mile away from the house, for Christ's sake.
And amid the overgrowth here, they find what looked like pieces of bones that had been
burnt and left lying in the charred grass.
Like this whole area got burned, including some bones.
So they bring in an anthropologist, because once you find bones, you've got to bring in
the people who do that.
Right.
You can't just have the fucking regular detectives shoveling bones out of the ground.
Right.
You can break them. An oral-D toothbrush brush and it and go, and this looks like a thigh bone.
You'll fuck it all up.
So the anthropologist said they believe they found pieces of a human skull, but they're
not sure.
Human bone fragments, what they believe are human bone fragments, were found in three
separate piles of burned cedar trees on the ranch.
Three separate piles near these burned cedar trees. The remains were found in a
secluded heavily wooded area on the 1,500 acre ranch here. They said we found four
burned areas, two of them had bones in them. That's what Jerry Jones said. They
said we think these may be the missing woman's bones.
The bones were found to be compatible
with a woman of a larger stature,
not a five foot 200 pound woman,
you know, just a taller, larger woman,
from 35 to 50 years of age who had delivered children.
Oh.
So that's how much kids fuck your body up,
is they'll be able to tell the damage they've done
to your bones after they've been burned and broken apart.
So that means they've got a pelvis then.
Yes, there are pieces of it anyway,
because they don't have anything whole there.
Four of the, they found four teeth here, okay,
and along with the bones, they find a piece of necklace or a gold
chain, piece of a gold chain about five inches long that was found in the burn piles, and
there was evidence presented also that Janet owned a necklace like that that she always
wore and that's remember Tad said she was wearing this, this, and this last time I saw
her.
So, the medical examiners here said, the medical examiner and a Norman anthropologist named
Clyde Snow are trying to identify the remains and determine the cause of death.
They said it's time consuming and tedious and we've been at it since Saturday and this
was like Wednesday.
They said we must we've made a tentative identification and now we're trying to determine the cause
of death.
They also said the bones haven't been out there very long, not ears or anything like that,
obviously. From this, they figure out based on dental records of the four teeth that these are
the remains of Janet. So we found Janet. She's in four separate piles of bones at this point.
On a 1,500 acre parcel of ceiling that her ex-husband owns.
Owns.
And it's deep in the woods too.
Deep in the...
Deep back there.
Oklahoma holler.
Yeah.
Now, he could say that's so deep back there that I wouldn't have seen anybody going back
there.
That's true.
But also, you know where to go where there's private spots in your 1500 acre ranch.
It doesn't look good for Leroy here.
Also, 1500 acres, you haven't seen a giant fucking fire four times?
That's what I'm seeing.
Four big ones here.
So now Leroy, they didn't arrest Leroy yet, but obviously her remains are found in your
property.
Certainly on the way.
Not looking good here for Leroy.
So he is a suspect and he said his lawyer told police that he's available if police want to arrest him talk to him
Do whatever here he is. He's not going anywhere. So that's his attorney Irvin box. This is attorney attorney
So box said he denies being involved in the death of his ex-wife if she is in fact dead
Even though they've well, if not not she's minus four teeth so he doesn't know
if she's dead or alive he doesn't have any knowledge about that but he said that he also
has no knowledge of why burned human bones would be on his ranch he said I don't fucking
know I didn't see anything so they go ahead and arrest Leroy here they're gonna go ahead
and take him in once the bones are found.
It's so weird because the other guy looks so guilty.
He looks so guilty.
Super guilty.
This guy's bones are here, so it's really, it's not good.
And he jerks off to weird shit.
And he jerks off to exactly what that would be.
A found, burned woman.
I mean, that's...
It's interesting.
That's interesting.
So, you can take what people jerk off to and you might be able to.
I don't want to kink shame, but it certainly happens.
No, no, no, no.
Unless you kill somebody, then it's all on the table at that point.
If you don't hurt anybody and you just like to jerk off to people tied up, good for you.
But if we find a tied up dead person in your house, that shit means something.
Now we're going to talk about it.
Yeah.
Tied up, burned dead person, even worse though.
Even fucking worse.
So the day he's arrested, the children were picked up
at school and placed in the care of the State Department
of Human Services, and the lawyer said that Leroy
will contest the taking of his children as well.
He said the children should be staying with family,
if not me, if I'm not out, this is ridiculous.
So as soon as they get to a juvenile facility where they have all these three kids, Tad
makes an escape.
He fucking takes off.
Tad ain't having it.
Tad is 12 and he ain't having it.
I don't know if he's late for a wrestling match or some shit, but he is fucking gone
and they don't find him till the next day.
Wow, he got away far.
Like 24 hours of running away.
Good for you, Tad.
Run, Tad, run. Like 24 hours of running away for good for you to add run So the kids are then at a juvenile court hearing a judge gave the maternal great-aunt Mary Bloomer
Temporary custody pending the outcome of the criminal proceedings against Leroy because if he's found innocent they'll give him back to him
Obviously, I mean OJ got his kids given back to him when he found no not guilty
Which is crazy. That's think about that
So they're wondering how the fuck did he do it?
How did he do it?
They were never, they're not able to figure out
how she died, but they think they know what happened.
This is the police narrative,
because you have to have some kind of narrative
to arrest somebody.
Fascinating theories though.
They said they believe Leroy snuck into the house,
into Janet's house that night and quietly abducted her
How the fuck do you quietly abduct your ex-wife?
If she even saw him on the property there be yelling like there's no way that three kids are gonna sleep through that
That'd be so hard to quietly abduct her
Unless they have like ether or something. I don't know how you would quietly abduct your ex-wife.
And it's not as, it's not as weekend to have the kid so he's got no reason to be in the
house till he does the dad in the home weekend thing. That's weird.
But it's not as weekend.
It's not as weekend. So it makes no sense. And I don't know how he would quietly, I just
don't know how you would do. Especially she's not a small woman. Five, seven, 160 pounds
is a formidable sized person
It's a just pick up and take them away quietly. You know what I mean? She weighed at eight ninety seven pounds
I'd say oh, maybe wrapped her up, but you know this this doesn't he's not a gigantic guy
So it doesn't make sense, but they say that he took her then to a house that he owned nearby. This is their theory
quietly abducted her
Took her to a holding ground not to ceiling took her to a holding ground, not to Selig, took her to a holding
area where he has nearby, okay, left her there, then went back to her house, left his car
there at her house, drove her car to the airport, abandoned it, then got a taxi back to Janet's
house to get his car to go pick her up at the holding area and take her
To see a leg ceiling to burn and kill her
So he restrained her solid enough to be able to leave the house
Plenty of trust that she'll be there when he gets back
Total and we know and by the way neither that house nor her house have any signs of struggle blood clean up
I mean if there's bones you got to get a lot to get to those Nor her house have any signs of struggle, blood, clean up.
I mean if there's bones, you gotta get through a lot
to get to those.
So there'd be blood somewhere, right?
Somewhere, I mean if he killed her in the house,
that'd be the only way, otherwise he'd have to somehow
incapacitate her completely to where neighbors
wouldn't hear her scream in Oklahoma City.
It's not like it's the ranch where no one's there.
And when there's nothing happening there,
that shit is dead ass quiet.
Dead, it's fucking dead quiet always.
I've never seen a town that looks abandoned before.
Outside of Cleveland, it looked abandoned.
Cleveland is abandoned, that's why.
That's the difference.
There's boards on windows in Cleveland.
This is Cleveland minus boards.
We were on a street with just a hotel.
In Cleveland we were on a street with just a hotel. In Cleveland, we were on a street with just a hotel.
And like 18 husks of what used to be office buildings
that aren't anymore.
Yeah.
Cleveland passed.
Yeah, it's boarded up.
Oklahoma City, I'm walking down the street.
There's statues.
There's traffic signals going.
And nobody there.
Nobody.
Nobody there.
No reason for any of this shit to be here.
So strange.
So weird town.
So that's their theory.
He snuck in while the kids are sleeping, mind you.
Didn't wake them up, abducted her, dropped her off.
You wait for me while I go back, get your car,
take it to the airport, abandon it,
take a taxi all the way back to the house here,
and then come meet you, pick you up,
take you to the ranch, kill you, burn you.
That is a lot. Classic, lot. That's a lot. They said then he used his car to drive back to her other house where he retrieved Janet, who may still have been alive at this point,
and took her to his farm in Sealing where he killed her, likely with a blow to the back
of her head and then burned the body. That's what they think. Now,
You're gonna present that in court?
That's what's crazy. We'll talk about it, but there's the forensic anthropologist guy who's gonna piece the skull together
and say that he thinks he found the cause of death.
Which makes this story make no sense.
That's the problem.
If they thought she was strangled to death or suffocated to death,
Then we could see it. If they thought she was strangled to death or suffocated to death, since her soft kill, yeah.
Then we could see it. Then I could, me personally,
I could see it because then he could have killed her in the house.
Originally he could have killed her in the car.
He could have killed her in his other house.
He could have killed her in any of those three locations and it would still make
sense. But if you've strangled someone to death,
you then don't have to bash their skull in before you burn them.
It doesn't make any sense. So that makes no,
she was alive till she got to the ranch.
Unless he bashed her head in any location
and then drove a leaking body.
Because if you collapse a skull, the skin's gotten abrasion.
There's blood somewhere.
It's everywhere.
And there's no blood in any of the places where,
if that happened, there would have been blood
or signs of a cleanup of blood.
Something.
There's none of that shit.
Anything.
So it's very odd here.
So the reaction here from Tad, Tad is blown away by, he's 12.
So he's like a, you know, 12, you're, you know, you're not a dumb idiot kid.
You're, you know what the results are doing.
Yeah, no shit.
He said, Tad said, it was unimaginable.
It was hard to realize that my dad had been charged
with my mom's murder because I loved my dad
and in my mind at that point,
I did not think that that was possible.
But in actuality, it was reality.
And you start to realize that she's never coming home.
Yeah, at that point, he was still hoping
mom would just come home one day.
At 12, you don't know. Maybe mom had something to do.
I don't know what adults are doing.
So he then said that he remembers being at his father's ranch and he and his brother
playing with those bones.
No!
Playing with his mother's burned bones.
No! No Playing with his mother's burned bones. No
He said that his dad claimed they belonged to a possum
Yeah, I'd rather see a video of my mom getting plowed no what you can't play with your mom's oh my god I told Jimmy and he just he had like a I'm broken paws for
He just had like a I'm broken paws for fucking three seconds. I can't imagine.
Oh, we got the poor kid.
He said he claimed they belonged to a possum and they said ultimately the bones were that
of her.
There was also some animal bones in there so maybe some of them were a possum.
He said, I don't think I'll get over finding it.
I don't think I'll ever get over it.
Finding out that that man took his kids out there and played with their mother's bones
Joe the investigator said that is just beyond fathomable to me
Truly now we have a quote to where he's like, yeah, we you know, we took him out there and you know, it's
It's fucking crazy
Imagine that he's like picking a piece up and drilling his brother with it like throwing it at him fucking calling him gay slurs
And shit, hey, what's up?
Touch it touch it. Go ahead put it on your tongue. Oh my god crazy. Yeah, I think that's a possum
Let's try to put them back together. So
Neighbors, Oklahoma City save neighbors say they're not buying it for a fucking second. Yeah, they have a totally different view of him
No, they said that he's a devoted father and a good neighbor and
It's different one of the neighbors said in my opinion. He was much more of a parent than Janet Dennis was
They said yeah
This was a woman who said this as well a woman neighbor based her opinion on her observations of
who said this as well. A woman neighbor based her opinion on her observations of both of them having outings with the kids. And she said he was a better fucking parent than she
was. She said he was, he was not real outgoing and he was a little strange, but strangest
strangeness doesn't make a murder. She's you're allowed to be strange. Yeah. His neighbors
in ceiling though portrayed him as different once. one asshole. Yeah. Well one said but they think the divorce might have pushed him over the edge
This guy this is fucking hilarious. This man asked to not be identified for a reason obviously
He's one of his wife to know that he fucking hates her
He said quote I ain't saying it's right or wrong, which is number one
He said quote, I ain't saying it's right or wrong, which is number one. Yes, you are.
I ain't saying it's right or wrong right away.
It's like Vince McMahon in that documentary going, I mean, even if it was rape, the statute
of limitations was over.
So ha part is that's not what you take.
Take two motherfucker.
Yeah, take two.
That's not what you meant to say.
Don't say that.
Don't say that.
So he said, I ain't saying it's right or wrong, but I could see it could drive a man to that.
My wife took half my ranch, I'mma off that bitch.
And then he said, no, don't put my name next to that shit, that's crazy.
What's your name, sir?
None of your goddamn business.
Guy who doesn't want to be in court someday with this shit getting pushed back at him.
So ceiling residents who asked not to be identified said they feared retribution from Dennis.
Oh.
And this guy fears from his wife probably too.
The prosecutors are speculating on an ongoing battle over the custody of the children and
all that.
Other ceiling residents who live near the ranch characterized Dennis as a man who,
and this quote says a lot.
You got people, a lot of people in this town who don't own a 1500 acre ranch.
And they think of these people as like, oh, the rich boy, you can get away with anything.
They said they thought, quote, he was above the law because he was a hometown boy and
like made it real like stinking.
So another neighbor believes that he believed if Dennis had been processed, Leroy had been
prosecuted for all the suspected thefts that had were investigated by the sheriff's department,
quote, this slaying might not have happened. How? How would
that stop him from killing his what he be in prison forever for stealing fencing?
I don't think so. If we got him for all the barbed wire then he would never get it.
I would have been over with. Even though there's consequences for his actions.
Yeah and then he would have said oh I shouldn't kill her. I went to jail for just
stealing fucking horse shoes or hooves or whatever the fuck they are
So how did he make the fire that hot?
Yeah, how do you make a fire that cuz we've seen
We've seen a lot of people try to burn people or it does not work out very well. It's very hard to not just fire
Yeah, it's not just the size of the fire
It's the it's the heat that has to be in there. And it has to be for a long period of time sustained.
So an investigator with the Oklahoma City Fire Marshal's office said that burning piles
of cedar could produce sufficient heat to burn human bones to the degree these bones
were found, but it would require more than one burning.
He said, you could do it, but you have to do it a few times.
He also said that if an accelerant was used in the burning, the smoke produced would have
been black smoke, which is what that neighbor said they saw.
We don't know what date.
Then he also noted though that they found no evidence of accelerants near the burn piles
or around or anywhere having to do with the burn piles.
So yeah, you would have to.
So they said, that's interesting.
He also said that the absence of such evidence does not completely indicate that no accelerants
had been used because the dissipation factor of the fuel and length of time that had passed
before the area was tested could affect that.
I feel like you find traces of gas probably. Gasoline sticks. Kerosene or
something. Sticks around, yeah. So the judge now is trying to decide where to place the
kids permanently here because this is going to be a long, we're in for a long siege with
this trial here. So they said that they're going to review the home environment and background
of two maternal great aunts and a paternal aunt who said they
would be willing to care for the children. So there's a lot of three people in this family
who will take them. So they have to figure out who's the best one to take them here.
His attorney, Leroy's attorney, Irvin Bach said, the kids are all in tears. The children
are traumatized. They're hurting very much. They were snatched out of school by the police
and are aware of the investigation. Well, no shit. Dad's in jail and it's in every newspaper that your mom's bones are found
in his yard. That's not good.
And all three of them are old enough to have conversations and they understand mommy's
not coming home. Those words are real easy to understand.
And Tad especially knows not only is mommy not coming home, I played with mommy's bones.
He said this, this is his quote about this,
and this is what he'll say in court later, quote,
he showed us some bones,
but he said they were animal bones.
He said he killed a possum and burned it out there.
We saw the bones lying on the ground,
and me and my brother threw them at each other.
They did?
They did, yep.
Oh my God. That's why when I was saying that,
I was like, oh no, that quote's coming up.
Shit.
The Oklahoma district attorney here,
Oklahoma County District Attorney Robert Macy said
he was disgusted by hearing that from the child.
No kidding.
He said that it was quote,
the ultimate act of vengeance against her.
It's almost beyond my comprehension
that a man would do this to his own children.
Well, we've heard worse, so.
It shouldn't be beyond your comprehension.
You're a prosecutor.
If we've heard worse, you've heard way worse, I hope.
I don't think that's near as scarring as raping them, and I'm sure you've heard of children
being raped, sir.
And then killed.
Yeah, right.
That happens all the time.
Way worse.
The two big ones.
Then he has, if first degree murder wasn't a big enough problem for him legally, he gets
another very large legal problem looming here.
What is this? That is, okay. for him legally, he gets another very large legal problem looming here.
That is, okay, he admits in court to mismanaging $452,430.21 that belonged to an elderly woman
he's known since childhood and was supposed to be helping with her money.
What did he do with that?
This is again 1990 fucking 400.
It's like a million dollars.
More than that it's like two million, three million dollars now.
It's crazy.
So probably about three, two and a half maybe.
Anyway, he agreed in court in Oklahoma County District Court civil action to return $425,430.21 in certificates and deposits.
I think I transposed those.
I think it was the 452.
And I wrote it down wrong.
US savings bonds, certificates of deposit, US savings bonds, and money from a checking
account that belonged to this elderly lady, Amber Dewar, D-U-E-R. She's in her 80s, she was born in like 1910
and her name is Amber, I've never heard that before.
That's the first one probably.
I thought, I would say, you had to be,
that's like, It's gotta be the first Amber, right?
Amber is at the same time as Crystal was being born,
like 1981, right?
Amber, Crystal, Jennifer, all of those are being born.
I guess Amber was named after the color, right?
I would think so.
The first one?
I guess, Amber waves of grain, I mean.
Yeah, right, right.
The ones later were certainly named after, I don't know,
a very kindly girl.
Someone who gives great blowjobs, maybe,
because I remember this one, gal.
Oh boy, I'm gonna name my first born daughter after her.
But the first one was named after like the color of a light
at the top of a fuckin' pole for a seaship.
Yeah, or honey, or, cause honey is that's,
Oh honey's amber also, yeah.
Yeah, so there's a lot of amber shit.
Also they say beer is amber.
Yeah, amber box, sure.
So there's a lot of different Amber connotations here.
So her attorney, Amber Dewar's attorney, Kenneth Turner, said that I, well that's a weird,
I think I know a guy by that name, which is interesting. Kenneth Turner? Yeah, said that
that Leroy had been given power of attorney to administer the 83 year old woman's personal finances.
You scumbag.
Wow.
When Dennis was arrested, then this Turner guy was hired to provide an accounting of
her money.
Certificates of deposit originally in Amber's name had been changed, listing Dennis's three
children and mother as beneficiaries now.
And with Dennis as a trustee, with Leroy as a trustee.
Wow, this guy, this lawyer said on the face, it doesn't look too good.
It's obvious to me that it is her money and he didn't deny that either.
So on August 30th or August 3rd, 1990, that's eight days after his divorce is final by the way a check for
65,379 dollars and 26 cents made payable to amber dur from the first national bank in sealing
Was endorsed by Dennis a copy of the return check shows that same day
Dennis went to Oklahoma City where he bought a
$65,000 Certificate of deposit in his son's Todd's
and his son Todd's name.
Why did he do that?
To launder $65,000 out of this lady's account.
The certificate deposit, the deposit listed Leroy Dennis as the trustee.
And this lawyer says that's a pretty strange coincidence.
Don't you think?
65 grand same day?
Come on. lawyer says that's a pretty strange coincidence don't you think 65 grand same day come on
the attorney Irvin box here that's as we know Leroy's attorney he said quote he sure
meaning he Leroy sure had a funny way of holding it in her best interest interest the arrangement
he had with Amber door is different from anything else I've seen in the past this is weird why
would you just get he's not a financial guy? No, he knows first aid and fences. That's what he knows fencing and first aid anything outside of that. I
Don't know what this guy grass instead of crop
Yeah
so
door inherited half of this or
193 thousand seven hundred fifteen dollars of her late sister's estate. The sister, Mabel Gerard, 86, died in March of 88.
The remainder was put into a trust fund
for Dore's medical needs, in case she needs some shit.
So Gerard's will specified that Dennis,
that Leroy Dennis be named trustee.
That's how he became the trustee.
An 86-year-old woman had it in her will
that he's gonna be the trustee of this 86 year old woman had in her will that he's going to be the
trustee of this to handle this for her sister. Dure's stepson, Darrell Dure and Gerard, that's
the other one there, had appointed Dennis to manage her finances. While the attorneys
were negotiating a settlement in the civil case, Oklahoma police detectives now Oklahoma City detectives began probing into a $33,800 in
interest checks derived from $407,000 Leroy and Janice Dennis Janet Dennis the two of
them as a couple once had as certificates of deposit in their bank account.
So she was in on this shit by the way.
Yeah no kidding.
She knew exactly what the fuck was going on here not to speak ill of the dead here, but they were both stealing from an old lady.
That's how she got what she got out of this divorce was because she was like, I'll blow
up this whole thing. Exactly. And he wasn't hiding it from her because he put it in their
joint bank account. So we know he wasn't hiding it from her. She had to have known. Then that
bank account. Okay. Police detectives believe Leroy designated that the interest checks be placed in trust
funds for his children in an attempt to, quote, hide the money.
The checks were never deposited, the detectives say.
So Oklahoma City homicide detective John Maddux said the children's grandfather, Arthur Olson,
remember him?
You're right.
Who doesn't like Leroy.
Not a fan.
Was listed as a trustee on those funds. Oh, what the shit? I don't like Leroy. Was listed as a trustee on those funds.
Oh what the shit. I don't like Leroy. He's a bad guy. Don't listen to anything Leroy
says. It's all a lie. Yep. Olsen, Arthur there, the dad, told police he'd never endorse
any of the 116 checks cashed in banks throughout the state beginning in March 1989. Leroy Dennis's
name has surfaced as a possible suspect in the apparent forgeries.
Yeah, this is I think a couple living above their means together with three kids trying
to have some fun.
The interest checks began in March 1989 as the couple appealed a U.S. bankruptcy court
judgment that ordered them to return the money.
As a couple.
The Dennis couple returned the $407,000 because the Western savings and loan already had been placed in
receivership. In April 1987, three months before the couple was ordered to repay the
money, records show they bought the house in Oklahoma City. They paid the realtor, Daryl
Doerr, people they know, $105,000 in cash for the home. They paid fucking cash back
then for a house.
Is he related to Amber and is he paying that man, whatever this lady is to him, money?
Yeah, he's using him as a real estate agent.
So police said at the time the family was living primarily on Janet Dennis' salary
as a school nurse.
They couldn't afford to buy a $105,000 cash house.
Sure.
Absolutely not.
So they're finding that this whole thing was getting shady
and maybe everyone was keeping some secrets here.
So do they have the evidence is the problem.
Oklahoma County District Attorney Robert Macy
has likened the case to another Oklahoma County murder
in which the prosecutors accused Gary Lee Rawlings of
Killing his wife and dumping her body from an airplane into the Gulf of Mexico
That sounds awesome. We're doing a patreon about that before except Scarface
Gary Lee Rawlings is getting a patreon episode at some point that
Unbelievable, it's fucking wild. So no
corpse was ever found because it was probably eaten by sharks in the Gulf of Mexico. But
they found out when they looked at the flight manifest. Yeah. Oh, you're a little light
on the way back. But a jury convicted Rawlings of the murder, even though they never found
the body. He was sentenced to life in prison over that They said like the Rawlings murder the case against Leroy Dennis is all circumstantial evidence
As according to urban box here got a body
Yeah, urban box pointed to the first the fact that Janet Dennis's car was found parked at Will Rogers Airport
But detectives say there are no records to show Janet Dennis boarded a flight out of Oklahoma City the night
She disappeared airport records show her car was parked for five There are no records to show Janet Dennis boarded a flight out of Oklahoma City the night she disappeared.
Airport records show her car was parked for 51.2 hours.
Oh, I'm sorry, parked 51.2 hours before a flight was scheduled to leave Oklahoma City.
Okay.
So they're saying it was parked before a flight was scheduled to leave five and a half hours
before any flight was scheduled to leave Oklahoma City. The car showed up in the middle of the night.
Midnight, yeah. And no flights were taken off until six in the morning. So yeah, they
said it took, this is Irving Box, the defense attorney, if he took the car out of there,
how did he get back to her house to get this vehicle and transport the body to ceiling?
It's a great question, but look, anything's possible.
Anything's possible. They also are perplexed look yeah anything's possible. Anything's
possible they also are perplexed about where she was killed they said
prosecutors believe she was abducted and killed far from the house but they have
no idea they don't even have a theory as to where even prosecutors admit they may
never know the exact location where she was killed how she was killed or
anything like that. They said there was fucked This is fucked. It's way fucked.
They said there's no sign of blood or struggle
in any of the homes, in any of the places.
They said, Irving Box, the defense attorney said,
he knows of no evidence to show
Janet Dennis was forced to leave the house.
They said, all they can show is she lived in Oklahoma County
and her body ended up in Dewey County.
It's pretty reasonable to assume
some crime was committed in Dewey County. So he said it should be in Dewey County, not in Oklahoma County. It's where we should
try this.
Well, I mean, at minimum, the desecration of a human corpse happened in Dewey County.
Yeah. Well, they're saying there's no blood, there's no proof anywhere else that they killed
her, that he killed her there, so it must be here. Their own theory is that he crushed
her skull. Well, where the fuck did that happen? You gotta, you know.
Yeah, and this is months later we find the body
and blood can go away outdoors pretty easily.
Oh yeah, rain, all that shit.
He said, the defense attorney said,
I haven't seen anything that shows my client did it.
Now there are bones in his yard.
So that's, I don't have anybody's bones in my yard.
You know what I mean?
Well, I have deer bones out there.
I'm sure with my ex wife's bones are nowhere near my yard.
They're still in her body because she's still alive.
But I still got all of them.
And she's got every one of them.
So yeah, I didn't, didn't say I was in favor of it, but no, I'm kidding.
She's fine.
Police are centering their case around the fact
that the woman's bones were discovered on the property,
and the homicide detective said, that's one thing
that Leroy can't get around, is that the bones
are on his property.
Prosecutors said the case may be prosecuted in the county
where the abduction that led to the killing may have occurred.
Now, the defense, though, files a request
to change the venue in the case. A judge is going to decide where the fuck it's going to be.
The prosecutor said, we have adequate evidence to proceed and we believe venue lies in Oklahoma
County.
But they said no.
The defense attorney said, not only do I disagree with that, I'd also like you to set a bond
for my client so he can assist in his defense so he can get out of jail.
They said over the last month though,
the investigators have found more than 5,000 bone fragments
in four separate burn piles at the ranch.
When they went through it with a real pair of tweezers,
that's what they're finding.
The forensic experts in Oklahoma City
have pieced them together in the shape of a skeleton.
They made a puzzle out of this.
That's a terrible puzzle, terrible puzzle. They made a puzzle out of this.
That's a terrible puzzle.
Terrible puzzle.
Yeah.
The investigator who did this said, this is a jigsaw puzzle.
No shit.
No kidding.
The under-sheriff Jerry Jones said he searched through pastures and up and down valleys on
Dennis' property for two months looking for evidence before finding the first pile
of bones.
He said, I got lucky, I guess.
The last spot to be checked was near the house. The bones were found about a quarter mile southeast of the
house where he lives. Um, another question that's still unanswered is the cause of death.
Cause the juries like to hear a story. Yeah. They like to hear at least how the person died.
At least like it, but they, they that. They don't necessarily like it,
but they are in favor of getting one
because it helps tremendously.
It helps complete the picture.
You know what I mean?
If you're saying,
because all the time prosecutors say it's like a puzzle.
If you have a few missing pieces of the puzzle,
you still see what the picture is.
It's the old, every prosecutor says that,
but you know, at some point it's too much.
It's also very frustrating when you have all the pieces except a couple.
Yeah.
That sucks.
You have like the, this case has all the border pieces, but nothing in the middle that shows
what the picture actually is.
It's just the border of it.
It's all they have.
So they said, that's interesting.
Examiners have found a wound in the woman's arm and an indentation in the back of the
skull, but are unsure what caused the injuries.
And the one, the investigator said, we may never be able to prove the true cause of death.
Now while they searched the ceiling ranch, they found, this doesn't matter, but 16 rifles,
several dozen arrows and 11 bows.
It's a 1500 acre ranch.
You're going to have all those things on there.
Everyone would.
So they said while a lot of these questions appear unanswered investigators are able to conclude that blood found inside
The garage of Dennis ceilings ranch house was animal blood
Dammit, so that's not gonna help at all. Yeah, they found blood and they were like, ah, finally
This is where he did it fuck. They They said, there are probably, this is the defense attorney,
there are probably more unknowns at this stage
than any other case I've ever had.
I would agree with you.
This is 535 for us and this is crazy.
I don't like this at all.
He said, the unknowns will hurt us.
There's no way of defending the unknowns, which is true.
The unknowns could become a positive for the prosecutor because you can just
paint all of these pictures of how it could have happened. So anyway, he says
he has an alibi for this time. He was getting grain and hanging out with his
mom. His mom says that her son was with her at the ranch that night. And she
said that he was there till the next morning
when his son Tad called to inform him of the disappearance.
And the mom says, I don't think he's done anything.
I don't know how he could if he was here with me.
It's been a mystery to me.
We'll probably never know,
and he'll probably have to suffer for it.
She is a fatalistic old lady, man.
No kidding.
He believes that Janet Dennis went to a bar on December 7th and quote met up with some foul play
So she says that the kids went to sleep and Janet said I'm gonna go get me a couple of drinks
Went out and found somebody who did this horrible thing to her and then knew to burn her bones and place them at her ex-husband's house
Which is a stretch.
She said also that she never saw any fires on her ranch property.
I don't think she's that with it at this point.
Seems like that's why she stays with her son.
Yes, exactly.
Police said at least four piles of brush were burned on the property about the time of the
disappearance and she said, we never seen no fire, built no fire.
So I don't know what the fuck you're talking about.
Neighbors said, we saw all sorts of fires all the time.
Fires all the time.
Yeah, wow.
They said that while they were searching the house,
Leroy's mom, Maysell, quilted and puttered
around the kitchen.
She just kept making her quilt as they
were searching the house, which is fucking hilarious.
She said, I didn't even know those bones were down there or even down there.
I think someone planted them there to make him look bad.
Four piles, ma.
Four piles here.
Yep.
So the, again, to the, the defense here, the defense attorney is saying, what about Umbenhauer?
What about that guy?
He could have easily killed her.
He knows where this ranch is. He knows about everything.
He could have easily killed her done his weird fantasy shit jerked off all over
the place and then fucking dump the bones out here. We don't know.
He had two months to do it. He was searching places that he shouldn't have been in.
So the prosecutor said though that yes,
the man was in Oklahoma City that night. True.
He was in the place, but he passed a lie detector test.
So you know, it's okay.
And then he said he's, he's currently on military duty in Saudi Arabia.
And they said, we're trying to identify anybody who might have been involved in the crime.
But right now we have no evidence to indicate there was a second party.
He was in Oklahoma City the night of the killing though
I don't know where the fuck where he is now has to do with what do you?
If you get subpoenaed in a murder trial, I assume that they'll let you go off-duty for that. That seems important
I'll bet the military will fly you back. I would hope so. You know what I mean? Lee right now wants the charges dropped
He said this is I do got dropped these charges. This is fucking ridiculous
He say he asked a federal judge to diss or not a federal judge, a regular judge to dismiss
a first degree murder charge because the medical examiner has not determined to even a cause
of death.
Yeah. You can't call something murder if you don't even have murder on the tip.
She could have tripped, hit her head and fell into a fire for all you know, you have no
fucking idea. So the attorney for Leroy said pathologists have not connected a skull fracture found
in the examination of the remains to any trauma that caused her death.
He said he's going to argue that an opinion issued in May in another murder case requires
a prosecutor to produce an exact cause of death.
He said precedent had been set just a few months ago and we're going to talk about it.
He says, I feel we have something for the judge to look at the medical examiner didn't have any conclusive results
Now the assistant district attorney Fern Smith. She sounds like a partier old Fern Smith. I bet she is too. Just a
She's on the table swinging her shirt over her head after fucking a shot and a half or she's just so much of a party
She just sits and drinks gin and that's still fun
That's still her thing still a party that way
So she said she fears that a dismissal of the charge would send a message that anyone can get away with murder if they destroy
the body
No, it sends a message that you got to figure more shit out
Yeah, you gotta get your shit together more and have you can't just charge people with murder willy-nilly
It's like oh we have to be able to charge them with murder without having all the evidence we have to be it without that
What do we do?
so the previous case they're gonna ask about concerned a
Deal here by a defendant named Robert Paul Thornburg to the murder of eight-year-old
George Seton Arthborough Thornburg, so his son, described
in detail how he killed the Oklahoma City boy.
The medical examiner was unable to determine the cause of death.
The court reversed his conviction.
He was convicted of it and they reversed it later saying they never had a cause of death.
So that's the precedent now that we're talking about.
So the defense attorney contends that the evidence in this case doesn't prove the
woman's death was even a criminal act. You know, he can't even prove she died on purpose.
He's not wrong.
He's not. I mean, you want to get improper disposal of remains, it'd be hard to deal
with. I mean, other than that. So the judge also wants and the defense attorney wants
bail. He's trying to get bail for his client. He said the lengthy separation from his kids
is ridiculous. He said, being separation from his kids is ridiculous.
He said being away from them has been traumatic.
I took them to jail to visit him recently
and they cried, he cried, and I cried.
Can you imagine?
I don't want my attorney crying.
You need to be harder than this.
You need to be hardcore.
You need to not have a soul, man.
Yes, exactly.
That's exactly what I need.
I need you to, your eyes to be cold black like the devil
I need you to call us pussies for this. Yep. Get it together you bunch of pussies
I'm trying to get you out of prison pussy. That's what I want to hear. Oh, sorry. Yeah sniffle and wipe my eyes
So as far as moving as changing the venue here the the judge told district
I'm sorry the district attorney told the judge they have, or I'm sorry, the district attorney told the
judge they have absolutely no evidence to show where the injury was inflicted. There
is not one scintilla of evidence that Janet Dennis was kidnapped or harmed in Oklahoma
County. That's I'm sorry. The defense attorney said that he's trying to move it to Dewey
County based on the discovery of the bone fragments. He believes Leroy would get a fairer
trial in the sticks, which is hilarious because even
if they didn't know who he was, you don't want your trial in the sticks.
The reason why Ted Bundy ran away from the Aspen fucking jail there, not to jump out
the window but through the ceiling, was because he asked for a change of venue.
The judge gave him one to Colorado
Springs, which is basically an automatic fucking death penalty rubber stamp. Right. Right.
They just rubber stamp everything. Yep. Yep. Guilty death penalty. Whereas in the city,
you at least have a chance that people might, if you think who just think who, who probably
has more of an open mind and not saying good, bad, anything. Who do you think is more open-minded? It's probably not people in a 900-person fucking town.
Yeah.
You're not wrong.
Yeah.
Just my, you know, whatever.
You think it's in mobile?
Yeah.
Oh, shit.
So the attorney said, jurors in western Oklahoma take a longer look at the evidence.
They're not so indoctrinated to big city crime.
It's the opposite. They're shocked by indoctrinated to big city crime. It's the opposite. They're
shocked by crime. So they fucking convict everybody. That's the in the city. People
go, this happens all the time. They're not blown away by it. I've heard of this. He said,
I've seen it. Yeah, this isn't whatever he said. They look at, they look hard at the
things and are not ready to convict just cause Bob Macy charges someone. That's the thing. It's an interesting way to look at it. Indoctrinated versus, that's not the word.
It's just experienced, man.
It's not indoctrinated.
And I happen to think what he's trying to do,
in my opinion, he wants Macy,
the Oklahoma City prosecutor,
to have to prosecute the case in the sticks
so he can say, these city people coming out here
and accusing us fine country folk is shit.
That's what I feel like he's trying to pull,
the defense attorney.
That's what it seems like.
So Oklahoma City homicide detective Ken Wilkie,
he said during this hearing that police have obtained
evidence placing Leroy Dennis at his ex-wife's house
two to three days before she disappeared.
Which is, in other words, we don't have any evidence
is what that says to me.
Two to, you were there three days before a murder,
that doesn't mean shit.
I'm sure I've been somewhere three days
before a murder happened there, you know what I mean?
My brother, my ex-brother, though,
was on top of the World Trade Center
on September 10th, James.
Oh, God, Oh, God.
Yeah, terrible.
What a terrorist piece of shit he is.
Well, I'm telling you.
This cop told the judge that he found out the couple had an argument that sent her son
running into his room.
Again, not abnormal for ex-people to argue and having the kids not want to hear it anymore.
Divorce people, yeah.
That happens.
When questioned by the defense attorney, the cop on the stand admitted that police have
no direct evidence that shows he abducted or killed his wife in Oklahoma County.
He said, you're saying all this.
What's your direct evidence?
He goes, oh, we don't have any at all.
But this is all some good speculation.
He also said that they have her car.
They just talked about her car being found, but
these prosecutors contends the circumstantial evidence is huge in this case and sufficient.
He cites the argument between the Dennis's the day before their death and the last sighting
of Janet Dennis, which was in Oklahoma County.
So it should stay in Oklahoma County.
He said, if you examine the relationship between the two of them, you can see where she would
not have voluntarily
left her house.
It only takes common sense and logic to determine
where the homicide occurred.
Okay, but your common sense and logic also says that
if to get her to leave, you're saying he took her
because there's no crime scene there.
But you're also saying that he had to have killed her there
because that's when we can prosecute it
But even though there's no evidence of that even though my contention is he killed her with a blow to the skull that would have certainly
Spent a lot of blood flying everywhere
But I'm also saying that he kidnapped her here and took her even though I said she wouldn't leave voluntarily and he'd had to incapacitate
It makes a lot of things
There's the logic of the prosecution as a juror.
I'd have a hard time with because I'm you have to tell me you think a B and C happen.
You can't tell me I think a happened and B happened.
But if C happened, then a couldn't have happened like and then have me just pick one.
That's not how it's working shit.
Yeah.
A judge ruled that the murder case against him against against Leroy, should be prosecuted in
Oklahoma County.
So he's going to be in Oklahoma City, although the police admit they have no evidence and
they don't know that that's where the crime was committed.
In the ruling, he said, there is sufficient evidence to show both Dewey County and Oklahoma
County have jurisdiction.
And as far as I'm concerned, the case will stay in Oklahoma County.
That's that.
Trial comes up now.
Oh my God. Death penalty on the table. They're pushing for the death penalty. It's like wow.
Pushing for that here. They don't even know what happened and they're like we will put
a motherfucker to death for this. It's crazy. In the openings here, the prosecutor said that, you know, at that point he says that
she may have been burned alive, he tells the jury.
She has, they have no idea what happened to her.
They're telling the jury that it must have been the most brutal thing possible.
I'm sure he knocked her out and burned her alive, which is crazy.
So the prosecutor also told the jury that the dentist's children were allowed by Leroy
to play amongst their mother's bones in the burn piles,
which is all true and that should be in there.
Finally, Leroy, they said that Leroy complained
that the prosecutor improperly made references
to the odor of burning flesh.
He not only said he could have burned her alive,
he said, you know what, it smells like burning flesh.
He made like this whole fucking world he set up of flesh is burning and wow. The awful, by the
way, it's disgusting. I don't know what human flesh smells like burning, but it's fucking
gross. He says it takes a special kind of person who can stand and watch a human being
being burned, but it takes a more special man who can do that to the woman
who gave birth to his three children. Most men, that's probably the only person they
could do that to. You know what I mean? Would be your ex wife or something like that.
Yeah. When he said that about the, I don't know, man. I can't say.
Interesting way to see that. I don't think guys see it like that. Oh, that's the mother
of my children.
No. Once they're out, they're out and they have nothing to do with her. Interesting way to see that. I don't think guys see it like that. Oh, that's the mother of my children. No
Once they're out they're out and they have nothing to do with her horrible things Yeah, I could see her on fire and not feel a goddamn thing about it
I don't see a kid halfway in her vagina right now. So fuck hers what people think my kids are clear these flames. They're fine
Shit
He then said that Leroy Dennis caved in Janet's head.
We don't know if he burned her alive or not.
He doesn't know if they caved her head in either.
That's the other thing.
They don't know.
So they bring in Clyde Snow, the anthropologist, and he's a nationally recognized anthropologist.
He's a known cat here.
He testified that he reconstructed Janet Dennis' remains from bones found in a mound of ashes located on the ranch
He held before the jury a charred skull. That's
Interesting prop here or whatever piece of evidence
He showed the jurors an indentation in the center back portion of the skull where a blow apparently had been struck before the woman died
Or could be the cause of death.
He testified that he found signs of bleeding.
He said that it indicated that she had been struck before she was burned.
So although the skull had been burned twice, the spot where the blow was struck did not
burn indicating she'd been hit hard enough to bleed severely before her body was burned. So again, how did he get her out of the house without leaving any trace of evidence?
You know, lead a woman out to a 1,500 acre farm where she knows what's gonna happen.
That's what I mean. Like what, how did this happen exactly? So they said though,
they still haven't been able to establish it as a cause of death. Then Tad testifies about the bones. They said he's 13 years old and
sobbing in court about this which I can't don't blame this poor poor poor
fucking Tad and all of them. Tad, Todd, Julie, oh this is horrible for them. Your
mother's gone and your dad is here. This is terrible. He said he was helping his
brother look on their family farm for animal bones for a show and tell project. And he taught they tossed
bones which they later learned where their mother's remains. He said he took Todd and
Julie to the ranch two days after their mother disappeared. They said Leroy took them home.
He stayed the weekend at the house and then went back to the ranch on Monday. He said that Leroy had told the
boys that he killed a possum and burned it on the property. Tad, while on the stand,
begins crying again during his appearance when he identified a photograph of his mother
wearing her favorite necklace. And so he cries, any kid would, and he said she wore it all the time.
And so he cries any kid would and he said she wore it all the time
Police say parts of that chain were found at the burn site
He said we threw some on some of the bone and he said on the on the stand We threw some of the bones around playing with them. They were pretty much laying on top of the ashes
He also told the judge that Leroy admitted burning the bones but claimed they were possum bones
the judge that Leroy admitted burning the bones but claimed they were possum bones.
When asked after the day of court, they talked to Irving Box here, the attorney for Leroy, about how'd today go, he said the boy's testimony was not a positive thing for us.
No, it wasn't. That's all of it right there. That's the whole case. Without the kids playing
with the bones, you got no fucking case here whatsoever. So the surprise, now this prosecution brings out
what the defense are calling a surprise witness. Okay. This is a young lady, Denise Lynn Thomas,
who's 16 years old. And she said that she saw Leroy Dennis poking through a toolbox at the back of his pickup
truck from about 3 p.m. on December 7, 1990, and the truck was parked outside the house
of the ex-wife.
And the teenager testified she saw the truck three times that day parked in the same driveway.
So come and go.
She said that Leroy was wearing wearing a tan one-piece overall outfit
Strangest out figure gotta be coveralls and that she saw him take something out of his truck
She said she didn't see him again that day
But she noticed his truck parked at the house later that evening at 4 7 and 8 30 p.m
How did the kids not know their father's truck was outside in the driveway?
Yeah, all day long until 9 30 and we're doing Christmas decorations. So they're out there doing shit around windows. Oh dad's here
No one noticed. Yeah, right. That's a good point. They're decorating shit around the window. They're fucking crazy
Yeah, that's crazy an earlier witness testified that Leroy Dennis regularly stayed at the house when he was in Oklahoma City as a house sitter
quote-unquote
This she says she knows when it was because, quote,
I remember because I had a school musical
and that was the only rehearsal that required me
to leave the house that day.
And so they said that, he said,
she also said she never saw his face.
That's not good.
That's not a positive identification then.
No. But I saw his structure as he was getting into the truck. That's not good. That's not a positive identification then.
But I saw his structure as he was getting into the truck.
That's not a positive ID.
She said she's been his neighbor for at least six years before this.
The defense attorney tried to have the testimony suppressed, but the prosecutors said no and
the judge let him have it.
The prosecutor said, we've been aware of a witness, this girl, but we didn't know exactly
what she saw.
Her mother had been interviewed and she, the young lady, spoke up that she had seen him
in Oklahoma City.
The defense accused the prosecutors of blindsiding us with this testimony and the prosecutor
said they've known about it since January 14th, or I'm sorry, the defense said they've known about it since January 14th or I'm sorry the defense said they've known about it since January 14th for months and failed to give us proper
notice.
But here's someone that should completely wipe him out anyway.
A grain operator in Vichy or VC which is where he said he was buying grain, testifies in court under oath that he saw Leroy picking up a load of grain at about 2pm on December 8th, 1990.
Just like fucking he said he was.
Couldn't be at the house.
That apparently contradicted the 16-year-old girl's testimony because she saw him at 3pm at the residence.
This is 150 miles away.
Hmm.
So, not possible, is what that is.
You're not getting 150 miles in an hour.
Not happening.
So, and he'd have so much fucking grain.
She'd say, I just saw all this grain.
It was crazy.
He didn't have room for a toolbox in the back of the truck.
It was all grain.
It's all grain.
He had no tools.
It's just piles of grain.
So the defense here, even though the judge ordered Dennis held for trial, the defense
attorney said the prosecutors have showed no big surprises so far.
They said as a matter of fact, in the course of their case, we probably picked up more
ammunition for a defense than we expected.
Sure.
Which, I mean, one witness puts him there and that witness is completely washed away
It's crazy. So they say what about the boyfriend? That's the defense. How about jim? Yeah, how about jim?
They said that he was at the top of the list of suspects
What the fuck here? Um, and that's what the even the detective
Testified to that he was eliminated after as a suspect after police learned or didn't learn they were told
That he was at Fort Sill when Janet disappeared
During a cross-examination of this defective detective though
He admits that detectives were unable to interview his lieutenant who was the one responsible for his alibi
No, he's the one person could
Could solidify his alibi and they couldn't fucking, they were unable to interview him.
So in other words, you don't have an alibi then. Right. If the prosecutors in a murder trial couldn't get to you to get the book. All we've got is you saying you were somewhere else. Yep, another soldier, which he said so too.
Everybody's saying that. Another soldier identified as Pam Milton,
told detectives she couldn't remember
whether Jim was at Fort Still that night or not.
He has oogots of an alibi, this guy.
So Jim testifies and he said he didn't do anything wrong
and he testifies that he gave her a ring
shortly before she disappeared
and that he loved her and all that and all
of his lies come out and everything.
Now in closings, but they actually make it so a lot of those lies don't get brought
up in court.
So now in closings, the prosecution said Leroy Dennis did everything in his power to silence
Janet Dennis, but she managed to talk to you through the soft grandfatherly tones of Dr.
Clyde Snow.
She spoke loudly in this trial and what she said is Leroy Dennis is the man who killed
her.
Okay, prosecutors repeated Tide's tale about how his younger brother and him played with
the bones on the ranch, found out they were their mother, and he says the one thing that
just screams out is how he was able to walk right up to that bone pile.
This man is totally evil.
Evil.
Pretty fucked up.
That's way fucked up.
The district attorney here said that he was disgusted by what that child's testimony
revealed.
He said it was the ultimate act of vengeance upon her.
It's almost beyond my comprehension that a man would do that to his own children
He also urged the jurors in closing arguments to put him on death row as well
Not only do we need him to be convicted eats die
He said it takes a special kind of person who can stand and watch a human being burned
But it takes a more special man who can do that to the woman who gave birth to his three children
Also says the most damaging evidence against Leroy Dennis is that we found the body on
his farm along with the testimony of his children that he told them the bones belonged to a
possum.
We don't have to prove cause of death.
We've done that circumstantially.
Okay.
The defense in their closing asked the jurors to be skeptical of circumstantial evidence,
especially when it's a that's all there is.
Yeah. He said, and please consider Jim Umbenhauer as a suspect in the death, because he is,
if you look at, you know, loose ends, he's got just as many of them as our guys. So
if one gets death row and the other gets nothing, that's a little weird.
So the verdict comes in here. And before the verdict comes in here and before the verdict comes in as
the judge releases the jury to do deliberations he advises the jurors to
quote bring your toothbrushes in case you have to be sequestered once you begin
deliberations. So the jurors by the way took the charred bones into the jury
room to deliberate with them. Go ahead and take Janet with us here. So after
a relatively short deliberation, they find him guilty of first degree murder.
Unbelievable. Wow, that's wild. So yeah, reactions here.
The defense attorney said, well, we'll ask the jury not to take Leroy's life. That's
where we're at now. Yeah. That's all we got to do. The prosecutor
said, he wasn't surprised at the quickness of the verdict, which dude, yeah you were.
Shut the fuck up. You were blown away. He said, I called him a cold blooded murder.
I told him everything that he did. And, you know, of course they're going to find him
that because I'm that good. That's what he said. I'm a winner. Sentencing comes around.
Defense attorney said he vowed to fight like
hell to keep his client off death row. No, it doesn't want him. The one thing though
that makes a difference is not the attorney, Tad gets on the stand and he's crying. He
couldn't look more like a little kid who doesn't want to lose his parents. He comes in holding
a red baseball cap in his hands.
He's probably got an Oklahoma Sooners cap on. He takes it off to go to court and holds
it while he sobs. And he told the jurors that if they could please spare his father, please
don't kill my father. He said it would make life a lot easier for him, my brother and
my little sister and then sobbed uncontrollably. Yeah, how do you, I mean,
if you're a juror, Jesus Christ, man, that's brutal. I'm shocked. Who put him up to that?
The defense attorney. Yeah. And he wanted to do it. Yeah. So they said, do you want your dad to die?
And he said, no, get up there and tell them about it. Yeah. So the very call comes in verdict comes in you sir may fuck off life without parole
Life without not the death penalty
So there's a juror here named Richard Herndon who they talked to and he said we didn't want we decided we didn't want this man
Out on the streets again the enormity of the crime deserved the death penalty
But tad was the deciding factor they said they said that can tad convinced at least three jurors to vote against the death penalty, but Tad was the deciding factor, they said. They said that Tad convinced at least three jurors to vote against the death penalty.
The first vote was nine, three for the death penalty.
Really?
He said, but unable to persuade the three who were against the death penalty, the jurors
eventually were unanimous on their sentence because they were like, I'm not taking another
person away from that kid.
It wasn't, I feel bad for him. It was, I'm not taking more people away from that kid. It wasn't I feel bad for him,
it was I'm not taking more people from that kid.
How the fuck can you do that?
Very nice, yeah.
So they took three hours to reach this verdict
and this juror said that the other jurors
found the evidence overwhelming,
even though it was circumstantial,
there was no doubt that he was the only one
with a motive to kill her.
You're going on motive?
Motive.
That is not evidence, my friend. Motive is
not even part of what the prosecution has to show. That's literally all they have, is
motive. He said that the prosecutor said he hoped the jury would have given a death sentence,
but he wasn't disappointed. He said it's a complex case and we can't kill everybody,
you know what I mean? No No he didn't say that.
He said it's a cut in Oklahoma people are like yeah that's about right for a prosecutor.
He said it's a complex case we couldn't prove the cause of death or how he did it so under
the circumstances the jury did a remarkable job and Leroy Dennis's family members said
they were relieved they weren't going to he wasn't going to be put to death. So 1994 he
has his automatic appeal for life without, and that gets tossed the fuck out,
nothing there.
1999 is his other appeal.
This is his get all your shit together appeal here.
He appeals first the neighbor testimony.
He said about this high school girl lived across the street.
They said although the state had endorsed Ms. Thomas as a witness, the prosecutor maintained
that he had only discovered the true value of her testimony over the lunch hour that
day and decided to call her without telling the defense.
So during a conversation with Ms. Thomas, the prosecutor learned that she had last seen
him not on June 3rd or 4th, as her mother had reported, but on June 7th, the day of
the disappearance.
No other witnesses, that's in Oklahoma City, no other witnesses testified to seeing Leroy
in Oklahoma City anywhere on that day.
As a matter of fact, conversely, multiple people testified that he was in Sealing that
day or other towns far away from Oklahoma City.
So they said that his counsel objected to the
testimony on the basis of unfair surprise. He said, Judge, I know we're coming to the
end of Friday, but say we've got to work Saturday and Sunday to do this would be unfair to us.
Before she's even put on, we would ask to have a continuance in regard to that based
on her. Find out who she is, what she's going to say, shit like that. In spite of the complaint of unfairness, the court offered a continuance only until Monday morning
at nine o'clock. The counsel for Leroy then requested a recess so that he and his co-counsel
could interview her. Counsel stated that once they had interviewed her, he might have an announcement
to make in court. After the recess, the counsel announced that he and his co-counsel had interviewed Ms. Thomas during the recess. He stated that Ms. Thomas told him that
she had provided the purportedly new information to the police department 14 months prior to trial.
Remember when I told you that earlier? That's when they knew it. This prosecutor tried to say,
I just heard about it at lunch. Over the lunch break. Yeah.
So on this basis, the council requested
that her testimony be disallowed,
because it's obviously not OK, but the court overruled
the objection.
Council did not renew his request for a continuance.
Ms. Thomas took the stand.
Council again requested that the record indicate
his strenuous objections to her testimony.
She testified she knew him, she was familiar with the truck,
and that she had seen him in his vehicle,
at least a side view of him,
on December 9th, or December 7th at about 3 o'clock p.m.
She said all the testimony that she gave.
On cross-examination, the defense attorney brought up
that her mother, in prior statements,
said that he had seen him on the third or the fourth not the seventh. So what the fuck
and also you said you didn't see his face that day. Right you don't know who
the fuck you saw. It's crazy so also they look into did she really have a play
going on because she said that's how she knew what day it was. Right. Well Leroy
presented new evidence which had not been presented to the state courts. The most important piece
of evidence was an affidavit from Ms. Thomas's music teacher.
Say what?
In the affidavit, the teacher stated that the school play Ms. Thomas referred to was
performed on December 13, 1990. There were 10 rehearsals for the play, and the last rehearsal was on the date
the play was presented just before it started,
unlike what she said.
Attached to the affidavit was a purported cover sheet
from the play program reflecting the December 13th date.
Let's see, Leroy also presented an affidavit
from a private investigator who interviewed Denise Thomas,
that's the young girl there.
The investigator obtained information from Ms. Thomas that the play in question was scrooge
and that the rehearsal she referred to in her trial testimony occurred one hour before
the actual production.
The district court supplemented the record with the music teacher's affidavit but discounted
the private investigator's affidavit because it was based on hearsay.
They were like, well, we like the stuff that's good for the prosecutor. So it denied appellant denied Leroy an evidentiary hearing on the
ineffectiveness issue, finding that he had failed to develop factual. Okay. So the district
court also rejected his claims saying that the his counsel failed to show prejudice from
his counsel alleged counsel's alleged ineffectiveness.
Now, also, that's what he's saying, is ineffective assistance of counsel based on letting her
testimony in.
Right.
So it's my lawyer's fault.
He argues here that counsel should have accepted the trial court's offer of a continuance to
investigate the testimony of Denise Thomas, should have investigated her testimony, and
should have filed a motion to compel the prosecution
to give the defense a list of witnesses
with a summary of their anticipated testimony,
which I thought was standard procedure here.
To establish a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel,
appellant must show both that his counsel's representation
fell below an objective standard of reasonableness
and that it prejudiced his defense. Also,
it was one of the reasons why you're convicted. So he can't prove that though. They say a fair assessment
of attorney performance requires that every effort be made to eliminate the distorting effects of
hindsight to reconstruct the circumstances of counsel's challenged conduct and to evaluate
the conduct from counsel's perspective at the time.
So they said if it falls into a range of normal there, there's nothing we can fucking do about it at that point. So his counsel maintained he didn't file a motion because the state maintained
an open file policy. Even if the council had requested such a summary, it would have been
unlikely to have been prevented the harm here. According to the state, the testimony was not
available until the very day in which she testified.
And then he also talks about improper prosecutorial comments, including the odor of burned flesh, and he may have burned her alive, and all these things.
They say that while personal attacks are clearly prohibited, no relief is warranted in the present case because the remarks complained of were not personal attacks on defense counsel.
The comment and issue is not limited in application to defense counsel, but it could be applied
to the prosecution as well.
Pellet's argument is without merit.
So he is shit out of luck.
Oh my God.
In the can.
Now, 2001.
Tad writes an article for the Daily Oklahoman.
Is that right?
He's got to be what?
20 maybe now?
Got to be, right?
2021, something like that.
And this is by Tad Dennis, and it's called, Parole Board Provides Checks and Balances.
Okay.
Okay.
The Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board operates within the constraints of the law.
The Oklahoma Constitution authorizes the board
to review the sentence of anyone convicted of any crime.
The Constitution given this board the authority to recommend any person convicted of a crime
for parole, for commutation of that sentence, or for a reprieve.
For an individual convicted of a crime who has completed his sentence and led a life
as productive member of society, the board has the authority to recommend to the governor
that this individual be pardoned.
The act of receiving clemency rests solely with the signature of the governor after a
favorable and majority vote of the parole board.
Any parole, commuted sentence, reprieve or pardon recommended by the parole board must
be sent to the governor for a final review for his signature or denial. Anyone convicted of a crime and seeking clemency through parole
commuted sentence reprieve or pardon is subjected to multiple hearings and investigative process
in order to determine the validity of the request and whether the clemency is appropriate.
This is Tad knows a lot about this apparently. He said, the framers of our state constitution
had the foresight to create the pardon and parole board.
Its function is to be a check and balance
for the courts and punishments that are administered
to those convicted of a crime.
This is a final step to an individual's freedom
where the appeal process is decided
by a court's procedural rules instead of the facts
and merits of the case, when all steps
of the appeal process have been exhausted
or when the individual has served the minimum sentence imposed by the
court.
The board initiates the investigative process when an individual applies for a clemency
hearing.
Board members must examine the facts of the case.
The board can also take into consideration whether the individual got a fair trial, whether
he received an effective assistance of counsel, and if the prosecutor
overzealously prosecuted the case, inflaming passions and prejudices of the jury in order
to obtain a conviction.
Some people have been sentenced to prison for a crime they didn't commit.
Courts and juries do make mistakes and convictness in people.
Those convictions are held throughout the appellate process.
This is just one reason for the existence of the board.
The governor is responsible for prison overcrowding. When he refuses to sign a parole, sentence
commutation, or reprieve for political reasons, because all of them have to go, I'm the toughest
on crime. I'm the toughest. No, I'll run him over with my car. I won't even have a trial.
I'll run him out in front of the courthouse. Him and his goddamn defense attorney. Run
them both down. Everybody votes for him. He says, it compounds the problem of prison overcrowding and adds to the need
for more prison bed space. Well, then they just more build more prisons and claim they're
creating jobs at that point. I created all these jobs in this county. They're all prison
jobs. Great. Good job. Yeah. Good work idiots. So they said programs such as parole, special
or special supervisor
lease etc wouldn't be needed to deal with prison overcrowding if the pardon and parole
board would use what the law already allows and the governor would sign approved requests
for clemency. And then it says Dennis writes from Alva his father Leroy Dean Dennis is
serving a term of life without parole for the 1990 murder of the writer's mother. Dennis
believes his father is innocent of the crime.
That's the important part.
He's saying he doesn't think his dad did it.
No, thinks he's innocent.
I don't know if he wants him to be innocent.
Now.
Okay.
That's the story.
But there's one other thing I can't find if it is or not.
And I pray and I hope that this is not tad.
Okay.
Yeah. or not and I pray and I hope that this is not Tad. Okay? The Detroit Free Press in what
is this like 2000, Jesus 11, 2016 something like that here. An off-duty Warren, this is
from the Detroit Free Press, off-duty Warren firefighter, Tad Dennis, downed at least 10
drinks at a day-long golf outing last September 11th, then was
served 88 ounces of beer at Clinton Township restaurant before he stumbled outside and
got back behind the wheel of his Ford Escape.
14 minutes later, Dennis' SUV plowed at high speed head-on into a car driven by a
Sterling Heights teenager on a residential side street.
God dang! into a car driven by a Sterling Heights teenager on a residential side street.
17 year old Diana Posdurka was dead from this.
The complaint details the teen's last minutes alive as she lifted her head from the dashboard
of her wrecked car and told a witness using a fire extinguisher to put out the flames
around her quote, Help me he hit me, help me hit me my legs my legs please help me I can't feel
my legs holy shit oh my so yes they're suing and Dennis of Sterling Heights is
already facing criminal charges of second-degree murder and operating while
intoxicated and causing death.
A probable cause.
I'm hoping this isn't him.
I'm really at the alcohol level was 0.21%.
I haven't seen he moved to Michigan.
I haven't seen anything.
But if not, I really feel bad for Ted Dennis because he's got some asshole using his name
for fucking horrible reasons here.
And he was driving like 80 miles an hour, more than twice the speed limit.
I hope that's just not him.
I hope it's not him.
And he ended up being sentenced to 11 to 30 years in prison.
So I hope it's not Tad.
Good Christ.
Really fucking do.
But either way, that is sealing Oklahoma, everybody.
What happened to-
Fucking bonkers.
Dad, is he still in prison?
Still, life without, he's still there.
Oh my God. Still there, without. He's still there.
Oh my god.
Still there.
I can't find him dead, so he must be still in there.
Holy.
Yep.
I found his background thing where I found it was definitely him because it had his murder
charges on it.
Oh boy.
But it doesn't say he's deceased on there, so there you go.
Shit.
That's fucked up.
So I don't know what happened here. I don't know if he did this or not. I really don't know what happened here.
I don't know if he did this or not.
I really don't.
Well, here's something.
The bones are there.
Yeah, if you're going by the Scott Peterson thing, she's dead where he was.
You know what I mean?
That's not good.
Yeah, oh no, no.
It's not good.
And especially the bones are on his property.
But the other one though, Scott Peterson didn't quite have,
this Jim Umberbrow or whatever is way more of a suspect
than those burglars in a fucking van.
Amber didn't have VHS tapes of her mom getting railed.
That's the other problem, yeah.
Oh, Jesus Christ.
So there you go.
If you like the show, give us five stars on whatever app you're listening on.
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How about that?
There was an amber in this too, wasn't there?
Yeah, there was.
There was.
Two ambers in these creepy fucking stories.
That's why.
Fucking amber.
So do that.
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This week's executive producers are Joseph Armstrong,
Elena Zemmell, Peyton Meadows, Thomas Lamar,
and Kelly Story, and Alexis Snapp.
Happy birthday, Alexis.
Thank you, and happy birthday.
Other producers this week are Janice Hill,
Chance Plafter, Platter maybe, Plotter?
Those are very different words.
Plaster, P.L.P. Laughter, that's what his last name is.
He pees from laughter.
Yeah, Katie Nemuth, Ariel Rose Walmsley, Patty Reigns, Diana Carfire, is that right?
Carfire.
Rachel Brawner, Josh would know last name. Wyatt Mitchell, Pam would know last name.
Josie Tucker, Nan would know last name.
Jordan Turcotte, Christina Sabol, Holly Beher.
Jake Everett, Heidi Summerfield, Jennifer Fletcher, Anna Wenzel, Cassidy Spencer, Sean
Riazzi, Christine Peterson.
This show also brought to you by the letter K.
Jessica Harden, Catherine Bell, Carla with no last name,
Jack Elliott, Christine Kiefer,
Chihula, Chihuahua Bear, I like the paint.
Oh, okay.
What's a Chihuahua?
Is that a, hmm.
You're asking me.
I don't know, is that a place?
I don't know.
I don't know.
Katie with no last name. I thought you were
trying to say Chalupa, I have no idea. Moving along. Katie with no last name. You're asking me
Katie with no last name Ellen McCormick Dylan Myers Laura McLaughlin
Kristen Wallace Lilly with no last name Audrey Adri Adri Jaquina Jack one ought
Jack one ought Jack
Jackie no Jack an astronaut but not It looks like Jacqueline not.
All right, Ashley McCabe, Stephanie Settle, Zachary
Krattsass, Courtney Shepherd, what is this?
Brian Stimpson, Jenny Lust.
That sounds like a porn star.
Larry Johnson, probably not, but I'd love it.
I'm sure it's grandma.
C.C. Martin, give that money back to your children, you deadbeat dad.
Courtney Krueger.
Stop giving us money.
Take care of your kids first.
Only Larry Johnson.
The rest of you, give us money.
Julie with no last name.
AJ Merle.
Chris with no last name.
Lindley.
Lindley Martin.
Gail Tina.
Shayla O'Keefe,
Emma Kroll Schweiger, Destiny Neeson,
Ben and Linnea Walker, Nikki Gagon,
Gagone, Gagone, Gagone, Gagone, Gagone.
Do you remember those in Dirty Dancing?
Her fingers to his chest, Gagone.
Gagone.
Hanson, Rachel Cazanass.
Is that a second time, Cazanass?
It is.
No, that's Krattsass.
It's two Cazanass and Krattsass.
Wow.
Thank you, all the cats in your ass people.
We appreciate it.
Tracy B. Max with no last name,
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Dr. Lars Hawkins,
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Ohm Alley, god damn it, Amanda Cabral,
Lucas Burr, Barry McCaulkiner, sure that's your name,
you son of a bitch, Michael Swink, Heather Helms,
a fair bitcher, you can watch my children.
Beth Foster, Mike Hunt, another guy who's got a really
fascinating name that's a pain in the ass when he goes
missing in stores.
Cheryl Teal, Dagan, Dagan, Daganayas, Daganayas,
Dagan, not gonna work.
Catherine Kerr, Brooke Hanson, Kit McCloud, oh Kit, Cloud Kicker, Jennifer Harriman,
Harriman, Jonathan Yoder, Bill Dickensheets,
probably not, Erin with no last name,
Stephanie Martin, Elle Henderson, Carly Jack B,
Michelle Shaw, Barrett Chamberlain, Tiffany Rector,
barely knew her, Angie L. Jen Trejo.
I knew I was coming.
Barely knew I was gonna say it.
Mary Carr, Scott Kaminer.
James Mitchell, Vape God, Michael would know last name,
Jonathan Wilson, Martha would know last name,
Leah Callis, Cal's maybe.
Someone made their name Vape God.
Think about that.
Can you believe it?
Vape God, they are one, Cal's maybe Kelly. Someone made their name VapeGod. Think about that. It's hilarious. Can you believe it?
VapeGod, they are one of those ring blowers.
Casey would know last name, VapeGod.
VapeGod.
I'm gonna be the first one to die
of whatever this shit gives me.
Whatever strange disease they come up with next
from this crazy shit.
Broccoli Lung.
Lena would know last name. Lena would know last name.
Andrea would know last name.
Carrie Keeler.
Anthony Pickling.
Picking.
All right.
Picking.
Picking.
All right.
Picking.
A and B. This show brought to you by the letters A and B. Linda Fanon.
Carl Whitaker.
Bill T. Lisa Norris.
Chuck's daughter.
Sherry would know last name.
Of course.
Carlos Montoya.
Jens. Jens, what is that?
That's a fucking European name, right?
Jens, Jens, is Jens Heilstedt?
Kelly R.
There's a heil in there so you know it's European.
We wouldn't approve of that shit.
No heiling in America anymore.
We don't do that. Chris Avera, Rachel Stenzel, Duane Wolf, JMC,
Ari Ariwoodyard, Sarah with no last name,
Hill Dolly, Will Walton, Greg Lemke,
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Sierra Bretnaker, Bretnature,
Jamie LaRose Oscar, and Isid is the is it dro is it dro gear arrow Chloe
Alexander McKell Beck Barry Leona G Nicole Gordon Tracy Connor cat with no
last name Deirdre Marsh oh what is this keys it's got to be Christy I got that
can't it can't be keesty del. Mike would know last name. Tyler Jones. Eva
fucking Milnikova. Milnikova. Mlyna Kova. Big country. Jeff S. Samantha Farrell.
Pharrell maybe. Brian Reeves gave us money. It appears so. Wow. Borderland Kennels. EPTX.
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Golden, Megan Hartman, Brittany Blackwill, Melissa Henry, Ashley with no last name, Dent
with no last name, Jacob Kay, M. Kostroskos.
Oh, aggressive.
Yeah, Paula Jackson, Lauren Pippen, probably somebody related.
Somebody, yeah.
Clearly.
Tracy Poets.
Someone who's fucking Michael Jordan's kid.
Tracy, you're terrific.
Tristan M. Climate change related anxiety.
Boy don't I know it.
And Angela with no last name.
Sarah O'Brien.
Jenny Miller.
Blake Perry.
Patty with no last name.
Jessica Smedley.
Cat and whisker dick.
All right.
Whiskey dick.
Not whisker dick.
Whisker dick.
Very skinny.
Very skinny dick. Very Dick. Very skinny.
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Very hairy.
Very hairy, skinny dick.
Christopher Jeune, Gail Tana, Mikey with no last name,
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From the bottom of our hearts, we cannot thank you enough.
Just thanks for all you do for us.
If you want to follow us on social media, head over to shutupandgivemurder.com.
Drop down menu has links to everything.
Keep coming back and hanging out with us week after week.
And until next week everybody, it's been our pleasure.
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